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2 December 2016 Global Equity Research Investment Strategy Global Equity Strategy Research Analysts Andrew Garthwaite 44 20 7883 6477 [email protected] STRATEGY 2017 Outlook: Equities, Regions and Macro Marina Pronina 44 20 7883 6476 [email protected] Robert Griffiths 44 20 7883 8885 [email protected] Nicolas Wylenzek 44 20 7883 6480 [email protected] Alex Hymers 44 20 7888 9710 [email protected] Mengyuan Yuan 44 20 7888 0368 [email protected] Alexander Evans 44 20 7888 1595 [email protected] Source: iStockphoto Equities: We increase our mid-year 2017 target on the S&P 500 to 2,350 from 2,200. The key positive for 2017, in our judgement, is that investors are overweight deflation hedges (i.e. bonds) relative to inflation hedges (equities) at a time when policy makers are moving away from NIRP towards fiscal stimulus, and inflation expectations are set to continue rising. Other supportive factors are: earnings revisions at a five-year high; a still reasonably elevated equity risk premium; excess liquidity; and rising economic momentum. However, we see a down market in H2 2017, hence our year-end 2017 target of 2,300. The second half challenges include the potential negative impact of US bond yields above 3% (3% being the CS view for end-2017); the growing pricing power of US labour squeezing profit margins; and the risk of China refocusing on reform rather than pro-growth policies. We continue to prefer equities to both bonds and gold. The macro backdrop is one of a modest acceleration in global GDP growth, with upside risks to the CS view of 3.0% global GDP growth in 2017. Regions: We add to our overweight in continental European equities (Germany remaining our top pick, upgrading France to benchmark, reducing the size of our underweight of Italy) and we remain overweight in Japanese equities. We reduce the size of our overweight in GEM equities (focusing on China, Taiwan and Korea), and downgrade UK equities to underweight from benchmark. We stay underweight the US in a global context as it is the worst performing market when global growth accelerates, the USD strengthens and bond yields rise; and valuations relative to other regions are extreme. DISCLOSURE APPENDIX AT THE BACK OF THIS REPORT CONTAINS IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES, ANALYST CERTIFICATIONS, LEGAL ENTITY DISCLOSURE AND THE STATUS OF NON-U.S ANALYSTS. U.S. Disclosure: Credit Suisse does and seeks to do business with companies covered in its research reports. As a result, investors should be aware that the Firm may have a conflict of interest that could affect the objectivity of this report. Investors should consider this report as only a single factor in making their investment decision. 2 December 2016 Table of contents Key charts 4 Executive overview 6 Index targets 20 Equity outlook: a year of two halves 21 What factors might help lift equity indices in H1? ................................................... 22 What worries us about equities? ............................................................................ 46 Prefer equities over bonds 58 Bond yields: upside risks remain ............................................................................ 58 What is the bull market view on bonds? ................................................................. 73 Regional scorecards 78 Continental Europe: increase overweight 82 Increase our overweight ......................................................................................... 82 What are the risks? ................................................................................................ 95 European countries ................................................................................................ 99 Japan: remain overweight 132 The positives ........................................................................................................ 132 What are the problems? ....................................................................................... 155 GEM: reduce overweight 166 Why the modest reduction? .................................................................................. 166 Why do we avoid a downgrade to benchmark? ................................................... 175 Country selection .................................................................................................. 190 UK: downgrade to underweight 226 What are the negatives? ...................................................................................... 226 What are the risks to an underweight? ................................................................. 236 UK domestic sectors ............................................................................................ 236 US: remain underweight 241 What are the challenges? ..................................................................................... 241 Where could we be wrong? .................................................................................. 246 Global Equity Strategy Macro outlook 247 Gold: remain cautious 283 Appendices 289 2 2 December 2016 The team wishes to acknowledge the contributions made to this report by Revelino Sequeira, Pranali Deshmukh and Neeraj Chadawar, employees of CRISIL Global Research and Analytics, a business division of CRISIL Limited, a third-party provider of research services to Credit Suisse. Global Equity Strategy 3 2 December 2016 Key charts – Equity Strategy Figure 1: Global earnings momentum is close to its strongest level in 5 years 40% Figure 2: Equities tend to re-rate until inflation rises above 3% 22 20% 20 0% 18 12m trailing P/E 18.8 S&P 500 average P/E, 1871 to present 12m fwd P/E 17.0 16 -20% 14 -40% 12 MSCI AC World -60% -80% 1998 2001 2004 2007 Earnings revisions, 4-wk 13-wk 2010 2013 2016 10 -3% or -3 to - -2 to - -1 to 0 to +1 to +2 to +3 to +4 to +5 to 6% or below 2% 1% 0% +1% +2% +3% +4% +5% +6% above Inflation range shown Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Figure 3: The gap between the consensus and warranted equity risk premium is still reasonable Figure 4: Equity to bond returns discount a modest fall in macro momentum, yet it should accelerate 50% 11 US ERP on consensus EPS 40% US Warranted ERP 30% 9 Global equities vs global government bonds, total returns (6m % chg) OECD leading indicator (6m % chg, rhs) 3% 2% 1% 20% 10% 7 0% 0% -1% -10% 5 -20% -2% -30% 3 -3% -40% 1 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 -50% 1997 -4% 1999 2002 2005 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Figure 5: Global excess liquidity is consistent with a re-rating of global equities of around 25% Figure 6: The profit and wage shares of GDP tend to move inversely to one another 18 OECD excess liquidity (3m lead) Global equities, 12m % change in PE (3mma, rhs) 14% 13% 16 95% 14 12 65% 10 8 35% 6 4 5% 2 0 -25% -2 -4 1983 52% % of GDP, US 53% Profits Wages, rhs, inverted 12% 54% 11% 10% 55% 9% 56% 8% 57% 7% 58% 6% -55% 1988 1993 1997 2002 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2007 2011 2016 5% 1950 59% 1961 1972 1983 1994 2005 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4 2 December 2016 Key charts – Regions Figure 7: Correlation of regional performance with 10-year US Treasury yields 0.32 Figure 8: As US index linked bond yields rise, GEM equities tend to underperform 0.22 -2.0 GEM relative to global equities, 6m % chg 13 -1.5 US 10-year TIPS yields, 6m chg, rhs, inv. 0.12 8 0.02 -0.08 -0.18 -0.28 Correlation of local currency relative performance with US 10 year yields -0.38 -1.0 3 -0.5 -2 0.0 0.5 -7 -0.48 1.0 -12 1.5 -0.58 Japan Europe ex. UK US GEM -17 2009 UK 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Figure 9: The US is on a 38% premium on HOLT's value to cost ratio relative to the global market Figure 10: GDP growth differentials suggest c20% relative upside for European equities 1.37 US HOLT P/B rel to Global 1.32 Cont.Europe equties relative to global, LC terms 145 Euro area GDP growth relative to global-ex- 1 euro with 2016 CS fcst, pp gap, rhs 0 135 -1 125 1.27 -2 115 1.22 1.17 1.12 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 105 -3 95 -4 85 1997 -5 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2014 2016 Source: Credit Suisse HOLT® Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Figure 11: In the UK, earnings momentum tracks sterling closely Figure 12: Japanese EPS is more than just a yen story 40% -24 UK: 13-week earnings revisions relative to global 30% GBP TWI, % chg Y/Y inv., rhs 20% 10% 60% -14 40% -4 0% -10% 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2014 2015 2016 -25% -15% -5% -20% 6 -60% 5% 15% 25% -80% -100% 2004 -35% JPY TWI (% change Y/Y, rhs, inv) 0% -40% 11 Japan earnings revisions, 4 week net upgrades (%) 20% 1 -20% -30% 2009 80% -19 -9 2 155 35% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5 2 December 2016 Executive overview Equities: 2,350 mid-year S&P 500 We see more upside than downside risks for equities in the first half of 2017 and thus raise our mid-year target on the S&P 500 to 2,350 from 2,200. However, we see the second half as more challenging and thus establish an end-2017 target of 2,300. We see the following factors as supportive for equities: ■ Earnings revisions near a five-year high: Global earnings revisions are close to a five-year high, and we revise up US EPS growth for 2017 to 6% from 3% on the back of the rise in commodity prices (adding 3.8pp to EPS), a recovery in nominal GDP growth relative to wage growth, and a lower corporate tax rate. These positives come at a time when gross margins, excluding tech, are already at normal levels. ■ A shift in policy: We believe that a change from negative interest rate policy (NIRP) towards fiscal easing is currently underway as policymakers realise that, at current levels, NIRP is increasingly counterproductive. We also think central bankers will be prone to allow economies to run 'too hot' and rather risk inflation than deflation (as the Swedish Riksbank is doing, in our view). In essence, this indicates investors need to buy inflation hedges – equities – and not bonds, which are deflation hedges. We think market-implied inflation expectations are still too low and equities should benefit as these rise; in periods of rising inflation, the market has tended to re-rate to an average of 20x trailing earnings. Only when the inflation rate rises above 3% do equities tend to de-rate. ■ Equities are an under-owned inflation hedge: We see an 80% probability that equities will outperform bonds in 2017, yet both institutional and retail investors are mis-positioned for this, being structurally overweight bonds relative to equities. We believe retail investors will follow momentum, with rising bond yields serving as the potential catalyst for a meaningful change in asset allocation. On top of this, there is scope for the corporate sector to continue to be a buyer, with 20% of US corporates having net debt-to-EBITDA below 1x, $750bn of overseas corporate cash and private equity having c.$1.4trn of dry powder. Recently, corporate buying has picked up and, encouragingly, buyback as a style has started to outperform again. ■ The equity risk premium is still high and can overshoot: The US ERP is reasonable at 5.3% on our below-consensus earnings numbers, versus a warranted ERP of 5.2%. We see scope for the ERP overshooting because: (i) on consensus earnings estimates the ERP is even higher – close to 6.4%; (ii) the long-run average ERP is 4.2%; (iii) at market peaks the ERP has fallen to, on average, 2.4%; and (iv) finally, some factors we do not model (e.g. minority shareholder rights, variance of earnings estimates) suggest that our warranted ERP should be lower still. Above all, the cost of equity, at 8.8%, is still only slightly below its norm, whereas most other major asset classes remain more clearly overvalued. ■ Excess liquidity: Excess liquidity, which we define as growth in M1 relative to nominal GDP, remains highly supportive, and is consistent with a strong re-rating of global equities. Indeed, the BoJ could de facto finance President-elect Trump's proposed tax cuts if Japanese investors sell JGBs to buy US bonds and the BoJ caps yields at zero. ■ Equities are not discounting an acceleration in growth: Looking at equities in aggregate, no improvement in macro momentum is being discounted. In fact, the ratio of equity to bond returns suggests a modest fall in lead indicators while we believe global GDP will accelerate. Global Equity Strategy 6 2 December 2016 ■ There has been no clear excess in equities: Peaks in equity bull markets have previously been marked by some kind of excess, whether in terms of investment fads, sentiment, valuation or leverage – no such excess is apparent to us yet. ■ Disruption could be positive for valuations: There is a case to be made that disruption could cause a re-rating of the equity market. Disruptive technology tends to lead to greater excess savings, an increase in the efficiency of investment, a fall in the NAIRU (as it is easier to match job offers with applicants), and is structurally disinflationary, which allows central banks to keep policies 'too loose'. ■ Trump – a net positive for equities: Our judgement is that the rhetoric on protectionism and immigration will be toned down, while fiscal stimulus, corporate tax cuts, de-regulation and repatriation of cash held overseas are all potentially growth and EPS positive. Almost all of President-elect Trump's policies are inflationary and thus support a bond-to-equity switch. The risks facing equities In spite of these positives, we see a number of downside risks facing equities, with a heightened chance of these materialising in H2 2017, hence our projection of a correction in equities. The main risks we see are as follows: ■ We see a risk that bond yields could rise too far: We do not think that rising bond yields will become a headwind for equities until the US 10-year yield rises to 3.0-3.5%, which would reduce EPS and undermine both relative valuations and corporate buying. We judge that each 100bps on the corporate bond yield takes c.4% off EPS. ■ The US profits cycle has peaked: Despite seeing some near-term positives for earnings in the US, our longer-term concerns remain. Namely, labour continues to gain pricing power, which is bad for profit margins. A quarter of the US margin improvement had come from lower rates and a third of EPS growth since 2012 from buybacks: the former is now a headwind, the latter a reduced tailwind. ■ Business model and political risks remain unusually elevated: We are in a world of abnormal risks, including business model risks – particularly because of China and disruptive technology – and populism, which is trying to redress the capital relative to labour share of GDP (via minimum wages and protectionism). ■ Heightened risks in H2: The second half of 2017 could be much more challenging for equities as China potentially tightens policy following the 19th Party Congress, China's loan-to-deposit ratio rises closer to the danger signal of 100%, and US wage growth continues to accelerate (hitting profits). ■ Real equity returns: Real returns from the previous bull market peak are already in line with their 140-year average. ■ Tactical indicators – no longer signalling pessimism: In the near term, tactical indicators have rebounded to be optimistic (implying some likely near-term consolidation). Global Equity Strategy 7 2 December 2016 Bonds: we remain cautious Credit Suisse rates strategists forecast a US 10-year yield of 3.00% by the end of 2017; we would agree, and see a risk of bund yields rising to 1-1.5%. Our concerns are: ■ Changing policy backdrop: Policymakers are increasingly looking to fiscal policy, especially as the world moves toward populism, which is typically inflationary (via minimum wage increase, controls on immigration, protectionism or spending more on infrastructure projects). In our judgement, President-elect Donald Trump's policies are stagflationary at worst, or reflationary at best. Either way, bonds face challenges. ■ The return of inflation: Inflation expectations look perhaps 50bps too low in the US. The 5 year rate implied in 5 years' time in the US and the euro area is 2.0% and 1.5% respectively. We think it can rise to 2.5% in the US on the back of wage growth continuing to rise from an eight-year high, headline inflation hitting 2.5% by mid-2017 and the Fed allowing a 'high pressure' economy. In the euro area, employment growth is nearly 1 percentage point above the rate of growth of the workforce, and this will ultimately push up wages. The ECB, like the Fed or BoJ, is likely to tolerate an inflation overshoot. Even Chinese PPI has turned positive for the first time in 4.5 years, implying it is exporting less deflation. ■ Markets still appear complacent: The New York Fed term premium model is now around zero, versus a post-2010 average of around 1% and implied volatility in bonds is still low. We believe that, outside of Japan, less financial repression is needed to stabilise government debt-to-GDP and unemployment (the equilibrium real rate being c.1% in the US and zero in UK); our fair value model highlights 2.8% on the US 10year, 3.2% if the Fed tightens in line with our house view (expecting three rate hikes by end 2017); and we think over 2017, the ECB is likely to face growing logistical, legal and political problems with QE, which will cause some fears of tapering. ■ Other cyclical measures point to upside for yields: The ratio of cyclicals to defensives or industrial commodity prices is consistent with a 2.7% 10-year bond yield. The bull case for bonds is that the US CPI diffusion index shows only half of prices rising (but momentum is turning up); there is a risk of a hard landing in China (but none of our hard landing indicators are flashing amber); and US margin pressure is a challenge for the US cycle (but usually unemployment is able to significantly overshoot the rate consistent with full employment before this happens) or disruptive technology causing dis-inflation. Of all of these, the strongest factor is the final one. We cannot help but think that when the longest bond bull market in recorded history ends, we are likely to have a reasonable bear market (it is worth noting that of the eight bond market corrections since 1990, three lasted longer than a year) and on average bull market corrections saw yields rise by 1.8% compared with 1% so far. Global Equity Strategy 8 2 December 2016 Regional allocation Continental Europe: Increase overweight We further add to our overweight of continental European equities, making it our biggest regional overweight together with Japan. We see the following positives: ■ Continental European growth to surprise on the upside: In our opinion, there are several strong tailwinds supporting European growth: i) the recovery in domestic demand, which has lagged US and Japanese domestic demand by 4pp and 10pp respectively since 2008, is finally accelerating; ii) the monetary transmission mechanism seems to be working again, with SME lending rates in the periphery having fallen to core levels (nearly 70% of peripheral GDP is SME-related) and European banks are easing lending conditions (75% of lending in continental Europe is done through banks); iii) GEM headwinds are diminishing, with exports to China and Russia growing again; and iv) the euro remains clearly undervalued. In fact, already year on year GDP in Europe is just above that of the US and PMIs are implying c.2% GDP growth. However, European equities have so far lagged the European recovery and the growth differential between Europe and the rest of the world is consistent with c.2025% outperformance. ■ Fund flows suggest investor capitulation: Year-to-date continental European equities have experienced 39 weeks of outflows, with two thirds of the inflows seen in 2015 having left. This is also reflected in our proprietary investor survey, where sentiment towards continental European equities fell to an all-time low. ■ Political risk looks overstated: European outflows and the pessimism of investors towards European equities seem to be mainly driven by fears of a deepening political crisis in Europe. This concern has increased on the back of Donald Trump's surprising win and Brexit, as investors have lost even more trust in opinion polls and the certainty of political outcomes. However, we think this risk is slightly overstated. While a "No" vote in the Italian constitutional reform referendum appears very likely, we do not think there will be elections before the summer of 2017. Furthermore, the 5 Star Movement's popularity has fallen in recent polls and, in our opinion, even in the event of a 5 Star victory in a general election, the chances of Italy leaving the euro area are very low over the next few years. Critically, survey data from the European Commission suggest that support for euro membership among the Italian population remains very high. The chance of a victory by Marine Le Pen in the French presidential election is low, in our view. We believe the election of Fillon is a more likely scenario and could bring much needed economic reforms to France. ■ Continental Europe is a play on a recovery in global growth and rising yields: Continental Europe has higher operational leverage than the US and the UK and should outperform these regions as global growth recovers. Furthermore, owing to Europe's overweight of financials, the Euro Stoxx typically outperforms global markets 80% of the time the Bund yield rises. ■ No stronger euro, despite stronger growth: Historically, a strong economic recovery (proxied by PMI new orders in Europe versus the US) has tended to be offset by a strengthening euro. Each 10% on the euro takes directly and indirectly 6p.p. off EPS growth (with c.45% of European earnings coming from outside of the EU) and 1.1% off nominal GDP. We think this will not be the case this time as the Treasury-Bund spread is likely to keep the euro weak. Global Equity Strategy 9 2 December 2016 ■ Continental Europe has significant exposure to GEM: The euro area's exposure to emerging markets is the second-highest of all regions (at 18% of non-commodity sales for listed companies). European stocks with high GEM exposure have been underperforming direct emerging market exposure recently by a near record amount, suggesting that Europe offers relative value. While we have turned a little more cautious on GEM equities, we still believe that GEM is likely to outperform modestly in 2017. ■ Valuations look reasonably attractive: While European equities trade on only a c.6% discount to US equities on a sector-adjusted basis, the discount increases to c.17% on normalised earnings and c.22% on aggregate 12m forward P/E. Furthermore, the equity risk premium is unusually high at 8% versus a warranted ERP of 7.5% at a time when German pension funds have just 15% of their assets in equities. ■ Earnings are supportive: While the expected earnings recovery in the euro area did not materialise in 2016, our model is pointing to 6% and 7% earnings growth in 2017 and 2018, respectively, on the back of a recovery in nominal GDP growth, a low domestic profit share of GDP, a lower interest charge and a weak euro. On consensus forecasts, 60% of consensus euro area earnings growth in 2017 (6.5pp) is set to come from just three sectors: financials, consumer discretionary and energy. Furthermore, absolute and relative earnings revisions have turned positive for only the second time since 2010. What are the risks to our call? The perceived political risk in Europe is likely to continue to weigh on the performance of European equities for the foreseeable future. Italian political instability after a potential "No" vote is likely to last some time, but we would look to this as a buying opportunity. The fundamental weakness of the euro area has not been resolved. There is only a very limited banking union and no fiscal or political union, and a stable monetary union in our opinion requires all three. Our view remains that eventually the euro area will be severely tested and chances are high that at some point a country will drop out. However, we believe that this only becomes a problem when the majority of the electorate wants to leave the euro and when unemployment is low. One of the key drivers of US equity performance has been disruptive technology (the growth in the cloud and the internet-related networks with mobile exposure). To a large extent, this space is dominated by US names. Internet software and services and internet retail account for more than 6% of market cap in the US, but just 0.2% in the euro area. This gives Europe a structural disadvantage. However, a rise in bond yields causes long duration assets to underperform, and thus this headwind should be less of a concern in 2017. What to buy? ■ Germany – increase overweight: i) Germany scores close to the top on our European country scorecard; ii) Germany is the most sensitive market to a weaker euro; iii) German lead indicators will likely remain stronger than for the rest of Europe as the economy is faced with an ultra-loose monetary policy (due to prevailing interest rates being too low and the currency being too weak); the majority of the external GEM-related headwinds for Germany (Russia, China) become tailwinds as export growth to these markets recovers and Germany is the most competitive economy in Europe as measured by the ease of doing business index; iv) German equities appear inexpensive, trading at close to a 15% discount to continental Europe on 12-month Global Equity Strategy 10 2 December 2016 forward P/E (Germany is the third-cheapest market on EV/EBITDA); and v) relative earnings revisions are at a seven-year high. China remains our key concern with regards to German equities with most of the outperformance of the DAX coming from autos and chemicals, the two sectors with the biggest exposure to China. However, the DAX excluding these two sectors is now outperforming and our economists are reasonably optimistic on the Chinese economy ahead of the 19th Party Congress. We particularly like German real estate (Deutsche Wohnen), companies with high German exposure (Deutsche Telekom) and Outperform-rated German stocks with an eCAP (Fresenius Medical Care, SAP). ■ France – increase to benchmark: i) Based on opinion polls, Francois Fillon has the greatest likelihood of being the next President of France, proposing to bring (in our opinion) much-needed economic reforms (including an increase in the pension age, scrapping the 35-hour workweek and a €40bn tax cut for companies); ii) France offers an attractive combination by being one of the most exposed economies to the domestic recovery and being the second-most sensitive European stock market to euro weakness; iii) economic lead indicators (PMIs) are improving; iv) earnings revisions are recovering; and v) sell-side net buy recommendations, a proxy on positioning, are close to 20-year lows. Why not overweight? Valuations are only neutral, an improvement in relative economic momentum has already been discounted by equities, the CAC is overbought and France is still an uncompetitive economy on many measures compared with the rest of Europe. We would look to buy French companies with a high proportion of labour costs which might thus benefit from labour reforms (Orpea, Vinci). ■ Spain – stay overweight: Spain remains our most preferred country in the periphery. We see the following positives: i) the performance of Spain is highly correlated to banks and the macro backdrop for Spanish banks looks, in our opinion, particularly attractive (they are cheap relative to European peers, loan growth is picking up, and house prices are recovering); ii) economic lead indicators remain strong (PMIs in line with 2% GDP growth and 3% employment growth); iii) Spain regained its competitiveness on REER – as also shown by a current account surplus of 2.6% of GDP; iv) the Spanish economy is the most exposed to the euro area domestic demand recovery (with exports outside the euro area at less than 20%); v) improved political stability following nearly 10 months with no government; and vi) valuations are not unreasonable – Spanish equities are trading c.5pp below their norm on 12m forward P/E relative to the rest of Europe, and on 13.1x earnings assuming normalised margins. ■ Italy – reduce the size of the underweight: As discussed above, we think a "No" vote in the constitutional reform referendum is now widely expected, based on recent polls (see European political discussion above). Furthermore, we would argue that investors are generally too negative on the risk of an Italian banking crisis and this leading to a sovereign crisis (the worst case cost of covering NPLs is 1.8% of GDP in our banks team's opinion and a worst case cost of covering broader Non-Performing Exposure (NPE), in our opinion, would be 6% of GDP; neither would lead to a sovereign risk) and retail investors are unlikely to be bailed in without compensation. Article 32 of the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive could end up allowing some degree of government bail-out of banks. Italian equities have become very cheap on almost all measures, including 12-month forward P/E, where Italy trades at close to a 20% discount to continental Europe and a Global Equity Strategy 11 2 December 2016 P/B relative to Europe (ex financials) at 22-year lows. Only Korea and Japan have a lower P/B than Italy. Italian bond spreads against German Bunds have reached a three-year high and seem to offer a much more attractive risk/reward than they did in June, when we downgraded Italy. Italy under Prime Minister Renzi has also implemented many important reforms already. Why not benchmark? Italy has, uniquely within the periphery, not yet seen an adjustment to its REER, PMI new orders are consistent with only 0% GDP growth, the major eurosceptic parties (5 Star Movement, Lega Nord and Forza Italia) could get around 50% of votes according to recent opinion polls and the bank recapitalizations are very demanding. ■ Netherlands – underweight: We are cautious of Dutch equities as: i) valuations are expensive (trading 1.4 std above norm on 12m forward P/E relative and at a nine-year high on P/B relative); ii) they have little exposure to the European recovery; iii) the market tends to be a bond proxy (32% of market cap comes from consumer staples); and iv) Dutch equities are already discounting a weaker euro. ■ Switzerland – underweight: We are cautious of Swiss equities as: i) they are typically the worst performing when bond yields rise and European PMI new orders pick up; ii) they look expensive (with the P/E relative to the rest of Europe almost 1 standard deviation above its average); and iii) earnings revisions are worse than for the European market. Japanese equities: remain overweight We lifted our weighting on 23 November 2016. The following factors are supportive: ■ Japan is a quintuple play on rising global growth and rising US bond yields. Global PMI new orders have risen to a 19-month high and Japan has the highest operational leverage and largest equity weighting in cyclicals of any major region. The more US bond yields rise, the more the yen weakens and 10% off the yen adds c.15% to EPS. Moreover, as the US yield curve steepens, Japanese buying of foreign bonds steps up, and that in turn will likely cause the BoJ to increase its rate of domestic bond buying to cap yields (something that will further reinforce a weaker yen). Finally, with 80% of inflation coming from higher import prices, at an exchange rate of ¥110, Japanese core inflation turns positive in 2017E, and a rise in inflation expectations could contribute to the gradual bond-to-equity switch underway. ■ Japan ranks at the top of our valuation scorecard. The P/E discount to the US is c.17%, and its P/B discount to global markets is 33%, with a RoE discount of 28%, having been c.50% in 2012. Japan's EV/EBITDA is the lowest of any major region and 61% of companies trade below replacement value. ■ Japanese funds flow is the most compelling of any market. BoJ and net corporate buying amounts to c.3% of market cap. Until recently, this had been offset by foreign selling, yet there are now clear signs that foreign selling is slowing (given the valuation discount). Once foreign investors become net buyers, they historically keep buying for around 1½ years. Moreover, under a blue-sky scenario, domestic actors could buy 11% of market cap (and even more if we include households), especially as private pension funds have 6.5% of assets in equities compared to the GPIF's target of 25%. ■ Tangible signs of change. In our judgement, there are clear signs of change: outside directors are being appointed (80% of Japanese companies now have two or more independent directors), buybacks are strong, cross holdings are being unwound, payout ratios are rising and Japan accounted for 22% of activist fund launches last Global Equity Strategy 12 2 December 2016 year. Japanese EPS forecasts proved relatively resilient to yen strength through the first half, implying corporate cost-cutting. We still see low-hanging fruit: cash on the balance sheet is 22% of market cap, and the investment share of GDP is higher than in any other developed region. ■ Domestic momentum. Japanese PMIs are now consistent with nearly 2% GDP growth, with Japan now at the middle, not bottom, of our economic momentum scorecard. Clearly, many long-term problems remain: stagnant wage growth, full employment, 0.5% trend GDP growth, labour laws in need of reform, and a reluctance to allow aggressive M&A or widespread share options schemes, plus exports to China are 5% of GDP. For now, however, we regard Japan as a warrant on US bond yields. Emerging markets: reduce overweight A year ago, we raised GEM to be our preferred region for 2016, before reducing the size of our overweight in September. We now reduce weightings further, to a small overweight and target 920 for MSCI EM for end-2017, in line with our GEM strategy team. Why do we reduce the size of our overweight? We take weightings down again largely to reflect a less favourable macro backdrop. The key macro drivers for GEM performance are: (i) the dollar; (ii) US TIPS yields; (iii) the oil price; and (iv) perceptions of China. The first eight months of the year saw a 'goldilocks' environment for GEM equities, with the oil price nearly doubling, the dollar falling almost 9% to its year-to-date trough, the 10-year TIPS yield falling 67bps and China accelerating. From here, many of these factors should reverse, with the dollar unlikely to weaken, a small rise in TIPS yields, Chinese policy more likely than not being tightened, and oil being largely range-bound. The combination of bond yields falling and commodity prices rising that was so supportive for GEM is unlikely to repeat itself, in our view. However, none of these factors are sufficient for us to downgrade to benchmark. We only see modest dollar strength, and the key in our mind is that GEM currencies are, excluding the RmB, 30% cheap against export market share. Further, dollar strength is not a mechanical negative for GEM equities: on a 1-year view, GEM has been able to outperform 30% of the time when the dollar strengthens. With regard to rising DM rates, the sharp improvement in the basic balance of payments position means that EMs can accommodate a higher TIPS yield (c.1%) and prior to 2012, GEM outperformed when US rates rose because of their high operational leverage. It was only the deterioration in the basic balance of payments position that caused this sensitivity to reverse. The biggest external macro risk remains China, where policy is tightening but none of our four hard landing indicators is flashing amber (let alone red) and we don't see a slowing in growth ahead of the 19th Party Congress. Why do we remain overweight? The long-term fundamentals suggest an overweight of GEM and we see the following specific positives: ■ A structural improvement in profitability: Unit labour costs are falling for the first time in six years. This is a critical driver of margins and thus RoE. ■ Relative economic and earnings momentum continues to improve: Economic momentum in GEM versus DM (using both GDP and PMIs) is improving and, with it, relative earnings revisions have picked up, too. Global Equity Strategy 13 2 December 2016 ■ Plenty of policy response potential: Emerging markets have clear cut-policy flexibility, with government debt-to-GDP at a third of DM levels and rates high in a historical or relative context. We think structural disinflationary factors, largely from disruptive technology, have been underestimated. ■ Valuations are supportive: The sector-adjusted P/E is on an 18% discount to developed markets. On normalised earnings, the discount is much higher (31% P/B discount and 9.7x Shiller P/E versus 26.6x in the US). Equities have lagged their usual relationship with bond spreads, despite, in some regions, much of EV being debt. ■ GEM is still under-owned: Inflows have been just 10% of the cumulative outflows seen over the past four years (with GEM, between 2012 and 2016, seeing total outflows that were half of the post-2001 inflows). We still think there is mis-positioning between the short- and longer-term views investors have on GEM: our most recent survey indicated that over half of investors believe GEM is likely to be the best region on a five-year view, but only 38% have such a favourable view for the next 12 months. ■ Emerging market politics, on a relative basis, is improving: The politics of emerging markets is in general about de-regulation and structural reform, while politics in developed markets is increasingly about the risk of populism. ■ Our GEM team's model gives 8% upside: Our GEM strategists' regression model for emerging market equities (based on the US dollar, ISM new orders, global IP and metals prices) implies 8% upside for MSCI EM to end-2017. What do we buy? We still think that GEM debt is too cheap, with EM7 real yield spreads over US Treasuries close to seven-year highs. Structurally, we believe that disruptive technology is much more dis-inflationary in emerging markets (given the undeveloped nature of the offline economy relative to DM) than is appreciated. Russian, Indonesian and Mexican bonds look attractive, in our opinion. We would buy companies with high GEM exposure but limited China exposure and quality GEM stocks (i.e. an eCAP on HOLT) and with a high but covered dividend yield (e.g. TSMC and AIS). From a country perspective, our GEM Strategy team favours China, Korea, Brazil and Indonesia. On the Global Equity Strategy team we use a quantitative approach to evaluate countries, favouring those that have cheap currencies, cheap equity markets, spare capacity in the labour market, good-quality internal/external balance sheets and low exposure to China. We think the best combination is seen in Russia, Taiwan and Korea (with CE3 scoring well). Below we focus only on those countries that score well on our scorecard. Taiwan: remain a small overweight Both we and our Asia strategist, Sakthi Siva, are overweight Taiwan. We believe Taiwan offers something of a hedge on a stronger dollar; it is one of the best performing emerging markets when the dollar strengthens or global PMIs rise, as Taiwan is a particularly open economy (exports are 62% of GDP) and 85% of revenues are dollar-denominated. Indeed, 36% of market cap is semis, which remains one of the most sensitive sectors to rising ISM new orders. In addition, PPI inflation and earnings revisions have turned positive. Against this backdrop, valuations look cheap (P/E is 10% below its norm) with a FCF yield of nearly 7% and net cash of 8% of market cap. Funds flow is becoming more supportive, with life insurers' risk weights for domestic equities having been reduced. The main worry is the Chinese competitive threat, a China slowdown (we would note that although 40% of exports go to China, half of exports are re-exported) and a less attractive Global Equity Strategy 14 2 December 2016 outlook for semis. Our Taiwan strategist favours Hon Hai, TSMC and Mega Financial Holding. China: stay overweight, but cautious of banks Excess liquidity (defined as M1 growth relative to nominal GDP growth) in China is supportive for equities, with the gap between excess liquidity and equity performance unusually large. There seem to be relatively few alternatives for Chinese investors, with a sharp fall in property turnover, a tightening of both wealth management products and flows overseas. Moreover, real bond yields in China look set to fall as inflation modestly picks up. Valuations remain attractive (looking at the A-share dividend yields against corporate bond yields) and outstanding margin buying has normalised. Earnings revisions look set to go positive for the first time since 2014. Our worry remains excess leverage and NPLs, and thus we structurally remain underweight the banks. Vincent Chan, head of China strategy, favours Alibaba, Ping An and Geely Automobiles. Korea: reducing the size of our overweight Our regional strategists are overweight Korea across the board. We reduce the size of our own overweight slightly given the risk of the yen weakening more than expected and some deterioration in both Korean lead indicators and earnings revisions. We remain overweight, however, because Korea is one of the most leveraged regions to a pick-up in global IP; P/E relatives to both GEM and global markets are at levels from which they have bounced in the past 12 years, the pay-out ratio is likely to rise and Samsung concerns have been overstated, in the view of our analysts. Our strategists focus on E-Mart, Naver and SEC. Russia: top of our GEM country scorecard; stay overweight The rouble, domestic bonds and Russian equities still look cheap (with domestic bond yields particularly attractive, at 8.8%). Oil and earnings revisions are supportive. We would buy domestically-exposed Russian stocks, with our screen highlighting M.Video, Magnit and X5 Retail Group. India: structurally overweight, but challenges near term Indian equities do not rank especially well on our scorecards and our regional strategists are cautious against a backdrop of dislocation created by GST implementation, demonetisation, negative earnings revisions, little valuation support and over-ownership. However, we remain of the view that Indian equities represent the best long-term story of any emerging market. Structurally, India has the best growth story (in terms of demographics, urbanisation or productivity catch-up); a number of factors suggest that the rupee is cheap (including discount to PPP, the basic balance of payments surplus, accelerating FDI, a sharp rise in FX reserves); and we find a 2% real bond yield attractive. In addition, there are clear signs of reform (GST, AADHAAR, the change in the bankruptcy code, and an independent central bank), and the P/E premium is only 4% compared to global equities for a 25% RoE premium. Oil is unlikely to be a headwind. The recent fall in government bond yields and the fact that both GST and demonetisation are, in the long run, net positives is also helpful. Our GEM Strategy team's model (relying on rupee, ISM and money supply) gives 19% upside potential (though they are underweight). Our Indian strategists' focus list includes Tata Motors, Cipla and Tech Mahindra. Global Equity Strategy 15 2 December 2016 UK equities: downgrade to underweight We downgrade UK equities to underweight from benchmark. The performance of UK equities in a global context is essentially driven by four macro variables which are, in order of importance: sterling, oil, emerging market equities and global lead indicators. After a strong 2016, three of these drivers are now less supportive. ■ Sterling close to a trough: With c.70% of sales derived internationally (and 40% of that dollar-denominated), there has been a very clear correlation between sterling weakness and the UK outperforming (in local currency terms). We stopped being sterling bears in the middle of October for the following reasons: sterling bear markets in periods of crisis average around 32% versus the USD (and at that stage sterling had fallen 29% from its peak); a 14% discount to PPP put sterling close to a 20-year low versus the dollar; the current account deficit is set to fall sharply (as 90% of overseas assets are foreign currency denominated but only 60% of overseas liabilities, and a sharp fall in real wages will hit imports) and, most importantly, a hard Brexit is not a forgone conclusion. For practical purposes it is quite conceivable that there will be an extended transition period. The longer it is, the greater the chance of a second referendum, we think. ■ GEM exposure not the positive it was: The UK's GEM exposure is directly 17% of sales and indirectly (with commodities) c.35%. In this Outlook, we have turned modestly more cautious on GEM in the face of USD strength and rising DM yields. ■ Commodities range-bound: 56% of forecast 2017 earnings growth is coming from commodities, which account for c.20% of market cap. From here, we see oil rangebound, and certainly not set to replicate the gains seen in the first half of 2016. ■ The stage of the global cycle is problematic for UK equities: Outside of commodities, the UK is a defensive market. The UK has the lowest operational leverage of any region to global IP, and the relative performance of the market has a strong inverse correlation with lead indicators. Moreover, it is the worst performing region when the US 10-year bond yield rises. ■ UK growth poised to weaken: Our economists forecast 1.2% GDP growth in 2017, from 2.1% in 2016. There are headwinds to growth arising from rising import prices and thus inflation (with headline CPI set to rise to c.2.5-3.0% from 0.9% currently) which will hit either profit margins or real wage growth. This is occurring at a time when consumers have a limited buffer, with the savings ratio close to historical lows, at 5.1%, and vacancy growth pointing to a slowdown in employment growth. ■ Valuations are only middling on our regional valuation scorecard. Domestic sector observations: We went underweight domestic UK sectors in September 2015, and lifted weightings in July 2016. We raised retailing to benchmark from underweight (P/E relatives are at recessionary levels, earnings momentum is improving, and it is the most sterling-sensitive sector); we are overweight non-London homebuilders (outside of London and the south east, affordability on a rental yield versus mortgage rate basis or house price to wage ratio is attractive); overweight UK life insurance (as a play on rising gilt yields and abnormally cheap versus fund managers) but have remained underweight UK office REITS (which tends to underperform as bond yields rise and is a disrupted sector). Global Equity Strategy 16 2 December 2016 US: remain underweight We stay underweight US equities within a global context despite having a year-end 2017 target for the S&P 500 of 2,300. With US equities accounting for c.55% of MSCI AC World market cap, in some ways our view on the US is largely the opposite of our views on Europe, Japan or GEM equities, and the funding mechanism for the risk we wish to take in these regions. Our underweight of the US is reinforced by: ■ Low operational leverage: The US is the most defensive of the global markets and will typically underperform if global growth and US bond yields rise. This defensiveness is a function of US equities having the lowest operational leverage (only the UK is lower) to a pick-up in global IP, largely because margins are high. Also, the US has greater labour market flexibility than other regions, and is thus able to cut costs more quickly into a downturn. ■ Overweight growth stocks: A rise in bond yields causes long-duration growth stocks to underperform (and tech and biotech are 19% of US market cap, compared to 12% globally), and growth tends to underperform as bond yields rise. Normally a rise in US bond yields causes the US to underperform. There has been a notable disconnect on this front since Donald Trump's election, however. ■ Relative valuations are high: P/E and value-to-cost relatives to global equities are close to all-time highs at 10% and 40% premia, respectively. ■ USD strength: Dollar strength is a headwind and international earners have not responded as much to dollar strength as would have been supposed. ■ The shift from capital to labour: US labour is gaining more pricing power than any other region and this causes margins to decline, with margins in the US still extended relative to history and other regions. ■ Bottom of our composite scorecard: The US now scores at the bottom of our earnings scorecard and second-to-last on our economic momentum scorecard, leaving US equities last on our composite regional scorecard. ■ Investors not as underweight as they were: The under-ownership of the US has somewhat reversed in recent months. In our view, the risk to an underweight stance is the global cycle. If, as was the case in the past two years, the current pick-up in macro momentum falters and yields fall back, then US equities will outperform. We would stress that we are overweight short-duration technology (in the software, internet and semis space), and are thus underweight the US excluding technology. Global Equity Strategy 17 2 December 2016 Macro outlook ■ A modest, but broad-based, acceleration in global growth Our economists forecast Global GDP growth to be 3.0% in 2017 from 2.5% in 2016, with Global PMI new orders at a 19-month high, consistent with c.3% GDP growth. We believe that a lot of the headwinds faced by the global economy over the past four years are now sharply diminishing. Among these headwinds, we would highlight: fiscal policy, which had taken 6.4% off GDP since 2011 in the US, and is now being eased; bank de-leveraging, which is now slowing; oil-related opex and capex (which had taken c.2% off US GDP growth in the past two years) should no longer be a drag, with the Baker Hughes rig count now rising; GEM growth outside of China is improving as spare capacity is re-established, while PMIs in the commodity exporters such as Russia and Brazil are now moving higher; and US inventories, which were a drag on US growth for five quarters, are now set to add to growth. Meanwhile, euro area GDP growth looks set to surprise and the euro area economy is 75% of the size of the US (on a PPP basis). US employment continues to grow steadily at 1.7%, prior to a fiscal boost. ■ The two key risks are China and US wage growth China's nominal GDP has slowed from a peak level of 23% (in 2007) to a trough of 7% in Q1 2016, at which point the Chinese government commenced a fiscal stimulus ahead of the 19th Party Congress to be held next autumn. There are tail risks in China, but we do not think 2017 is the year of a hard landing in growth. On the positive side: i) China has fiscal flexibility (net government debt to GDP is extremely low) and it can utilise this without losing control of the RmB (because the loanto-deposit ratio is still below 100%, and thus NPLs can be rolled over without the PBOC having to buy securitised assets); ii) real estate looks extended to us, but mortgage debtto-GDP is low (c.25%) and even a 30% fall in house prices would lead to minimal negative equity; and iii) none of our four hard landing indicators is flashing amber, let alone red. Our economists see 6.7% GDP growth in 2017 on the back of infrastructure spending and the weaker RmB boosting exports. We see three key risks: i) there has been no rebalancing (the second-biggest credit bubble, the biggest investment bubble and some characteristics of a real estate bubble); ii) two key drivers of GDP growth have rolled over, in real estate and state/local infrastructure investment; and iii) there has been policy tightening in the past few months. The other main risk is the US labour market. US workers are getting pricing power, with many measures of wage growth now at an eight-year high. The worry we have is that this has a negative impact on corporate margins and in turn causes corporates to invest less. This is problematic as corporate capex tends to lead the cycle. We hope that, as in the UK or Japan, the unemployment rate consistent with full employment is lower than expected (c4% not 4.8%), and typically unemployment has undershot the NAIRU by around 1 percentage point at the end of a cycle (currently, the unemployment rate is at the CBO's NAIRU estimate). We think the key is to monitor lead indicators of capital spending, all of which have improved recently. On the Fed, our economists believe that the Fed will raise rates 3 times before the end of 2017 compared to market expectations of just over 2. We believe that all central bankers will in general be much more willing to tolerate a growth overshoot than the opposite. Global Equity Strategy 18 2 December 2016 Currencies We show CS FX strategists forecasts below: broadly, they are dollar bullish. Figure 13: Credit Suisse FX forecasts EURUSD CS FX forecasts 3 month 12 month 1.03 1.00 USDJPY 111 108 GBPUSD EURGBP USDCAD EURCHF USDCHF USDMXN USDCNY 1.20 0.86 1.38 1.05 1.02 23.00 7.01 1.20 0.83 1.40 1.04 1.04 25.00 7.33 Source: Credit Suisse FX Research team We would note that EURUSD has essentially been following the Bund/Treasury spread in recent quarters, and near term this spread can widen further with the persistently dovish stance of the ECB. We struggle to be bearish on the euro for the duration of 2017 given PMI differentials, current account positions, discount to PPP (c.15% currently) and current bearish speculative positioning. The key is the point at which the ECB tapers in response to the weaker euro. Our FX team forecasts USDJPY of 111. We would be more bearish. We see the USDJPY being driven by US yields, especially with the BoJ capping JGB yields at zero. Only above ¥110 does Japanese CPI ex food and energy get above zero in 2017, according to our economists. Our FX team forecasts that the RmB will decline to 7.33 on a 12-month view. We continue to see the RMB decline as being orderly (with the current account surplus of 3% of GDP, and the RmB REER has moved very closely with China's share of global exports). The worry, as noted elsewhere, is when the loan-to-deposit ratio of the banking system rises above 100%. Until that point, we think margins can be sacrificed for market share without the risk of the PBOC printing money to enable the roll-over of NPLs. Gold: staying cautious We turned cautious on gold in early August. In our view, the gold price is driven by three factors: real bond yields, the relative performance of banks and the dollar. All three remain headwinds, and on our models gold is 8% overvalued against these drivers. In our view, gold is not cheap against other real assets (equities or US housing) or against other precious metals. We acknowledge that the Credit Suisse house view on gold continues to be much more constructive. Global Equity Strategy 19 2 December 2016 Index targets In this 2017 Strategy Outlook, we raise our weightings in Japanese equities (as flagged in our report Japanese equities: upgrade to overweight, 23 November 2016), and also add marginally to our overweight in continental European equities, to leave us with the same scale of overweight in both regions. We reduce the size of our overweight in GEM equities fairly significantly, but retain a positive stance. We take UK equities to underweight, and retain our underweight in US equities. The changes to our unhedged weightings largely reflect the currency views expressed in this report, namely, some further US dollar strength, downside risk to the yen, stability in sterling and some relative GEM FX resilience given the cheapness of these currencies. Figure 14: Regional weightings Region Benchmark w eight (%) Recommended over/underw eight (% factor) Hedged Unhedged Change (p.p.) Recommended over/underw eight (bps from benchmark) Hedged Unhedged Hedged Unhedged Continental Europe 15.1 13.0% 11.0% 1.0% -1.0% 200 170 Japan 8.6 13.0% 8.0% 13.0% 8.0% 110 70 GEM 11.4 4.0% 5.0% -7.0% -8.0% 50 60 UK 6.3 -4.0% -4.0% -4.0% -2.0% -30 -30 US 58.5 -5.6% -4.6% -0.3% 0.9% -330 -270 Source: Credit Suisse estimates We also introduce 2017 year-end targets for the major regional equity indices, and update our previously published mid-year targets. We forecast 5.6% upside for global equities in 2017, and 4.6% upside for the S&P 500, with a year-end target of 2,300. As discussed elsewhere in this report, our base case incorporates a view that the second half will see a modest correction in equity markets, and thus our year-end targets are lower across the board than our mid-year targets. We adopt our GEM equity strategy team's target of 920 for MSCI GEM, as outlined in their report Global EM Equity Strategy: 2017 Outlook – Staying the course, 1 December 2016. Figure 15: Index targets Current End-2017E 2017 forecast 1/12/2016 2,199 target 2,300 price return 4.6% Euro Stox x 50 3,052 3,300 FTSE 100 6,784 7,000 Nikkei 225 Market S&P 500 Mid y ear H1 2017 6.7% 2017 2,350 return 6.9% 8.1% 10.6% 3,350 9.8% 3.2% 7.0% 7,100 4.7% 9.2% Total return 18,308 19,800 8.1% 10.1% 20,000 MSCI EMF GEM* 863 920 6.6% 9.6% - - MSCI AC World 489 516 5.6% 8.3% 521 6.6% * Forecast from CS GEM equity strategy team Source: Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 20 2 December 2016 Equity outlook: a year of two halves We see the following factors as supportive of equities in the first half of 2017: 1. Global earnings revisions are near their strongest in 5 years; 2. Investors are overweight deflation hedges (i.e. bonds) relative to inflation hedges (equities) at a time when policy makers are moving away from NIRP towards fiscal stimulus, and inflation expectations are set to continue rising; 3. The equity risk premium can overshoot fair value substantially at the end of a bull market and we are not yet in overshoot territory; 4. Excess liquidity is rising, especially if the BoJ steps up its rate of QE in response to Japanese investors buying more US bonds. In general, we believe that central banks are more willing to risk tightening too little, too late than the reverse; 5. The ratio of equity to bond returns is discounting a small slowdown in global growth despite global PMI new orders rising to a 19 month high. 6. Disruptive technology might potentially be positive for P/Es. What factors could become more challenging for equities in the second half of 2017? 1. Bond yields end up overshooting and upsetting equity markets (to a level above 3%); 2. A roll-over in China post the 19th Party Congress; 3. US wage growth continuing to rise; 4. We could see some significant tapering from both the BoJ and the ECB by Q4 2017. Despite raising our mid-year target on the S&P 500 to 2,350, we think it is appropriate to be benchmark of equities because of: ■ Our concerns about the second half of 2017; ■ We struggle to see anything other than a temporary bounce in US profits; ■ The growing move from capital to labour; ■ The extremely high business model risk; ■ In absolute terms, equities are not cheap. Global Equity Strategy 21 2 December 2016 What factors might help lift equity indices in H1? Why might we see a bounce in the first half of 2017? The following factors are, in our minds, supportive: 1. Earnings revisions are strong, and we foresee a rebound in US earnings Global earnings momentum, as measured by the breadth of revisions, remains close to its strongest point in the last 5 years using the 13-week average measure (which controls for quarterly reporting). Recent US dollar strength has weighed on US earnings momentum at the margins, but history suggests earnings momentum around current levels tends to be a positive for equity markets. Indeed, as the second chart below illustrates, this level of earnings breadth suggests that equities should have performed better. Figure 16: Global earnings momentum remains close to its strongest level in 5 years Figure 17: The level of earnings breadth suggests upside for global equities 40% 60% 20% 40% 0% MSCI AC World net earnings revisions Year-on-year change in global equities, rhs 80% 60% 20% 40% 0% 20% -20% -20% 0% -40% -20% -60% -40% -80% 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 -60% -40% MSCI AC World -60% Earnings revisions, net -80% 1998 4-wk 2001 2004 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2010 13-wk 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research This improvement in earnings momentum has happened at a time when we have already seen something not far from a 'normal' US earnings recession. Since Q4 2014, when operating earnings peaked, S&P 500 operating EPS fell 14% before stabilising. This compares to an average downturn of 18% in previous cycles. Global Equity Strategy 22 2 December 2016 Figure 18: S&P 500 earnings had already fallen 14% from their peak… 140 Figure 19: …which was roughly in line with the average earnings recession S&P 500 12-month trailing EPS 120 Operating (S&P) Profit cycle Reported 100 IBES 80 60 40 20 Decline in operating EPS Peak to trough % of cycle rise 1970 - 1975 -10% 24% 1975 - 1982 -18% 38% 1982 - 1986 -5% 20% 1986 - 1992 -23% 60% 1992 - 2001 -32% 48% 2001 - 2009 -57% 99% Median* -18% 38% Q3 2014 - Q1 2016 -14% 21% *excl 2001 - 2009 0 1989 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Standard & Poor's, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Standard & Poor's, Credit Suisse research Indeed, we identify four near-term supports for the US profits outlook. ■ Stronger commodity prices The majority of the decline in US earnings from their peak was a direct result of the collapse in commodity prices, with commodity sectors (energy and materials) alone contributing 96% of the decline in net income from the peak. In this respect, the end of the commodity bear market should be an unambiguous positive for US earnings. The rebound in commodity prices is already consistent with a modest increase in net income margins, and both the energy and materials sectors are forecast to contribute c.3.8p.p. to 2017 EPS growth – one-third of earnings growth for the overall market. It is this, we feel, that will be the primary driver of any near-term earnings recovery. Global Equity Strategy 23 2 December 2016 Figure 20: US EPS ex resources has remained fairly resilient Figure 21: The rally in commodity prices suggests a modest margin recovery 6.0% 380 50 40 MSCI US ex res trailing earnings , 1998 = 100 4.0% 30 330 20 2.0% 280 10 0.0% 230 0 -10 -2.0% 180 -20 -30 -4.0% 130 Annual change in US non financial net margin (p.p.) 80 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -40 % change Y/Y in commodity prices (rhs, 6m lead) -6.0% -50 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Of the 13% EPS growth that consensus currently expects for MSCI USA in 2017, around a third comes from commodities (despite these sectors accounting for only around 7% of total earnings), 20% from tech and a further 15% from financials, making these sectors the key drivers of the earnings outlook. Figure 22: US earnings and earnings growth by sector Figure 23: The energy sector is the largest contributor to EPS growth on consensus forecasts US sectors: contribution to 2017 EPS growth MSCI USA sectors Energy EPS growth 2016 2017 absolute growth (%) -19.1 36.9 3.9 28.2 Materials 5.4 10.6 3.1 3.4 Industrials 5.6 9.3 9.3 4.2 Cons disc. 31.3 12.4 12.0 9.3 Cons stap. -4.1 13.4 8.4 5.3 Healthcare 6.1 5.5 16.4 12.1 Financials -14.0 15.4 18.5 15.3 IT -3.2 17.7 21.9 20.8 Telecom 16.1 7.7 3.2 1.2 Utilities -9.3 5.7 3.2 0.3 Market 0.2 12.8 Market ex financials 1.8 12.9 Market ex res and fins 6.5 8.5 Market ex resources 5.2 8.8 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Telecom 1% Contribution to 2017 EPS Industrials 4% Materials 4% Utilities 0% Cons stap. 5% Energy 28% Cons disc. 10% Healthcare 12% Financials 15% IT 21% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 24 2 December 2016 ■ A modest recovery in nominal GDP relative to nominal wage growth As a result of both stronger growth and higher inflation, US nominal GDP growth – which had been very weak – is likely to accelerate, in our view. Although wage growth should also rise as the labour market tightens further, we do not see wages picking up by as much as nominal GDP; our economists forecast 2017 nominal GDP growth of 4.3%, which is above the previous cycle's high in wage growth. A widening of the gap between nominal GDP and wage growth, as shown below, would be positive for profit growth. Figure 25: …and the annual change in the nominal wage/GDP gap has tended to correlate with profit growth Figure 24: The gap between nominal US GDP growth and wage growth has closed as nominal GDP growth has slowed… 10% 60% 50% 8% 10% NIPA profits, % chg Y/Y 8% Annual change in wage/GDP gap, rhs 40% 6% 6% 30% 4% 4% 20% 2% 10% 0% 0% -2% Gap between the two Nominal GDP growth Nominal wage growth -6% 85 87 90 92 95 97 0% -2% -10% % change Y/Y -4% 2% 99 02 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 04 07 09 11 14 16 -20% -4% -30% -6% -40% 1983 -8% 1987 1991 1995 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Typically, at the end of the cycle, unemployment can overshoot the level consistent with full employment by about 1pp. This allows a longer business cycle. Global Equity Strategy 25 2 December 2016 Figure 26: In previous business cycles, the unemployment rate has been able to overshoot the NAIRU 6 Deviation of US unemployment rate from CBO NAIRU 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ US corporate tax rates falling The specifics of President-elect Trump's corporate tax proposals are difficult to pin down, but the headlines are punchy: a 35% federal corporate tax rate falling to just 15%. However, this potentially dramatic cut in the statutory tax rate will not be matched by a similarly large fall in the effective tax rate. Using data from HOLT, it is clear that a revenue-exposure weighted statutory tax rate has had a far closer fit with the effective tax rate paid by US corporates than the US statutory rate. Even assuming the Federal Statutory tax rate falls by 20p.p., Figure 28 below suggests that the effective rate would be c.24% (in line with the global average), which would suggest an 8.6% rise in EPS. If the effective tax rate were to fall by half this amount, then the EPS boost would be just half this; c.4.3%. Global Equity Strategy 26 2 December 2016 Figure 27: The US corporate tax rate is high within a global context Figure 28: Donald Trump's proposed tax cuts suggest the effective tax rate should fall by 6p.p., to 24% US corporate tax rate Median effective rate Effective corporate tax rate, % 35 60 Blended statutory rate (60% US, 40% global), with projection 30 50 25 40 20 30 15 20 10 5 10 0 Japan US France Germany Global UK 0 Hong Kong 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Credit Suisse HOLT Source: Credit Suisse HOLT Clearly, there is an offset to this positive, namely the recent rise in US corporate bond yields and risk of a further rise. The boost to EPS from a fall in the effective tax rate to 24% (up 8.6% as noted above, all other things equal), for example, would halve were this to be accompanied by a rise in corporate bond yields of 100bps (we note that the corporate bond yield is up 35bps from election night already). That is not to sound too negative: if President-elect Trump succeeds in cutting corporate taxation, it will boost EPS. The magnitude of this boost, however, is likely to be in mid to low single digit percentages rather than anything more significant. Figure 29: In many instances, a modest rise in yields would offset a significant proportion of the boost to profits from a reduction in taxes. US EPS change under different effective tax rate / corporate bond yield assumptions Increase in corporate bond yield Effectiv e tax rate 20% 22% 24% 26% 28% 30% 0bps 14.3% 11.4% 8.6% 5.7% 2.9% 0.0% 50bps 11.9% 9.1% 6.3% 3.5% 0.7% -2.1% 100bps 9.6% 6.9% 4.1% 1.4% -1.4% -4.1% 150bps 7.3% 4.6% 1.9% -0.8% -3.5% -6.2% 200bps 4.9% 2.3% -0.3% -3.0% -5.6% -8.2% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 27 2 December 2016 ■ Margins – excluding tech – are already low To some extent, US margins have been flattered by the tech sector. Gross margins excluding tech are already quite low. And when it comes to tech, we believe that very high capitalised R&D to sales (in other words, significant barriers to entry) allows higher profitability and margins to be maintained. Figure 30: Tech is a significant driver of US gross margins… US non financials ebitda margin 18% 17% 15% Global IT Svs 20% 2015 CFROI 19% Figure 31: …as its high barriers to entry lead to high profitability Software Int. S/w 16% 15% 10% Semis Tech H/W Cons Dur Cons SVs 14% Media Retailing Comm. Eqpt Cap Gds 13% 5% 12% Inc tech Ex tech 1996 2000 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Autos Capitalized R&D as % of sales Materials 11% 1991 Elec. Eqpt 2008 2012 2016 0% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We note that it is only the US that has high margins relative to historical norms. In the case of Europe and GEM, margins are below their norm. In light of the more favourable factors discussed above, we slightly revise our US EPS growth figure for 2017 to 6.0%, from 3.3%. Global Equity Strategy 28 2 December 2016 Figure 32: We look for 6% S&P 500 earnings growth in 2017… Figure 33: …which is 5.5p.p. below consensus 50% Model inputs, % chg US Real GDP Coeff. t-value 2016E 2017E 3.3 3.0 1.7% 2.3% Non-fin. corporate GDP deflator 5.8 2.6 1.4% 2.6% Total costs (ULC+NULC)* -7.0 -5.8 1.9% 2.3% USD trade-weighted -0.3 -1.5 0.0% 3.0% *ULC= Unit labour costs, NULC (nonlabor unit costs = 53% depr./13% interest/ 34% taxes) 40% S&P 500 EPS, y/y% Model 30% 2016/17E IBES consensus 20% 10% Model output - S&P 500 operating EPS 0% IBES consensus $117.0 $130.4 Credit Suisse $116.9 $123.9 IBES consensus, y/y% 1.3% 11.5% Credit Suisse, y/y% 1.2% 6.0% Model specifications RSQ 0.71 Intercept 0.00 -10% -20% 2016/17E CS -30% -40% 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse estimates Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 2. A move from NIRP to fiscal easing and central bankers allowing inflation overshoots As we have discussed previously, we are seeing a clear-cut policy change, with policymakers moving away from negative interest rate policies and towards fiscal easing. The former favours deflation hedges (i.e. bonds), whereas the latter favours inflation hedges (i.e. equities). We believe negative interest rate policies are increasingly regarded by policymakers as counterproductive. They are seen to cause asset bubbles, create 'zombie capital' (by allowing unproductive or loss-making firms to sustain themselves on cheap borrowing), push up saving rates, hurt the profitability of banks, and increase the inequality of wealth. By skewing gains towards asset owners (who tend to have higher savings ratios), QE has likely placed upward pressure on the aggregate savings ratio and generated disappointing nominal GDP growth, compared to a policy targeted at the less well off. As these factors have come to be recognised by policymakers, they have made more public their move away from NIRP and QE. Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen pointedly did not mention negative rates as a policy weapon at Jackson Hole when she discussed the policy tools available in a recession, while the Governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, has said he is "not a fan of negative rates". In the case of Japan, NIRP has brought political challenges. In July, the largest bank – MUFJ – stopped being a primary dealer in the JGB market, highlighting the pressure on banks from having just over half of their assets in JGBs or deposits. We believe that this was a signal that the banks, which are important funding contributors to the ruling LDP, could slow down their political funding. Meanwhile, there is a growing recognition of the potential utility of greater fiscal spending. In Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Canada has implemented a $60bn fiscal programme. In the US, President-elect Donald Trump tax cuts have been costed at c.20% of GDP over 10 years by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, while his infrastructure spending plan (on which his transition website places a number of $550bn) Global Equity Strategy 29 2 December 2016 is worth a further 3% of GDP. This fiscal policy could be even more simulative if there were enhanced investment tax credits at the expense of reducing interest tax deductibility and some US $2.5 of US cash repatriated from overseas finds its way into GDP (via buybacks and consumption or via investment). In the euro area, Mario Draghi has noted that "countries that have fiscal space should use it". Jean-Claude Juncker's infrastructure plan has expanded in size to €620bn from €375bn, while Spain and Portugal were not fined or penalised for missing their deficit targets. In the UK, the recent Autumn Statement saw the announcement of a £23bn National Productivity Investment Fund over the next five years, along with commitments to spend a further £5.7bn on social infrastructure and R&D. Lastly, in Japan, the secretary general of the LDP, Toshihiro Nikai, now favours abandoning the balanced budget amendment and if Prime Minister Shinzo Abe were to call a snap election, we think some further fiscal easing could be expected. We feel that populism is spreading and expect this to result in more fiscal spending and higher inflation (via protectionism, more stringent immigration and onshoring). This again means investors are likely to buy inflation hedges. On top of this, we believe that central banks, on the whole, will be prone to tighten too late (and risk inflation overshooting) rather than too early (and risk deflation), and thus end up potentially risking an asset bubble: There are three good examples of this. i. The BoJ has said that it would allow inflation to overshoot and, moreover, its focus now appears to be on institutionalising an upward-sloping yield curve to incentivise banks to lend. ii. The Swedish Riksbank has continued with QE of c.6% of GDP despite nominal GDP growth of around 4% and house price inflation of 8%. iii. Janet Yellen commented on 15 October that "if strong economic conditions can partially reverse supply-side damage after it has occurred, then policymakers may want to aim at being more accommodative during recoveries than would be called for under the traditional view that supply is largely independent of demand". 3. Equities are an inflation hedge… As an inflation hedge, equities tend to re-rate to an average multiple of 20x when inflation rises to between 2% and 3%, with this band being something of a sweet spot for valuations; rising inflation only becomes challenging for equities beyond 3%. This sensitivity of equities to rising inflation is of particular importance, as recently the correlation between inflation breakevens and equity multiples has risen to a multi-year high. Global Equity Strategy 30 2 December 2016 Figure 34: When inflation rises from low levels, equities tend to re-rate 22 20 12m trailing P/E 18.8 Figure 35: The correlation between equity multiples and inflation expectations in the US is near a decadal high 0.8 S&P 500 average P/E, 1871 to present 12m fwd P/E 17.0 18 12m rolling correlation between US 10-yr BEI and 12-m fwd PE 0.6 0.4 16 0.2 14 0 12 -0.2 10 -3% or -3 to - -2 to - -1 to below 2% 1% 0% 0 to +1% +1 to +2 to +3 to +4 to +5 to 6% or +2% +3% +4% +5% +6% above -0.4 -0.6 2000 Inflation range shown Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Currently, the implied 5-year, 5-year forward breakeven inflation rate is 2.0%, slightly below core inflation of 2.2%. We believe that the 5y/5y forward breakeven rate could easily rise to 2.5% or slightly further. However, we see little chance of inflation rising much above 3% on a sustained basis – something that the market seems to believe as well; 3% strike price inflation caps, which pay the holder if inflation rises above 3%, remain cheap, whereas 1% and 2% strike price caps have recently increased substantially in price. Figure 36: Despite having risen sharply, 5y5y breakeven inflation rates remain below current core inflation Figure 37: Currently, above-3% inflation remains seen as unlikely US 5-yr inflation cap 3.0 700 1% 2% 3% 600 2.5 500 2.0 400 1.5 300 200 US 5y5y breakeven inflation 1.0 Core CPI, y/y 0.5 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2013 2014 2015 100 2016 0 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Source: The BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse research 31 2 December 2016 Historically, equities have tended to outperform bonds at times of accelerating US CPI inflation. We feel that, in most circumstances, equities will outperform bonds in 2017. Figure 38: Accelerating inflation tends to support the performance of global equities relative to bonds 60% 7 6 40% 5 4 20% 3 0% 2 1 -20% 0 -40% Global equity to bond ratio, % chg Y/Y -1 US CPI, % chg Y/Y -2 -60% -3 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. …and institutions or retail are not positioned for inflation Since the market low in 2009, the only significant net buyer of equities has been the corporate sector. Institutions have actually been net sellers, whereas households have bought almost no equity on a net basis (just over 1.2% of market cap cumulatively) and thus both retail and pension fund weightings in equities are low. The extent of this cautious positioning becomes clear when looking at global fund flows: since 2008, data from EPFR show $1.4trn flows into bond funds, while equity funds have actually seen outflows. Global Equity Strategy 32 2 December 2016 Figure 39: Since the market low, the only net buyer in the US has been the corporate sector… 18% Non-financial corporates Rest of world 14% Households Institutions 1,430 1,500 Cumulative buying/selling of US equities, % Market Cap 16% Figure 40: …and overall, global investors have not been net buyers of equities 1,300 12% 1,100 10% Flows into global funds, USD bn 900 8% Equities Bonds 700 6% 4% 494 500 2% 0% 300 -2% 100 308 141121 93 76 49 -4% -6% -100 -8% -300 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 -50 Since Jan 2008 -10% 2009 -9 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -14 -93 2012 2013 2014 2015 Last six months Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research On EPFR data, year-to-date we have seen $120bn of outflows from global equity funds, the second-largest year-to-date value of outflows since 2008, against nearly $160bn of inflows into global bond funds. It is quite astonishing to see equity mutual fund outflows at very extreme levels – currently more extreme than even in 2008 (though some of this reflects investors selling mutual funds to buy ETFs). Figure 42: …and net selling of equity mutual fund shares has surpassed 2008 levels Figure 41: This year has seen some of the most significant outflows from equities since 2008… 2008 2013 Cumulative flows into global equity funds, $bn 2009 2010 2011 2014 2015 2016 2012 300 30 US net new cash to all equity mutual funds ($bn, 12mma) 25 20 15 200 10 100 5 0 0 -5 -100 -10 -200 -15 -20 -300 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 95 96 98 99 01 02 04 05 07 08 10 11 13 14 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 33 2 December 2016 Pension fund weightings in equities are very low across many regions, and for US retail investors equity weightings (as a share of financial assets) are close to normal levels. Figure 44: …and households do not hold a significant share of their wealth in equities Figure 43: US pension funds' equity weightings remain well below average levels… 50% 33% US private pension funds, equities as % of invested assets US Households directly held equities, % of total financial assets 45% 28% 40% 23% 35% 18% 30% 13% 25% 20% 1961 8% 1970 1979 1988 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1997 2006 2016 1945 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As a result, investors are implicitly overweight bonds (deflation hedges) and not equities (inflation hedges) at a time when both policy and the macro environment suggest inflation is likely to accelerate. We see two potential catalysts for a switch in asset allocation: First, a further rise in bond yields – reminding investors of the potential for capital losses on their bond holdings – could catalyse something of a switch from bonds into equities. As yields rise, equity fund flows tend to pick up relative to those into bond funds, with just over half of all US equity fund flows over the past 10 years being explained by a combination of equity and bond returns. In addition, retail investors tend to follow momentum and thus buy equities when they perform well. Households' buying of government bonds is also dominated by momentum: buying accelerates as yields fall, and vice versa. Global Equity Strategy 34 2 December 2016 Figure 45: Just over half of US equity fund flows are explained by market performance relative to bonds… Figure 46: …meaning that equity mutual funds see inflows when the market is expensive, and vice versa 2% 50 1% 40 0% 30 22 20 20 10 18 0 16 -10 14 -20 12 -30 10 -1% -2% -3% -4% 3m anualized flows as % of market cap in US mutual funds, all equities -5% Regression (equity & bond returns; R2=54%) -6% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2014 2015 2016 US net new cash to all equity mutual funds ($bn, 3mma) US market 12m fwd PE (rhs) -40 26 24 8 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Second, as bond yields rise, US actuaries allow pension funds and life companies to take on more risk (because the value of their liabilities falls). 5. The equity risk premium is still modestly high (and can overshoot) The equity risk premium (the additional discount rate on top of the risk free rate that is required to make the NPV of expected future dividends equal to the market) is still high, at 6.4%. Even on our below-consensus earnings estimates, the ERP remains high in a historical context, at 5.3% versus a long-run average of 4.2%. While we can debate whether the ERP is overstated because the terminal growth rate assumed is too high, it is unambiguous that the risk-free component of the discount rate (the long-dated bond yield) is unusually low relative to nominal GDP (the rate at which revenues should grow) and this drives the elevated ERP. Global Equity Strategy 35 2 December 2016 Figure 47: The gap between G4 nominal GDP growth and bond yields remains significant 10% G4 aggregate government bond yield 8% G4 nominal GDP growth 6% 4% 2% 0% -2% -4% 1990 1994 1998 2003 2007 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research If the bond yield is rising because inflation expectations are rising, then the long-term growth rate should rise by as much as the discount rate and thus the ERP would be little changed. So far, about half of the rise in the Treasury yield since its low in July has been due to a rise in inflation expectations. Figure 48: On our earnings forecasts, the ERP is 5.3%, versus 6.4% on consensus numbers 12mth fwd EPS 12-24mth fwd EPS growth 3-5yr fwd EPS growth ERP ERP on 12m forward consensus EPS estimates $129.8 11.7% 12.3% 6.4% ERP on our EPS forecasts $123.3 6.0% 8.0% 5.3% $58 $49 6.4% 6.4% 5.4% 4.8% 4.2% US ERP $58 risk premium Our forecast foryear 2009average EPS ofequity $49 Historical 110Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Our model for the warranted ERP, which depends on lead indicators and credit spreads, is consistent with a 1.2pp fall in the ERP (using consensus numbers) and a marginal decline if we calculate the ERP on the basis of our earnings estimates. Global Equity Strategy 36 2 December 2016 Figure 49: The gap between the consensus and warranted equity risk premium has narrowed sharply Figure 50: Our model, based on the output gap and credit spreads, implies a warranted ERP of 5.2% US ERP on consensus EPS 11 Model inputs Coeff. t-value Current US Warranted ERP US lead indicator - dev. from trend -0.38 -9.6 1.15 9 BAA Corp. bond spread 1.48 12.9 2.63 7 Model output 5 3 1 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research US warranted ERP (consensus, operating) 5.2 Current ERP on consensus EPS 6.4 ERP on Credit Suisse EPS 5.3 Post-1991 average 5.3 RSQ 0.70 St. error of estimate 1.13 Intercept 1.8 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research There are three main reasons why we think that the equity risk premium can end up falling further than perhaps our models say. i. The equity risk premium, at 5.3% (on our earnings numbers), is still considerably above its long run average of 4.2%. ii. We think that, as is the case in most bull markets, the ERP can overshoot its fair value'. Historically, markets have peaked on a very low equity risk premium – 2.4% on average. While we do not expect the ERP to fall to such low levels again, it is illustrative of the tendency for equities to overshoot fair value when markets peak. Figure 51: Markets typically peak on a far more depressed ERP US ERP proxy until 1987 (earnings yield x 45% payout ratio - bond yields + 10-year trailing nominal GDP growth) 15% US ERP on consensus EPS Equity market peaks 10% 5% 0% -5% 1871 1882 1893 1904 1915 1926 1938 1949 1960 1971 1982 1993 2005 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 37 2 December 2016 iii. Other factors suggest a lower 'warranted' ERP. Our model for the ERP largely looks at cyclical factors to explain the riskiness of equities versus bonds (i.e. credit spreads, ISM and PMI new orders). Below we consider other cyclical factors and structural factors which all suggest that the 'warranted' ERP should be lower. We discuss each in turn below. ■ Equity to bond volatility As a proxy on the drawdown risk from equity investing, we look at the ratio of realised equity to bond volatility. This has fallen significantly over the past quarter, reversing its earlier rise, and suggests that the equity risk premium should fall. ■ Earnings uncertainty As a proxy on earnings uncertainty, we look at the dispersion of analysts' earnings estimates around their mean. Despite recent political developments having contributed to rising macro uncertainty, perceived earnings uncertainty is still particularly low, at near the minimum seen over the past two years, and suggests the ERP can fall further. Figure 52: The fall in equity volatility relative to that of bonds suggests a lower ERP ERP on consensus EPS 15 Ratio of equity to bond volatility, 1y (rhs) 13 11 Figure 53: The level of dispersion among analysts' earnings estimates suggests a lower ERP 10 18 9 16 8 14 7 12 6 10 5 8 4 6 3 4 2 2 1988 9 S&P 500, stdev of consensus EPS estimates / 12m fwd EPS (%) ERP on consensus EPS 12 Warranted ERP 10 8 7 5 3 1 2004 14 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 6 4 2 0 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Public- to corporate-sector leverage In the developed world, governments' leverage has risen significantly since 2008 and is now particularly high relative to corporate sector leverage. The solution to this is to either: default on government bonds (worse for bonds than equities); tax the creditor (worse for equities than bonds); or tax the creditor indirectly via a sustained period of depressed real rates (this is good for bonds until real rates fall to the required level – as they now have, as we show in the bond section). The leaves equity returns less repressed than bond returns. ■ Minority shareholder risk One of the highest risks of investing in equities over a very long period of time (i.e. 40 years) is minority shareholder risk. This is often overlooked but we feel that the minority shareholder risk has been greatly reduced. This risk comes down to three elements: Global Equity Strategy 38 2 December 2016 a. Corporate governance and whether the interests of management and shareholders are aligned. Aggressive M&A (underperforming managements lose their jobs and are replaced) or strong non-executive boards (who fire underperforming management) and executive share options have all improved significantly (as we show later on in the case of Japan), yet this reduced 'dilution' risk is not reflected in a lower ERP. b. Accounting visibility and information flow is much better, meaning minority shareholders today know much more about the state of the corporates that they are buying. c. There is now much higher liquidity in equity markets and transaction costs are far lower than historically was the case. Moreover, the first two of these shareholder-related factors are helped by a structural rise in ESG-related investment mandates. Considering all these additional factors, the ERP could indeed fall to much lower levels – around 1.5p.p. lower than currently – as we show in the table below. Figure 54: G4 government leverage has risen significantly as corporates de-levered 140% Figure 55: Our equity risk premium proxies suggest the ERP can overshoot the warranted G4: debt to GDP by sector 130% Governments 120% Non-financial corporates 110% Risks 100% Proxy Implied ERP ISM/Credit spreads 5.2% Volatility risk Ratio of equity to bond volatility 3.5% Earnings uncertainty Dispersion of earnings estimates 2.3% Cycle risk 90% 80% Economic uncertainty risk Policy Uncertainty Indicator Safety of corporate vs govt balance sheet Corporate vs government balance sheets 70% Average 'warranted' ERP 4.7% sub 4% 3.9% 60% 50% 40% 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The big picture is that the cost of equity is still quite high in both the US and Europe, while the discount rate on other assets – corporate or government debt – is low. In our view, that leaves equities as the least expensive asset class in a world of expensive assets and, as above, a hedge against the form of risk that we believe is most likely: that policymakers switch to more inflationary policies. Global Equity Strategy 39 2 December 2016 Figure 56: The cost of equity has been largely unchanged, despite significant falls in the discount rate on other assets Figure 57: The cost of equity in the US is not far below its 20-year average US cost of equity 20 US IG yield US 10yr TIPS US 10yr govt US High yield bond yield yield 0.00 18 US 10-year bond yield 16 US cost of equity 14 -0.20 US IG yield 12 -0.40 10 -0.60 8 6 -0.80 4 2 -1.00 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -1.20 Standard deviation below respective 20 year norm Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research There clearly remain concerns that equities are expensive in absolute terms. As we have shown before, the main proxies of absolute value suggest a fair value of c.1,700 for the S&P 500, as detailed in the table below. Figure 58: In absolute terms, equities are expensive Current level St.dev. from avg/trend S&P value if indicators were at long term levels Upside / Downside Value Tobin's Q (EV/replacement value) 0.98 0.99 1,852 Downside Market Cap to GDP 1.19 1.59 1,450 Downside Price to trend EPS* 22.5 -0.03 2,235 Upside Shiller PE* 26.6 1.28 1,420 Downside 0.96 1,710 Downside Valuation indicator Average Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research However, this does not mean that the market should fall 20%. Rather, it means that the market is c.30% expensive in absolute terms, and that long-term real returns ought to be around 20% below their historical norm of 6.9%; i.e. in real terms returns should be c.5.5%. We would note that in the past 40 years, the forward P/E has had better predictive ability over future returns than the Shiller P/E. Currently, the forward P/E ratio is consistent with 10-year real returns of c.3.5% pa. Global Equity Strategy 40 2 December 2016 Figure 59: The current forward P/E suggests 10-year real returns of c.3.5% pa… Subsequent 10-yr real returns S&P 500 12m fwd PE, rhs, inverted 17% 8 10 12% Subsequent 5-yr real returns Shiller PE, rhs, inverted 30% 0 5 20% 10 12 14 7% 16 2% 18 15 10% 20 0% 25 30 -10% 35 20 -3% 22 -8% 1986 Figure 60: …although the Shiller P/E, which has had only a loose relationship with forward returns, suggests returns will be lower than this 1991 1996 2001 2006 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2011 2016 24 40 -20% 45 -30% 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 50 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research While the Shiller P/E (CAPE) at current levels is associated with below-average returns, 47% of the time the CAPE has been at current levels, nominal returns have been above 5% over the subsequent year (and 27% of the time over the subsequent three years). 6. Excess liquidity suggests a re-rating Global liquidity conditions remain supportive for equities, in our view. We look at growth in money supply versus money demand (using the Bank of England's methodology; i.e. the differential between nominal M1 and GDP growth) and, on this basis, excess liquidity suggests a c.25% re-rating of equities. The interesting dynamic, though, is that if Japanese investors buy more US bonds (because of the higher yield and steeper curve) and the BoJ continues to target a zero JGB yield, then the BoJ could actually accelerate its rate of QQE, potentially making the liquidity outlook more favourable still. Indeed, at the most recent BoJ meeting, the central bank committed to buying unlimited amounts of JGBs at a fixed yield, showing that – in spite of rates rising globally – the BoJ is determined to cap the JGB yield at zero. Global Equity Strategy 41 2 December 2016 7. The ratio of equity to bond returns is not discounting an acceleration in growth The ratio of equity to bond returns is no longer discounting a recovery in lead indicators, but rather a modest deceleration. However, as we discuss later, global growth is likely to surprise positively in 2017, in our judgement. Figure 61: Global excess liquidity is consistent with a re-rating of global equities of around 25% OECD excess liquidity (3m lead) 18 Global equities, 12m % change in PE (3mma, rhs) 16 95% 14 50% Global equities vs global government bonds, total returns (6m % chg) 40% OECD leading indicator (6m % chg, rhs) 3% 2% 30% 1% 20% 12 65% 10 8 35% 6 10% 0% 0% -1% -10% 4 5% 2 0 -25% -20% -2% -30% -3% -40% -2 -4 1983 Figure 62: Global equity to bond returns suggest a modest fall in macro momentum -55% 1988 1993 1997 2002 2007 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -50% 1997 -4% 1999 2002 2005 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Typically, any rise in US macro surprises – as we would expect to occur – sees the S&P 500 rally, historically. Figure 63: A rise in US macro surprises is typically associated with the S&P 500 rallying… Figure 64: …and, particularly over the past 18 months, there has been a close correlation between economic surprises and the S&P 40 30 110 20 2300 S&P 500 30 US macro surprises, rhs 20 60 10 2200 10 0 -40 0 2100 -10 -90 2000 US macro economic surprises -190 -30 1900 -40 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2014 2015 2016 -20 -40 -50 S&P 500, 3m % change, rhs -240 2008 -10 -30 -20 -140 10 1800 -60 Jul-15 Sep-15 Nov-15 Jan-16 Mar-16 May-16 Jul-16 Sep-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 42 2 December 2016 8. No clear excess in equities Normally the end of a bull market sees some form of excess in terms of funds flow, valuation, or of a particular investing fad. For example, excess valuation (e.g. the Nifty Fifty stocks peaked on 42x earnings in 1972 and the TMT stocks on 60x earnings in early 2000) or clear-cut excess leverage in the financial sector (as in the case of 2007/08). This time around, there is no similarly clear excess, although we would acknowledge that corporate leverage is becoming high in the US. Above all, there has been no excess in sentiment. If anything, quite the opposite: sentiment toward equities – at least in recent years – has been fairly cautious, with many investors expressing some degree of scepticism over the market's ability to make new highs. Our most recent investor survey, conducted in October, suggests that many clients see limited upside for equities. Figure 65: Most investors do not see much upside for equities 2300 Where do you see the S&P 500 at the end of…? -1% 2205 2185 2200 -3% 2132 2100 2000 1900 1800 1700 Current 2016 2017 Source: Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy Investor Survey (October), Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 9. Could disruption actually be good for equities? Disruptive technology's impact on certain sectors within the equity market is clearly a negative; disruption means increased business model risk and shorter asset lives. However, we wonder whether – at least from a macro perspective – disruption could be positive for equities in aggregate, as it: Global Equity Strategy i. Creates excess savings: the benefits of disruptive technology generally accrue to the wealthy – or, alternatively, owners of capital – who tend to have higher savings ratios; ii. Increases the marginal productivity of capital: technological advances and the growth of the sharing economy (which raises asset utilisation rates) increase the productivity of capital, and thus the efficiency of investment, meaning less investment is needed. The chart below illustrates that the business investment share of GDP in the US has remained around 'normal' levels, despite the profit share of GDP, in 2014, having steadily risen to very elevated levels. 43 2 December 2016 Figure 66: The corporate profit share of GDP is particularly elevated, against just 'normal' levels of business investment Share of US GDP Profits Net business investment, with post-1990 avg. 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% -2% 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Both points (i) and (ii) lead to excess savings and generally that is good for financial asset prices. iii. Reduces equilibrium unemployment rates: technologies such as LinkedIn and job-switching apps mean it is now much easier to match job offers with applications. This, combined with the reduced demand for labour as automation becomes more widespread, should lower the full employment rate, extending the cycle and, at the margin, reducing wage (and thus margin) pressures; and iv. Keeps headline inflation low: above all, disruptive technology is disinflationary, which allows central banks to keep monetary policy loose. 10. The Trump effect: more positive for equities than not The equity market has taken the view that the election of Donald Trump is a small net positive (with the S&P 500 up by around 3% since the election). In general, we would agree with this, but note that the risks remain high. There appear to be three principal economic risks associated with a Trump presidency. ■ Immigration The proposed deportation of 11.4 million illegal immigrants would not only sharply reduce the US unemployment rate, it would also reduce the trend rate of growth of US GDP growth down to c1.5%. In addition, concerns will be elevated in specialist areas such as tech, which employs 85,000 workers on H-1B visas. However, we think the stance on immigration will be toned down from the campaign. President Obama deported 2.7 million illegal immigrants with criminal records and we suspect there will be a tougher pointsbased system under Trump. Moreover, both Houses of Congress are in favour of immigration according to our Public Policy Team. ■ Protectionism Clearly there is concern that Donald Trump's policies could lead to an all-out trade war, a development that would be bad for growth and profits. We believe that the practicalities will again mean that the reality is greatly toned down, however. President Obama, at one Global Equity Strategy 44 2 December 2016 point, threatened to pull out of NAFTA and anti-dumping duties can take a very long time to implement; we note that, in some cases, high anti-dumping duties are already in place (222% in the case of steel). Moreover, most of Trump's advisors are businessmen and are likely to be critical of protectionism. The Vice President-elect, Mike Pence, who is in charge of the transition team, is an advocate of free trade and travelled to China during his term as Governor of Indiana. We think that the bottom line is that the interlinkages are now so great that starting a trade war becomes much harder. For example, the US has five-times higher FDI in China than China has in the US; as a result, corporate America potentially stands to suffer much more directly from a trade war than in the past, with over 44% of S&P 500 revenues coming from overseas. Also, the primary consequence of reshoring would be higher prices to the US consumer. ■ Antitrust rulings President-elect Trump has previously stated that one of the largest tech companies in the US has "a huge antitrust problem". The reality, however, is that in order to win an antitrust ruling not only does one have to prove market dominance, but also abuse of market power that results in higher prices to the consumer. The latter two might be very hard to prove in the case of the internet-related companies. The potential positives ■ More or less, all of Trump's policies are inflationary These include immigration, protectionism, an increase in government spending and potentially leaning on the Fed to raise rates less quickly than would have previously planned (Donald Trump needs to appoint two Fed governors in 2017 and a Chair of the FOMC by January 2018). This is happening at a time when investors are structurally very underweight equities – the inflation hedge – and overweight bonds – the deflation hedge. ■ Improving infrastructure Donald Trump has committed to spending $550bn on infrastructure over five years. This should be a net positive as it boosts not only GDP but also productivity against a backdrop where the average age of US roads is 27 years. ■ Fiscal easing Trump's tax plans have been costed at c20% of GDP over 10 years by the Committee for a Federally Responsible Budget. The last time there was a Republican President and Congress was under George W. Bush when substantial fiscal easing occurred. ■ De-regulation There have been strong hints that there will be a lower regulatory burden on energy, pharmaceuticals, and above all financials (where Trump hints that he will repeal DoddFrank and looks to ease the new 'fiduciary duty'). ■ Repatriation of overseas cash Allowing the $750bn of offshore cash to be bought onshore with a probable tax rate of c.10% would in all likelihood result in an increase in buybacks helping both EPS and corporate net buying. ■ Reduce the corporate tax rate Trump has talked about the reducing the headline tax rate from 35% to 15% (against an effective tax rate of 30%). We suspect, as discussed, the fall in the tax rate would be much Global Equity Strategy 45 2 December 2016 less than the headline number (with a likely loss of many tax credits). This could boost growth and earnings. It is possible that investment tax credits could increase relative to other credits (such as interest tax deductibility) and that would encourage more investment. What worries us about equities? Despite these positives, we see a set of challenges for equities, and thus stick to our benchmark weighting. We discuss each of the main issues in turn: 1. The risk of government yields rising 'too high' The biggest risk we see facing equities in 2017 is bond yields rising to a level at which: i) the relative valuation case for equities becomes undermined; ii) rates rises impact on profitability; or iii) rates rise to a level that significantly undermines corporate net buying. Since 1999, the correlation between bond yields and equities has been positive, with equities tending to benefit from any rise in bond yields. On almost all occasions when the US 10-year yield has risen (by a median of 90bps over a period of 4 months) the S&P 500 has pushed higher, although, generally, larger rises in yields have been associated with lower equity returns. Figure 68: …with equities rising on almost all occasions since 2000 when bond yields have risen Figure 67: Historically, a positive correlation between yields and equities has tended to hold… 40 1.50 30 40% 2012 35% 1.00 30% 20 10 0 0.00 -10 -0.50 -20 -1.00 -30 S&P 500 % change 0.50 25% 2011 20% 2002 2009 15% 10% 2006 5% 2004 2015 -1.50 3 month % change in the S&P 500 -50 2008 3 month change in the US 10 year yield (bp, rhs) 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 2016 -2.00 -5% 2008 2004 0% -40 2010 2001 2005 2008 2003 2001 2000 -10% 50 75 100 125 150 US 10-year yield increase (bps) 175 200 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Quantifying the level of yields at which equities become challenged is difficult, but we examine the three potential channels in turn: ■ Relative valuations becoming challenged On our below-consensus earnings numbers, US equities can accommodate a further 10bps rise in the US 10-year yield (i.e. to 2.5%) before the equity risk premium becomes 'fair value'. But there are three reasons for believing that the bond yield can rise closer to 3.0-3.5% before the rise in bond yields becomes a problem for equities: i. Global Equity Strategy The factors that we tend not to model in our formal warranted ERP model (such as realised equity to bond volatility, the variance in earnings estimates or minority 46 2 December 2016 shareholder rights) would imply the warranted ERP should be 1-1.5% lower than our model suggests. ii. All markets tend to overshoot fair value. If this were to happen to the degree which has occurred usually, that would imply an ability to accommodate a bond yield of c.4%. iii. Although we treat consensus numbers very cautiously, on consensus earnings forecasts, the actual ERP is much higher and suggests that a 140bps rise in yields (to 3.7%) can be absorbed by the ERP without the cost of equity increasing. Another way of considering relative valuations is the yield spread of US Treasuries over equities. As the rate of inflation rises, fixed income investors' required yield premium over equities widens. The simple chart below suggests that, on current inflation and dividend yield, the 10-year bond yield can rise by about 1% before it becomes a valuation impediment. This would imply a bond yield of c.3.3%. Figure 69: The acceleration in CPI inflation suggests a 1ppt widening of the yield premium 10-year Treasuries offer over US equities 5.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 1.0 0.0 -1.0 -1.0 -3.0 -2.0 12 month change -5.0 -3.0 CPI inflation -4.0 UST yield less DY, rhs -7.0 -5.0 1976 1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Most of this analysis suggests that the time to worry is when yields hit 3.0-3.5%. ■ Higher yields damaging profitability The main negative side-effect for equities from rising yields is a rising interest charge, which not only dents profitability (as the interest charge rises) but can also undermine the FCF yield enhancement of buybacks as the gap between the FCF yield and the corporate bond yield closes. All else equal, the chart below suggests that each 100bp rise in the BAA yield would raise the interest burden (expressed as a percentage of sales) by 0.35pp, or, equivalently, would reduce PBT by 4%. Global Equity Strategy 47 2 December 2016 Figure 70: Each 100bps rise in the BAA yield suggests a 4% fall in PBT Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Turning to the impact of rising rates on the top line, the OECD's global model estimates that a 100bps rise in US short-term rates reduces domestic nominal GDP growth by c.0.4%, while the effect on non-US global growth is more muted, at c.0.2%. Assuming a parallel yield curve shift, using the geographical revenue exposure for the S&P 500 (55% domestic, 45% international), and proxying revenue growth by nominal GDP growth, we calculate the revenue impact as minus 0.32% per 100bps increase in interest rates. Based on the historical beta of net profit to revenue growth outside of recessions (4x), this would imply a 1.3% decline in profits. Thus, combining these factors gives a 5.3% hit to profits for each 100bps rise in yields (although for sensitivity analyses within this outlook, we use purely the interest charge impact). ■ Corporate buying slows meaningfully We believe that the key driver of buybacks is the degree to which they are earnings enhancing (the gap between the earnings yield and the corporate bond yield). In fact, since 2012, buybacks have accounted for around a third of EPS growth, with the remaining two-thirds being 'organic'. If corporate bond yields were to rise by 150-200bps, the gap between the free cash flow and corporate bond yield would fall to below its average 2004-2007 level, which we think would result in a meaningful slowing of buybacks. Below we assume uniform increases in corporate bond yields across the credit risk spectrum (i.e. driven by an increase in the risk free rate, but not the credit risk premium) and calculate the proportion of the market which would still have a free cash flow yield in excess of the respective corporate bond yield. As a rough rule of thumb, each 50bps rise in the risk free rate reduces this proportion by 6ppts, with a 200bps rise leading to a near-halving of the number of companies that can raise their free cash flow yield by retiring shares for debt. Global Equity Strategy 48 2 December 2016 Figure 71: If corporate bond yields were to rise 200bps, the proportion of the market with a FCF yield in excess of its corporate bond yield would nearly halve 65% Proportion of market with FCF yield > corresponding corporate yield 60% 55% 50% 45% 40% 35% 30% +0bps +50bps +100bps Increase in corporate bond yields +150bps +200bps Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. The US profits cycle has likely peaked, even if there is a temporary rise Although there are some near-term positives emerging for US earnings, we see the longer-term outlook as more challenging, owing to the following factors. ■ Labour gaining pricing power The biggest problem facing corporate profits is the growing evidence that US labour is beginning to gain pricing power. Whether we look at the wage component of the ECI, average hourly earnings or the Atlanta Fed wage tracker, labour market tightness is clearly revealing itself in accelerating wage growth. Figure 72: Wage growth is picking up on both AHE and ECI… 5.0 Figure 73: …and the constant-cohort Atlanta Fed wage tracker for job switchers is near previous cycle highs 7 Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker % change Y/Y Average hourly earnings (% chg Y/Y) 4.5 ECI wages and salaries (% chg Y/Y) 6 Job Switcher 4.0 Overall 5 3.5 4 3.0 2.5 3 2.0 2 1.5 1.0 1990 1 1993 1997 2001 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2008 2012 2016 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Credit Suisse research 49 2 December 2016 When the wage share of GDP rises – as it should do in 2017 with continuing employment and wage growth – the profit share of GDP falls. This hit should become less in 2017 as nominal GDP growth accelerates, but rising wage growth should still reduce the profit share of GDP. Using our economists' projections for nominal GDP growth and employment growth, and assuming wage growth rises to 3.25% by end-2017, we estimate that the labour income share of GDP could rise by 25bps in 2017 (compared to a 97bps rise in 2015 and 36bps so far in 2016). Figure 74: Based on our assumptions for employment and wage growth, the rate at which the labour share of GDP increases should slow further in 2017 Year Wage growth (y/y, annual average) Change in labour share of GDP (bps) 2015 2.1% +97 2016* 2.5% +36 2017* 2.9% +25 *estimate/partial estimate Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Based on the usual relationship between the wage and profit share of GDP, this suggests a continued fall in the profit share of income, although a fall that is still consistent with a modest rise in corporate profits. Figure 75: Our projections for employment and wage growth suggest a continued rise in the labour share of GDP 14% 52% Share of US GDP 13% Profits 12% Wages, rhs (inverted) 53% 54% 11% 10% 55% 9% 56% 8% 57% 7% 58% 6% 5% 1950 59% 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ The majority of the margin improvement came from one-off factors The majority of the improvement seen in net income margins relative to the post-1990 average until their peak came from two factors that we do not think can be repeated to the same degree: i) a fall in the interest burden; and ii) a fall in the tax burden. Global Equity Strategy 50 2 December 2016 Figure 76: The majority of the net income margin improvement was due to interest and tax… Figure 77: …which, along with increased leverage, had a positive impact on ROE 2.0% US: Contribution to change in ROE - 10y average (0212) vs. 3yr average (13-15) ex financials & resources 1.5% US sector margins (Ex Financials & Resources) Component post-1990 Latest (4Q avg avg) 1.0% Contribution to change Ch (% pt) in net income margin EBITDA margin 16.7 17.4 0.67 43.6% Interest -2.4 -2.0 0.40 25.8% Depreciation -5.0 -5.1 -0.17 -11.3% Tax -3.0 -2.4 0.64 41.3% Net profit 6.3 7.8 1.54 0.5% 0.0% -0.5% -1.0% -1.5% Tax Burden Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Interest Burden EBIT margin Asset Turn Leverage RoE Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As discussed above, we see a risk that the interest charge continues to rise further, while, on the tax side, clearly the election of Donald Trump helps, but we wonder whether the positive effects have been overestimated. As noted above, a fall in the tax rate is likely to be accompanied by a rise in corporate bond yields (given the stimulus to the economy this would represent), serving as at least a partial offset to the boost to profitability brought about by the tax cut. ■ Buybacks look set to slow further As we discuss below, the outlook for share buybacks continues to deteriorate, largely because of the extent to which corporate leverage has already risen. Global Equity Strategy 51 2 December 2016 3. Corporate buying is set to slow, but not as quickly as previously thought Corporate buybacks have been responsible for a third of US EPS growth since 2012. However, after peaking at a post crisis high in the second half of 2015, buybacks have been slowing throughout 2016. We think this slowdown is likely to continue on the back of increased leverage (net debt to EBITDA is back above its norm) and higher bond yields (making leverage more expensive). Figure 78: The rate of share buybacks has slowed… Share buybacks as a share of market cap (%) 12% Figure 79: …on the back of increased corporate leverage in the US 2.40 13 per. Mov. Avg. (Share buybacks as a share of market cap (%)) 2.20 US net debt/EBITDA ex financials US net debt/EBITDA ex financials and resources 10% 2.00 8% 1.80 6% 1.60 4% 1.40 2% 1.20 0% -2% 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Source: TrimTabs Investment Research, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 1.00 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research However, we are slightly more positive than we were earlier this year, as two hitherto negative trends have improved: i. The rate of corporate net buying (which has averaged 4.2% of market cap) is showing signs of a small pick up on the back of increased takeover activity. ii. Buyback as a style is starting to outperform again, indicating that – to some extent – investors are rewarding buybacks. Furthermore, we think corporates can still continue some of their buying albeit at a slower rate. We see the following factors suggesting some buying power remains: i) the gap between the FCF yield and the corporate bond yield remains attractive; ii) there is still nearly 20% of the market with net debt-to-EBITDA below 1x; iii) there is a record $1.4trn of private equity 'dry powder' (on Preqin data); and iv) some amount of the $750bn of US corporates' cash held overseas will likely be used for buybacks or domestic cash-financed M&A if repatriated. Global Equity Strategy 52 2 December 2016 Figure 80: After falling throughout the last 12 months corporate net buying picked up recently… Net corporate buying as a share of market cap (%) 11% 13 per. Mov. Avg. (Net corporate buying as a share of market cap (%)) 9% Figure 81: …and the gap between the free cash flow and junk bond yield remains attractive 0% -5% 7% 5% -10% 3% 1% -15% -1% FCF yield ex financials* - junk bond US -3% -5% 2001 * FCFE/market cap -20% 2004 2007 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 1998 2000 2003 2006 2008 2011 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In addition, we would stress that even if corporate buying does remain subdued relative to the levels seen in recent years, the issue is that the swing factor – particularly given current asset allocations and the outlook for inflation – is likely to be retail and/or institutional investors, not corporates. 4. Globally, there is a clear shift under way from capital to labour Recent years have seen capital's share of national income grow, while the wage share has stagnated. This is at a time when, in the US, median real personal income is still below 2007 levels and, in the UK, the median real wage fell between 2008 and 2014 by the largest amount on record. This is leading to the following reactions, which have a punitive impact on corporate profitability: ■ A rise in minimum wages. We have already seen this occur in the UK with the national living wage, which is designed to raise the minimum wage to 60% of median income by 2020. In the US, the 'Fight for $15' campaign continues to build momentum, with 29 states now paying above the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. Meanwhile four states have existing plans to raise minimum wages to 60% of the median wage over the next two years. ■ A rise in effective tax rates. The OECD BEPS tax initiative, which 87 tax jurisdictions have joined, aims to close corporate tax loopholes and counter profit shifting. The estimated cost of this to corporates is up to $240bn, or 4% of global profits. ■ The risk of a rise in protectionism. Clearly many of Trump's policies, particularly those aimed at appeasing workers, are protectionist. 5. One of our fair value models shows just fair value As noted above, our valuation models, such as the ERP analysis presented above, are increasingly signalling fair value, having pointed to equities as cheap for much of the postcrisis period. Our warranted P/E model, which is based on earnings estimate dispersion, US lead indicators, policy uncertainty and the TIPS yield, suggests the current forward P/E ratio is near fair value – implying very slight downside (1%). Global Equity Strategy 53 2 December 2016 Figure 82: Our warranted P/E model suggests US equities are at fair value on forward earnings Figure 83: Warranted P/E model specifications 24 24 Gap Model - Actual S&P 12m fwd PE Model FY3 EPS 12m fwd EPS growth dispersion 19 19 14 US lead indicator dev. from trend 10y TIPS Policy uncertainty, yield 12mma Latest 11.9 4.7 1.0 0.5 104 Coefficent 0.67 -0.90 0.19 -0.87 -0.05 t-value 16.3 -6.3 1.8 -9.3 -10.3 9 14 Intercept 4 Coefficent 19.0 Current 12m fwd P/E t-value 23.2 Model 16.8 Upside (downside) 9 -1 4 1992 R2 69% adj. R2 68% 17.0 -1.0% -6 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 6. China and technology Essentially, the cost of corporate debt has remained low relative to the ROCE achieved. Initially investors believed that this gap would be closed by the cost of debt rising – it did not – and then that corporates would over-invest, bringing down the ROCE – they have not. Figure 84: The gap between ROCE and the cost of debt in the developed world has been particularly high… 22% US non-financials ROCE 8% 9% 18% US recessions shaded US non-financial corporation business investment (% GDP) 10% BAA corporate bond yield, rhs 20% Figure 85: …and corporates are not clearly overinvested 8% 7% 6% 5% 16% 7% 14% 6% 12% 10% 5% 8% 4% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy -1% 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 54 2 December 2016 Instead of US corporates, where investment has been underwhelming, China is responsible for that over-investment: China accounts for nearly 25% of global investment but only 15% of global consumption, and thus is seeking to export the excess capacity that it built on an artificially low cost of capital, driving down the return on equity in the developed world. The particular issue is SOEs, which account for over half of Chinese capex, yet achieve very low return on equity (on average 3%, but sometimes lower). We also see clear signs that China is moving up the value added curve. With regard to technology, while we make the argument above that disruptive technology can lead to a higher market P/E, it does mean that individual business model risk and asset lives are generally shortening. 7. How much longer can bull markets really last? Although global equities have already peaked – in the first half of 2015 – thus far we have not seen a definitive end to the current bull market, which began in 2009. Figure 86: Global equities peaked in May 2015 (in US dollar terms) 500 MSCI AC World (USD terms) 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In a historical context, the duration of this bull market (thus far, 92 months) is fairly unusual, at almost twice the duration of the median bull market seen since 1877. Moreover, only 3 of the 18 bull markets over this 142-year period were of greater duration (and two of those by at most 5 months), and the inflation-adjusted return from previous peak is in line with that seen on average over the past 140 years. Global Equity Strategy 55 2 December 2016 Figure 87: The current bull market in equities is near the longest duration seen Real return Real return from previous bull market peak Absolute Annualised Bull market start date Bull market end date Duration (months) Sep 1877 Jun 1881 48 155% 26% n/a Jul 1884 May 1890 71 45% 6% 5% Apr 1891 May 1892 14 31% 26% 8% Aug 1893 Jun 1901 95 96% 9% 43% Dec 1903 Sep 1906 34 51% 16% 4% Dec 1907 Jun 1911 43 58% 14% -6% Sep 1921 Sep 1929 97 396% 22% 64% Jul 1932 Jul 1933 13 144% 128% -53% Apr 1935 Feb 1937 23 109% 47% 50% Jun 1942 Apr 1946 47 108% 21% -21% Jul 1949 Jul 1956 85 205% 17% 76% Jan 1958 Dec 1961 48 68% 14% 34% Nov 1962 Jan 1966 39 59% 15% 23% Nov 1966 Dec 1968 26 28% 12% 2% Aug 1970 Jan 1973 30 43% 15% -7% Aug 1982 Aug 1987 61 157% 20% 4% Sep 1988 Mar 2000 139 280% 12% 193% Mar 2003 Oct 2007 56 61% 11% -13% Average 54 116% 24% 24% Feb 2009 - Now 92 187% 9% 22% Source: Robert J Shiller, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 56 2 December 2016 8. Tactical indicators: no longer signalling pessimism Bullish sentiment, as measured by the bull/bear ratio (see Figure 88), for individuals and financial advisors have picked up quite sharply. Furthermore, option skew – which had been fairly elevated – is now below average (Figure 89). Figure 88: Bullish sentiment has picked up fairly sharply 60 Individual investors Bulls minus Bears Financial advisors 40 Figure 89: Option skew is 1 std below neutral levels 0.15 Skew : 3-month 90-110 0.14 Average (+/- 2 stdev) 0.13 0.12 20 0.11 0 0.10 0.09 -20 0.08 0.07 -40 0.06 -60 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 2016 0.05 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Which factors could catalyse a correction in the second half? There are three primary events that we see having the potential to cause a correction for equities in the second half of the year: Global Equity Strategy i. Bond yields: we fear that bond yields may overshoot, rising to a level above 3.5%; at this point the relative valuation case for equities becomes undermined and the rise in corporate bond yields hits EPS to such a degree that the effective tax rate would need to fall below 22% to bring a net positive impact. ii. China: after the 19th Party Congress, the Chinese leadership may choose to shift its focus more toward reform at the expense of growth. Moreover, by the end of 2017, the loan to deposit ratio in China is likely to be close to 100%. At this level, the risk is that the PBOC has to print money in order to roll over NPLs, which would risk a significant and sharp devaluation of the RMB. iii. US wage growth: given the ambiguity around what level of unemployment is consistent with full employment, we see risks that wage growth accelerates meaningfully in the latter part of 2017. If the nominal wage/GDP growth gap were to close again, this would place greater pressure on profit margins than we envisage. 57 2 December 2016 Prefer equities over bonds Our house view for the 10-year US Treasury yield is 2.80% mid-2017, and 3.00% at end2017, as our rates strategy team detail in Interest rates in a Trump era, 29 November 2016. We would agree with this view, and see a risk that the 10-year Bund yield ends up at c1% by mid-2017. Indeed, even in both scenarios, we would see the risk for yields to the upside. Bond yields: upside risks remain We see the following factors suggesting that the risk is that bond yields go higher: 1. There has been an unprecedented bull market in bonds This bond bull market has spanned 36 years, as we show in the case of UK long-dated debt below. Moreover, real yields are still close to historical lows, as shown in the case of US. Ordinarily, when a bull market in any asset class ends, the subsequent correction or bear market tends to be much greater than investors anticipate (for example, after the peak in equities in 2000 or the peak in the oil prices at $146pb). In our judgement, this could be the case again. Figure 90: The multi-year rally in UK debt has been unprecedented… 18 Figure 91: …and real yields in the US are near alltime lows 15 US long term real yield,% 16 13 14 11 12 UK bond yields, % 9 10 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 0 Jan-1750 Jan-1810 Jan-1870 Source: Bank of England, Credit Suisse research Jan-1930 Jan-1990 1 1920 1936 1952 1968 1984 2000 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We have had plenty of bear markets in bonds even as part of the broader bull market. Below we show the length of time and the magnitude of bear markets which have occurred since 1990. The average correction has seen US 10-year bond prices decline 13% over 11 months (or a 9% total loss). On three occasions, the duration of the bear market has been beyond a year and, on average, 10-year yields have risen by 182bp. Global Equity Strategy 58 2 December 2016 Figure 92: Bond market corrections since 1990 10 year US bond index Start date End date 15/10/1993 21/11/1994 Duration (months) Chg in clean price 13.4 -19% Chg in total returns Chg in 10 yr yield -13% 2.86% 03/01/1996 05/07/1996 6.1 -10% -7% 1.48% 05/10/1998 21/01/2000 15.8 -19% -13% 2.63% 13/06/2003 07/05/2004 11.0 -12% -9% 1.66% 01/06/2005 12/06/2007 24.7 -11% -3% 1.34% 18/12/2008 10/06/2009 5.8 -14% -13% 1.85% 07/10/2010 08/02/2011 4.1 -10% -9% 1.34% 02/05/2013 08/01/2014 8.4 -11% -9% 1.37% 08/07/2016 24/11/2016 4.6 -8% -7% 0.99% Av erage 11.2 -13% -9% 1.82% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. The impact of Donald Trump Since the election of Donald Trump, there has been a c.50bps increase in nominal US 10year bond yields. Around 60% of the rise in yields has been driven by real yields, and 40% has been driven by inflation expectations. This is very different from the 'taper tantrum' period in 2013, where the rise in nominal bond yields was entirely due to a rise in real bond yields. Were real yields to return to the level in the taper tantrum (or even their level at the end of 2015), it would add another 50bps to nominal yields. Figure 93: Inflation expectations initially moved, followed by real yields Figure 94: The taper tantrum of 2013 was an almost exclusively real yield event 3.5 85 3.0 84.5 2.5 84 2.0 83.5 1.5 83 1.0 82.5 0.5 82 0.0 US 10-year real bond yields -0.5 Implied inflation rates -1.0 -1.5 2011 81.5 Taper Tantrum Period US 10-year bond yields 81 80.5 Taper Tantrum (May 2013 - Jan 2014) Trump (From 08 Nov 2016) Change in nominal bond yields 1.38 0.50 Change in real bond yields 1.42 0.29 Change in implied inflation rates -0.04 0.21 % chg in nom. yld due to chg.in real yld. 103% 59% % chg in nom. Yld due to chg. In implied inflation -3% 41% 80 2013 2014 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In our view, a Trump Presidency represents a risk to the bond market in the following respects: ■ Growth: Trump's fiscal stimulus is likely to be pro-growth: if his stimulus policies were to be implemented, then GDP growth could easily be 1% higher above the previous baseline, in our judgement. The last occasion when have seen a Republican Clean Global Equity Strategy 59 2 December 2016 Sweep was under the first term of George W. Bush (which resulted in huge tax cuts in 2001 and 2003). The multiplier on fiscal spending is estimated by our economists to be as high as 1.8x, while McKinsey suggest that the socioeconomic rate of return on infrastructure investment could be c.20%. The American Society of Civil Engineers suggest rates of return on projects such as levees can be 24:1 (given the high cost of flood damage). Donald Trump's policies are part of a bigger, global shift in policy away NIRP to fiscal easing, at the margin. This is against a backdrop where fiscal tightening since 2011 has taken 6.4% off US GDP. ■ Inflation: Many of Trump's policies are likely to have inflationary consequences at a time when inflationary dynamics were already turning higher. Trade protectionism would likely increase import price inflation, and a move toward encouraging reshoring would also serve to increase business costs. Repatriation of illegal immigrants and stricter control on immigration could push the unemployment rate down even further and place upward pressure on wage growth at a time when the US labour market already appears close to full capacity. ■ Bond supply: President-elect Trump's fiscal plan could add $5.3trn to national debt over the next 10 years, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, or $7.2trn according to the Tax Policy Centre. Note these numbers do not include infrastructure spending which could range from around $550bn to $1trn over the next decade (depending on the level of private involvement). This spending plan, were it realised, would take US net debt to GDP up from just over 80% currently, to around 105% by 2026. It is also worth noting that, according to the Fed's Flow of Funds data, the increase in Treasury bonds outstanding since 2009, once we net off Fed purchases, has been c.$5.5trn, or almost exactly that which the estimates noted above suggest Trump's plans will add to Federal debt. That increase, however, was against the backdrop of a financial crisis and deep recession. This also raises the question as to whether the next decade could see the Fed unwind their Treasury holdings (currently c.$2.5trn), only adding to net bond supply. Figure 95: Net of Fed purchases, Treasuries outstanding rose by c.$5.5trn since 2009, not far from projections for issuance under Trump's policies over the next decade 8000 Cumulative issuance/purchase 7000 US Treasury issuance ($m) Fed Treasury purchases ($m) 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 60 2 December 2016 ■ Populism: Some of Trump's more populist policies could undermine, at the margins, confidence in holding US debt. China and Japan own 7.7% and 7.4% of the US Treasury market respectively, and both have faced challenges from the more populist elements of Trump's campaign programme (relating to trade barriers in the case of China, and NATO in the case of Japan). His criticism of Janet Yellen (for being too political) could undermine confidence in the independence of the Fed. While his comment that he 'would borrow, knowing that if the economy crashed, you could make a deal' (CNBC, May 2016) suggested a willingness to buy back bonds below par under some conditions. 3. Populism more broadly has generally been negative for bonds There has been a broad-based rise in populist movements globally, not just in the US. This has occurred not least because inflation-adjusted wage growth had its worst performance on record in the seven years to 2014. In our view, the current populist movements seem to embody the following elements that tend to be negative for bonds: ■ Less immigration, which in turn threatens to push down unemployment rates and therefore place further upward pressure on wage growth and inflation; ■ More protectionism and reshoring of production, pushing up prices; ■ More spending on social projects/infrastructure, which raises nominal GDP growth and potentially increases the supply of bonds; and ■ Rising minimum wages which also add to inflation pressures. 4. Inflation expectations look too sanguine With the US labour market relatively tight, US wage growth appears to be on an upward trajectory, and this is the source of c.60% of inflation. The wage component of the ECI and average hourly earnings are now trending a little higher. Moreover, the wage component of the manufacturing ECI is close to 15-year highs, as are the number of firms reporting that jobs are hard to fill. Global Equity Strategy 61 2 December 2016 Figure 96: Wage pressures in the US are building… Figure 97: …with skill shortages leading to rising wage growth in the manufacturing sector ECI manufacturing wages & salary, y/y % change 5.0 Average hourly earnings (% chg Y/Y) 4.5 3.0% 30% ECI wages and salaries (% chg Y/Y) 4.0 25% 2.5% 3.5 20% 3.0 2.0% 15% 2.5 2.0 1.5% 10% 1.5 1.0 1990 1993 1997 2001 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2008 2012 2016 1.0% 2004 5% 2005 2007 2009 2011 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Clearly, this is against a backdrop where no one knows what the 'true' full employment rate is (the FOMC says it is 4.8%). All we would point out is that, on some measures, the unemployment rate is very low (the U3 rate, which excludes those who have been unemployed for more than six months), while on other measures there is a lot more slack (the U6 rate, which includes people who are marginally attached to the workforce such as part-time employees who want a full-time job). Clearly, the judge and jury of when full employment is reached is wage growth, and that is starting to rise. As the chart below illustrates, there has been a close relationship between services inflation in the US (which is 65% of the CPI basket, and running currently at 3% Y/Y), and wage inflation, suggesting that as long as the labour market remains relatively tight, underlying inflation pressures will remain. Just over a third of the CPI basket is accounted for by goods. This is likely to move from deflation to inflation of c.1% thanks to the rebound in the oil price (the red dot in the figure below assumes a flat oil price, and illustrates the Y/Y change implied in Q1 2017). Assuming the services component remains steady at 3%, simple arithmetic would suggest a headline CPI inflation rate of 2.5% is easily achievable by the end of Q1 next year, in line with our economists' forecast. Global Equity Strategy 62 2 December 2016 Figure 99: …the oil price is consistent with a pickup in goods price inflation to c.1% Figure 98: Accelerating wage growth is leading to service price inflation… 5.5 5.0 Oil price, % chg Y/Y 190 4.5 5.0 4.0 4.5 3.5 4.0 4 US CPI non-services inflation, % chg Y/Y, rhs 3 140 2 90 3.0 3.5 2.5 3.0 % change Y/Y 2.5 2.0 1 40 0 2.0 Atlanta Fed services wages 1.5 Services CPI, rhs 1.0 1.5 -10 -1 -60 -2 0.5 1.0 0.0 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 -110 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -3 1998 2016 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Our concern is not so much a sharp rise in headline inflation as much as a sharp upward shift in inflation expectations. In the US, 5y/5y forward breakeven inflation is discounting inflation of about 2.0%, i.e. no rise from the current level of core inflation at 2.2% and only a modest rise from the current level of core PCE inflation. Headline inflation over the past 10 years has been 1.7% in spite of the most severe recession since the 1930s and a collapse in commodity prices. Figure 100: The recovery in commodity prices suggests US headline inflation rising to c.2% 60% Assuming commodity prices unchanged 40% Figure 101: Core inflation has risen above 5y/5y forward breakeven inflation rates 6% 3.0 5% 2.5 4% 20% 3% 0% 2% 1% -20% 0% -40% -60% 2.0 Year-on-year change TR/CC commodities index US CPI, lagged 2 months, rhs 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1.5 1.0 Core CPI, y/y -1% -2% US 5y5y breakeven inflation 0.5 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 63 2 December 2016 Beyond the US, there are signs of global deflationary pressures easing. In China, for example, overall PPI inflation is now positive for the first time in 55 months. The GDP deflator is also now climbing out of negative territory and pork prices alone are up strongly over the past 12 months. Figure 102: Chinese deflation is now over, with PPI positive for the first time in nearly 5 years Figure 103: Market-implied forward inflation expectations remain low in the euro area 15 3.0 15 China GDP deflator, y/y% 13 Europe 5y5y fwd breakeven inflation swap PPI, rhs Core Inflation 11 10 2.5 5 2.0 9 7 5 3 0 1.5 1 -1 -5 1.0 -3 -5 1998 -10 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0.5 2009 2010 2011 2012 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research European core inflation – at least in the near term – is likely to remain very muted with wage growth broadly flat at 1% with little sign of acceleration, against a backdrop of an unemployment rate that is above its long-run average (10.1% vs 9.7%). Figure 104: Euro area wage growth is yet to pick up meaningfully Figure 105: The euro area is the only major region where the unemployment rate is above its average 3.5% Unemployment rate, % 10 Current 3.0% 15-year average 8 2.5% 6 2.0% 4 1.5% 2 1999 2002 2005 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2008 2010 2013 2016 Japan US UK GEM 0 GEM (ex China) 0.5% 1997 Euro area labour compensation per employee, y/y% Euro-area 1.0% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 64 2 December 2016 The worry is that longer-term inflation expectations are too sanguine. Employment in the euro area is growing nearly 1% above the rate of growth of the labour force (1.5% versus 0.5%, respectively), a dynamic which will eventually tighten the labour market. Moreover, there may be some signs of a near-term cyclical upturn in core inflation, with backlogs of work component of the PMI manufacturing release consistent with core inflation rising, as shown below. Our economists forecast headline inflation could well move up to 1.3% in by February from 0.5% currently. If headline inflation rises to 1.3% and nominal GDP growth is c.3% by the middle of 2017, we believe that expectations for inflation between 20212026 (currently 1.5%) will rise. Figure 106: Employment growth in the euro area is now above 1.4% Euro area employment growth y/y, % 2% Figure 107: The backlogs of work PMI suggest that euro area core inflation may turn up over the next 18 months Eurozone core CPI, detrended and pushed back 18 months PMI: backlogs of work (rhs) 0.6% 60 0.4% 55 1% 0.2% 0% 50 0.0% -0.2% -1% 45 -0.4% 40 -2% -3% 2002 -0.6% -0.8% 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 2014 2016 35 2003 2004 2006 2007 2009 2010 2012 2013 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. A willingness by central banks to allow inflation to overshoot and yield curves to steepen In our view, policy makers are now far more willing to allow an inflationary overshoot than risk tightening too early and bringing on deflation. There are three good examples of this. First, the BoJ has said that it would allow inflation to overshoot and, moreover, its focus now appears to be on institutionalising an upward-sloping yield curve to incentivise banks to lend. Second, the Swedish Riksbank has continued with QE of c.6% of GDP in spite of nominal GDP growth of around 4% and house price inflation of 9%. And lastly, Janet Yellen commented on 15 October that "if strong economic conditions can partially reverse supply-side damage after it has occurred, then policymakers may want to aim at being more accommodative during recoveries than would be called for under the traditional view that supply is largely independent of demand.” These developments, to us, risk creating a steeper yield curve, as markets price in this risk. Another way of looking at this risk is to examine the term premium, which according to the New York Fed's ACM model is still low at around zero. Global Equity Strategy 65 2 December 2016 Figure 108: The term premium has fallen to near historic lows 6 Figure 109: A repricing of Fed expectations would likely raise 10-year yields 3-month change 10 - year Treasury term premium US 3m rate implied in 12 months' time 5 0.6 4 0.4 3 0.2 2 0 1 -0.2 0 -0.4 -1 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -0.6 May 15 Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York 1.0 US 10-yr yield, rhs -0.8 Aug 15 Dec 15 Mar 16 Jul 16 Nov 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Could the market be too sanguine on the Fed? Our house view is that the next Fed rate hike is in December 2016 but critically, our economists believe there will be a total of three rate hikes between now and end-2017, while the market is pricing in just over two. If the market reprices short-end rates higher, the long end should rise as well. 6. Implied volatility is still low Implied volatility, though increased slightly in the past few days, is still low by historical standards. Figure 110: Implied volatility in the US bond market remains very low MOVE Index Current level 245 195 145 95 45 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 66 2 December 2016 7. Could global growth surprise positively in 2017? Global PMI new orders have risen to a two-year high and global monetary conditions remain abnormally loose, even after the recent rise in the USD. As we highlight in the macro overview, the drags on global growth, at least for now, seem to be diminishing (bank de-leveraging, European crisis, the drag from the decline in commodity capex and opex, and fiscal policy). Finally, we think China is unlikely to decelerate much ahead of the 19th Party Congress. Figure 111: Our global monetary conditions index shows policy remains unusually loose Figure 112: Global PMI new orders indicate a modest acceleration in global GDP growth 65 4.8% Global MCI (US, Euro area, Japan, UK), stdev from average Tighter 1.3 60 3.8% 55 0.8 2.8% 50 0.3 1.8% 45 0.8% 40 -0.2 -0.7 35 Global manufacturing PMI new orders 30 Global GDP growth, 6m lag, rhs Looser -1.2 2000 2003 2006 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 25 1999 -0.2% -1.2% -2.2% 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research, Markit 8. Tactically, yields are only just beginning to price in a pick-up in growth Financial market proxies are also consistent with higher yields, with the cyclical-todefensive ratio in both the US and Europe suggesting higher yields Figure 114: …with the same true in Europe Figure 113: Cyclicals relative to defensives have rallied sharply in the US… Eur cyclicals rel defensives 136% US cyclicals rel defensives 3.7 US 10Y Bond yield, rhs 6 month change in bund yield, rhs 113 131% 3.2 126% 111 109 2.7 121% 107 1.7 111% 1.2 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2015 2016 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 105 -0.4 103 -0.6 101 -0.8 2.2 116% 106% 2011 115 99 -1 97 Nov-12 May-13 Nov-13 May-14 Nov-14 May-15 Nov-15 May-16 -1.2 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 67 2 December 2016 The rebound in industrial commodity prices is also consistent with a greater rise in bond yields Figure 115: The rally in metals prices suggests bond yields should have risen more 30% 5.5 3m % change in metals prices US 5y5y forward, rhs 20% 5.0 4.5 10% 4.0 0% 3.5 3.0 -10% 2.5 -20% 2.0 -30% 2010 1.5 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 9. There is a decreasing need for financial repression We have consistently noted that with global credit-to-GDP at all-time highs, there are three simple ways to de-lever at the same time as stabilising unemployment: i) default on government debt (and risk economic chaos); ii) tax the creditor (and risk losing power); and iii) tax creditors indirectly through negative real rates. Clearly, it is the latter that is the main focus for policy makers. However, a combination of fiscal tightening and improving growth rates now means that this degree of financial repression is no longer required in most developed markets. On our calculations, with the exception of Japan, the equilibrium long term real rate is now above the current real bond yield. Global Equity Strategy 68 2 December 2016 Figure 116: In many cases, the real yield required to stabilise government debt to GDP is above current levels… Figure 117: …though we do acknowledge that global leverage is at a new high 250% Total debt to GDP (Private + Public), 4Q moving average 240% Euro area US Japan UK Government debt to GDP (2014) Cyclically adjusted primary budget 2015 Trend real GDP growth Real bond yield needed to stabilise government debt Current real bond yield 96.4 105.6 245.1 92.0 1.4 -1.3 -4.7 -1.5 1.5 2.5 0.5 2.0 3.0 1.3 -1.4 0.4 -1.1 0.4 -0.8 -2.1 Global Global Trend 230% 220% 210% 200% *Trend calculated from Q1 1995 onwards 190% 180% 1995 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1998 2001 2005 2008 2011 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 10. Fair value models imply higher yields Clearly, most fair value models have been declared redundant in the bond bull market. However, if we look at bond yields relative to inflation, short rates and ISM new orders, then bond yields should be higher. If the Fed raise rates three times by the end of 2017 and core inflation stays where we are, then the fair value yield of the US 10-year would rise closer to 3.2%. Figure 118: Our bond model indicates a fair value 10-year Treasury yield of over 2.5% 8 Figure 119: Model details Model (+/- 1 stdev) Fair value 7 10-year US Treasury bond yield 6 Model inputs 5 ISM new orders US core CPI, yoy % US 3-month T-bill rate 0.64 RSQ 0.80 4 3 Coeff. t-value Current 0.03 3.7 52.1 -0.33 -2.6 2.2 24.7 0.54 Model output 10Y Treasury yield 2 Fair value 2.80 latest 2.24 1 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Above all, in the developed world, nominal bond yields remain unusually depressed relative to nominal GDP growth; ordinarily 10-year rates are above or modestly below nominal growth, but the yield on 10-year bonds has now been significantly below GDP Global Equity Strategy 69 2 December 2016 growth for a sustained period of time. This is particularly extreme in the case of the euro area. Figure 120: Developed market bond yields remain particularly low relative to nominal GDP growth… 10% Figure 121: …and this gap is even more extreme in the euro area 10% G4 aggregate government bond yield 8% 8% G4 nominal GDP growth 6% 6% 4% 4% 2% 2% 0% 0% -2% -2% -4% 1990 1994 1998 2003 2007 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 Germany 10-yr yield Euro area nominal GDP growth -4% 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 11. Globally, the policy discussion is evolving We have already discussed in some detail the potential impact of Donald Trump's election as President, but the shift in policy is very much a global dynamic, as we discuss in the macro section of this piece. We believe 2017 could see a continuation of the gradual shift away from NIRP and QE, which has characterised 2016, towards fiscal easing around the world, and would just note the following points here in summary: ■ A move away from NIRP towards fiscal easing As we discuss in the asset allocation section, there is a clear move from NIRP towards fiscal easing underway. In addition to this, 2017 is likely to see growing logistical challenges for the euro area and Japan. ■ Logistical, legal and political problems with continuing QE into 2017 or 2018 By the middle of 2017, it is likely that logistical problems start to appear in the bond-buying programmes of both the ECB and the BoJ. Any reduction in the size of asset purchases, were it to occur in 2017, would be different to the Fed's tapering, which began at the end of 2013. On that occasion, the Bank of Japan and eventually the ECB stepped in to begin buying in significant size, offsetting the Fed's taper. Any decline in purchases in 2017 would likely see no such offset. Taking the two major central banks engaged in asset purchases in turn: ■ The ECB The post-US election rise in government bond yields has provided the ECB's asset purchase programme with a sense of relief. Prior to the rise in German government yields, the prospect of the ECB running out of eligible debt to buy by the end of 2016 appeared very real. The rise in yields may have extended their ability to buy into the middle of 2017, however. That makes an extension of the current purchases programme for perhaps six months from March possible, but nonetheless that could mark the beginning of the end for Global Equity Strategy 70 2 December 2016 the ECB's purchase programme. Extending purchases beyond the middle of 2017 will require a relaxation of one or more of the purchase programme's constraints (following the capital key for purchases; not buying any bonds yielding below -40bps and not owning more than 33% of any given bond issue). All we would note is that relaxing one or more of these constraints is potentially problematic. Deviating from the capital key brings political problems (as clearly the ECB would be seen to be bailing out peripheral countries and the Germans taking on disproportionate capital risk). There is a precedent for raising the issuer limit beyond 33% (the ECB raised this to 50% from 33% for supranational bonds in June), but it does risk pushing the ECB down the BoJ's path of owning half of the government debt market, not a comfortable position for a central bank. There is also a potential legal hurdle with the European Court of Justice (ECJ) if the limit is raised beyond 50%. These difficult decisions will be discussed against a backdrop of resilient growth in real terms (with growth of 1.6% year-on-year and if anything likely to accelerate) and accelerating headline inflation thanks to the recent weakening of the euro. ■ The BoJ The BoJ's programme of asset purchases is now facing a range of challenges, political and economic. On the political side, and as noted above, MUFJ, an important supporter of the ruling LDP, stopped being a primary dealer in the JGB market as a result of the pressures generated by NIRP. On the economic side, there are supply and demand challenges. On the supply side, an IMF working paper noted that banks' and insurance companies' holdings of JGBs are likely to reach collateral limits in late 2017 or 2018 (“We construct a realistic rebalancing scenario, which suggests that the BoJ may need to taper its JGB purchases in 2017 or 2018, given collateral needs of banks, asset-liability management constraints of insurers, and announced asset allocation targets of major pension funds.”), thus making them ever more unwilling sellers. On the demand side, the BoJ currently owns 37% of the JGB market, and the IMF estimates that it will own c.60% of the JGB market by the end of 2019 at the current purchase pace. The critical issue is really a behavioural one. Do Japanese retail and institutional investors believe the BoJ's inflation target (and thus realise that they are locked into a modest capital loss, zero coupon and minus 2% real yield) and increase their rate of selling (which the BoJ would buy), or do they read the BoJ action as a form of tapering? And will the rise in US bond yields cause Japanese bond investors to switch into US bonds, thereby releasing more JGBs for the BoJ to buy? Global Equity Strategy 71 2 December 2016 Figure 122: The BoJ's rate of JGB buying has slowed very marginally since their policy change Yield curve control policy announcement 27000 Figure 123: Fed tapering was offset by BoJ and ECB buying Monthly central bank government bond purchases ($bn) 180 BOE 160 22000 ECB BOJ FED 140 120 17000 100 12000 80 7000 60 40 2000 20 -3000 -8000 Mar-14 4 week rolling average weekly JGB purchases Jul-14 2 month rolling average weekly JGB purchases Nov-14 Mar-15 Jul-15 Nov-15 Mar-16 Jul-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0 -20 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Could the impact of QE be overstated? There is a clear risk that investors have the mindset of "central bank buying is greater than net supply, thus prices have to rise". We would simply highlight that in the US, under QE 1 and QE 2, bond yields rose as QE 1 and QE 2 began and fell as they finished. More simply, if markets were only about supply and demand, then when there is a budget surplus, yields should be low and vice versa in the pre-QE era. If anything, the correlation – at least in the UK – has been particularly weak, and at times the other way around. This is in an environment where, as we show in the asset allocation section, investors are structurally very overweight bonds: since 2008, on the EPFR data, bond funds have seen $1.4tn inflow while equity funds have experienced $42bn of outflows. Global Equity Strategy 72 2 December 2016 Figure 124: The correlation between the net supply of gilts and their yield has been weak, and at times negative 4% UK Net Lending/Borrowing, % GDP Detrended nominal gilt yield, rhs 4 2% 3 0% 2 -2% 1 -4% 0 -6% -1 -8% -2 -10% -3 1987 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 12. Do investors put too much faith in demographics and productivity as an argument for low yields? Demographics? Our economists highlight that the rate of growth of the US labour force has slowed to about 0.5%, from 1.0%. Clearly this is one of the two critical determinants of the productive potential of the economy – the other being productivity growth. Thus, worsening demographics should – all other things being equal – mean lower real rates (with the Fed estimating that, in the US, demographic factors alone have accounted for a 1.25 percentage point decline in the equilibrium real rate since 1980). However, although the demographic headwinds facing productivity growth (and the subsequent implications for real rates) are relatively well understood, we are concerned that the impact of demographics on inflation, and thus on nominal rates, are potentially being underestimated. At some point, the demographic impact on inflation will reverse. As the dependency ratio rises further, we are convinced that inflation – and thus nominal yields – will come under upward pressure due to two key factors: first, lower labour supply is likely to result in an increase in labour costs, and second, as the share of retirees rises, the savings rate is likely to fall. Low productivity? We can't help but think productivity is being under-recorded. Goods or services that we get for free, for example Google maps, are not being measured at all. Moreover, the quality adjustment, particularly in technology, is not fully reflected in deflators. What is the bull market view on bonds? Where could the view above be wrong? There are, we think, four key aspects behind the bond bulls' arguments. Global Equity Strategy 73 2 December 2016 1. The BoJ steps up its rate of QQE via the backdoor One emerging risk is that the BoJ continues to cap JGB yields at zero and thus as US bond yields rise (especially in hedged terms as the yield curve steepens), the Japanese rate of foreign buying could pick up. So perversely Trump's fiscal policies are partly funded by the BoJ. 2. The US is late cycle Aspects of the US economy appear late cycle. Wage growth continues to move moderately higher and, as the wage share of GDP rises, so the profit share falls. As the chart below illustrates, when profits decline year-on-year, this tends to be associated with GDP growth of at most 1%. The lines of causation are clear: when corporate margins are squeezed, corporates spend less. Figure 125: Profit share of GDP and wage share move in opposite directions % of GDP, US 14% 13% 52% 53% Profits 12% Figure 126: Falling NIPA profits coincide with US GDP growth sub-1% Wages, rhs, inverted 54% 11% 10% 55% 9% 56% 8% 57% 7% 58% 6% 5% 1950 59% 1961 1972 1983 1994 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2005 2016 55% US NIPA post-tax profits % chg YoY 12% 45% US real GDP y/y % 6 month lag, rhs 10% 35% 8% 25% 6% 15% 4% 5% 2% -5% 0% -15% -2% -25% -4% -35% -6% 77 80 83 86 89 92 95 98 01 04 07 10 13 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Capex has been the high beta component of GDP (with a beta of 1.8x). While it is true that employment growth remains resilient, it has historically been a lagging indicator, while capex has been a leading indicator. Global Equity Strategy 74 2 December 2016 Figure 127: Capex tends to grow if US GDP growth is above 1.2% 20 8 US Real fixed Investment, yoy 15 US real GDP, yoy (RHS) 6 10 4 5 2 0 0 -5 Economic indicator C&I lending intentions ISM manufacturing new orders Consumer confidence Core cap goods orders Employment growth Lead (+) / lag (-) with the cycle +9 months +4 months +3 months +3 months -6 months -2 -10 -4 -15 -20 1981 Figure 128: Investment tends to lead the cycle, while employment tends to lag -6 1988 1995 2002 2009 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Moreover, net debt to EBITDA of US corporates is approaching financial crisis highs, while including resources, it has exceeded this level already. Figure 129: Net debt-to-EBITDA is back above normal levels Figure 130: US corporate sector debt as a share of GDP is close to an all-time high 2.3 80 75 2.1 US non-financial corporate sector debt, % GDP 70 1.9 65 60 1.7 55 1.5 50 1.3 45 US net debt to EBITDA 40 1.1 ex financials 35 ex financials & resources 0.9 1986 1991 1996 2001 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2006 2011 2016 30 1950 1956 1962 1968 1974 1980 1986 1992 1998 2004 2010 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research There are three factors that cause us to downplay this risk currently: i) Lead indicators of capital spending are clearly turning up as nominal GDP growth accelerates relative to nominal wage growth; Global Equity Strategy 75 2 December 2016 ii) Unemployment can clearly overshoot full employment levels, as it has in every previous cycle (on average by 1% point); Figure 132: Historically, the US unemployment rate has fallen considerably below NAIRU as the cycle peaks Figure 131: Lead indicators of capex are turning higher in the US 6 40% 30% 30 20% Deviation of US unemployment rate from CBO NAIRU 5 4 20 10% 3 0% 10 -10% 2 1 -20% 0 -30% 0 Core capital goods orders, -40% -10 3m/3m ann. -50% Philly Fed capex expectations 3mma, rhs -60% -20 2005 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -1 -2 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research iii) Earnings revisions are close to a three-year high, as we show in the asset allocation section. 3. China starts to export deflation again after second half of 2017 In our view, China continues to pose a significant risk as discussed in our macro section. If President Xi tries to stimulate growth in the run up to the 19th Party Congress, then in all likelihood growth will slow after then. Moreover as we move towards the end of 2017, the loan to deposit ratio is likely to rise above 100% (which raises the risk that the BoJ has to print money). Thus China represents something of a downside risk to bond yields after the second half of 2017, in our view. For now, none of the hard landing indicators is flashing amber (yet alone red) and with net government debt to GDP at very low levels and a current account surplus, China does have policy flexibility. The one key issue to highlight is the degree of policy tightening (which, as we show in the macro section, seems to be being tightened on all measures). 4. Deflation from the disruptive economy Globally, structural deflationary forces are at work owing to the disruptive economy. These include: i) the move to a sharing economy implying lower demand for hotel rooms, storage, cars and machines as existing resources are more effectively utilised; ii) the disruptive economy creates price visibility and that forces down prices (especially in areas such as financial services); iii) there is clearly an increase in automation – the Oxford University Martin School believes that by the early 2020s, 47% of US jobs could be at risk from automation. Global Equity Strategy 76 2 December 2016 5. Some aspects of US inflation look overstated We wonder if the headline inflation rate masks the breadth – or in this case, lack of – in inflationary pressures. Calculating a diffusion index for inflation (i.e. the net balance of CPI components exhibiting positive year-on-year inflation) suggests that CPI inflation is being driven higher by a relatively small subset of the inflation basket; currently, the same number of components is experiencing year-on-year price decreases as those experiencing increases. However, we would caveat this by noting that a similar index, measuring the momentum of inflation (taking the net balance of CPI components with an increasing inflation rate) has not deteriorated to the same degree as the breadth index discussed above. This may mean a broader-based rise in inflationary pressure is imminent. Figure 134: …but a measure of breadth in inflationary momentum suggests this may change Figure 133: Breadth of inflation in the CPI basket has fallen to very low levels… Net balance of CPI components with positive inflation 80% US CPI inflation, rhs 6 5 70% 60% Net balance of CPI components with increasing inflation US CPI inflation, rhs 5 40% 4 4 60% 3 50% 2 40% 20% 3 2 0% 1 1 30% 0 20% -1 10% -20% 0 -1 -40% -2 -2 0% -3 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 6 -60% -3 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 77 2 December 2016 Regional scorecards Regional composite scorecard Our regional composite scorecard ranks our five main investment regions based on monetary conditions, economic momentum, valuation, earnings momentum, positioning & sentiment, and macro factors. On this basis, UK ranks top, whereas the US ranks last. Figure 135: Regional composite scorecard Normalized scores Regions Weights UK Overall score MCI Economic momentum Valuation Earnings momentum Positioning & Sentiment 15% 20% 20% 15% 15% 15% 100% 1.34 1.40 0.22 1.75 0.47 -1.33 0.66 0.39 Macro factors Europe ex UK 0.74 0.71 0.12 -0.31 1.54 -0.49 Japan -0.35 -0.57 0.92 -0.18 -0.85 1.37 0.07 GEM -1.01 -0.85 0.44 -0.57 -0.61 0.13 -0.39 US -0.72 -0.70 -1.70 -0.70 -0.55 0.31 -0.73 For all the measures above, a high z score is considered as positive Region with higher liquidity, better economic momentum, cheaper valuation, better earnings momentum and more bearish positioning & sentiment is ranked at the top Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Regional monetary condition scorecard Our monetary condition scorecard ranks regions based on the favourability of their monetary environment (real policy rate, M1 relative to nominal GDP growth and the over and undervaluation of the exchange rate). On these measures, the UK ranks top, whereas GEM ranks bottom. Figure 136: Regional monetary condition scorecard Real policy rate M1-Nominal GDP growth Exchange rate, dev. from trend MCI, st. dev. Weight: 50% 25% 25% 100% UK -0.9% 8.0% -5.0% -1.71 Euro-area -0.8% 5.9% -7.3% -1.29 Japan -0.4% 7.4% -7.3% -0.52 US -1.7% 7.8% 23% -0.26 GEM 2.8% 12.7% 14% -0.05 Lower value of MCI indicates higher liquidity Region with least real policy rate, slowest M1-Nominal GDP growth and most undervalued currency is ranked at the top Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 78 2 December 2016 Regional economic momentum scorecard Our regional economic momentum scorecard ranks regions based on current levels of PMIs, the change in PMIs and macro surprises. On this basis, the UK currently shows the highest economic momentum, whereas GEM shows the lowest. Figure 137: Regional economic momentum scorecard Composite PMI Rank Region Macro surprises Index, now Index, 3m ch Weight 33% 33% 1 UK 55.9 9.8 2 Europe ex UK 53.5 2.4 3 Japan 51.4 2.1 4 US 53.1 -1.8 5 GEM 52.1 0.4 Region having high PMIs and rank high on surprises are on top. Level 17% 55.8 63.3 17.5 9.3 -5.6 3m change 17% -15.0 42.1 6.7 -2.9 -3.0 Overall score 1.1 0.5 -0.4 -0.5 -0.6 Source: Markit, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Regional valuation scorecard Our regional valuation scorecard assesses regions by their "cheapness" based on 12m forward P/E, P/B, BY relative to the 12m forward earnings yield, DY and PEG ratio. On these measures, Japan is the cheapest region, whereas the US is the most expensive. Figure 138: Regional valuation scorecard 12m Fwd P/E Region Latest Z-score Price to Book Latest 40% Weight Z-score BY-12m fwd Earnings Yield Latest 20% Z-score DY Latest 10% PEG Z-score Latest 10% Z-score Z-score 20% Japan 14.1 1.1 1.3 0.5 -7.1 1.0 2.0 1.0 1.6 -0.6 0.63 GEM 11.7 -0.1 1.6 0.4 -2.3 -0.2 3.0 0.6 0.9 1.6 0.39 UK 14.3 -0.1 1.9 0.9 -5.6 0.4 3.6 0.5 1.4 0.1 0.28 Europe ex UK 14.3 0.1 1.6 1.2 -6.1 0.9 3.2 0.5 1.7 -1.0 0.23 US 17.0 -1.1 3.0 -1.4 -3.5 -0.1 2.1 0.8 1.4 -0.1 -0.67 Cheapest region, with cheaper valuation (12m fwd P/E, P/B, DY & PEG ratios) and smaller spread between bond yields and earnings yields, is ranked at the top A higher z-score is a positive on all measures Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 79 2 December 2016 Regional earnings momentum scorecard Our regional earnings momentum scorecard ranks regions based on earnings revisions as well as changes in 12m forward EPS. On this basis, UK shows the strongest earnings momentum, whereas the US show the weakest. Figure 139: Earnings momentum scorecard Net Upgrades (% tot. revisions) 12m EPS change Total score 1m 3m z-score 1m 3m z-score (50% upgrades, 50% EPS change) UK 17% 23% 1.7 1.5% 3.0% 1.8 1.7 Japan -1% -3% -0.1 -0.1% -0.1% -0.3 -0.2 Europe ex UK 0% -3% -0.1 -0.2% -0.7% -0.5 -0.3 GEM -12% -10% -0.8 -0.1% -0.1% -0.3 -0.6 US -10% -8% -0.7 -0.5% -0.7% -0.7 -0.7 Global -7% -6% -0.2% -0.3% Regions with higher net upgrades (number of upgrades - number of downgrades)/(number of upgrades - number of downgrades) and higher revisions to EPS are ranked as best, and shown at top Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Regional positioning and sentiment scorecard Our regional positioning and sentiment scorecard ranks regions based on risk appetite, fund flows, and sell side recommendations. On this basis, the Europe ex UK ranks top, whereas Japan ranks at the bottom. Figure 140: Regional positioning and sentiment scorecard Region Risk appetite, rel global Latest z-score 3m annualized flows, rel global Latest LT. average 40% z-score Sell side recommendations, rel global Latest LT. average z-score 40% Total z score* Weight Europe ex UK 20% 100% -1.31 2.44 -8.4% -2.6% 0.44 -1.7% -2.7% -0.74 1.01 UK -0.28 0.44 -3.6% 0.3% 0.82 -2.1% -2.3% -0.17 0.47 US 0.08 -0.23 -1.5% -1.5% 0.01 3.4% 3.8% 0.20 -0.05 GEM -0.09 0.11 6.8% 2.2% -0.40 -0.3% 0.3% 0.20 -0.08 Japan -0.15 0.18 10.6% 3.6% -0.26 -1.7% -3.8% -0.82 -0.19 Regions with lower risk appetite, most net outflows and most bearish sell-side recommendations are ranked at the top A higher z-score is positive for all measures Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 80 2 December 2016 Regional macro scorecard Our regional macro scorecard evaluates each region’s exposure to various macroeconomic factors – and then ranks them by their estimated relative performance under our projected macro scenario. Our base case is for a small rise in economic momentum, some upside for global equity markets and slightly higher bond yields, notable increase in inflation and a small rise in the dollar against the euro. On this basis, Japan ranks at the top whereas UK ranks at the bottom. Figure 141: Regional macro scorecard Region Beta PMI BY CPI USD Scenario 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.1 Score Japan 1.59 0.37 8.23 -4.08 1.35 0.42 US 0.92 -0.04 -0.96 0.76 -0.16 0.10 GEM 0.93 0.54 -3.31 4.48 -0.49 0.04 Europe ex. UK 1.15 0.14 1.18 -2.24 0.18 -0.15 UK 0.91 -0.47 -2.32 -0.75 -0.16 -0.41 Scenario: Increase=1, Flat=0, Decrease=-1 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 81 2 December 2016 Continental Europe: increase overweight Why we increase our overweight We add to European equities for the following reasons: 1. Europe ranks second on our regional composite scorecard Europe currently ranks second from the top on our composite regional scorecard, scoring particularly well on monetary conditions, positioning and economic momentum (see above). 2. European equities are lagging the European recovery We highlighted in the macro overview that we expect the euro area's economic recovery to surprise on back of pent-up domestic demand, very low SME lending rates, a clear cut recovery in exports to Russian and China and, above all, a euro that is becoming unusually cheap given the relative strength of European growth. In fact, on a year-on-year basis, European GDP growth has been above that of US in real terms for the first time since 2009 (with a one quarter exception in 2011) and we would not be surprised to see European GDP growth of c.2% in 2017. However, despite an ongoing economic recovery in the euro area, European equities did not recover in line with the improvement in European economic momentum. Usually, the growth differential between European and global growth correlates closely with the performance of European equities relative to global equities. However, the recent underperformance of European equities relative to global markets is consistent with euro area GDP growth falling to be 3% below global growth. If European equities were to catch up with our economists' forecasts of 1.5% or even our view that GDP growth could be 2%, we should see European equities outperform global equities by c20-25%. Figure 142: Markets move closely with growth differentials, and are currently discounting European GDP growth to be almost 3.0% below global (i.e., c-0.5% growth) Figure 143: Euro area PMI new orders are consistent with GDP growth of c.2.0% Eurozone manufacturing PMI: new orders, 3m lead 2 155 Cont.Europe equties relative to global, LC terms 1 Euro area GDP growth relative to global-exeuro with 2016 CS fcst, pp gap, rhs 0 145 135 -1 125 -2 115 4% Eurozone GDP growth, y/y rhs 60 3% 55 2% 50 1% 0% 45 -1% 40 105 -3 35 95 -4 30 -5 25 1999 -2% -3% -4% 85 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2009 2011 2014 2016 -5% -6% 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 82 2 December 2016 3. European equities continue to face outflows and investor pessimism Since the beginning of 2016, European equities not only underperformed their global peers, but also experienced significant outflows, with nearly 70% of the inflows seen throughout 2015 having flowed out again. In fact, on EPFR data, year-to-date we have seen 39 weeks of outflows and only 7 weeks of inflows resulting in more than $34bn of net outflows. While there are some signs that these outflows are slowing, 3 month annualised outflows were running at -30% of AuM only three months ago. These outflows are also reflected in the WisdomTree hedged Europe ETF, which saw nearly 50% of its inflows since inception in early 2014 reverse. Figure 144: Outflows from Cont. European equity funds have bounced off their extreme lows … Figure 145: …with around two-thirds of inflows since Nov 14 having flowed out 60,000 50% 3m annualised net flows into Cont Europe equity funds, as a % of assets 40% 50,000 30% 40,000 20% 10% 30,000 0% 20,000 -10% Cumulative inflows in Continental European equity funds since December 1st 2014, $m 10,000 -20% -30% 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 0 Nov-14 2016 Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research Mar-15 Jun-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 May-16 Sep-16 Dec-16 Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research Furthermore, based on our most recent investor survey, only 23% of investors expect Continental European equities to be the best performing region over the next three months. This is the lowest value since we initiated the survey in early 2012. Figure 146: Investors are the most negative on European equities since we started our survey 70% Proportion of respondents who believe Cont. Europea will be the best-performing region over the next 3 months Figure 147: The currency hedged WisdomTree ETF has seen significant outflows 800 20,000 600 60% 15,000 400 50% 200 10,000 0 40% 20% Aug-12 -200 5,000 30% Daily inflows (rhs, $m) -400 Cumulative inflows into WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity Index ($m) Mar-13 Oct-13 May-14 Dec-14 Jul-15 Feb-16 Source: Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy Investor Survey (October) Global Equity Strategy Sep-16 0 -600 Apr-14 Jul-14 Nov-14 Mar-15 Jun-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 May-16 Sep-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 83 2 December 2016 4. European political uncertainty the key driver of investor pessimism European outflows and the pessimism of investors towards European equities seem to be mainly driven by fears of a deepening political crisis in Europe. In fact, a plurality of respondents in our October investor survey (c.31%) believe a European political crisis is the most significant global macro risk over the next 12 months. We would argue that this concern has increased on the back of Donald Trump's surprising win in the US presidential election as investors will have lost even more trust in opinion polls and the certainty of political outcomes (which was already called into question on the back of the UK's referendum on EU membership). Figure 148: A European political crisis is the biggest concern for investors What is the most significant global macro risk over the next 12 months? 35% 30.8% 30% 25% 20% 18.0% 20.9% 19.0% 15% 10% 10.0% 5% 1.4% 0% Fed rate rises China Geo-political A European political crisis An emerging market crisis A US recession Source: Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy Investor Survey (October) We think that investors are perhaps now too pessimistic on European politics with some commentators and investors (e.g. Telegraph, 27 Nov) now contemplating a Le Pen win in the French Presidential election (despite her currently polling at around 30%, as we discuss below). We discuss the four main concerns in turn: ■ The Italian constitutional reform referendum: This is the most immediate political test, with the referendum due on 4 December, where at the time of writing a No vote seems highly likely (and with Italian bond spreads close to a three-year high, partly discounted). We would agree with our economists, who argue that while the referendum is likely to lead to increased market volatility, they don’t see any systemic consequences. Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has pledged his job on the success of the Italian constitutional referendum and consequently, investors are concerned that Renzi could be replaced by a coalition led by the 5 Star movement (which on recent polls has up to c.27% of the vote compared to Renzi's Democratic Party on c.33%). However, we would argue that if Renzi resigns, the most likely outcome is a technocratic administration until the next general election in spring 2018. Even if there are early elections, we would not expect them before the summer of 2017 as suggested by Democratic party officials, after the constitutional court has ruled on the Italicum election law. Global Equity Strategy 84 2 December 2016 Furthermore, without constitutional change, it appears very difficult for the 5 Star Movement to get a qualified majority in the Senate (a referendum on Italy's membership in the euro area or EU would require a qualified majority in both houses to change the constitution). This is particularly difficult as 5 Star is coming under considerable criticism for its running of Rome (see Reuters, 18 September) and this could lead to a loss of its popularity in the spotlight of a general election. Moreover, we would stress that 5 Star is much more an anti-corruption party and a referendum is much lower on their priority list than it is for Front National in France, for example. Even if there were a referendum on euro membership, it would most likely lead to a remain vote. Data by the European Commission suggest a clear majority of Italians want to remain in the euro area (see below). ■ The French Presidential election: We agree with our economists that the Presidential election in spring 2017 is the greatest existential risk for Europe and a victory for Front National candidate Le Pen would put the EU's future in question. However, we would argue that while Le Pen should make it through the first round (getting c.30% of votes based on recent polls), she is likely to lose the second round. Francois Fillon, the candidate of the conservatives, is forecast to get slightly above 65% of the votes in a second round face off against Le Pen. While Donald Trump's victory and Brexit can be considered as big surprises, the difference between opinion polls and the actual result was only a few percentage points – in contrast to what would be required in France. If Francois Fillon won the presidential election, this would likely be a very positive outcome for the French economy given that he plans to: − Scrap the 35-hour week in favour of a 39-hour week; − Lift the pension age gradually from 62 to 65; − Scrap the wealth tax; − Propose a €40bn tax cut for companies; − Cut public spending by up to €100bn. Furthermore, we would highlight that Emmanuel Macron is the most likely candidate from the political left according to opinion polls. While his chance to proceed to the second round is very slim (currently getting around half the votes of Fillon and Le Pen in recent opinion polls) we would consider him a reformist and a positive for the French economy. Macron plans to scrap the 35-hour working week for younger workers and plans to make it easier for businesses to lay workers off. ■ Dutch general election (15 March): Recent polls suggest the eurosceptic party PVV, headed by Geert Wilders, has been losing popularity since Brexit (with the share of the vote slipping from 30% to c.25%). Furthermore, surveys show that Dutch people would still overwhelmingly vote to remain in the EU if a referendum was held. Our economists assume that at least five parties are needed to form a coalition that holds majorities in both houses. For the next Dutch government this could prove difficult, as just one coalition member could potentially break up the government, but the PVV is unlikely to gain power alone. ■ Greece. Greece ended up receiving its €2.8bn payment in spite of only completing 2 out of 15 reforms. Given the refugee crisis and the upcoming German election (in October 2017) there is little incentive for further domestic upheaval. ■ Spain: after nearly a 10-month period with no government, Mariano Rajoy was reconfirmed as Prime Minister. While only leading a minority government, recent Global Equity Strategy 85 2 December 2016 opinion polls suggested that if there was another election Rajoy would be likely to win a strong plurality. Thus there is in our opinion very little pressure on the Prime Minister to reverse any of his previous reforms. 5. Europe is a play on a recovering global growth and rising bond yields Bond yields and global economic momentum are two of the two most important macro drivers impacting the performance of European equities, and both factors are now increasingly supportive for the reasons we discuss in the macro section of this piece. ■ Bond yields: The performance of European equities relative to global peers is closely correlated with bond yields, with Europe outperforming c.80% of the time bond yields rise. This is due to Europe's overweight of banks (c.10% of market cap versus 6% in the US), which outperform as bond yields rise. We believe that by the end of next year, the Bund yield could easily be 1%. Figure 149: European equities usually outperform when the Bund yield rises German 10 year bund yield (%) 4.5 Euro area equities relative to US in USD terms (rhs) 3.5 Figure 150: The relative performance of European banks has been highly correlated with the relative performance of euro area equities 21 15 8.9 European banks / Stoxx 600, lhs 19 17 2.5 0.71 Euro Stoxx 50 / MSCI AC World (local) 0.61 8.4 7.9 0.51 7.4 13 0.41 1.5 6.9 11 0.5 9 -0.5 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 7 0.31 0.21 2010 6.4 5.9 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Economic momentum: European equities tend to outperform as global economic momentum picks up. European operational leverage is higher than that of US and UK, which makes European earnings particularly sensitive to the global cycle. Recently, European equities performance relative to global markets had lagged behind the improvement in global PMIs. Global Equity Strategy 86 2 December 2016 Figure 151: Euro area equities usually outperform when Global PMI new orders pick up… Figure 152:… due to Europe's reasonably high operational leverage Euro area equities relative to global (USD terms, % chg Y/Y) 38 6 65 Global manufacturing PMI new orders (rhs) 5.7 Beta of EPS to Global IP 5 28 60 55 8 -2 3.4 3.2 3.0 3 2.4 2 50 -12 1 45 -22 -32 1998 3.9 4 18 0 Japan 40 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Emerging markets World Continental Europe US UK Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 6. A strong macro story not offset by a strong euro Up to 2015, a strong economic recovery (proxied by PMI new orders in Europe versus the US) tended to be offset by a strengthening currency. With each 10% on the euro taking directly and indirectly 6% off EPS growth (with c.45% of European earnings coming from outside of the EU) and 1.1% of nominal GDP, this provided a powerful headwind to earnings and economic momentum. However, this time around, as the European economy has recovered, the euro has weakened. The reason for this has been the Treasury/Bund spread, which is one of the key drivers determining the EURUSD exchange rate. Indeed, our FX team believes that the euro could even weaken further, to parity against the dollar, by the end of 2017. Figure 153: The EUR/USD has ignored the improvement in Eurozone relative macro momentum 10 Figure 154: The Treasury/Bund spread suggests only slight euro downside, and we would expect the spread to narrow 1.60 1.20 5 1.50 EURUSD Treasury/Bund spread, rhs, inv 1.18 1.2 1.4 1.16 0 1.40 -5 1.30 1.14 1.6 1.12 1.8 1.10 -10 -15 1.20 Euro-area vs US: manufacturing PMI new orders EUR USD, 6m lag, rhs -20 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1.08 2.0 1.06 1.10 1.00 1.04 1.02 Jan-15 2.2 Jun-15 Dec-15 May-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 87 2 December 2016 A weaker euro is not only important for economic momentum but also for euro area equities, which tend to outperform in local currency terms when the euro weakens. This relationship is also reflected in the close correlation between European earnings revisions and the euro trade weighted index. Figure 155: Euro weakness is good for European earnings momentum Cont Europe: 13-week earnings revisions relative to global Euro TWI, inv., rhs 83 Figure 156: Euro area equities appear to have reassumed their pre-2005 relationship, outperforming in local currency terms when the euro weakens 70% Correl. coeff:-0.9 Correl. coeff: 0.0 65% 17% 88 7% 0.7 Correl. coeff:-0.4 0.9 60% 55% -3% 93 -13% 98 -23% 1.1 50% 45% 1.3 40% 103 -33% 35% Euro-area rel MSCI AC World, local currency terms 1.5 EURO/Dollar, rhs, inverted -43% 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 30% 1991 1994 1998 2001 2005 2009 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 7. GEM is not a headwind and European GEM equity exposure is underperforming GEM The euro area's exposure to emerging markets is the second highest of all regions (excluding GEM), whether we consider corporate revenues or economic exposure. While we have turned a little more cautious on GEM equities (see above), we still believe that GEM is likely to outperform modestly in 2017 as the improvement in the aggregate balance of payments makes GEM much more resilient to dollar strength and rising US rates. Figure 157: In Continental Europe and the UK, GEM and resource exposure is about double that of the US at c25% of sales 14% 40% 35% Market cap energy & mining (% of total) 30% GEM sales exposure, ex mining and oil (%) 25% Figure 158: European economic exposure to GEM is also nearly double that of the US Gross exports to GEM, % GDP (on value-added basis) Other 12% 1.6% 10% 0.8% 0.6% LATAM 18% NJA 7% 20% 8% 1% 4.4% 6% 15% 10% EEMEA 2.7% 9.6% 4% 17% 18% 17% 2% 5% 7% 0% 1.4% 2.6% 1.0% 5% 2.2% 0.5% 0.7% 2.1% 3.3% 2.9% 2.6% Euro area UK US 0% FTSE 100 Euro Stoxx 50 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Nikkei S&P 500 Japan Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 88 2 December 2016 Unsurprisingly, European stocks with high GEM exposure are closely correlated to the performance of emerging market equities. Interestingly, these stocks recently have been underperforming emerging markets suggesting that Europe offers relative value. Figure 159: European-listed stocks with significant GEM exposure usually track GEM equities closely but have correctly quite sharply of late 1150 800 1100 1050 750 1000 950 700 900 850 650 800 750 600 MSCI EM USD 700 650 Jan-14 May-14 European stocks with GEM exposure, rhs Oct-14 Mar-15 Aug-15 Jan-16 550 Nov-16 Jun-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 8. Valuations look reasonable While European equities trade on a 22% discount relative to US equities on 12-month forward P/E, this falls to a discount of just 6% on a fully sector adjusted basis. However, Europe and US are at very different stages of the economic as well as the margin/profit cycle. Figure 160: Continental European equities trade on a 6% sector adjusted PE Figure 161: And at a 22% discount on 12m fwd P/E 1.00 145% Europe ex UK sector adjusted 12m fwd P/E relative to US 130% Euro Area 12m fwd P/E rel US Average (+/- 1sd) 0.95 Average 0.90 115% 0.85 0.80 100% 0.75 85% 0.70 70% 1995 1997 1999 2002 2004 2006 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2009 2011 2013 2016 0.65 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In fact, if we look at normalised earnings to adjust for the different stages of the earnings/margin cycle, Europe continues to trade nearly 20% below its norm relative to the US. Global Equity Strategy 89 2 December 2016 Figure 162: Europe’s Shiller P/E relative to the US is at the bottom end of its range Figure 163: Europe’s discount to the US on normalized measures 160% Shiller P/E - Cont Eur rel US 140% Average (+/- 1SD) 120% 100% 80% 15-year average Now Dev. from average P/B discount to US 37% 46% -16% Value to cost discount to US 29% 32% -4% CAPE discount to US 28% 55% -37% 3-year forward P/E discount to US 14% 26% -14% Implied discount to US 27% 40% -17% 60% 40% 1984 1989 1994 2000 2005 2010 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Furthermore, the equity risk premium in Europe is now 7.95% against a warranted ERP (based on OECD lead indicators and policy uncertainty) of 7.5%. In addition, the cost of equity has not fallen substantially despite the fall in (real and nominal) bond yields as the ERP has risen to offset the decline in the risk free rate. Indeed, with 52% of German pension fund weightings in bonds and just 15% in equities (against a European average of 32%), we remain of the view that the very low equity weightings mean that European equities should be particularly sensitive to a rise in inflation expectations, which are still too low, with 5y/5y forward inflation expectations 1.5%. Figure 164: The European ERP is in line with the warranted ERP Figure 165: The European cost of equity is not very far below its historical average European cost of equity 12 11 European warranted ERP 15 German 10-year nominal bond yield European ERP 13 German 10-year real bond yield (nominal yield - 3mma inflation rate up to 2009, inflation linked swaps since 2009) 10 11 9 9 8 7 7 5 6 3 5 1 4 -1 3 2 1998 -3 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2012 2014 2016 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 90 2 December 2016 Below we show which sectors are cheap relative to their US peers, relative to history, on both P/E and P/B, with those in the bottom left quadrant the cheapest. These include Energy, Industrial conglomerates, Household and Personal Products, Software, Utilities, Insurance, Mining, Commercial services and Aerospace & Defense. Figure 166: European sector valuations relative to the US Relative to 10-year history, standard deviations 4 Cons Dur European sector trading at a discount 3 Chemicals Cons svs Div Fin 2 Cons Mat Building pdts 1 Autos 0 Utilities Insurance Industrials -1 Energy (-69,-2) -2 -40 Banks Bev FD Retail Met & Min Software -20 -10 Media Telecoms Retailing Construction Machinery Healthcare Tech HD Aero & Def Comm svs Oil & Gas ( -58,-2.1) -30 Elec Equip Pharma App & Lux European sector trading cheap relative to history Semis FD producers HH & Per Prd European vs US sectors: 12-m fwd P/E 0 10 P/E premium/discount, % 20 30 40 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 9. Earnings revisions turned positive Earnings revisions of European equities have turned positive for only the second time in five years and are now in line with global equities. Figure 167: Europe Earnings momentum turned positive for only the second time in five years 10% MSCI Europe 3m earnings breadth Rel world 5% 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% 1996 1999 2003 2006 2009 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 91 2 December 2016 10. We forecast c.6% EPS growth in 2017 While the expected earnings recovery in the Euro area did not materialise in 2016, our model is pointing to significant EPS upside potential over 2017 and 2018. We forecast 6% and 7% earnings growth in these two years. Figure 168: We look for 14% upside to euro-area earnings over the next two years Expl. Variables: Euro-area GDP yoy% Euro-area PPI yoy% Euro-area unit labour costs yoy%, 2Q lead Intercept R2 MSCI EMU EPS, yoy IBES Consensus Coeff. 4.0 3.1 -2.3 -0.1 0.68 Latest 1.6 -0.3 1.0 2016E 1.6 -1.0 1.0 2017E 1.5 1.0 1.3 2018E 1.5 1.5 1.5 0.9% 0.2% 6.1% 12.8% 7.2% 10.6% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse estimates In our view, the earnings improvement should come from the following areas: ■ European margins tend to be very sensitive to rising nominal GDP. Weighting nominal GDP growth based on sales exposure of European listed companies – 45% European and 55% global – implies slight improvement in European margins. ■ The domestic profit share of GDP is very low, and should recover as the economy recovers and the wage share of GDP falls. Figure 169: Nominal GDP growth is consistent with margins rising slightly 7.0% 6.0% Global nominal GDP growth, y/y%, weighted (45% Euro area, 55% global) Euro area net income margins (non- 1.7% fin), y/y pp chg, rhs 1.2% 23.0% 0.7% 22.0% 5.0% 4.0% % GDP, Euro area 29.5% Gross profit 22.5% Employee compensation, rhs, inverted 30.0% 0.2% 3.0% -0.3% 2.0% -0.8% 1.0% 21.5% 30.5% 21.0% 31.0% -1.3% 0.0% -1.8% -1.0% -2.0% 2003 Figure 170: The profit share of GDP in Cont. Europe appears to have troughed at a low level, while the wage share has peaked -2.3% 2005 2007 2009 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2015 20.5% 20.0% 31.5% 1999 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ The historical relationship between bond yields and the interest charge suggests that the latter can fall by another 10%, which would serve to boost EPS by c.3.5%. This is due to the average maturity of a corporate bank loan being c.3 years and thus the fall in interest charges follows bond yields with a lag; Global Equity Strategy 92 2 December 2016 We would note that euro area consensus earnings growth assumptions look reasonably concentrated with nearly 60% of growth expected to come from financials, consumer discretionaries and energy. Figure 171: 60% of euro area earnings growth expected to come from three sectors 14 6% 12 3% 3% 3% 8% 8% 10 10% 13% 8 16% 6 MSCI Euro area 2017 consensus earnings growth contribution 30% 4 2 0 Financials Cons disc. Energy Industrials Cons stap. IT Materials Healthcare Telecom Utilities Market Source: MSCI 11. Policy setting to remain very loose We would argue that if any of the major central banks are likely to keep rates too low for too Iong and even risk an asset bubble, it's most likely the ECB. We note that Mario Draghi suggested after the last ECB meeting that they had not even discussed ending bond purchases. In fact Draghi sent a very strong signal supporting an extension of the bond buying programme when he suggested that the Eurozone's weak economy remains clouded by risks and heavily reliant on the ECB’s stimulus (WSJ, 18 November). Our economists argue that the ECB is aware of the mistakes it made in 2008 and 2011 when it raised interest rates too quickly on the back of inflation concerns and will not make the same mistake again. Draghi has consistently stated that he wants to get inflation back to the target of 'close to but below' 2% and is willing to focus on core inflation (which has remained range bound at 0.8%). However, we wonder whether, with the ECB’s short-term focus on inflation, the ECB's policy setting is now too loose. After all, the gap between nominal GDP and nominal rates is the largest since 1990 (240bp vs 45bp in the US) and at the margin, fiscal policy is being eased. Global Equity Strategy 93 2 December 2016 Figure 172: In the euro area, corporate bond yields imply the interest charge can fall by c.10% = c. 3.5% to EPS 8 2.4 2.2 0.0 6 0.0 4 1.8 Gap between nominal GDP growth and bond yields US Euro area 0.0 0.0 3 2 Euro area non-financials, Interest charge / sales (%), 4q lag Euro area BBB corporate bond yield, rhs 1.6 1.4 1998 0.0 7 5 2.0 Figure 173: In the euro area the gap between nominal GDP growth and 10y bond yields is unusually high 1 0 2000 2002 2005 2007 2009 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -0.1 -0.1 -0.1 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2011 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 12. Lots of spare capacity in the labour market There remains a lot of spare capacity in the European labour market given that unemployment is still over 10%. As a result, thus far, there has been little sign of wage inflation accelerating. This not only allows domestic profits to accelerate (nominal GDP to rise more than nominal wages) but also enables the ECB to keep monetary policy abnormally loose. Figure 174: The euro area is the only region in which the unemployment rate is above its 15-year average… 4.0 Unemployment rate, % 10 Current Figure 175: ...as a result, euro-area wage growth has yet to pick up, which should help profits 15-year average 3.5 8 3.0 6 2.5 4 2.0 2 1.5 ECB index of negotiated wages, %y/y 1.0 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Japan US UK GEM GEM (ex China) Euro-area 0 Euro area labour compensation per employee, y/y% 0.5 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 94 2 December 2016 What are the risks? The risks to an overweight in euro area equities are the following, in our view: 1. Political risk will continue to weigh on investors' minds As discussed above, the perceived political risk in Europe is likely to continue to weigh on the performance of European equities for the foreseeable future. Trump's surprising victory resulted in investors' trust in polls and the certainty of political outcomes to be diminished even further. 2. The euro area is ultimately a fragile concept The fundamental weakness of the euro area has not been resolved: there is only a very limited banking union (only 0.8% of bank deposits are projected to be covered under the European Deposit Insurance Scheme by 2024) and no fiscal or political union. This is aggravated by the lack of a meaningful fiscal redistribution mechanism with Germany not recycling its current account surplus (which is running at 9% of GDP). This missing fiscal transfer mechanism creates regional pockets of high unemployment with the only solution being a painful adjustment in real effective exchange rates (an adjustment that has not yet occurred in Italy but did occur in the rest of the periphery). Moreover, these issues are further aggravated by worries over the loss of sovereignty and immigration. The question remains in how far nation states are willing to sacrifice a significant part of their sovereignty when regions (for example Catalonia or Scotland) are demanding regional independence. Figure 176: REER deflated by ULC has seen significant adjustments in Spain, Greece, Ireland, but not Italy REER deflated by ULC 130 125 Germany Ireland Greece Spain Italy Portugal France 120 115 110 105 100 95 90 85 80 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 95 2 December 2016 Our view remains that eventually the euro area will be severely tested and chances are high that at some point a country will try to drop out. But we believe that this only becomes a problem when: i. The majority of the electorate want to leave the euro. Currently, this is not the case in any of the euro area countries. Figure 177: Net support for the euro is now positive across euro area members 80% Net % of population supporting Euro 70% 60% 2015 2016 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% CYP ITA GRC LTU ESP PRT AUT FRA DEU FIN MLT NLD BEL SVK LVA EST SVN LUX IRL Source: European Commission, Credit Suisse research ii. 3. When unemployment is low. We believe that in an environment where unemployment is high and confidence in the economic cycle is fragile, electorates are not willing to take a risk (hence for example, Greece stayed in the euro despite a 25% decline in GDP). European equities have been more disrupted by technology, while offering exposure to fewer of the beneficiaries One of the key drivers of US equity performance has been disruptive technology (the growth in the cloud and the internet-related networks with mobile exposure). To a large extent this space is dominated by US names; in particular Google, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft. Internet software and services and internet retail account for more than 6% of market cap in the US, but just 0.2% in the euro area. While euro area shareholders have not particularly profited from disruptive technology, they have certainly felt the negative impact. Retail is an obvious area where Europe, in the absence of a company like Amazon, has been a significant relative loser from disruption, with the euro area retail sector having underperformed its US counterpart by nearly 20% over the last two years. However, while this is a structural negative, we should stress that many of these disruptive companies are long duration and long duration assets usually underperform as bond yields rise. This is especially the case if a higher cost of funding means that disruptive companies have to focus more on profits today than sales tomorrow. Global Equity Strategy 96 2 December 2016 Figure 178: Internet-related stocks account for 6.7% of US market cap, and 0.2% in Europe Figure 179: US growth has recently been positively correlated with bond yields MSCI USA growth index, relative to the market 8% MSCI Internet index (software&services and internet retail), % market cap 1% US 10 year government bond yield (rhs, inverted) 114 7% 2% 6% 109 US Europe 5% 3% 104 4% 3% 99 4% 2% 94 1% 0% 2001 5% 2004 2006 2009 2011 2014 89 2003 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research How to play this? One of our favourite European macro themes continues to be the recovery in European domestic demand. We would play this through European stocks with high domestic exposure as well as US stocks with high European exposure. The screen below shows Continental European stocks with more than 40% of sales coming from Continental Europe, which have been awarded a HOLT eCAP (as a proxy on quality) and are Outperform or Neutral rated by CS analysts. Figure 180: Continental European socks with high Continental European exposure, have been awarded a HOLT eCAP and are OP or N rated by CS analysts -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Exposure to Cont. Europe (%) eCap Award Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average Jumbo 97% X 13.6 57% 20% 2.0 Hennes & Mauritz 'B' 70% X 21.2 90% -6% 7.8 Atos 57% X 12.9 64% -2% Cap Gemini 57% X 13.3 66% Adecco 'R' 50% X 12.9 Barry Callebaut 38% X Schneider Electric Se 34% Roche Holding HOLT 2016e Momentum, % FCY DY Price, % change to best 10% na 2.0 46.9 2.7 1.9 1.9 Outperform 6% 2.9 3.6 4.7 -5.7 -0.6 2.6 Neutral 2.6 84% 3.8 1.3 62.0 1.4 0.0 2.3 Neutral -12% 1.9 48% 7.3 1.9 15.7 -0.2 -1.1 2.0 Outperform 70% -17% 2.9 42% 6.6 3.9 8.9 -1.4 0.2 2.6 Outperform 22.8 118% 24% 3.4 27% 3.5 1.3 1.1 -1.6 0.4 3.1 Outperform X 15.8 93% 8% 1.8 20% 6.1 3.3 10.8 -0.9 -1.9 2.5 Outperform 32% X 14.3 99% -11% 9.2 7% 5.4 3.8 29.4 -0.7 -0.3 2.0 Outperform Dorma Kaba Hold 29% X 24.1 141% 45% 7.0 108% 4.9 1.7 23.3 -14.6 -0.1 2.5 Neutral Siemens 26% X 14.1 83% 4% 2.5 29% 4.9 3.4 23.1 -1.2 0.1 2.2 Neutral Temenos Group 22% X 29.3 146% 42% 12.2 156% 3.6 0.8 10.2 2.4 2.3 2.7 Outperform Sap 18% X 19.1 95% 3% 4.2 10% 4.2 1.5 4.7 -0.9 0.3 2.4 Outperform Dksh Holding 4% X 20.3 110% -11% 2.9 7% 3.1 2.2 2.7 0.0 0.2 2.3 Outperform Atlas Copco 'A' 2% X 22.6 133% 34% 7.4 56% 3.6 2.3 1.8 0.5 1.3 2.7 Neutral Name 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 97 2 December 2016 The screen below shows US stocks, with more than 30% of sales coming from Europe, with upside on HOLT and rated Outperform by CS analysts. Figure 181: US stocks with high Continental European exposure and OP rated by CS analysts -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Pan Europe Exposure (%) Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs Liberty Global Cl.A 67% 350.6 1928% 545% Alexion Pharms. 51% 21.4 160% -58% Intercontinental Ex. 47% 17.9 120% Priceline Group 45% 20.3 Brookfield Infr.Ptns. Units Owens Illinois New 42% HOLT rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3.0 13% 4.3 0.0 3.3 -57% na 0.0 -19% 2.2 -17% 4.7 86% -4% 8.6 49% 21.2 168% -44% 2.1 41% 7.4 47% -30% Lazard 'A' 40% 12.2 82% Gilead Sciences 40% 6.9 Mcdonalds 40% Electronic Arts Name 2016e Momentum, % Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 3m EPS 3m Sales -61.9 nm -1.8 2.1 Outperform 59.3 -0.1 0.5 2.0 Outperform 1.2 -63.9 -1.5 -0.5 2.1 Outperform 4.4 0.0 32.1 -5.5 0.8 2.0 Outperform 59% na 4.6 na 26.5 -1.6 2.2 Outperform 17.3 169% 9.4 0.0 -55.6 -0.8 -0.9 2.7 Outperform -26% 3.8 -28% na 6.1 51.2 2.9 1.1 1.8 Outperform 51% -59% 5.8 -9% 15.6 2.5 308.7 -2.6 -1.1 2.2 Outperform 19.5 95% 5% 15.4 158% 3.5 3.0 -21.4 2.2 0.8 2.4 Outperform 39% 19.8 99% -18% 7.0 132% 4.5 0.0 -5.7 1.9 -0.1 2.0 Outperform Activision Blizzard 39% 16.9 85% -16% 3.4 -39% 3.9 0.7 46.9 4.7 0.3 1.9 Outperform Carnival 39% 13.9 68% -14% 1.7 49% 2.8 2.6 42.4 0.7 0.2 2.3 Outperform Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 98 2 December 2016 European countries We show below our composite Continental European country scorecard, where Sweden, Finland and Germany score best, while Italy, Netherlands and Belgium score worst. We score and rank countries based on the following factors: ■ Valuation: markets that are cheap in relative terms (and relative to their own history) score well. The valuation metrics which we assess are 12-month forward P/E, P/B (exfinancials), dividend yield and P/E on normalised margins. ■ Earnings momentum: markets that have experienced a positive change in 12-month forward EPS estimates over the past 1-3 months, as well as those with positive earnings breadth (calculated as net earnings upgrades expressed as a share of total earnings revisions) are judged to have positive earnings momentum and score well. ■ Growth momentum: countries that score well are those where economic growth momentum is judged to be positive – these are where lead indicators are low relative to history but improving, and where forecasts for 2016 and 2017 GDP growth are high. Those countries that are particularly exposed to the euro area domestic demand recovery score well on growth momentum. ■ Macro fundamentals: countries that score well are those that are judged to have robust macro fundamentals – in particular, current account and government budget surpluses, and low government/private sector debt to GDP. ■ Euro sensitivity: given our expectation for mild euro weakness, we favour countries with foreign sales and economic exposure. This leads us to score well those countries that tend to outperform as the euro weakens and that have low stock market and economic exposure to the euro area. Figure 182: European country scorecard Countries Valuation Earnings momentum Growth momentum Macro fundamentals Euro sensitivity Politics & reform Overall zscore 20% 10% 35% 10% 15% 15% Sweden -0.21 -0.19 0.34 0.33 0.99 0.71 0.35 Finland 0.28 0.03 -0.12 -0.17 0.78 0.66 0.22 Germany -0.28 -0.18 -0.09 1.03 0.69 0.58 0.19 Ireland -0.60 -1.50 0.79 0.05 -0.18 0.59 0.07 Switzerland 0.17 -0.61 -0.31 0.65 0.43 0.41 0.06 Norway 0.11 -0.52 -0.21 0.93 -0.46 0.66 0.02 Portugal 1.11 2.28 -0.61 -0.67 -0.97 -0.17 0.00 France 0.01 0.09 0.12 -0.52 0.39 -0.65 -0.04 Austria 0.74 0.40 -0.21 0.15 -0.80 -0.36 -0.04 Spain -0.47 -0.24 0.13 -0.47 -0.08 0.32 -0.08 Greece 0.99 0.53 -0.07 -0.77 -0.69 -1.00 -0.10 Italy 0.71 -0.61 -0.56 -0.18 0.48 -1.16 -0.24 Netherlands -0.59 -0.09 0.01 0.32 -0.45 -0.71 -0.27 Belgium -1.43 0.62 -0.18 -0.68 -0.12 0.11 -0.36 Countries that have cheap equity markets, positive earnings and growth momentum, strong macro fundamentals, are internationally oriented, have low commodity exposure, a stable political environment and positive reform momentum are scored highly Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 99 2 December 2016 Germany: remain overweight We stick to our overweight for the following reasons: 1. The winner from a weaker euro Due to its export-driven economy (exports outside the euro area are c.30% of GDP) and very high overseas exposure (40-45% of sales from outside Europe), Germany is the best performing European region when the euro weakens. As we discuss in the FX section we think the euro is likely to weaken from here. Figure 183: German equities have the most negative correlation with the euro 0.6 Figure 184: German equities tend to outperform the European market when the euro weakens 145 Correlation with EURUSD 0.5 1.00 DAX price rel cont. Europe 135 EURUSD, rhs, inv 0.4 1.10 125 0.3 115 0.2 0.1 1.20 105 0 1.30 95 -0.1 85 -0.2 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Germany France Belgium Ireland Finland Netherlands Italy Spain Portugal Greece Austria -0.3 1.40 75 1.50 65 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Germany scores third from the top on our European country scorecard Germany ranks third on our European country scorecard scoring particularly well on macro fundamentals, euro sensitivity and politics. 3. Strong economic momentum in combination with super-loose monetary policy German lead indicators continue to recover and are stronger than those of the euro area. This is due to a combination of highly supportive factors highlighted below: ■ Overly-loose monetary policy given the strength of the economy: A simple Taylor Rule analysis suggests that the German policy rate should be around 2%. This suggests that Germany's monetary policy (a combination of interest rates and exchange rate) is generally too loose. Indeed, we would expect a further acceleration in wage growth, which is already running at 1.9% with an unemployment rate of only 4.3% — more than half of peak levels and at levels that can be considered as full employment. This is likely to push Global Equity Strategy 100 2 December 2016 real rates into even more negative territory (short term real rates are already at around -2% with core German inflation currently at 1.2%). Figure 185: German growth remains stronger than the rest of Europe Figure 186: German lead indicators continue to pick up 70 1.5 65 60 0.5 55 50 -0.5 45 40 -1.5 35 German standardized lead indicators 30 Germany PMI mfg new orders 25 IFO business expectations -2.5 PMI manufacturing new orders Rest of Euro area PMI mfg new orders 20 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 ZEW sentiment indicator -3.5 2007 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Markit, Credit Suisse research 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse research ■ Household balance sheets are strong: German households have one of the best combinations of low leverage and a high savings rate. Such a high savings rate and lack of re-leveraging following the financial crisis are key supports for flows into real assets such as residential properties and equities. Figure 187: A Taylor rule analysis suggests that rates are about 2-3ppt too low for the German economy. This will end up supporting GDP growth 250% ECB policy rate (Bundesbank before 1999), % 230% German policy rate estimated using Taylor rule, % 9 Private sector debt, % of GDP 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Belgium Netherlands 210% 190% France 170% Spain UK 150% 130% Italy Less saving 110% 0 Higher debt 10 Figure 188: German households have the most attractive combination of a high savings ratio and low leverage Germany 90% -1 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 -2% -1% 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% Household financial surplus, % of GDP Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 101 2 December 2016 ■ External headwinds becoming tailwinds: German exports to Russia seem to have troughed, while Chinese imports from Germany, in year-on-year terms, are growing again. German exports to Russia and China make up 1.8% and 6% of total German exports, respectively. Figure 189: German exports to China are growing again 80% Figure 190: … while exports to Russia seem to have troughed 3.6 Chinese imports from Germany (in $) y/y%, 3mma 60% 300 Russian car sales ('000s), 3mma, rhs Germany exports to China (in EUR) y/y%, 3mma 70% German exports to Russia (€ bn), 3mma 3.1 250 2.6 200 2.1 150 1.6 100 1.1 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 50 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% -30% 2003 2005 2007 2009 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ An attractive economy for investments: Germany is the most competitive economy in Europe in terms of the World Bank's ease of doing business index, making it one of the most attractive European economies for foreign investments. Global Equity Strategy 102 2 December 2016 4. Valuations are reasonable: mid-range on trend earnings, cheap on P/E German equities appear cheap, trading near a 15% discount to Continental Europe on 12month forward P/E and close to 1.2 standard deviations below average levels; it is the third cheapest market on EV/EBITDA. Figure 191: Germany is the best ranked European nation in regards to the World Bank's ease of doing business index 70 World Bank ease of Doing Business 2016 Figure 192: On forward P/E relative, German equities appear cheap, trading 1.2std below average levels 123% 60 118% 50 113% DAX 12m fwd PE rel Cont. Europe Average (+/- 1SD) 108% 40 103% 30 98% 20 93% Greece Italy Spain France Ireland Belgium 83% Netherlands 0 Portugal 88% Germany 10 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 78% 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research On measures assuming a normalisation in earnings, German equities appear slightly less attractive. However, they are still middling on 12-month forward P/E on normalised margins, and have a price-to-book relative that is in line with the average. Figure 193: Once we normalise margins, valuations for Germany are less attractive, but are still midrange Figure 194: Germany is among the cheapest European markets on EV/EBITDA 14 20.0 18.7 17.7 17.4 17.0 12-m fwd P/E on normalised margins 16.1 15.0 15.3 14.8 European countries EV/EBITDA 12 10 12.7 12.4 8 9.7 10.0 9.6 8.9 6 4 5.0 2 Global Equity Strategy Norway Italy Germany France Spain Sweden Netherlands Belgium Denmark Portugal Austria Italy Spain Norway France Netherlands Germany Sweden Finland Switzerland Ireland Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research United Kingdom 0 0.0 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 103 2 December 2016 5. Relative earnings momentum is positive and stronger than implied by the euro On both absolute and relative terms to European equities, earnings momentum for the DAX remains positive, and is stronger than implied by the euro alone. Figure 195: Earnings revisions for German equities have been far stronger than implied by the euro 30% 20% DAX, 13-wk earnings revisions, net upgrades Assuming a flat euro Euro TWI % chg Y/Y, rhs (inverted) Figure 196: Earnings momentum for Germany remains much better than that for Europe -18 DAX: 13-week earnings revisions relative to Cont. Europe 40% -13 10% 30% -8 0% 20% -10% -3 -20% 2 -30% 10% 0% 7 -40% -50% -60% 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 2017 12 -10% 17 -20% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research What are the risks to this call? 1. Key sectors are suffering from Chinese exposure & competition Over the past 10 years, nearly all the outperformance of the DAX has come from two sectors, namely autos and chemicals. We are underweight both of these sectors with two of the key concerns (amongst many others in the case of autos) being the pressure faced from Chinese competition and the exposure to the Chinese economy. However, this might not be of a concern in the short term, as: ■ German exposed China plays (including auto and chemicals) follow Chinese economic momentum (proxied by PMIs) and our economists are relatively upbeat on the Chinese economy in the run up to the 19th Party Congress. ■ The DAX, ex-chemicals and autos, has continued to outperform. Global Equity Strategy 104 2 December 2016 Figure 197: The relative performance of the German stocks with exposure to China plays had disconnected from Chinese economic momentum, but seems to be moving back in line German autos, chemicals & China-exposed cap goods rel market, y/y change 8% China manufacturing PMI new orders, 1m lag (rhs) 115% 110% 52 3% 50 -2% 48 -7% 2013 2014 2015 25% 56 54 -12% 2012 Figure 198: Most of the German outperformance since 2006 had come from autos and chemicals 95% 19% 90% 85% 44 80% 42 75% 2001 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 21% 100% 46 2016 23% 105% 17% 15% Germany rel Cont Europe Germany ex autos and chemicals rel Europe, rhs 2004 2006 2009 2011 2014 13% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. On the tactical side, the sell-side is bullish and the market is overbought Net sell-side recommendations for Germany remain elevated, and German equities are slightly overbought. Figure 199:The sell side is relatively bullish on the DAX DAX on analyst recom. rel to Cont. Europe (+=Buy; -=Sell) 2.2 Analyst recom. (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 6% Figure 200: The DAX is slightly overbought relative to its European peers 20% 15% 2.3 10% 4% 2.4 2% 5% 2.5 0% 2.6 -5% 0% -2% 2.7 -4% 2.8 -6% 1999 2002 2006 2009 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2012 2016 -10% DAX, deviation from 6mma, rel Cont. Europe -15% -20% 2001 Average (+/- 1SD) 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 105 2 December 2016 How to play this? As we highlighted recently (see What to do with bond proxies, 3 November), we continue to favour plays on domestic Germany, and especially German real estate plays, for the following reasons: i) as real rates become more negative, household and institutional fund flows into real estate will increase; ii) inflation-adjusted house prices remain 40% below their peak and affordability is high (whether we look at a house price to wage ratio or rental yield versus mortgage rate); iii) REITs are already pricing in a 30bp Bund yield; and iv) after their recent sell off, valuations have become much more reasonable with our analysts pointing out that the stocks now trade in line with 2016 NAV. Figure 201: German residential are already pricing in a 10y Bund yield of nearly 30bp 110 105 100 German Real estate cos rel market German bund 10y real yield,rhs inverted 95 Figure 202: German residentials trade below their norm on 12m fwd P/E relative to the market -0.3 350% German Real estate Cos 12m fwd P/E rel German Market -0.1 300% Average (+/- 1SD) 0.1 250% 0.3 200% 90 85 80 150% 0.5 75 65 60 Jul 15 100% 0.7 70 50% 0.9 Sep 15 Dec 15 Mar 16 May 16 Aug 16 0% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Nov 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Below, we screen for German domestic plays, i.e. European stocks with high sales exposure to Germany, which are Neutral or Outperform rated by CS analysts. Of these, Deutsche Wohnen and TUI are Outperform rated and have positive earnings momentum. Figure 203: Plays on domestic Germany that are rated Outperform by Credit Suisse analysts -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Germany Sales exposure (%) Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Grand City Properties 100% 12.8 na 56% 1.4 25% -6.2 3.0 -48.4 -53.5 -1.3 2.3 Neutral Deutsche Wohnen Br.Shs. Vonovia 100% 23.6 na -2% 1.4 70% -6.0 2.7 -7.4 0.2 -3.8 2.0 Outperform 100% 20.2 na -2% 1.3 27% 5.3 3.6 7.8 -5.8 1.1 2.3 Neutral Hays 40% 15.9 87% -7% 4.4 -38% 39.2 2.8 18.1 1.7 6.2 2.8 Neutral Deutsche Telekom 40% 15.3 112% -8% 2.3 65% 6.6 4.1 34.6 -0.1 0.8 2.3 Outperform Tui (Lon) 28% 11.2 55% -25% na na 8.9 5.0 -1.1 1.9 0.3 2.1 Outperform Sthree 25% 14.1 77% -18% 6.0 23% 7.1 5.1 15.5 -0.2 0.2 2.3 Outperform Name Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Furthermore, we screen for German stocks, which are Outperform or Neutral rated by CS analysts and have been awarded a HOLT eCAP. Of these, Dialog Semicon and Gerresheimer have positive earnings momentum and are Outperform rated. Global Equity Strategy 106 2 December 2016 Figure 204: German Outperform rated stocks with an eCAP -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ HOLT 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- 2016e Momentum, % eCap Award Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS Adidas X 25.1 151% 43% 5.1 134% 1.4 1.4 -17.5 0.5 0.3 2.9 Neutral Beiersdorf X 24.1 119% -7% 4.2 20% 3.2 0.9 -3.7 1.5 -0.1 2.6 Neutral Brenntag X 17.7 105% 5% 2.8 28% 4.9 2.1 -13.2 -3.8 -1.2 2.3 Neutral Deutsche Boerse X na na na na na na na 59.2 na na na Neutral Fresenius X 20.3 123% 14% 3.3 82% 1.5 0.9 -1.7 -0.5 -0.1 2.0 Neutral Fresenius Med.Care X 17.4 106% -11% 2.5 22% 3.1 1.3 -3.5 0.0 -0.3 2.0 Outperform Prosiebensat 1 Media X 12.7 71% -8% 9.6 79% 4.1 5.9 -15.0 -3.0 1.2 2.1 Outperform Sap X 18.2 91% -1% 4.1 8% 4.3 1.6 4.7 -0.9 0.3 2.4 Outperform Siemens X 14.0 83% 4% 2.5 30% 4.9 3.4 23.1 -0.6 0.0 2.2 Neutral Dialog Semicon. X 14.6 92% -43% 3.1 25% 6.8 0.0 57.6 2.8 2.8 2.4 Outperform Gerresheimer X 15.1 81% -4% 3.4 69% 5.3 1.5 -18.8 1.4 -2.8 2.4 Outperform Name 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates France: upgrade to benchmark We increase France to benchmark from underweight for four main reasons: 1. We are seeing some change and the political situation is not as bad as investors believe As we argued previously in this report, we think a victory by Marine Le Pen in the 2017 presidential election is unlikely. Based on the most recent polls Francois Fillon is likely to become the next President of France and this should be beneficial for French equities and the economy. Fillon has stated he would: − Scrap the 35-hour week in favour of a 39-hour week; − Lift the pension age gradually from 62 to 65; − Scrap the wealth tax; − Propose a €40bn tax cut for companies; − Cut public spending by up to €100bn; We would however note that historically, reform plans are often met with significant opposition – Juppe had to abandon his retirement reform plans in 1995 and many of Hollande's reforms had to be watered down or implemented by decree. Nevertheless, some change is already happening. We have seen a total reduction of €41bn in costs for corporates through to 2017 thanks to: tax credit on firms’ payroll for wages up to 2.5x minimum wage; cuts to employers’ social security contributions; and removal of a production tax on French firms. Furthermore, Hollande's labour bill, which bypassed parliament earlier this year, allows: ■ Companies to negotiate deals with staff to work more than 35 hours/week, provided they are large enough to have union representatives. If such a deal is proposed but faces difficulties being approved by unions, a referendum with employees can be held, provided unions representing at least 30% of the workforce consent. ■ Companies with fewer than 11 employees can justify layoffs for economic reasons after a one-month fall in revenues. Companies with up to 300 employees must show a decrease in revenues over three consecutive quarters and even larger companies must show a decline over a year. Global Equity Strategy 107 2 December 2016 In addition, France has maintained its ranking on the World Bank's ease of doing business index, despite dropping on a majority of subcomponents. Figure 205: France's ranking on the World Bank's ease of doing business index did not deteriorate Topics DB 2016 rank DB 2015 rank Overall 27 27 Starting a Business 32 27 Dealing with Construction Permits 40 39 Getting Electricity 20 22 Registering Property 85 82 Getting Credit 79 71 Protecting Minority Investors 29 27 Paying Taxes 87 105 Trading Across Borders 1 1 Enforcing Contracts 14 12 Resolving Insolvency 24 22 Change in rank No Change -5 ↓ ↓ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↑ -1 2 -3 -8 -2 18 No Change -2 ↓ ↓ -2 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Best of both worlds: large exposure to European domestic demand and benefits from weaker euro From an economic point of view, France has significant exposure to European domestic demand and is therefore a great play on the European recovery. Figure 206: France has a high exposure to euro area domestic demand 105 Figure 207: …. But French equities have the second most negative correlation with the euro 0.6 Exposure to euro area domestic demand, % of GDP (net exports to EA + domestic demand) Correlation with EURUSD 0.5 0.4 100 0.3 0.2 0.1 95 0 -0.1 90 -0.2 -0.3 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Germany France Belgium Ireland Finland Netherlands Italy Spain Portugal Greece -0.4 Austria Netherlands Germany Sweden Austria Italy Spain Belgium Portugal Finland France Greece 85 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Moreover, the stock market is the second most sensitive market to euro weakness with French companies generating c.40% of earnings from outside of Europe. Global Equity Strategy 108 2 December 2016 3. Some upside on economic momentum French economic lead indicators are slowly starting to improve and French PMIs are now accelerating in line with the Eurozone, having previously lagged European momentum. The INSEE business sentiment survey is now in line with slightly above 1.5% GDP growth (with consensus forecasting 1.2% GDP growth for France in 2017). Figure 208: French PMI new orders started to improve 4.0 Manufacturing PMI new orders Denmark ( 0.96, 7.77) 3.0 Time-weighted 3 month change in z-score Figure 209: The INSEE survey of French business sentiment is now consistent with growth of c.1.5% Austria Netherlands Italy 125 5% 4% 115 3% Spain 2.0 105 Global France 1.0 2% United Kingdom 1% Eurozone 95 -1% Ireland 0.0 85 Germany -1.0 -2% Greece -4% France, GDP, y/y% -2.0 -0.2 -3% France business sentiment 75 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 Z-score: latest PMI 0.8 1.0 1.2 Source: Markit, Credit Suisse research 65 1998 -5% 2000 2003 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. Valuations are reasonable French equities are trading only slightly above with their norm on 12m forward P/E relative to their European peers and are nearly 0.6 standard deviation cheap on P/B relative. Figure 210: French equities are 0.5 s.d. above average relative to history on 12-month forward P/E Figure 211: French equities P/B relative cont. Europe 0.6std below average France PB rel Cont Europe ex fin 1.30 2% France versus Continental Europe: 12-month forward P/E 1.25 0% Average (+/- 1 std) 1.20 Average (+/- 1SD) 1.15 -2% -4% 1.10 1.05 1.00 -6% -8% 0.95 0.90 0.85 -10% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 0.80 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 109 2 December 2016 5. Earnings momentum is recovering While still below the earnings momentum for the whole European market, earnings momentum of French equities has started to recover sharply. 6. The sell side is very bearish French sell side recommendations are close to the most negative they have been since the financial crisis in both absolute as well as relative terms. Figure 212: France equities' earnings momentum absolute and relative to the euro-area market France 3m breadth 15% Figure 213: France on sell side recommendations France rel Eur x UK on sell side recommendations Analyst Recommendations (1=BUY, 5 = SELL) Rel Euro area mkt 2.3 7% 10% 5% 5% 2.4 0% 3% -5% -10% 2.5 1% -15% -1% -20% 2.6 -25% -30% 2002 2004 2006 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -3% 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Why not overweight? 1. The CAC has already priced in a small improvement in economic momentum French business sentiment relative to the euro area has picked up from its trough in 2015. However, French growth remains c.1% below euro area GDP growth as French equities have already outperformed the European market and have thus to some extent discounted the pick-up in economic momentum. Global Equity Strategy 110 2 December 2016 Figure 214: French lead indicators consistent with French growth slightly underperforming the euro area but by less than before 9 Figure 215: The CAC has performed better than suggested by economic momentum 5% 3% 4 7 3% 5 2% 2 3 1% 1 1% -1 -1% -2 -3 -1% -5 -3% -4 -7 -2% French business sentiment rel Euro area, lhs -9 -11 1997 0 1999 2002 2005 2007 2010 2013 -5% -6 France vs Euro area, GDP differential, y/y%, 3q lag -3% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -8 2009 French economic sentiment rel Euro area CAC 40 rel to EuroStoxx, 6m % chg, rhs 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 -7% 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. A loss in competitiveness We continue to worry about the loss of competitiveness (which can be proxied by the French current account surplus relative to that of Europe), while labour costs appear relatively high, with the share of non-labour costs the highest of any major euro area member, as shown below. This is also reflected in France only being in 61 st place on the World Economic Forum's ranking of labour market efficiency. Figure 216: French current account deficit continues to deteriorate relative to the rest of the euro area 2% Figure 217: France has the highest non-wage share of labour costs of any major euro area member 45 Total labour costs, € 35% Non-wage costs, % of total, rhs 40 1% 30% 35 30 0% 25% 25 -1% 20 20% 15 -2% 10 -3% France Sweden Belgium Italy 2016 Austria Global Equity Strategy 2014 Euro area Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 Spain 2010 Netherlands 2008 Germany 2006 10% Portugal 2004 0 United Kingdom -5% 2001 French rel Euro area current account, 12mma, % GDP Ireland -4% 15% 5 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 111 2 December 2016 3. French equities look overbought French equities are now more than 1 standard deviation overbought relative to their European peers. Figure 218: French equities are overbought 30% 25% French, deviation from 6mma, rel Cont. Europe 20% Average (+/- 1 SD) 15% 10% 5% 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% 1985 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research How to play this? We believe the stocks that should benefit from reform are those where a high percentage of labour costs is originated in France and where ideally a significant proportion of sales are in France. The below screen show the stocks that fulfill this criteria and are Outperform or Neutral rated by CS analysts. We would particularly highlight Orpea and Vinci, which have more than 50% of their labour cost originating in France and are Outperform rated. Figure 219: Outperform rated French stocks Analysts Estimates -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ Domestic Exposure (%) What % of labour cost is originated in France Abs Eiffage 80% 79% Orpea 67% 67% Vinci 58% Credit Agricole 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY 13.3 78% -2% 1.8 35% 6.6 21.8 133% -4% 2.4 48% 4.7 53% 13.6 80% -3% 2.2 31% 51% 53% 10.4 89% 25% 0.5 Remy Cointreau 4% 40% 27.9 138% 14% Societe Generale 52% 39% 9.2 79% Elior Group 50% 36% 16.7 Bnp Paribas 73% 31% Kering 8% Technip Pernod-Ricard Name HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 2.5 -71.0 1.5 0.4 2.4 Neutral 1.4 -102.5 2.0 1.3 1.9 Outperform 7.4 3.3 -13.8 -0.4 -0.9 2.0 Outperform 4% na 5.7 23.1 4.0 -1.6 2.6 Outperform 3.4 49% 2.1 2.1 -39.1 -0.9 -0.7 2.5 Outperform 2% 0.5 -15% na 5.6 59.9 7.9 1.2 2.4 Neutral 81% -11% 2.3 35% 4.3 2.0 -45.0 1.6 0.0 1.9 Outperform 9.4 80% 3% 0.7 5% na 4.9 26.3 5.7 1.4 2.5 Neutral 20% 18.2 109% 22% 2.3 81% 3.6 2.2 -1.5 3.7 1.4 2.3 Neutral 4% 20% 17.5 71% 13% 1.7 3% 3.6 3.0 -9.8 3.5 1.2 2.5 Outperform 9% 15% 17.5 87% 1% 2.0 17% 5.2 1.9 -15.2 -0.1 -0.8 2.5 Outperform Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 112 2 December 2016 The European periphery: upgrade to benchmark We downgraded the European periphery on the back of the surprising Brexit referendum at the end of June, while we regarded Italian bond yield spreads as too complacent. However, after underperforming the core by c.4.5% since Brexit, we think it's time to raise the periphery back to benchmark. This is due to the following reasons: 1. Economic upside remains as markets overreact to weakening in momentum Economic momentum in the periphery remains strong, with PMI new orders actually higher than those in the core. However, markets are already discounting much weaker relative PMIs. Furthermore, GDP in most peripheral economies remains between 2-7% below its previous peak, suggesting they can continue growing above trend for some time. Figure 220: Manufacturing PMIs remain stronger than those in the core PMI mfg new orders, Periphery rel core 7 Figure 221: In most peripheral countries, GDP remains well below its previous peak Italy 110 Periphery rel core perf,y/y chg %, rhs Spain 108 Portugal 106 2 Real GDP, Q3 2007 = 100 France 104 Germany 102 100 -3 98 96 -8 94 92 -13 2006 90 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 Source: Markit, Credit Suisse research 2014 2015 2016 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. A play on domestic demand The peripheral European economies – with the exception of Ireland – have lower exposure to non-euro area exports. Thus, the periphery is a reasonable expression of our positive view on the euro area domestic demand recovery. However, we would note that because of this, the periphery tends to underperform as the euro weakens. Global Equity Strategy 113 2 December 2016 Figure 222: The relative performance of the periphery is correlated with the EURUSD Figure 223: The peripheral European economies are more domestic than the core economies (with the exception of Ireland) 1.6 0.74 EURUSD Exports outside the euro area (goods&services), % of GDP 83% 60% Peripheral Europe relative to Continental Europe (rhs) 0.72 30% 0.64 20% 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Spain Italy France 0.56 2012 Portugal 1.0 2011 Greece 0% 0.58 Austria 1.1 10% Finland 0.60 Norway 0.62 Sweden 1.2 0.66 Germany 1.3 40% Switzerland 0.68 Belgium 1.4 50% Netherlands 0.70 Ireland 1.5 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Valuations continue to look attractive When considering valuations on measures of normalised earnings (either price-to-book or P/E on normalised margins), the periphery still appears attractively valued on a relative basis, trading on a P/B ratio that is 11% below the core. Given the stage of the cycle in core versus periphery, we believe there is greater upside to earnings in the periphery as both margins and revenues recover further. Figure 225: Once we normalise margins, the periphery is cheap on forward P/E, with the exception of Ireland Figure 224: Versus the core, the periphery is still cheap on P/B, trading at a 10% discount Peripheral Europe ex financials P/B rel core 130% 25.2 25 Average (+/- 1sd) 120% 12-m fwd P/E on normalised margins 22.2 20 17.9 110% 16.8 16.7 16.4 15.4 15 14.6 11.7 100% 90% 8.8 7.3 5 80% 2002 2004 2006 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Portugal Austria Italy Spain France Norway Germany Sweden Finland Netherlands 2000 Switzerland Belgium 1998 Ireland 0 70% 60% 1996 9.8 9.7 10 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 114 2 December 2016 4. Competitiveness has improved significantly, with the exception of Italy Since the euro area crisis, the competitiveness of the peripheral countries improved significantly as indicated by the adjustments seen in the real effective exchange rate (with the exception of Italy). This is also reflected in the 12-month rolling current account balance which improved from -6.2% at the end of 2008 to 1.9% currently. Figure 226: REER deflated by ULC has already seen significant adjustments in most of the periphery but Italy 130 Germany Greece Italy France 125 120 Ireland Spain Portugal Figure 227: The current account balance of the periphery improved significantly 1.5% REER deflated by ULC European periphery 12m rolling current accout, % of GDP 115 -0.5% 110 105 -2.5% 100 95 90 -4.5% 85 80 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 -6.5% 2003 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The below screen shows stocks in the European periphery that are Outperform rated by CS analysts, cheap on HOLT and have positive earnings momentum. Figure 228: Periphery OP rated stock with positive earnings momentum and cheap on HOLT -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Name Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average Endesa 16.1 106% 88% 2.3 Enel 10.9 72% -4% 1.1 Iberdrola 13.5 89% 2% Jumbo 13.6 57% Motor Oil 7.2 Green Reit Saras HOLT 2016e Momentum, % FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 58% 5.1 6.7 48.0 5.7 1.1 3.1 Outperform 2% 13.9 4.8 61.1 2.3 -0.7 1.7 Outperform 1.0 1% 6.5 5.2 57.6 0.5 -1.5 2.1 Outperform 20% 2.0 10% na 2.0 46.9 2.7 1.9 1.9 Outperform 29% -14% 2.2 1% na 6.2 63.5 0.2 -2.9 1.6 Outperform 22.4 na -11% 0.8 -6% 0.0 3.1 11.5 5.5 -2.2 2.0 Outperform 9.6 39% -66% 1.8 32% 10.2 5.9 82.6 0.5 -5.7 2.5 Outperform 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 115 2 December 2016 Spain: increase overweight 1. Spain is a play on European banks, where we think pessimism is overdone Due to banks' high share of Spanish market cap (a quarter of the total market), Spain's relative performance follows that of the European banks index. We are overweight European banks with a particular focus on European retail banks (see Financials: tactically long, 21 September). Figure 229: Spain's relative performance is correlated to the relative performance of European banks… 110 130 100 Spain rel. Euro Area 120 Banks rel. Euro Area, rhs 110 100 90 90 Figure 230: …due partly to the fact that banks constitute c25% of Spain's market capitalisation 30% 25.7% Banks market cap as a % of total 25% 20% 16.1% 13.5% 15% 80 80 70 60 70 9.0% 10% 6.4% 5% 2.1% 50 60 2009 40 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2015 2016 0% Spain Italy Netherlands France Portugal Germany Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research One of the key reasons for our overweight of European banks is the potential for loan loss provisions to fall. We view the three key determinants of provisioning as: i) employment growth; ii) collateral values; and iii) level of interest rates. In Spain, all three factors would point to a fall in provisioning while proxies on loan growth, particularly on the consumer side, look strong. Despite these improving trends, Spanish banks are trading at all-time lows on price-tobook relative to the broader banks sector and the sell-side remains particularly bearish. From a strategy perspective, we have consistently preferred retail banks to wholesale or investment banks, and Spain is largely retail bank dominated. Global Equity Strategy 116 2 December 2016 Figure 231: Credit demand in Spain, particularly for mortgages, remains very strong 80 60 40 50% ECB BLS, Spain mortgage credit demand 40% Mortgage credit growth, 3mma Y/Y% 1Q lag, rhs 30% 20% 20 10% 0 Figure 232: Relative to euro area banks, Spanish banks are trading near an all-time low on P/B 280% 260% Spanish Banks PB rel Euro area banks 240% Average (+/- 1sd) 220% 0% 200% -10% 180% -20% 160% -60 -30% 140% -80 -40% 120% -50% 100% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 -20 -40 -100 2005 2006 2008 2009 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. The ongoing recovery is solid, supported by strong economic momentum The signs of recovery in Spain are very strong; despite weakening recently, PMIs are consistent with GDP growth of 2%, and employment growth, which is crucial for a continuing self-sustained domestic demand recovery, is at an 8-year high of 3% year-onyear as composite employment PMIs remain robust. Figure 233: Spanish PMIs are consistent with GDP growth c2% 70 8% Figure 234: Employment growth in Spain is at an 8year high Spain Composite PMI, employment, lhs 60 65 8 Spain employment growth, y/y%, 3-month lag Spain Composite PMI, new orders, lhs 6 6% GDP, q/q% , ann. 55 60 4 4% 55 2% 2 50 50 0 0% 45 -2% 40 -4% 35 30 -6% 25 2000 -8% 2002 2005 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2013 2016 45 -2 -4 40 -6 35 -8 1999 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 117 2 December 2016 Property prices, too, are recovering and this should support a recovery in construction investment – something which has been a drag on domestic demand over the past few years. Figure 235: House prices in Spain have troughed Figure 236: Construction investment in Spain has begun to recover 105 Spain Investment breakdown (2008Q1=100) 100 95 95 85 90 85 75 80 75 70 65 Construction (50%) Spain house prices, new houses 55 Spain house prices, existing houses Machinery/transport equipment (42%) Spain house prices, new and existing houses 45 65 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Competitiveness has been regained There has been a structural improvement in Spanish competitiveness, which has not been undermined by the economic recovery. Indeed, the current account remains in surplus, meaning the Spanish economy is generating excess savings. 4. Exposed to the European recovery As we show below, among those in the euro area the Spanish economy is theoretically the most domestically-oriented. Exports outside the euro area as a share of GDP are the lowest among major euro area economies, giving the Spanish economy significant exposure to the European recovery. Global Equity Strategy 118 2 December 2016 Figure 238: Spain is one of the most domestic European economies 10% -10% 0% -12% 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Spain -8% France 20% Portugal -6% Italy 30% Greece -4% Austria 40% Finland -2% Norway 50% Sweden 0% Germany 60% Ireland 2% Exports outside the euro area (goods&services), % of GDP 83% Switzerland Spain current account 3m ann., % GDP Belgium 4% Netherlands Figure 237: The Spanish current account has moved into a surplus of 2.6% of GDP Source: Eurostat 5. Some elements of valuation look cheap Spanish equities trade below their long-run average on 12m forward P/E relative to European equities. Furthermore, Spanish equites are trading on one of the lowest 12m forward P/E multiples across the major European countries if we normalize margins We acknowledge that Spanish equities rank poorly on the valuation component of our European sector scorecard, however this is mainly due to Spanish equities looking expensive on P/B relative. Figure 239: The Spanish equities look slightly cheap on 12m fwd PE… Spain 12m fwd PE rel Cont Europe Figure 240: …. and are one of the cheapest markets on normalized margins 25 23.9 12-m fwd P/E on normalised margins Average (+/- 1SD) 107% 18.9 20 102% 15 97% 92% 17.9 17.4 16.8 16.2 15.5 15.0 13.1 12.8 10.2 9.6 9.3 10 87% 5 82% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2013 2016 Portugal Austria Italy Norway Spain France Sweden Finland Netherlands 2007 Germany 2004 Switzerland Belgium 72% 2001 Ireland 0 77% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 119 2 December 2016 6. Improving political stability As we discuss above, after 10 months without a government, Rajoy was reconfirmed as Prime Minister and recent polls suggest the PP would be able to win a strong plurality in the event of a snap election. 7. Spanish equities offer some proxy Brazil exposure The Spanish market has high exposure to Brazil, with around 20% of Spanish sales coming from LatAm, of which the majority is from Brazil. We would highlight that the Spanish Brazilian-exposed stocks, which typically follow the EURBRL, have recently underperformed the strength in the Real. Figure 241: Brazilian PMI new orders are recovering 65 Brazil PMI manufacturing new orders Brazil IP, y/y, rhs 60 55 50 45 40 35 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Figure 242: The recent strength of the BRL suggests the Spanish Brazil-exposed stocks should have performed better 20% 109 15% 107 10% 105 5% 103 0% 101 -5% 99 -10% 97 -15% 95 -20% 93 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 Spanish stocks exposed to Brazil price perf rel mkt 4.5 EUR/BRL, rhs, inverted 5.0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research However, we would note that Spain ranks in the second half of our European country scorecard, as it ranks poorly on traditional valuation measures, recent changes in short term economic momentum and macro fundamentals. Below we screen for Spanish stocks with significant exposure to Brazil. Figure 243: This screen shows Spanish listed stocks with significant Brazilian exposure -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ Name YTD Sales exposure performance to Brazil (%) (%) 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY HOLT Price, % change to best 2016e Momentum, % 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Banco Santander 30% -4% 9.6 83% -2% 0.7 -19% na 4.7 36.1 1.3 0.2 2.7 Neutral Prosegur Cia.Securidad Mapfre 29% 38% 15.6 85% 5% 5.0 64% 4.1 2.2 -25.6 -7.0 -0.2 3.2 Not Covered 24% 21% 10.8 92% 14% 1.1 6% na 4.5 23.7 -2.1 -0.7 3.6 Not Covered Telefonica 21% -20% 11.5 85% -5% 2.2 -18% 8.2 7.8 -5.5 -2.9 5.3 2.5 Neutral Distribuidora Intnac.De Alimentacion Iberdrola 15% -19% 10.9 65% -33% 8.7 -31% 8.4 4.5 -27.7 -3.9 -0.3 2.2 Not Covered 8% -11% 13.5 90% 2% 1.0 -1% 6.6 5.3 57.6 0.2 -1.5 2.1 Outperform Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Global Equity Strategy 120 2 December 2016 Italy: reduce underweight We downgraded Italian equities post the Brexit vote as we perceived Italian bond spreads as being too complacent in regard to Italian political and economic risk. However, after widening by more than 80bps since August to a three-year high, we would argue spreads are now looking more reasonable. Figure 244: Italian spreads have widened significantly and equities underperformed in line with the widening 2.7 Spreads btw Italian 10 yr and German 10 yr 2.1 MSCI Italy rel performance, rhs, inv 2.9 1.9 3.1 1.7 3.3 1.5 3.5 1.3 3.7 1.1 3.9 0.9 4.1 0.7 Nov-14 Feb-15 May-15 Aug-15 Nov-15 Feb-16 May-16 Aug-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research On the back of more realistic bond spreads, a recent rebound in macro momentum, our more positive view on the periphery and their cheap valuation, we add slightly to weightings. Lead indicators of Italian economic growth, having fallen to very weak levels, are now picking up. Italian manufacturing PMI new orders are now in line with slightly above1 % GDP growth and suggest a stabilisation in consumer confidence. Global Equity Strategy 121 2 December 2016 Figure 246: …and no longer indicate falling consumer confidence Figure 245: Italian PMIs have rebounded to be in line with just over 1% GDP growth… Italy manufacturing PMI, new orders 65 7% GDP, q/q% , ann.,rhs 70 10 65 60 55 2% 50 45 -3% 40 35 -8% Italy manufacturing PMI, new orders 5 Italian consumer confidence, rhs 0 60 -5 55 -10 -15 50 -20 45 -25 40 -30 -35 35 30 25 -13% 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -40 30 -45 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Italian equities have become very cheap on almost all measures, including 12-month forward P/E, where Italy trades close to a 20% discount to Continental Europe and more than 1 standard deviation below average. When we consider measures of normalised earnings, Italian equities appear even more attractively valued; assuming margins recover to their long-run average implies over 30% potential upside to EPS, making Italy one of the cheapest European markets on 12-month forward P/E with normalised margins. Average (+/- 1SD) 105% 18.7 17.7 17.4 17.0 12-m fwd P/E on normalised margins 16.1 15.0 95% 15.3 14.8 12.7 12.4 10.0 85% 9.7 9.6 8.9 5.0 75% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2013 2016 Portugal Spain Norway France Sweden Finland Netherlands 2007 Germany 2004 Switzerland 0.0 Ireland 65% 2001 20.0 Austria MSCI Italy 12m fwd PE rel Cont. Europe 115% Figure 248: If we normalise margins, Italy is one of the most attractively valued markets in Europe (ex financials) Italy Figure 247: Italian equities have de-rated recently and trade at a 20% discount to Cont. Europe, 1.4std below average Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 122 2 December 2016 On P/B relative to the European market, Italy trades at a 30% discount to the wider European market, and nearly 1 standard deviation below average levels. In fact, of the largest 20 markets globally, Italy is the third cheapest market on price to book. Figure 249: On P/B relative, Italian equities look attractive, trading at a 30% discount to Continental Europe and over 0.8std below average Figure 250: Italy is the cheapest of the major global markets on P/B (ex financials) 3.5 P/B for top 20 global markets by market cap 110% 3.0 100% 2.5 90% 2.0 80% 1.5 70% 1.0 0.5 MSCI Italy PB rel Cont. Europe ex fin 50% 0.0 USA Sweden Switzerland India Netherlands South Africa UK China Spain Australia Europe Taiwan Germany Canada France Hong Kong Italy Japan Korea 60% Average (+/- 1SD) 40% 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 Source Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Italian banks have already sharply underperformed their European peers, while they trade one standard deviation below their norm on P/B relative. Figure 252: … and are trading 1 standard deviation below their norm on P/B relative Figure 251: Italian banks have already underperformed their peers… 105 95 1.3 MSCI Italy Banks PB rel Cont. Eur Banks 1.2 Average (+/- 1sd) 1.1 1.0 85 0.9 75 0.8 65 55 45 0.7 Bank equity index, rebased to 100 at Jan 1st France UK Belgium 35 Dec-15 Feb-16 0.6 Italy Spain Apr-16 Source Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 0.5 0.4 1996 Jun-16 Aug-16 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2012 2014 2016 Oct-16 Source Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 123 2 December 2016 Furthermore, we think that investors are too negative on Italian politics (see above) as well as the risk of the Italian banking crisis leading to a sovereign risk crisis. Our banks team highlights that Italian NPLs are c.€200bn while NPEs (Non Performing Exposure = NPL + 'past due and unlikely to pay loans') are €360bn of which c.47% are covered. In a very worst case scenario, if all NPEs became NPLs and coverage would need to rise to 75%, this would amount to costs of c.€100bn or c6% of GDP, not far off that of SAREB in Spain (c5% of GDP). Our banks research team recently discussed these views in Italian banks: The relevance of the "soft" and the "hard" NO, 01 December. However, there are a number of reasons for seeing this as being too pessimistic: ■ The transition from 'unlikely to pay' to NPLs has, according to our banks team, slowed significantly and we think it is far too pessimistic to assume the coverage ratio of 'past due and unlikely to pay loans' has to rise to 75%. ■ The coverage ratio of NPLs is already 60% and the cost of increasing the coverage of NPLs from 60% to 75% is only 1.8% of GDP. ■ With 50% of mortgages being fixed and with the mortgage rates significantly below the rental yield, real estate trends in Italy should improve. Real estate makes up the majority of the collateral of Italian banks. We think a bail-in of retail investors with no compensation is unlikely. Retail investors own one-third of about €600bn worth of bank bonds and half of about €60bn worth of subordinated bonds (according to the IMF) and we don't think Renzi and the established parties are keen to alienate the electorate further especially as there are plenty of regulations that allow room for maneuverability. Consequently, we on the Global Equity Strategy team believe that if there is a bail in there would be some form of compensation for the retail investors (though we raise the question of who pays for this without falling foul of EU state aid laws). In addition, Article 32 of the Bank Resolution and Recovery Directive suggests that state aid can be allowed in 'exceptional circumstances to remedy a serious disturbance to the economy' that 'endangers financial stability' and Article 23 allows viable banks to be temporarily supported to meet capital needs identified by a shortfall in a stress test scenario. Furthermore, we think that politically Europe will not want to risk a financial crisis ahead of such important elections coming due in 2017, especially with the weak capital position of Deutsche Bank. One possible scenario is that the ECB would allow of postponement of recapitalisations in Italy as a compromise solution until after a general election. We would also highlight that, contrary to general belief, there have been some significant reforms in Italy over the past couple of years. Examples include: ■ Article 18 of the 1970 workers statute has been formally abolished for new employees, allowing firms with more than 15 workers to be able to fire for business reasons, without the risk of having to reinstate them. This is effective even if a dismissal is ruled unlawful, and the total payoff is limited to only two years' salary. ■ New election law: Effective since mid-2016, the new Italicum system awards an immediate parliamentary majority to the party that achieves at least 40% of the vote. Should no party win 40%, a run-off vote is held, with the winner guaranteed a minimum 55% of parliamentary seats. This should prevent political gridlock caused by a succession of weak coalition governments. The constitutional court is due to rule on this after the referendum. ■ Removal of barriers to competition through product market reform. Global Equity Strategy 124 2 December 2016 − Insurance: introduce measures to reduce costs, fight fraud more effectively, and give the consumer greater ability to compare policies. − Telecoms and Banking: make switching provider easier, increase transparency of hidden charges, and enable workers to switch freely between pension funds. − Postal: elimination of all legal monopolies still held by Poste Italiane. − Energy: phase out price regulation effective from 2018. − Closed professions: remove restrictions on who may conduct certain types of business. ■ This is in addition to other pro-competition actions by Renzi’s administration. These include the commitment to lower energy costs, making bank accounts portable, limiting VAT exemptions, and easing SME access to credit. ■ The most sweeping banking reform in 20 years. In 2015, Italy’s Parliament passed legislation mandating that Popolari banks (Italy’s large cooperative banks) with assets in excess of €8bn convert to joint-stock companies. ■ There has been important judicial reform: Specific duties previously reserved for notaries may now be performed by lawyers; notaries are now allowed to advertise; there has been a liberalisation of geographical regions governing where individual notaries may practice; and the number of documents that require notarisation has been reduced. This should speed up the time taken to enforce a contract. Italy currently ranks 108 out of 190 countries on the ability to enforce contracts according to the World Bank's 2016 ease of doing business index. ■ Changes to bankruptcy law: The Italian government has approved a number of changes to existing bankruptcy laws in order to help banks rid themselves of bad debts more quickly. The new measures are aimed at reducing current recovery times, which can span over several years. However, we are not yet ready to upgrade Italian equities to benchmark for the following reasons: 1. Competitiveness has not yet improved While other countries in the European periphery have seen significant improvements to their competitiveness, Italy's REER has remained flat since the start of the European economic crisis. This suggests Italy's economy will either have to go through painful reforms or the economy is likely to face deflation. Furthermore, Italy ranks second worst of all European countries on the World Bank’s ease of doing business index. 2. Political risk remains As we argued above, we believe investors are too concerned about potential Italian political risk. However, there is some risk with the two biggest populist parties, 5 Star movement and Lega Nord, polling just below 30% and 13%, respectively. 3. Italy ranks third from the bottom on our European country scorecard Italy ranks very poorly on our European country scorecard based on weak earnings momentum, weak growth momentum as well as significant political risk. 4. Idiosyncratic risks not yet reflected in bond spread relative to Spain While the spread of Italian bond yields over Spanish bond yields widened over the past few weeks, we don’t think spreads are fully reflecting the Italian idiosyncratic risks relative to Spain. In our opinion, the yield of Italian 10-year bonds should be 100bp above that of Spanish 10-year yields (from c50bp now) for the following reasons: Global Equity Strategy 125 2 December 2016 ■ Weak economic momentum: Italian PMIs are only in line with just above 0% GDP growth, while Spanish PMIs are in line with 2% growth. ■ Spain has lower government debt than Italy: Spanish government debt, at 100% of GDP, is much lower than in Italy (government debt to GDP of 135%). While we acknowledge that the Spanish budget deficit is clearly higher than the Italian deficit (-3.8% vs -2.4% on the European Commission's 2017 estimates), NPLs, which might potentially need to be shouldered by the government, are substantially higher in Italy (17%) than in Spain (6%). Figure 253: Italian over Spanish bond spreads have risen but we think risks remain to the upside Figure 254: Spain has lower government debt than Italy 140% 120 Government debt, % GDP 120% Italy vs Spain 10-year bond yield spreads in bps 100% 70 80% 60% 20 40% -30 20% 2013 2014 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Norway Switzerland Denmark Sweden Netherlands Canada Austria France 2016 United Kingdom 2012 Spain Italy 2011 United States -130 2010 Portugal 0% -80 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Deteriorating competitiveness: Italy has the most expensive REER on the basis of unit labour costs and ranks significantly worse than Spain on the World Bank’s ease of doing business index. Figure 255: Spain ranks significantly above Italy on the World Bank’s ease of doing business index World Bank ease of doing business Spain Italy Overall 33 44 Starting a Business 79 57 Dealing with Construction Permits 111 82 Getting Electricity 71 45 Registering Property 50 24 Getting Credit 60 97 Protecting Minority Investors 30 40 Paying Taxes 45 134 Enforcing Contracts 36 106 Resolving Insolvency 25 23 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 126 2 December 2016 The below screen shows Italian stocks that are Outperform rated by Credit Suisse analysts. Figure 256: Italian Outperform rated stocks -----P/E (12m fwd) -----rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY 72% -4% 88% 64% 1.1 2% 13.9 4.8 0.9 -19% 4.9 6.3 9.8 83% -18% 0.7 5% na 9.0 Luxottica 25.2 151% 7% 4.3 38% 3.0 Prysmian 14.2 83% 12% 3.7 23% Azimut Holding 11.3 76% -13% 2.9 Infrastrutture Wireless Italiane Spa Npv Saras 21.2 153% -29% 9.6 39% Yoox Net-A-Porter 43.0 Italgas 10.0 Name Abs rel to Industry Enel 10.9 Eni 21.9 Intesa Sanpaolo HOLT 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Price, % change to best 2016e Momentum, % Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 3m EPS 3m Sales 61.1 2.3 -0.7 1.7 Outperform 103.6 -283.8 -2.3 2.3 Outperform 44.5 -2.9 0.2 1.9 Outperform 1.9 -9.5 -0.6 -1.4 2.8 Outperform 8.4 2.1 -3.3 -0.9 -1.0 1.9 Outperform 2% na 7.3 -5.1 1.5 2.2 2.3 Outperform 1.7 8% 1.5 3.5 -49.8 3.8 0.6 2.1 Outperform -66% 1.8 32% 10.2 5.9 82.6 0.5 -5.7 2.5 Outperform 182% -26% 12.6 58% -1.2 0.0 -58.2 0.6 -2.4 1.9 Outperform 66% na na na 5.5 6.0 na na na 2.2 Outperform Source: IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT®, Credit Suisse estimates Netherlands: underweight We previously had no recommended weighting for Dutch equities, but believe that investors should be underweight, for the following reasons. 1. Valuations look expensive Dutch equities are trading not far off a 20-year high on 12m forward P/E relative to the wider European market and are trading close to a 10-year high on P/B relative. Figure 257: Netherlands 12m fwd PE rel cont Europe is 1.4 std above average Figure 258: Netherlands price to book rel Cont Europe is trading at normal level 108% 200% 103% 180% 98% 160% 93% 140% 120% 88% Netherlands 12m fwd PE rel Cont. Europe 83% 78% 1996 Neatherlands PB rel Cont. Europe ex fin Average (+/- 1SD) 100% Average (+/- 1SD) 2000 2004 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 2016 80% 1991 1994 1997 2000 2002 2005 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Limited exposure to the European recovery While Dutch PMIs are in line with nearly 2.5% GDP growth, we would argue that the Dutch economy has the smallest exposure to euro area domestic demand of all major European economies. Global Equity Strategy 127 2 December 2016 Figure 259: Dutch PMIs are in line with strong GDP growth…. 70 Netherlands manufacturing PMI new orders, 6m lead 5 Netherlands real GDP growth (%), rhs 65 60 Figure 260: …but the economy has very little exposure to euro area domestic demand 105 3 100 1 95 -1 90 -3 85 Exposure to euro area domestic demand, % of GDP (net exports to EA + domestic demand) 55 50 45 2009 2011 2012 2014 Germany Sweden Austria Italy Spain Belgium 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Netherlands 2007 Portugal -5 2005 Finland 30 2004 France 35 Greece 40 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. MSCI Netherlands – a play on bond yields Consumer staples make up one-third of the MSCI Netherlands (we are underweight staples). On the back of this overweight of bond proxies, the relative performance of Dutch equities has been closely correlated with German 10-year bund yields. However, we are not only expecting German bund yields to rise further but the MSCI Netherlands has also failed to react to the recent rise in bunds, exposing Dutch equities to significant downside risk. Figure 261: Dutch equities are overweight staples… Materials 7% Telecom Con Dis Energy 1% 2% 2% Figure 262: ….and tend to underperform as yields rise 110 -1 105 0 100 Con Stap 32% Industrials 18% 95 1 90 2 85 IT 18% Financials 20% MSCI Netherlands L1 sectors market split (%) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 80 Netherlands price rel cont. Europe 3 10y Bund yields, rha inv 75 4 70 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 128 2 December 2016 4. Equities decoupled from the euro Since the beginning of 2016, Dutch equites have decoupled from the euro trade weighted index and are already anticipating a weaker euro. Figure 263: Dutch equities tend to underperform as the euro strengthens 110 80 105 85 80% Netherlands: 13-week earnings revisions Rel Cont Europe 60% 40% 100 90 95 90 95 20% 0% -20% 85 100 Netherlands price rel cont. Europe 80 EURTWI, rhs, inv 105 75 70 2009 Figure 264: Earnings revisions in the Netherlands rel Continental Europe -40% -60% -80% 110 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 2016 -100% 2002 2005 2009 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. Some political risk ahead of the Dutch general election in 2017 As we highlight in our political section, the next Dutch government is likely to hold only a slim majority on the back of a coalition potentially made up by more than five parties. 6. The Netherlands ranks second from bottom on our European country scorecard The Netherlands ranks second last on our European country scorecard on the basis of stretched valuations, limited exposure to a weaker euro as well as some political risk. Switzerland: remain a small underweight Despite its good rankings on our country scorecard we would be underweight Switzerland within a Continental European portfolio, for the following reasons. 1. A defensive market as the European recovery remains on track Switzerland is one of the most defensive markets in Europe, with Swiss equities underperforming relative to European equities as European lead indicators pick up. Given our view that the European economy is likely to continue its recovery throughout 2017, we would adopt a relatively cautious stance on Swiss equities. Global Equity Strategy 129 2 December 2016 Figure 265: Swiss equities underperform as European economic momentum picks up -20% Switzerland rel Europe, rhs, inv (lc), 6m chg % -15% 10 -10% 5 European countries 10Y correl with PMI 0.4 0.3 0.2 -5% 0 0% 5% -5 10% -10 0.1 0.0 -0.1 15% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research France Spain Sweden Switzerland 2013 Portugal 2010 Germany 2007 Netherlands 25% 2004 Finland -0.2 Greece 20% Italy -15 -20 2001 -25% Belgium 15 European PMI manufacturing new orders, 3m chg Austria 20 Figure 266: Swiss equities are the most negatively correlated with European PMIs Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We would also note that Swiss equities have steadily outperformed global equities as the bund yield has fallen (being the most negatively correlated European market with Bund yields). Again, as noted above, we continue to see upside risks to bund yields from here which could be a headwind for Swiss relative performance. Figure 267: Swiss equities tend to outperform as the bund yield falls 0.62 -0.20 Bund yield (rhs, inv) 0.3 0.2 0.56 0.30 0.54 0.52 0.80 0.1 0.0 -0.1 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 Sweden Belgium Portugal 2.30 2016 Switzerland 2012 Netherlands -0.3 Finland 1.80 0.44 France 0.46 -0.2 Spain 0.48 Germany 1.30 Greece 0.50 0.42 2011 European countries 10Y correl with Bund Yield Italy 0.58 Switzerland relative to Cont. Europe (local terms) 0.4 Austria 0.60 -0.70 Figure 268: Swiss equities are the most negatively correlated with Bund yields Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Valuations are stretched Swiss equities are expensive on 12m forward P/E relative to the European market, trading nearly 1 standard deviation above their norm. Global Equity Strategy 130 2 December 2016 3. Earnings momentum looks weak Earnings momentum is unimpressive, with earning momentum worse than the rest of Europe. Figure 269: Swiss equities are nearly 0.5std expensive on 12m forward P/E… 140% Figure 270: … while Swiss earnings momentum is weak 20% Switzerland 3m breadth Rel Cont Europe mkt 130% 10% 120% 0% 110% 100% -10% 90% Switzerland rel Europe 12m fwd PE 80% -20% Average +/- STD -30% 70% 60% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -40% 1997 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We acknowledge that, from a bottom-up perspective, we are overweight big cap drugs but equally we are underweight consumer staples and are much more negative on investment/universal banks than retail banks. Global Equity Strategy 131 2 December 2016 Japan: remain overweight We upgraded Japanese equities to overweight in our piece Japanese equities: upgrade to overweight, 23 November 2016. Japan is the most leveraged play on a rebound in both US growth and a rise in US bond yields. We have long found bottom-up attractions and idiosyncratic positives for Japanese equities, but now these are allied with a more compelling macro story, making us comfortable in taking a more positive stance for 2017. The positives Below, we review what has changed for the better on the macro side, before revisiting the bottom-up arguments in favour of Japanese equities. 1) Japan has become a quintuple play on global growth The global cycle is turning up… Global PMI new orders have hit a 19-month high (consistent with GDP growth of 2.9%), and many of the drags on global growth (such as bank deleveraging, the fall in commodity opex/capex) are diminishing. This is occurring at a time when China is supporting growth ahead of the 19th Party Congress and has the ability to continue to do so with net government debt to GDP of c0% and a current account surplus of 3%. Added to this, Continental European growth continues to surprise positively despite political challenges. The big change however has been the election of Donald Trump, a development which brings with it the prospect of meaningfully looser US fiscal policy (a prospect which is supported by the Republican clean sweep in Congress for the first time since the sharp fiscal easing seen in the first term of George W. Bush), following a period since 2011 in which the IMF estimate that fiscal tightening has taken 6.4% off GDP. This policy shift is occurring at a time when other factors are already supporting a nearterm pick in US growth, such as the inventory cycle and commodity capex, against a backdrop of steady consumption growth. The macro consequences of this policy shift are clear: somewhat faster nominal GDP growth in the US, dollar strength and higher bond yields – all of these things are positive for Japanese equities. And Japan is a quintuple play on rising US bond yields and global PMI new orders In our October piece on Japan, we noted that Japanese equities are in a sense a triple play on growth momentum via operational leverage, cyclicality and yen weakness as US yields rise. Now, we would add two further elements to this leverage into the global cycle: first, as global yields start to exert upward pressure on JGB yields, the BoJ is likely to respond with enhanced QE to keep JGB yields low, and second, domestic inflation expectations, which rise as the yen declines, serve to increase the attractiveness of equities. Taking each of these points in turn: ■ Operational leverage: The relatively low margins and high fixed cost base of Japanese equities give them the highest operational leverage of any region, and accordingly the market's beta to global IP is the highest of any major market, as shown in Figure 271. ■ Cyclicality: Japan's significant weighting in industrials and technology make it the equity market with the highest weighting in cyclicality (excluding financials) globally. Global Equity Strategy 132 2 December 2016 Figure 271: Japan has the highest operational leverage 70% 9.1 Share of market cap accounted for by: Beta of EPS to Global IP 9 60% Cyclicals 8 Defensive Energy 50% 7 6.1 6 40% 4.9 5 4.8 4.5 4 30% 3.2 20% 3 10% 2 1 World Continental Europe US UK Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters UK US Global Emerging markets EMU Japan NJA Japan 0% 0 GEM 10 Figure 272: The share of Japanese market cap in cyclicals is highest of any region Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters ■ Higher US rates consistent with yen weakness: With the BoJ de facto targeting rates of zero, rising US rates have widened out the Treasury-JGB spread in a more pronounced way than would have been anticipated under the old monetary policy framework. In that sense, the new policy of yield curve targeting, when combined with the impact of 'Trumpflation', has the potential to generate further yen weakness. Inevitably, Yen weakness tends to drive Japanese equity outperformance in local currency terms, with each 10% off the yen adding c.15% to EPS, on the basis of a simple correlation. Figure 273: The real 10 year yield gap between USTs and JGBs is likely to widen further thanks to US policy and rising Japanese inflation 110 160 Japan/US 10-year real note yield differential USDJPY, rhs 6 Figure 274: Yen weakness inevitably supports the local currency performance of Japanese equities relative to the world 150 47 120 140 4 130 130 42 140 120 2 110 0 150 37 160 100 90 -2 Japan relative to global equities, local currency terms 32 80 -4 1995 70 2000 2005 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy 2011 2016 Japanese Yen, TWI, inv, rhs 27 2012 170 180 190 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters 133 2 December 2016 ■ Global upward pressure on JGB yields will be met with more monetary stimulus. We think that there is a clear risk that with the steepening of the US yield curve and the rise in US bond yields that Japanese investors seek to buy more US bonds (typically, their bond buying has been hedged). There is a loose relationship between the yield spread between USTs and JGBs and Japanese buying of foreign bonds. With the BoJ committed to cap the JGB yield at zero, then de facto the more bonds domestic retail or institutions sell as they move into foreign bonds, the more the BoJ is likely to have to buy. On November 17th, the BoJ gave their first indication as to how they intend to cap 10year JGB yields at zero when they offered to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds with terms of between one and five years at a fixed price. The yields offered by the BoJ were marginally above those prevailing in the market, so ultimately they ended up not buying any bonds, but with global yields continuing to creep higher such an operation may in future result in potential significant bond purchases. This monetary stimulus, in turn, would place further downward pressure on the yen. Figure 275: Japanese investors tend to switch to foreign bonds when the yield spread widens Japanese net buying of foreign bonds, ¥trn ,3m sum 10yr UST/JGB spread, rhs, p.p. 12 2.45 7 1.95 2 1.45 -3 0.95 -8 2008 0.45 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters ■ Weaker yen will eventually drive inflation expectations higher. Finally, the more the yen weakens as a function of these macro forces, the more this creates inflation in Japan, which could impact on the prevailing deflationary mindset and asset allocation. Import prices generate around 80% of the change in inflation (largely because Japan has only a 39% self-sufficiency ratio in food). And in our economist's judgement an exchange rate of ¥110 is needed to bring Japanese core inflation (i.e. excluding fresh food and energy) above zero. Even three months ago when the BoJ moved toward yield curve targeting, and away from aggressive QQE, this felt a distant prospect. US developments have now allowed this level on the exchange rate to be achieved at a time when it seems the US/Japanese bond spread could widen further. Global Equity Strategy 134 2 December 2016 Figure 276: Import price inflation relates closely to the annual change in the yen… 30 -35 Import price index (manufactured goods, % chg Y/Y) 30 Japanese import price index, % change Y/Y 25 -25 Yen/USD % change Y/Y (rhs) 20 -15 15 CPI ex fresh food, % change Y/Y (3 month lag, rhs) 25 3 20 2 15 10 -5 5 5 0 1 10 5 0 0 -5 15 -10 25 -15 -20 1994 Figure 277: … with import prices now consistent with a fall in CPI 35 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2013 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters -1 -5 -10 -2 -15 -20 -3 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters The proof that Japan is a play on both rising bond yields and the global cycle is not only the very high correlation between US TIPS yields and the relative performance of the Nikkei but also the fact that the correlation between JGBs and Japanese equities is at an all-time high. Figure 278: Japan's relative performance has historically followed the TIPS yield 300 280 260 Figure 279: Correlation between the JGB yield and Japanese equities 3.5 Japan rel to global, lc terms US 10-year TIPS yields, rhs 3.0 2.5 240 2.0 220 1.5 200 1.0 180 0.5 160 0.0 140 -0.5 120 -1.0 100 -1.5 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy Japan 18 month correlation with 10yr Japanese bond yields 0.9 0.6 0.3 0.0 -0.3 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters 135 2 December 2016 2) We see a clear-cut valuation discount Japan ranks top of our composite valuation scorecard. Figure 280: Japan scores top of our valuation scorecard 12m Fwd P/E Region Latest Price to Book Z-score Latest 40% Weight BY-12m fwd Earnings Yield Z-score Latest 20% Z-score DY Latest 10% PEG Z-score Latest 10% Z-score Z-score 20% Japan 14.1 1.1 1.3 0.5 -7.1 1.0 2.0 1.0 1.6 -0.6 0.63 GEM 11.7 -0.1 1.6 0.4 -2.3 -0.2 3.0 0.6 0.9 1.6 0.39 UK 14.3 -0.1 1.9 0.9 -5.6 0.4 3.6 0.5 1.4 0.1 0.28 Europe ex UK 14.3 0.1 1.6 1.2 -6.1 0.9 3.2 0.5 1.7 -1.0 0.23 US 17.0 -1.1 3.0 -1.4 -3.5 -0.1 2.1 0.8 1.4 -0.1 -0.67 Cheapest region, with cheaper valuation (12m fwd P/E, P/B, DY & PEG ratios) and smaller spread between bond yields and earnings yields, is ranked at the top A higher z-score is a positive on all measures Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Japan trades on a 2% forward PE discount to European equities, and a 17% discount to the US. Breaking down the PE into P/B and RoE, the Japanese RoE discount to global markets has closed (from around a 50% discount in 2012 to around 27% now), while the P/B discount has widened out close to a record, at around a 34% discount to global markets currently. Figure 281: Japanese equities are cheaper than both the US and European equities on a 12m fwd PE basis Figure 282: Japan's RoE discount has closed, while its P/B discount has not 80% 550% PB RoE 60% Japan rel US: 12m fwd P/E 450% Japan rel Europe: 12m fwd P/E 100% Japan rel to WORLD 40% 20% 350% 0% 250% -20% -40% 150% -60% 50% 1988 1991 1995 1998 2002 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2005 2009 2012 2016 -80% 1985 1989 1993 1998 2002 2007 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 136 2 December 2016 Below we show sectors where the P/E is abnormally cheap against the US in terms of P/E relative, and their respective RoE premia or discounts. This approach highlights utilities, retail and financials as sectors that trade on substantial P/E discounts to their US peers while offering superior or almost equal profitability. Figure 283: Utilities, retailing and financials in Japan are on significant valuation discounts to their US peers while offering comparable profitability 2% 0% Utilities Div Fin Japan sectors RoE rel US -2% Retailing Insurance Banks -4% -6% Pharma Comm svs Media Materials -8% HC & equip Telecom Energy (0.3,-0.2%) H&P prod Semis SW & svs -10% F&D Retail Cons Dur -12% Auto Fd, Bev & tobacco -14% Cap Goods -16% Tech HW Cons svs (1.5,-35.2%) Transport -18% 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2 Japan sectors 12m fwd PE rel US 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Across a wide range of valuation metrics, Japanese equities appear cheap, and on some metrics close to their cheapest point in decades. Japan has the lowest EV/EBITDA of the global market and nearly two-thirds of companies are trading below replacement value. Figure 284: Nearly 61% of Japanese companies trade below replacement value Figure 285: Japan is the cheapest major market on an 2016 EV/EBITDA basis 14x 80% EV/EBITDA 12x 70% 10x 60% 8x 50% 6x 40% 4x 30% Japan market, % of companies below replacement value 20% 2x Average 10% 1995 0x 1998 2001 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2007 2010 2013 2016 Japan GEM Cont. Europe US UK Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 137 2 December 2016 Moreover, cash on the balance sheet is now 21% of market cap, the highest of any region outside NJA. We also would note that the dividend yield of Japan is now back to a premium to that of US equities for the first time in the Abenomics periods. Figure 286: Cash as a percentage of market cap is c.21% 2016 Cash, % of M Cap 25% World = 13% 23% 125% MSCI Japan DY rel US 115% 21% 20% Figure 287: Japan's DY is at a premium to that of the US for the first time in the Abenomics era Average (+/- 1sd) 105% 18% 95% 17% 15% 13% 13% 85% 13% 75% 9% 10% 65% 55% 5% 45% 35% 0% NJA Japan EMEA LatAm Europe World ex UK Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research UK US 25% 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research This dividend premium is not just a function of a period of price underperformance. Dividend momentum in Japan has been relatively robust thanks to reasonably resilient earnings momentum, but also thanks to a rising payout ratio, driven by corporate governance improvements: we discuss both elements in more detail below. 3) The most exciting funds flow story: foreign investor capitulation, offset by BoJ and corporate buying In some ways, international investors have been the swing investors in Japanese equities, and currently own c.30% of market cap, as we show below. On a 12-month basis, the rate of foreign selling has now passed its worse point but we can see that around the middle of the year foreign selling was at its highest since 1990. Global Equity Strategy 138 2 December 2016 Figure 288: There has been substantial selling of Japanese equities by foreigners 12m foreign buying of Japanese equities, % market cap 6% Figure 289: Although on a 6 month basis that foreign selling has started to slow somewhat 48 Japan relative performance (lc), % chg Y/Y, rhs 38 8% 6m annualised net foreign buying in Japanese equities, as a % of market cap 6% 4% 28 2% 4% 18 2% 8 0% 0% -2% -2 -2% -4% Sep-13 10% Mar-14 Sep-14 Mar-15 Sep-15 Mar-16 -4% -12 -6% -22 -8% 1990 Sep-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1993 1996 1999 2003 2006 2009 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The same is true when we look just at passive flows. For most of this year, investors have aggressively rotated toward regions which benefit from falling DM rates (i.e. GEM equities) and away from those which benefit when rates rise (Japan and Europe, to a less degree). It's notable that flows into European and Japanese funds have just started to tick a little higher, but if yields continue to climb, these trends seem likely to reverse. Figure 290: The performance of European and Japanese equities is positively correlated with bond yields Figure 291: Passive funds have seen sharp outflows from Europe and Japan, and significant inflows into GEM funds 0.32 4500 0.22 0.12 2500 Cumulative year-to-date inflows ($m) Vanguard FTSE emerging markets iShares MSCI eurozone iShares MSCI Japan 0.02 500 -0.08 -1500 -0.18 Correlation of local currency relative performance with US 10 year yields -0.28 -3500 -0.38 -5500 -0.48 -0.58 Japan Europe ex. UK US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy GEM UK -7500 Jan-16 Mar-16 May-16 Jul-16 Sep-16 Nov-16 Source: The BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse research 139 2 December 2016 When sentiment among foreign investors does change toward Japan, it has tended to be extremely impactful, resulting in extended periods of buying, and substantial purchases. Looking at the last few major turns in sentiment suggests periods of foreign buying have tended to lasted between 1.5 and 4 years and see purchases of c.6% of market cap. Figure 292: Periods of foreign purchasing of Japanese equities have tended to be extended in duration and see significant purchases Start Date End Date Duration 22-Feb-91 15-May-98 7 Years, 2 Months Foreign buying of Japanese Foreign buying of Japanese equities USD m equities, % market cap 178,935 6.1% 05-Mar-99 29-Sep-00 1 Years, 6 Months 59,914 1.7% 10-May-02 28-Mar-08 5 Years, 10 Months 309,368 10.7% 27-Nov-09 02-Mar-12 2 Years, 3 Months 86,423 4.0% 14-Sep-12 11-Sep-15 3 Years 182,066 6.8% 4 years 93,176 5.8% Average Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters While foreign investors might re-engage with Japanese equities against a backdrop of rising DM yields, there remains a significant domestic funds flow story driven by the BoJ, public pension funds and corporates themselves, with the potential for further buying from households. Taking each group in turn: ■ The BoJ We discuss the outlook for policy in more detail below, but one area where the BoJ has been proactive in recent months is in equity buying. It opted to increase its ETF purchases from ¥3.3trn to ¥6trn on an annual basis, or c.1.2% of market cap and now owns around 2% of market cap. Figure 293: Foreign investors own around 30% of the Japanese equity market; the BoJ owns c.2% % of Japanese equity market owned Foreigners 30% Nonfinancial corporations 24% Financial institutions 21% Households 18% Government 7% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 140 2 December 2016 ■ Public pension funds The GPIF's domestic equity weighting has fallen back as the equity market (and bond yields) has fallen. As a result, to return to the new target allocation would require $20bn of domestic buying, and to the top end of the range of $150bn, or around 3% of market cap. Japan Post Bank, the second biggest holder of JGBs after the BoJ, stated last November that it will look to increase its domestic equity holdings from less than 1% of its assets currently. Figure 294: If the GPIF returned to the top end of its equity weightings, it would imply buying 3% of market cap Potential new buying ($bn) if the Previous Actual realised Estimated New target allocation increases to: target allocation (End allocation as of upper limit for allocation allocation new target Sep 2016) 23 Nov equities Domestic bonds 60% (+/-8% ) 36.2% 35.3% 35% (+/-10% ) -4 -143 International bonds 11% (+/-5% ) 12.5% 11.4% 15% (+/-4% ) 51 -5 Domestic equities 12% (+/-6% ) 21.6% 23.6% 25% (+/-9% ) 19 145 International equities 12% (+/-5% ) 21.0% 21.1% 25% (+/-8% ) 54 124 Short-term assets 5% 8.8% 8.6% -120 -120 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Private pension funds While public pension funds have moved to an equity allocation of c.20% of assets (as per the GPIF above), equity weightings among private pension funds have actually moved down modestly. Having been c.9% of assets for much of the past decade, domestic equities are now around 6.5% of assets as shown below. Private pension funds have c.¥140trn of assets, accounting for c.66% of the assets of public pension funds, so they are substantial actors. Were private pension funds to move to the 20% equity weighting of public pension funds (and note this number is set to rise), it would imply c.$185bn of equity buying, or around 3.9% of market cap. Global Equity Strategy 141 2 December 2016 Figure 295: Private pension funds have not followed the allocation shift pursued by public funds 40% % of Japan pension funds held in domestic equities 35% Corporate pensions 30% Public pensions 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 1997 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Japanese households Japanese households, with their 1.7 quadrillion yen ($17trn) in financial assets, are the biggest, but most stubborn, potential swing factor. Over 50% of these assets remain in cash, with a further 1% or so in government bonds, i.e. an asset allocation that could be considered 'perfect' for an environment of deflation. Despite the best efforts of the Abe government, this allocation has barely shifted, suggesting continuing scepticism on the part of households that a more sustained period of inflation is imminent. A central part of the BoJ's most recent set of policy pronouncements was a commitment to target a real bond yield of minus 2% by anchoring the 10-year JGB yield at around zero, while aiming to push up inflation expectations via continued expansion of the monetary base and a commitment to an inflation overshoot. Moreover, by targeting a bond yield of zero percent, the BoJ appears to be in effect locking into zero capital gain for fixed income. This should make JGBs relatively unattractive from a retail perspective, and represents perhaps the boldest attempt yet by policymakers to encourage households to move up the risk curve in terms of their asset allocation. Were households to lift their equity weightings back to 2007 levels, it would equate to equity buying of c.11% of market cap. There has been some modest success in replicating the UK's tax-free Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs), with around 10 million Nippon Individual Savings Accounts (NISAs) now active in Japan. A further more meaningful shift into domestic equities, however, would in all likelihood require the BoJ to succeed in their attempts to lift inflation expectations, thereby pushing down real bond yields. That remains far from certain, as we discuss in more detail below. We note though that market-implied inflation expectations have moved slightly higher in recent weeks, as they have done globally. Global Equity Strategy 142 2 December 2016 Figure 296: Inflation expectations in Japan appear to be nudging higher 1.4 1.2 Japan Breakeven 10 year inflation (%) 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse Corporate buying One of the more concrete successes of Abenomics has been a renewed sense of focus among companies on shareholders. One of the channels through which this has been manifested is the pick-up in corporate buybacks, which are now running at around 2% of market cap, having slowed marginally from a run rate of 3% of market cap in the first half of the year. Figure 297: Japan households remain positioned for deflation Figure 298: Corporates are buying equity worth around 2% of market cap 4.0% Government bonds 1% Other assets 8% 3.5% Equities 8% Share buybacks, % of market cap (6 month average annualised) 3.0% 2.5% Currency and deposits 53% Insurance and pension reserves 30% 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% 2000 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse research If we bring together these different sources of demand, the level of equity buying under a blue sky scenario among domestic actors could be substantial at around $500bn excluding households (or around 10% of market cap), and a trillion dollars if we include a possible household reallocation. These are admittedly very optimistic numbers, but there isn't Global Equity Strategy 143 2 December 2016 another equity market globally with such a potentially compelling domestic fund flow story, in our view. Figure 299: Under a blue sky scenario, domestic actors could buy around 10% of market cap and if we include households 22% of market cap Investor Public pension funds (upper limit) Private pension funds BoJ purchases (annual) Corporate buybacks (current annual pace) Households Buying ex households Buying inc. households Equity buying ($bn) 150.0 185 59.4 95.0 539.2 489.4 1028.6 % of mkt cap 3.1% 3.9% 1.2% 2.0% 11.3% 10.2% 21.5% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4) Foreign investor scepticism Moreover, scepticism towards the BoJ's ability to deliver market-moving policy change appears to be proxied by still significant longs of the yen. In addition, data from our prime services team suggests that although hedge fund net exposure to Japan has picked up slightly from an Abenomics-era low reached in the summer, it remains well off highs. Figure 300: Investors are long the yen on a net basis, implying scepticism about the BoJ's ability to reduce real rates via inflation expectations 100 Speculative net-positions in Yen against dollar futures contracts Figure 301: Hedge fund exposure to Japan has picked up a little in recent weeks, albeit from an Abenomics-era low 100% 50 80% 0 60% -50 40% -100 20% -150 0% -200 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 -20% 2013 Net exposure of macro/CTA funds to Japan 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse Prime Services 5) Earnings momentum decoupling from the yen: a sign of corporate change? Japanese EPS in level terms proved relatively resilient to the yen strength which characterised much of 2016 prior to the election of Donald Trump. Earnings revisions have almost now gone positive on a breadth basis. Global Equity Strategy 144 2 December 2016 Figure 302: Forward EPS has been slightly more resilient to yen strength than one might have expected 66 61 56 51 46 Japan 12 m fwd EPS (¥, 6 week lag) 41 36 May-12 Yen TWI (rhs inv) Dec-12 Aug-13 Apr-14 Nov-14 Jul-15 Figure 303: EPS momentum picked up even when the yen strengthened 105 80% 115 60% 125 40% 135 20% 145 0% -5% 155 -20% 5% 165 -40% 175 -60% 185 Mar-16 Japan earnings revisions, 4 week net upgrades (%) JPY TWI (% change Y/Y, rhs, inv) -25% -15% 15% 25% -80% 195 Nov-16 -100% 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -35% 35% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research This relative strength in EPS has been driven by the more domestic sectors, with telecoms, real estate, transport and media among the sectors to have had their 12-month forward EPS revised higher over the past six months. Figure 304: …with EPS in some more domestic sectors being upgraded 15 % chg in 12m fwd EPS over the last 6 months 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 -20 Telecoms Software Media Div Fins Pharma Food/Bev/Tobacco HPC Retailing Cap Goods Real estate Utilities Materials Insurance Transport Healthcare Equipment Energy Banks Autos Tech hardware Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We believe that this de-coupling between EPS and the yen reflects clear signs that corporates are cutting costs. We have long argued that apart from utilising the balance sheet much more efficiently as we discuss below, there are two areas of low hanging fruit for corporates to exploit: i) A demographic dividend Global Equity Strategy 145 2 December 2016 There are two factors depressing aggregate wage growth. The first is ageing, with workers over 60 paid less, and the growth of part-time employees, who are paid around a third less than regular employees. Japan's demographics are such that there is now a peak in the 50-54-year-old wage cohort (who are on average paid c.25% more than the median worker). Moreover, the most rapid area of employment growth has been among the over 65s (where the employment CAGR has been 6% over the past three years), who are paid 30% less than the 50-54 age cohort. Along with this, part-time workers now account for c.23% of total employment, their share having doubled since the late 1990s, while the broader category of non-regular workers accounts for around 40% of the workforce. As a result of these factors, overall personnel costs have been extremely muted, despite wage growth having picked up slightly over the past two years. Figure 305: The 60-64 cohort are paid c.30% less on average than the 50-54 category… Figure 306: …but the growth in the labour force is among the 65+ cohort 8.0% 450 Average monthly cash earnings (¥ 000's) 3 year CAGR of employees 400 6.0% 350 4.0% 300 2.0% 250 0.0% 200 -2.0% 150 -4.0% 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 50-54 55-64 65+ Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research A simple calculation would suggest that were the part-time share of the workforce to rise by a further 5 percentage points, and the 55-64 cohort continue to decline by c.2%, the total wage bill would fall by c3%. Global Equity Strategy 146 2 December 2016 Figure 307: Part-time work has been growing as a share of total employment Figure 308: Overall personnel costs have been contained 14.5% 25% Part time workers, % of total employment 23% 14.0% 21% 13.5% 19% 13.0% 17% 12.5% 15% 12.0% 13% 11.5% 11% Personnel costs as a % of total sales 9% 11.0% 7% 10.5% 5% 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 10.0% 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ii) Less investment The investment share of GDP in Japan is still extremely high, as is the capex-todepreciation ratio for corporates. We believe this is relatively easy to fix as corporates focus more on returning cash to shareholders (in theory), rather than over-investing in their businesses. Figure 309: Current investment share of GDP for US, UK, euro area and Japan Investment share of GDP - Q2 2016 22% 20% 18% 16% 14% 12% 10% Japan Euro area UK US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 6) Some corporate change, although more financial than restructuring The scope for change in Japan is significant. Productivity per hour worked is 30% below that of France and with Japan's CFROI® more than 50% below that of Europe. Global Equity Strategy 147 2 December 2016 Figure 310: Japan's CFROI is significantly lower than that of Europe and the US 12% 65 CS HOLT® CFROI (cash flow return on investments) Japan Figure 311: GDP per hour worked is among the lowest of any developed country US Europe 10% GDP per hour worked (Current USD) 60 55 50 45 8% 40 6% 35 30 4% Source: Credit Suisse HOLT® Greece Japan Italy United Kingdom 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015E Spain Australia Euro area Germany G7 countries 0% France United States 25 2% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Despite general scepticism about the achievements of the reforming third arrow of Abenomics, we would argue that apart from the improvement in EPS relative to the yen as shown in the point above, there have been some clear-cut signs of corporate change, although on the whole much more from a point of view of the CFO (financial restructuring) than the CEO (corporate restructuring). ■ A greater focus on shareholder returns i) Buybacks We would proxy this by the appointment of outside directors and by buybacks as a share of market cap, both of which have been on a clear upward trend, with both the number of companies carrying out buybacks and the average size of the buyback programmes pursued rising. Looking ahead, Japanese corporates have cash worth 21% of market cap (compared with c.9% of the S&P 500) suggesting that, in the absence of a sudden rise in investment, buybacks can continue to surprise on the upside. Global Equity Strategy 148 2 December 2016 Figure 312: The share of independent directors on Japanese boards has been picking up Figure 313: The trajectory of buybacks in 2016 is outstripping that of 2014 and 2015 thus far 7 90% (¥ trn) % of TSE 1st section companies with 2 or more independent directors 80% 6 2016 70% 5 2015 60% 4 2014 50% 3 40% 30% 2 20% 1 10% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2013 2012 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Source: The BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse research Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Credit Suisse research ii) Dividends Another source of shareholder returns is dividends, where payments have again been rising. The dividend payout ratio of Japanese corporates has in aggregate been moving higher over the past year. At around 31% currently, it is around 3 percentage points higher than in 2013, and 10 percentage points higher than in 2007. Nonetheless, it remains more than 10 percentage points below the global norm. In the 2015 financial year, aggregate dividends of Japan's 3,600 companies exceeded ¥10trn for the first time, and an estimated ¥11trn was paid out in dividends in the financial year ending March 2016. Dividend momentum is clearly improving. Figure 314: The Japanese payout ratio is on the rise, but remains well below the global norm Figure 315: Japanese dividend momentum has been reasonably strong 60% 55% 50% Topix dividend payout ratio (%) MSCI World dividend payout ratio (%) 120 12 month forward DPS, rebased to 100 two years ago 110 45% 40% 100 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 90 80 Euro area Japan USA GEM 70 Aug-14 Nov-14 UK Feb-15 May-15 Aug-15 Nov-15 Feb-16 May-16 Aug-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 149 2 December 2016 ■ Improving corporate governance i) The Corporate Governance code A new Corporate Governance code took effect on 1 June 2015, placing shareholder interests at the core of management guidelines. For instance, it aims to facilitate engagement with outside shareholders (by enabling electronic voting and producing disclosures and AGM notices in English), encourages corporates to take on at least two independent board directors (a measure which saw 58% compliance by end 2015), seeks to improve the transparency of companies' cross holdings and ensures that anti-takeover measures are taken only if beneficial to the shareholders. It also aims to put every type of shareholder on a level playing field and improve transparency of disclosures. This is already having a considerable impact on corporates. At the end of 2015, 11.6% of companies surveyed by the Tokyo Stock Exchange were in full compliance, and an additional 66.4% complied with >90% of the principles. ii) Monitoring management performance Over 100 companies (including Takeda, Calbee and Eisai) have now linked executive pay to share price performance, and the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry is considering making RoE-based compensation tax deductible. If this goes through the 2016 fiscal tax reform requests, these companies could implement this for FY17. In February 2015, the Institutional Shareholder Services advisory firm recommended that shareholders should vote against reappointing senior executives when the company has generated an average RoE of less than 5% over the past five fiscal years. This is important when, as above, 38% of firms make RoE below 5% and as below, 60% of companies trade below replacement value (i.e. they are priced as though they will destroy shareholder value). In 2016 for instance, it advised investors to vote against the reappointment of executives at Kobe Steel (2015 average RoE of 2.6%) and Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings (4.4%) among others. iii) Shareholder activism The GPIF last year allocated funds to Taiyo Pacific, which describes itself as a "pioneer in friendly activist investing". As such, it invests only in companies willing to work with it to improve returns and shuns proxy fights to force change. The number of Japanese companies subject to activist demands this year has risen to 13 (YTD) from eight last year, according to Activist Insight of London. Moreover, Japanfocused activist funds represented 22% of activist funds started in 2015 globally, according to data from Preqin quoted by Bloomberg. There have recently been examples of Japanese corporates being bought by foreign as opposed to domestic acquirers. One of the highest-profile examples of this was Sharp, which was bought by Hon Hai Precision Industry of Taiwan. Historically the Japanese government has tended to favour an intra-country merger, which in many cases did not shed capacity. iv) Cross holdings unwinding and some consolidation The tax exemption has been reduced for cross holdings above 5%, while the corporate governance code, which came into effect last summer, also pushes corporates to divest their holdings. Cross holdings are unwinding slowly, with Japan's three largest banks, Mizuho, Sumitomo Mitsui and Mitsubishi UFJ, having now set targets to sell down their ¥10trn stakes in corporate clients. This could boost EPS for the major banks by 10% to 20% if they opt to use this cash to pursue buybacks. Non-financial corporates hold around 22% of market cap. As these unwind, it should serve to both free up cash to fund further buybacks, and in some cases drive EPS higher as cross holdings are not fully consolidated, and are thus valued on the Global Equity Strategy 150 2 December 2016 basis of dividends rather than earnings (in theory if all cross holdings were valued on the basis of dividend yield and then unwound and valued on the basis of earnings, then market EPS would rise for 22% of the market and that in turn would push market EPS up by c70%). ■ Broader economic reform i) The Workers Dispatch Act and White Collar Exemption Our Japan economics team discussed the changes in Updates on Labour Market Reform Initiatives, 18 September 2015. In summary, the Workers Dispatch Act has been amended to allow temporary workers to be employed for up to three years (and then the vacancy can be re-filled by another temporary worker) and thus, de facto, temporary workers can be used on a permanent basis. Progress on the White Collar Exemption has been more disappointing, in our view. This reform would allow for overtime pay for specialist workers with an annual salary above ¥10m. This allows professionals to be paid on performance rather than on hours worked, which would represent an important shift. The bill, however, was delayed again earlier this year. With the government now in possession of a fresh electoral mandate, it is possible they will now re-focus on passing the reform. We admit that the key element of labour reform has not been addressed: namely, changing the 1970s' labour law, which says that companies cannot make redundancies unless "it is in general societal interests" (and thus limits the ability to fire workers, which in turns means loss-making operations continue to have extremely high fixed costs). ii) Agricultural reform Abe's Cabinet has approved a bill greatly reducing the power of the Central Union of Agricultural Cooperatives (JA-Zenchu). Reducing this Cooperative's power is intended to increase local autonomy and the productivity of agricultural producers. Agricultural reform has broader significance as a key symbol of Abe's fight against vested interests within Japan, and so his success in this area to date bodes well, in our view, for the third arrow of Abenomics. 7) Japan is moving up our economic momentum scorecard Japan is now moving up the economic momentum scorecard, despite the recent period of yen strength. Figure 316: Japan has moved up to the middle of our PMI scorecard Rank Region Composite PMI Index, now Index, 3m ch Weight 33% 33% 1 UK 55.9 9.8 2 Europe ex UK 53.5 2.4 3 Japan 51.4 2.1 4 GEM 52.1 0.4 5 US 53.1 -1.8 Region having high PMIs and rank high on surprises are on top. Macro surprises Level 17% 52.6 39.3 27.1 -4.4 -2.2 3m change 17% 6.5 10.9 10.1 -4.0 -9.9 Overall score 1.3 0.3 -0.2 -0.7 -0.8 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 151 2 December 2016 Moreover, PMI new orders are consistent with GDP growth picking up to almost 2% at a time when consensus is for only 0.8% GDP growth in 2017. Moreover, Q3 saw nominal GDP in Japan climb again, taking the aggregate gain since Abe's election to 7%. Figure 317: PMIs and real GDP growth have both been picking up Japan manufacturing PMI new orders 66 Figure 318: Nominal GDP in Japan has increased by 7% since Shinzo Abe's election 8% Japan GDP growth, 1q lag, rhs 6% 530000 Abe elected 520000 4% 56 510000 2% 46 0% -2% 36 -4% 490000 Japanese nominal GDP, ¥bn 480000 -6% 26 -8% 16 Jan-04 500000 -10% Feb-06 Mar-08 May-10 Jun-12 Jul-14 470000 460000 1994 Sep-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse research 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In our view, there could be two further supports for growth from here. The first of these is that Japan already has a competitive currency, as proxied by the fact that the yen is cheap on a PPP basis (which has been rare over recent decades) and it has a large current account surplus. Any further yen weakness from here will help Japanese growth. As mentioned already, rate differentials, the step up in QQE and positioning would all argue for further yen weakness. Figure 319: The yen, at par to PPP against the dollar, is just off its 30-year low Figure 320: The Japanese current account has moved sharply into a surplus of 3.7% of GDP 5.0% 110% 90% JPY / USD, deviation from PPP 70% 4.0% 3.0% 50% 2.0% 30% 10% 1.0% Current account balance, % of GDP -10% -30% 1986 1991 1996 2001 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2006 2011 2016 0.0% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 152 2 December 2016 The second support is the prospect of fiscal easing: there is an increasing chance of a snap Lower House election. This would not only give Prime Minister Abe more of a mandate for reform (he then would control both the Upper and the Lower House for the next four years), but might well lead to more fiscal easing. 8) Policy options are not exhausted, even if US growth were to weaken We think many investors assume that Japan has run out of policy options if there were a slowdown in US growth, or if the hopes now attached to Donald Trump (relating to a significant fiscal boost) are disappointed. Investors fear that the BoJ appears likely to run out of JGBs to buy in a de facto sense in 2018 because at that stage the BoJ would own around 50% of the JGB market. To quote the IMF: “We construct a realistic rebalancing scenario, which suggests that the BoJ may need to taper its JGB purchases in 2017 or 2018, given collateral needs of banks, asset-liability management constraints of insurers, and announced asset allocation targets of major pension funds." Because the quality of infrastructure is high (Japan ranks 7th of 140 countries on the WEF's infrastructure ranking), and unskilled labour is scarce, we think there is also scepticism of Japan's ability to pursue an infrastructure driven fiscal boost. While the most recent round of policy innovation has moved away from a focus on the quantity of purchases for the reasons above, we would dispute the notion that Japan is entirely out of policy options for the following reasons: First, Japan has net foreign assets of 62% of GDP, and thus it can always buy foreign assets (such as equities) as the SNB is doing, given that the country in effect is short the yen (when the yen declines, Japan becomes wealthier). Second, although government debt to GDP is high at 250% on a gross basis, net government debt to GDP is only 130%. This would require a real bond yield of minus 1.4% to stabilise government debt to GDP and unemployment. The BoJ has now moved one step closer to this by targeting a real bond yield of minus 2%. Third, the BoJ owns c.38% of the JGB market and could retire some of the debt by de facto converting it into a zero-coupon irredeemable, where the coupon could rise if certain conditions (perhaps nominal GDP targets) were met. Fourth, although on some measures Japan is close to full employment, it has significant scope to boost productivity, as discussed above, and the U6 unemployment rate (i.e. those part time workers who want to have a full time job but can't register as being unemployed) is close to 6% according to our analysts. Last, fiscal policy could take the form of spending vouchers that mature if they are not spent within a fixed period, to push the onus onto consumption rather than investment via infrastructure. Indeed Japan tried this approach in 1999 when 31 million 'shopping coupons' worth ¥20,000 each were distributed to Japanese families with children and to the elderly, which expired after 6 months. Global Equity Strategy 153 2 December 2016 9) Not as vulnerable to protectionism as might be feared One of the risks attached to the election of Donald Trump is a rise in protectionist pressures globally. Although Japan is levered into the global cycle for the reasons discussed above, this leverage is more via yields and the USD, and less to do with trade. Trade as a share of GDP is relatively low in Japan when compared to the US, the EU or Germany. Figure 321: Exports as a share of GDP are relatively low in Japan 25.0% 23.0% Exports as a % of GDP 21.0% 19.0% 17.0% 15.0% 13.0% 11.0% 9.0% 7.0% 5.0% Japan Euro Area to RoW China Germany to non-EA Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 154 2 December 2016 What are the problems? 1) Little feed-through of the weaker yen to underlying inflation The yen-induced inflation spike of 2013/14 has simply not translated into higher inflation expectations or materially accelerating wage growth. This is despite clear tightness in the Japanese labour market, with the ratio of job offers per applicant now at a 20-year high of 1.4. Figure 322: Scheduled and contracted earnings growth has remained around zero, albeit this is an improvement from -1% in 2013 % change Y/Y 2.0 5.0 4.0 Scheduled 1.0 1.4 Total Japanese cash earnings, % chg Y/Y, 6 mma Total cash earnings 1.5 Figure 323: Wage growth has disconnected from the tightness of the labour market with the ratio of job offers per applicant at 1.4 1.3 Ratio of job offers per applicant, rhs 1.2 3.0 Contracted 1.1 0.5 2.0 0.0 1.0 -0.5 0.0 -1.0 -1.0 -1.5 -2.0 0.6 -2.0 -3.0 0.5 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 -4.0 -2.5 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2015 2016 0.4 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2) The September 21st change in policy makes Japanese monetary policy hugely dependent on US rates and GDP growth ■ Yen weakness reliant on US yields retaining upward momentum The latest innovation from the BoJ in its statement of 21 September contained two elements: a commitment to 'yield curve control' and an 'inflation-overshooting commitment'. The BoJ has said it expects its purchase pace to remain 'more or less in line with the current pace'. Thus it is critical to watch the BoJ's rate of JGB purchasing as this will reveal if domestic institutions are selling more bonds as a result of this policy action or if as a result of the rising US bond yield they are buying more US bonds. Global Equity Strategy 155 2 December 2016 Figure 324: The 2-month rolling average of JGB purchases has dipped noticeably 27000 22000 17000 12000 7000 2000 -3000 4 week rolling average weekly JGB purchases 2 month rolling average weekly JGB purchases -8000 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 Dec-14 Mar-15 Jun-15 Sep-15 Dec-15 Mar-16 Jun-16 Sep-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The second aspect of the BoJ's new policy package was to announce that they will continue to stimulate until CPI inflation exceeds the price stability target of 2%. The BoJ's failure to reach its 2% inflation target over the Abenomics period seems to make this commitment somewhat lacking in credibility. Nevertheless, we would be wary of completely ignoring the BoJ's target, as the (admittedly illiquid) market-implied inflation expectations appear to have done. The critical issue is that if US growth were to falter and US rate expectations fall, the yen is likely to appreciate and this in turn would drive up Japanese real rates (owing to accelerating deflation with the JGB yield floor at zero) with the yen backed up by a 4% current account surplus. ■ Which leaves fiscal policy, if there is a global growth accident As a result, from here if US growth were to falter, then fiscal easing financed if necessary by the BoJ would likely be the solution. The usual riposte is twofold: first, the MoF will not allow it. However, we think Abe has shown that he is able to overcome MoF objections (as he did with QQE by eventually replacing 6 out of 9 board members with his own appointees) and even the Secretary General of the LDP, Mr Nakai, has said that he no longer favours a 'balanced budget'. The second debate is over effectiveness, and we believe that fiscal spending could be more effective than investors realise. Since 1994, fiscal easing in Japan has amounted to ¥380trn (or 76% of GDP), but the clear-water impact has been just under 24% of GDP. This has thus added only 1% a year to GDP since 1998. If we look at the change in the cyclically adjusted primary budget deficit, however, the fiscal easing has been less than this. As we discuss above, we think the solution would be consumer vouchers or easing that helps boost productivity (e.g. childcare for women to allow them to work). Global Equity Strategy 156 2 December 2016 3) A lingering reluctance to embrace change Support for major policy change does not appear to run deep Perhaps the 'problem' for Japan from a policy perspective is that there is not a sense of crisis. Japan has net foreign assets (as a creditor nation), a very low unemployment rate (3.1%) and a good quality of life (at least measured in terms of life expectancy or the low crime rate). With households net creditors, deflation actually becomes attractive, increasing real purchasing power. In terms of GDP per capita in real terms since 2000, Japan has only modestly underperformed the US, and in fact has outgrown the euro area. In addition, Japan is one of the very few countries where the incumbent politicians have been reelected with an increased majority (as seen in the recent Upper House elections). Figure 325: In terms of GDP per capita, Japan has only modestly underperformed the US since 2000 118 GDP per capita constant prices 2000 = 100 116 Euro area 114 Japan USA 112 110 108 106 104 102 100 98 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Moreover, as described above, a weak yen is politically counterproductive (as food prices rise more than wage growth) and NIRP hurts the banking sector, which tends to support the LDP (the trough in JGB yields occurred at a similar time when MUFG said it would stop dealing in the primary bond market). If the performance of the Nikkei is not going to rely largely on the US cycle, then greater domestic change will be needed. We believe that widespread domestic economic deregulation, labour market reform or much more clear-cut fiscal stimulus to drive up inflation expectations would all be required to make the Japanese equity story more domestically driven. Limits to the corporate change seen We would argue that a full embracing of US/UK style shareholder focus would require three factors: ■ Widespread executive share options (something still lacking). ■ Aggressive M&A to penalise underperforming managements. Again, this is very rare. ■ A change in the corporate attitude that the number of people employed remains the key measure of corporate success, rather than a focus on profitability. Global Equity Strategy 157 2 December 2016 What if there is no change and US growth falters? The key risk in Japan, in our view, is that there is no economic reform and a deceleration in US growth momentum. Under such an outcome, Japan would slip back into deflation and the underlying weakness of the economy would become primary once again: ■ Challenging fiscal arithmetic. Indeed, as we highlighted in our bond piece, What to do with bond proxies, 3 November 2016, Japan needs a real bond yield of minus 1.4% to stabilise government debt to GDP and unemployment. ■ A very low structural growth rate. The rate of growth of productivity and labour when added together is no more than 0.5%, largely because the labour force is shrinking by 0.5% a year. The female participation rate is already quite high (for 25 to 65 year olds) at 66%; it is just their pay which has been abnormally low. ■ Labour laws in need of reform. An economy that for political reasons has been reluctant to change the 1970s' labour law, namely that employees cannot be fired unless it is in 'general societal interest'. ■ Little spare capacity in the economy. The Japanese economy is close to full capacity in the labour market with the job offer to applications ratio at a 24-year high. ■ An economy which over-invests. Japan's investment share of GDP is the highest among major developed regions. Figure 326: Japan's gross government debt to GDP ratio stands at 245% Figure 327: Corporates continue to over-save, putting pressure on the government to borrow 12% 250 Non-financials Government Households Overseas Net surplus, % of GDP, 4Q average 9% 2016 gross government debt to GDP (%) 200 6% 3% 150 0% 100 -3% -6% 50 -9% 0 Japan Italy US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Spain France UK -12% Q1 1998 Q1 2001 Q1 2004 Q1 2007 Q1 2010 Q1 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 158 2 December 2016 4) Exposure to China is high Japan has nearly five times the economic exposure of the US to China, which leaves Japan vulnerable to any China-related economic worries. Such worries seem limited at the moment, with CS economists having revised up their GDP forecast to 6.8% in 2017 from 6.5%. Japan was sold off aggressively by foreign investors fearing the impact of RmB weakness in August 2015, but it has not been bought back as China recovered. We do believe, though, that in the long run China represents a serious competitive threat to Japan. Figure 328: Japan is heavily exposed to China 14% Gross exports to GEM, % GDP (on value-added basis) 12% Rest of GEM China 10% 8% 8.0% 9.6% 6% 7.1% 4% 2% 5.8% 4.6% 1.7% 0% Japan Euro area 1.0% 1.0% UK US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 159 2 December 2016 Stock picks 1) Japan Focus List Our Japanese equity research team highlight the following stocks as their top picks. Figure 329: Japan Focus List -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ HOLT 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- 2016e Momentum, % Name Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Taisei 11.3 66% -41% 1.8 93% na 2.1 18.1 2.5 -3.3 2.1 Outperform Sekisui House 10.3 61% -36% 1.2 53% na 3.5 43.4 0.0 0.1 1.9 Outperform Morinaga 19.1 98% -19% 3.1 194% 3.3 0.8 -47.4 20.0 1.7 2.0 Outperform Toray Inds. 14.3 85% -47% 1.6 24% -3.2 1.5 -1.8 -0.9 -3.0 2.2 Outperform Mitsui Chemicals 10.3 61% -60% 1.3 76% 16.7 2.0 32.0 19.1 -1.8 2.3 Outperform Shionogi 21.3 147% 2% 3.5 112% na 1.3 -15.7 4.4 2.9 2.0 Outperform Nippon Shinyaku 30.6 211% 26% 3.6 203% na 0.6 -41.1 4.2 2.0 1.8 Outperform Kose 22.1 109% -6% 3.6 143% na 1.0 -28.1 -5.3 -0.7 2.0 Outperform Sumitomo Osaka CementMetals Hitachi 9.4 52% -59% 0.9 31% na 2.3 74.5 -4.6 -1.1 2.6 Outperform 13.3 74% -36% 1.3 -6% na 1.7 38.8 -0.4 -2.6 2.4 Outperform Daikin Industries 20.2 118% -5% 3.1 81% 6.4 1.1 -18.2 3.0 -0.3 2.2 Outperform Toshiba 12.8 75% -45% 5.3 178% -1.0 0.0 -22.4 30.2 3.2 2.8 Outperform Sony 21.0 125% -43% 1.7 75% 4.2 0.7 39.6 -15.2 -1.0 2.0 Outperform Aisin Seiki 12.7 137% -39% 1.2 31% na 2.0 71.8 6.4 0.3 2.1 Outperform Suzuki Motor 13.0 139% -34% 1.7 53% na 0.9 28.3 39.4 -1.2 2.3 Outperform Nissha Printing 21.1 115% -45% 1.5 17% na 1.2 -3.5 -240.9 -6.9 2.5 Outperform Credit Saison 9.2 62% -38% 0.8 1% na 1.7 -11.4 -0.1 0.2 3.0 Outperform Shinsei Bank 8.8 75% -25% 0.6 -3% na 0.6 -8.4 -1.4 -17.5 2.5 Outperform Source: Credit Suisse estimates, HOLT, IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters 2) Cheap quality in a global context The following Japanese stocks all have HOLT eCap awards, implying they are quality companies, and yet they trade on valuation discounts to their global sector peers. Figure 330: Japanese companies with eCap awards which trade at valuation discounts to their sector peers -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % eCAP Awards Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Japan Tobacco X 16.7 95% -13% 2.8 38% -0.8 3.4 -13.2 -0.2 -1.6 2.1 Outperform Obic X 19.2 96% 10% 2.8 82% na 1.7 -19.0 -0.5 -0.3 2.5 Not Covered Otsuka X 18.8 94% 7% 3.0 49% na 2.0 -9.9 -0.3 -0.1 2.2 Not Covered Uss X 20.7 88% 19% 2.9 57% na 2.7 -17.2 -1.8 -2.7 2.7 Not Covered Aeon Delight X 15.3 83% 6% 2.0 16% na 1.8 23.2 -0.9 -0.4 2.3 Not Covered Conexio X 10.3 77% 10% 2.1 65% na 3.8 23.3 0.0 0.0 2.5 Not Covered Elecom X 12.0 89% 13% 3.3 107% na 2.1 80.1 4.7 -1.4 2.7 Not Covered En-Japan X 18.1 98% -7% 4.1 53% na 1.3 -4.8 2.3 -2.0 2.2 Not Covered F@N Communications X 14.4 72% -20% 3.9 3% na 2.4 25.9 -1.5 -2.1 3.2 Not Covered Obara Group X 12.5 73% -45% 2.4 92% na 1.2 1.3 0.0 0.0 3.0 Not Covered Septeni Holdings X 13.1 72% -32% 4.0 88% na 1.0 -28.9 26.3 -18.1 1.7 Not Covered Trancom X 12.4 77% 17% 2.2 67% na 1.4 30.1 0.0 0.0 2.3 Not Covered Usen X 9.7 53% -65% 3.2 -12% na 0.9 82.0 -26.6 3.6 1.0 Not Covered Workman X 19.2 81% 30% 2.8 85% na 1.5 -39.2 0.0 0.0 3.0 Not Covered Wowow X 12.5 69% 10% 1.9 56% na 2.0 77.9 0.0 0.0 3.0 Not Covered Name Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: Credit Suisse, HOLT, IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy 160 2 December 2016 3) Companies focused on change We highlight companies that are focusing on change, as proxied by appointing outside directors. Figure 331: Japanese companies which are appointing external directors -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus recommendation Credit Suisse (1=Buy; 5=Sell) rating Name % Independent directors Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Sony 77% 21.0 125% -43% 1.7 75% 4.2 0.7 39.6 -15.2 -1.0 2.0 Outperform Eisai 64% 51.6 356% 58% 3.3 51% na 2.3 -27.3 12.2 -1.6 2.8 Underperform Shionogi 60% 21.3 147% 2% 3.5 112% na 1.3 -15.7 4.4 2.9 2.0 Outperform Santen Pharm. 60% 21.5 149% 10% 2.4 36% na 1.7 -9.7 -3.9 -0.5 2.2 Outperform Hitachi 57% 12.0 89% -63% 1.1 5% 4.3 2.0 52.4 -1.5 -0.3 2.2 Outperform Astellas Pharma 57% 15.9 110% -12% 2.7 56% na 2.1 38.0 2.7 -0.9 2.3 Neutral Japan Exchange Group 57% 22.8 153% -3% 3.7 53% na 2.5 -37.3 3.6 1.1 3.3 Underperform Nomura Hdg. 55% 12.1 81% -46% 0.8 -14% na 2.5 -21.8 61.1 7.6 3.0 Neutral Olympus 54% 23.9 145% -14% 3.7 2% na 0.7 -15.0 -7.4 -5.1 2.2 Outperform Shinsei Bank 50% 8.8 75% -25% 0.6 -3% na 0.6 -8.4 -1.4 -17.5 2.5 Outperform Orix 46% 8.2 55% -28% 1.0 28% na 2.8 -13.1 1.4 1.1 1.9 Outperform Tdk 43% 16.8 125% -27% 1.5 45% -10.3 1.5 5.6 2.4 1.1 2.8 Neutral Calbee 43% 23.4 121% -19% 3.9 32% 3.2 1.1 -41.1 -4.0 -2.0 2.6 Neutral Source: Credit Suisse estimates, HOLT, IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters 4) Japanese companies with dividend yields above 2% covered by free cash flow, and with net cash on the balance sheet The names below could, in our judgement, continue to increase distributions, have free cash flow yields above their dividend yields and have cash on their balance sheets. Figure 332: Relatively high yielding stocks with net cash 2016e, % Name Net Cash to market cap 2016e FCY DY -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % FCY/DY Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Kuraray 3% 4.2 2.56 1.6 13.1 78% -20% 1.1 21% 37.8 -0.1 -0.7 3.1 Neutral Panasonic 3% 6.23 2.15 2.90 15.0 90% -54% 1.5 39% 81.4 -1.6 -1.9 2.2 Neutral Tokyo Electron 13% 3.91 2.75 1.42 15.6 98% -51% 3.0 85% 2.3 10.5 4.7 2.2 Outperform Ckd 8% 6.22 2.11 2.95 13.1 77% -35% 1.2 50% 14.9 7.3 0.9 1.8 Not Covered Disco 13% 5.28 2.18 2.42 21.1 132% -19% 2.8 76% -22.1 5.2 2.3 2.3 Neutral Lintec 37% 4.58 2.76 1.66 13.9 83% -5% 1.0 14% 47.0 -12.9 -3.4 2.3 Not Covered Tsi Holdings 38% 10.27 2.66 3.86 32.4 194% -26% 0.6 21% 32.8 -28.9 0.5 3.0 Not Covered Source: Credit Suisse research, HOLT, IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy 161 2 December 2016 5) Companies that dominate their end markets Japan has a number of companies which continue to dominate, or enjoy significant market share, in their respective end markets. Figure 333: Japanese companies that dominate their end markets -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales 13.1 78% -20% 1.1 21% 4.2 2.6 37.8 -0.1 -0.7 3.1 Neutral 30.7 192% -8% 1.8 6% 5.4 0.8 23.3 0.9 -0.6 2.8 Underperform 28% 19.8 118% 3% 1.7 31% 2.2 1.4 -12.0 2.0 -0.8 1.9 Neutral ArF photo-resist 30% 15.6 93% -5% 1.0 -20% -3.1 3.1 50.1 -1.2 -1.7 3.2 Neutral Immersion top coat 90% VRV 40% 20.2 118% -5% 3.1 81% 6.4 1.1 -18.2 3.0 -0.3 2.2 Outperform HVAC 10% Transmission Automatic 16% 12.7 137% -39% 1.2 31% na 2.0 71.8 6.4 0.3 2.1 Outperform Transmission Step -AT 22% Torque Converter LCD glass substrate 15% 25% 17.9 105% -20% 0.8 -19% na 2.5 60.4 9.7 -1.8 2.6 Not Covered 70% 12.2 72% -78% 0.7 -2% na -0.1 -49.8 4.2 -0.9 2.7 Not Covered Nippon Elec.Glass Thin film solar cell glass substrate LCD glass substrate 20% 23.7 176% 5% 0.6 -39% na 2.7 69.3 -35.3 -1.5 2.8 Not Covered Ngk Insulators Exhaust gas filters 40% 15.1 89% -29% 1.8 14% na 1.8 11.5 -12.4 -2.2 2.2 Outperform Honeycomb 45% Sumitomo Electric Ind. Wire-harness 27% 12.2 131% -31% 1.0 16% na 2.1 82.1 -2.6 -0.1 2.2 Outperform Nabtesco Speed reduction gear 60% 18.4 108% -5% 2.5 39% -1.0 1.7 -38.5 -5.2 -0.5 2.4 Neutral Keyence Sensors for manufacturing n/a 29.8 221% 18% 4.5 106% 3.0 0.2 -27.6 -0.6 -0.4 2.1 Neutral Fanuc CNC systems 60% 31.4 184% 17% 2.9 33% 0.4 1.7 -41.9 0.6 -1.3 2.9 Underperform Thk Linear motion guide 60% 20.3 119% -30% 1.3 16% 2.5 1.5 -21.9 0.7 1.5 2.9 Neutral Kureha 100% 9.5 57% -40% 0.7 -2% na 2.4 32.1 0.0 0.8 3.0 Neutral Teijin PGA biodegradable plastic (for shale extr) carbongas fiber 11% 10.8 64% -62% 1.4 49% -24.7 2.3 42.2 -0.2 -2.5 2.4 Neutral Toray Inds. carbon fiber 35% 14.3 85% -47% 1.6 24% -3.2 1.5 -1.8 -0.9 -3.0 2.2 Outperform Mitsubishi Chm.Hdg. carbon fiber 10% 10.0 59% -54% 1.1 35% 16.6 2.3 86.8 17.3 -3.4 2.4 Outperform Nidec Spindle Motor 80-90% 27.1 159% 30% 4.0 62% 1.9 0.8 -35.6 2.5 -2.7 2.1 Outperform Murata Manufacturing 40-50% 18.9 141% -33% 2.7 83% 3.7 1.4 5.1 -4.7 -2.6 2.4 Outperform Kyocera Multilayer ceramic capacitor (MLCC) Ceramic package 70-80% 26.4 196% 6% 0.9 3% 6.4 1.8 49.5 -3.4 -2.5 3.1 Neutral Ngk Spark Plug Spark Plug, Oxygen sensor 40% 15.2 163% -33% 1.6 34% na 1.7 5.8 -3.7 -2.3 2.5 Outperform Tdk Li-ion pollymer battery 30-40% 16.8 125% -27% 1.5 45% -10.3 1.5 5.6 2.4 1.1 2.8 Neutral Smc Pneumatic equipment 33% 22.6 132% -7% 2.3 54% 3.3 0.6 -20.4 -3.2 -0.5 2.4 Neutral Osg Tapping Machines 30% 18.6 109% -32% 2.1 41% na 2.2 -35.6 1.9 -0.8 2.8 Not Covered Harmonic Drive Sys. Miniature speed reducer 60% 38.0 223% 26% 7.0 174% na 0.7 -45.8 -1.7 0.1 2.0 Not Covered Sony CMOS sensors 45% 21.0 125% -43% 1.7 75% 4.2 0.7 39.6 -15.2 -1.0 2.0 Outperform Exedy Torque Converter 22% 11.6 125% -23% 0.9 11% na 2.2 37.5 0.9 0.4 3.3 Neutral Koito Manufacturing Headlamps 22% 17.2 184% -6% 3.3 148% na 0.7 13.3 0.2 -1.4 2.5 Underperform Nifco Auto plastic fasteners 22% 15.6 168% -18% 2.6 105% na 1.8 -11.3 -1.2 -0.5 2.2 Outperform Toyota Inds. Forklift 21% 14.0 150% -45% 0.8 25% na 2.2 112.2 -1.5 -0.4 2.7 Outperform Alps Electric Automatic Wi-Fi module 16.6 123% -43% 2.5 113% na 1.0 -6.0 -15.0 -3.4 1.9 Outperform Nippon Shokubai Super Absorb. Polymer 18% 13.4 80% -3% 1.1 29% -3.8 2.1 39.1 -4.6 -3.8 2.5 Neutral Asahi Kasei Li-ion Battery seperator 18% 14.1 84% -14% 1.3 38% 1.0 2.0 22.4 0.9 -0.6 2.7 Neutral Hitachi Chemical Li-ion Battery anode 30% 13.8 82% -23% 1.5 38% 1.1 1.9 27.5 2.1 -1.9 2.5 Outperform Name Product Kuraray Sumco Shin-Etsu Chemical JSR Daikin Industries Aisin Seiki Asahi Glass Nippon Sheet Glass Market Share Abs Poval film 80% 300 mm wafer 26% 300 mm wafer Consensus recommendation Credit Suisse rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: Credit Suisse, HOLT, IBES, MSCI, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy 162 2 December 2016 6) Japanese banks We believe that investors should be overweight Japanese banks. They look extremely cheap, are essentially a play on the steeper yield curve, and asset quality should be improving given the rise in house prices. Figure 335: … and the same is the case with its P/B relative Figure 334: Japanese banks trade 2.0 standard deviations below average on 12m fwd P/E relative… 110% Japan banks rel mkt: P/E Japan banks rel mkt: P/B Average (+/- 1SD) 100% Average (+/- 1SD) 95% 90% 85% 80% 75% 70% 65% 60% 55% 50% 45% 40% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 35% 1995 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Credit Suisse research, Thomson Reuters Furthermore, Japanese banks look cheap on a combination of 12-month forward RoE and P/B. Figure 336: Japan offers an attractive RoE/PB trade-off 1.7 Major Countries - Price to book versus ROE Sweden 1.5 United States Price to Book 1.3 Denmark Netherlands 1.1 Switzerland 0.9 United Kingdom Spain 0.7 France Japan 0.5 Italy Germany 0.3 -2% 0% 2% 4% ROE 6% 8% 10% 12% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 163 2 December 2016 This is against a backdrop of rising house prices and reasonably robust loan growth. Figure 337: House prices are stabilising Figure 338: Japanese loan growth remains high 5% Tokyo Metropolitan Area, house prices, % change year-on-year 8 Japan bank loan growth, y/y% 3% 1% 3 -1% -2 -3% -7 -5% -7% 1993 -12 1996 1999 2002 2006 2009 2012 2016 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In addition, the loan-to-deposit ratio of the banks is extremely depressed. The close relation with JGB yields has been of particular note year-to-date given the sharp move higher in yields, which has provided some relief to the relative performance of the sector. Figure 339: Japan loan-to-deposit ratio is depressed at 66% 105% Japanese banks loan -to-deposit ratio Figure 340: JGB yields have tended to correlate closely with the performance of Japanese banks 0.75 2.10 Japanese banks relative to the market 100% JGB 10 year yield (%, rhs) 0.65 95% 90% 1.60 0.55 1.10 0.45 0.60 0.35 0.10 85% 80% 75% 70% 65% 1983 1987 1992 1997 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2001 2006 2011 2016 0.25 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 -0.40 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 164 2 December 2016 The critical points on the yield curve for Japanese banks are the 3 month and 5 year points, and accordingly there has been a reasonably close relationship between this spread and the relative performance of Japanese banks. The move by the BoJ to institutionalise an upward sloping yield curve has helped to increase this spread. Japanese banks, however, have not responded in the way one might have expected, underperforming the steepening of the curve. Figure 341: The 3 month 5 year spread is an important driver of Japanese banks, and suggests further upside for the sector Japanese yield curve: 5 year less 3 month 0.3 0.489 Japanese banks rel, rhs 0.2 0.439 0.1 0.389 0.0 0.339 -0.1 -0.2 2012 0.289 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy 165 2 December 2016 GEM: reduce overweight We initially upgraded GEM equities to overweight in December 2015, making the region our largest overweight for 2016. We then modestly trimmed emerging markets to a smaller overweight to reflect a less supportive macro backdrop in early September (see GEM: most preferred region, slightly reduced, 2 September). We now cut the size of our overweight even further, owing to the factors highlighted below. However, although we think that EM equity outperformance may be muted (or indeed not materialise) in H1 2017, we remain of the view that longer-term outperformance can be achieved, as we discuss later, and that the relative strength of the three-year story precludes us from taking weightings down further. Why the modest reduction? 1. The global macro backdrop for GEM is becoming less supportive From a macro point of view, we see the most important drivers of emerging market performance as: US rates; the US dollar; commodity prices; and investor perceptions of China. The first 10 months of the year saw a uniquely supportive set of factors come together for emerging markets: the dollar fell by nearly 9% on a trade-weighted basis between January and August, the oil price rallied by over 90% between February and October, the US TIPS yield fell by 80bps between January and July, to its low of -6bps while macro momentum in China accelerated from a low in Q1 2016. The very unusual combination seen in the first half of the year was the sharp fall in index linked and nominal bond yields despite the rise in the oil price: something that is very unlikely to be repeated, in our opinion. Going forward, some of these macro tailwinds will become somewhat less supportive for GEM equity performance. Nonetheless, we doubt these changes in the macro backdrop will be significant enough to cause GEM to underperform over the course of 2017. Figure 342: A number of the macro tailwinds for GEM will become headwinds in the coming months on Credit Suisse macro forecasts (25 Oct the relative peak in GEM performance) Macro factor Change: 22 Jan to 25 Oct USD TWI ↓ -4.0% Oil price ↑ 75% US TIPS yield (bps) ↓ -67 MSCI GEM $ rel to World 16% 12 month outlook ↑ 4.2% ↑ 33% ↑ 40 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Below we assess each of these factors in turn. ■ US rates: rising TIPS yields There has been a very close correlation between the TIPS yield and the performance of emerging markets in the past three years. Thus the rise that we would project, c.50bp from here, would – on the basis of the first chart below – take c.5% off the relative performance of emerging markets. Global Equity Strategy 166 2 December 2016 However, we believe there are two reasons emerging markets can be more resilient than they were in the 2013 'Taper Tantrum' to rising DM rates: i. The improvement in current account positions makes GEM less vulnerable to US rates The aggregate emerging market current account position has improved significantly over the past few years, reflecting a repair of external imbalances and meaning reliance on short-term foreign capital inflows – which are undermined as DM rates rise – has lessened. Thus emerging markets can, it seems, accommodate a rise in the TIPS yield to c.1%. Figure 343: There has been a clear relationship between TIPS yields and the relative performance of GEM equities Figure 344: A lower TIPS yield makes it easier for emerging markets to finance their current account deficits -2.0 13 GEM relative to global equities, 6m % chg 10-year TIPS yield, 6m lead, lhs 3.5 -1.5 US 10-year TIPS yields, 6m chg, rhs, inv. 8 6-month rolling GEM current account deficits, % of GDP, rhs, inverted 2016E CS forecast 3.0 -1.0 2.5 3 -0.5 2.0 -2 0.0 Sample includes Brazil, India, Russia, Mexico, Indonesia, Philippines, Turkey, South Africa, Poland, Hungary 1.5 -7 1.0 -12 1.5 -17 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2015 2016 -0.1% -1.1% 0.5 -1.6% 0.0 -2.1% -0.5 -1.0 2008 0.4% -0.6% 1.0 0.5 0.9% -2.6% 2009 2010 2011 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Indeed, the chart below suggests that current account positions are a determinant of EM equity performance; since Trump's election as the next President of the US and the subsequent sharp rise in DM yields, there has been a reasonable positive correlation between a country's current account balance and its performance relative to GEM. Global Equity Strategy 167 2 December 2016 Figure 345: There has been a positive correlation between EM countries' current account positions and their relative performance since Trump's election Price perf rel GEM since Trump victory in $ (9th Nov, 2016) 6% Russia 4% Taiwan China 2% Korea 0% India Philippines Poland Brazil Chile -4% Mexico -6% Thailand South Africa -2% Hungary Czech Republic Turkey -8% Indonesia -10% -7% -5% -3% -1% 1% 3% 5% 7% Current account as % GDP (Q2, 2016) 9% 11% 13% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ii. An improvement in global growth (which occurs as the same time as US rates rise), is normally good for GEM In the pre-crisis period, GEM equities used to outperform when US bond yields rose. This was because, during the previous cycle, a rise in bond yields occurred against a backdrop of global reflation (i.e. rising commodity prices and stronger growth), as we are seeing now, and that in turn helped to support emerging markets. Indeed, as the second chart below shows, emerging markets have above-average leverage into rising global growth because: i) in some instances, their economies are more open; ii) they tend to be the just-in-time producers for the US consumer; iii) a rise in global growth momentum is ordinarily associated with a rise in commodity prices; and iv) GEM equities have above average operational leverage. Global Equity Strategy 168 2 December 2016 Figure 346: A sustained negative correlation with bond yields has historically been unusual for GEM equities 0.6 GEM relative performance, 12m correlation with US 10-yr yields 6 5.7 Beta of EPS to Global IP 5 0.4 3.9 4 0.2 3.4 3.2 3 0.0 3.0 2.4 2 -0.2 1 -0.4 -0.6 2001 Figure 347: After Japan, emerging market EPS has the greatest beta to global IP 0 2003 2005 2007 2009 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 2014 2016 Japan Emerging markets World Continental Europe US UK Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ The US dollar: set to strengthen…but only modestly We acknowledge that 2017 is likely to see the dollar strengthen, in contrast to the prior year. Ordinarily, as the chart below shows, dollar strength is a headwind for emerging markets. There are four reasons why the dollar bull market is unlikely to be as much as a headwind as is usually the case: First, as we highlight in the currency section, we think that dollar strength will be relatively muted (our FX strategists see c.4% upside to DXY) and there is unlikely to be a move from here of the magnitude seen in 2015. The current dollar bull market has already seen the currency gain 42% from trough to peak – greater than the previous bull market – and it has lasted 5½ years, versus an average duration of 6 to 7 years (implying a peak in the dollar in 2017). Thus, we struggle to see a multi-year, or greater than 10%, continuation of the US dollar bull market. Global Equity Strategy 169 2 December 2016 Figure 348 The current dollar bull market has already been of greater magnitude than the previous 180 6 yrs +67% 9.5 yrs -39% 7 yrs +40% 10 yrs -47% Figure 349: Visually, the correlation between GEM relative performance and the USD is extremely close 5 yrs 42% 75 GEM price rel. (local currency, lhs) 140 160 USD TWI (rhs, inverted) 85 120 140 95 100 120 80 105 60 115 100 80 40 60 1975 125 1980 1986 1992 1998 Trade weighted US dollar 2004 2010 2016 First Fed Rate hike Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 20 1994 1997 2001 2005 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Excluding the RmB, EM currencies – especially after the recent sell-off – are looking particularly cheap versus the dollar, trading 30% below the valuation level suggested by their export market share, and thus are more likely to be resilient to dollar strength. Moreover, EM currencies have notably lagged other EM proxies, such as metals prices. Figure 350: Against PPP, GEM currencies (ex-China) are close to as cheap as they were in 2002… Figure 351: …and have significantly lagged the rally in EM proxies such as metals GEM currency valuation (ex China) vs US on PPP -35% GEM export market share, ex China, rhs 15% -40% 14% -45% 13% -50% 12% -55% 49 770 47 720 45 670 43 620 570 10% 41 9% 39 Jan-14 2005 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2010 2013 2016 870 820 -65% 2003 920 51 11% 2000 CRB metals index, rhs 53 -60% -70% 1998 GEM nominal FX index (ex-China) 55 Jun-14 Dec-14 Jun-15 Dec-15 May-16 520 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Reflecting this, many GEM currencies, at spot exchange rates, have devalued against the USD by a similar degree to that seen in the wake of the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis. Global Equity Strategy 170 2 December 2016 Figure 352: Many EM currencies have already depreciated by a similar degree to that seen in the Asian financial crisis GEM currency devaluations - 1997/8 vs now TWD CNY KRW SGD THB CLP MYR INR* IDR HUF MXN* TRY ZAR* BRL RUB ARS 0% -10% -20% -30% -40% -50% -60% -70% -80% 1997/8 (peak to trough in 4 years centred around Asian crisis) -90% -100% Now * indicates currency was freely floating preceding the Asian crisis Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Currency is, in our view, the critical driver of equity performance: our GEM equity strategy team estimate that 25% of total returns come from FX. Furthermore, if currencies appreciate, then inflation and interest rates fall, and the foreign currency denominated debt burden lessens. As a cross check on currency cheapness, we can see that foreign exchange reserves are rising in GEM (excluding the RMB). This is important because a rise in FX reserves in emerging markets is often unsterilized and can thus lead to a rise in money supply growth, supporting asset prices. Figure 353: FX reserves in GEM ex-China have been rising recently… GEM ex-China M1 6-month change, rhs China FX reserves, yoy 60% 16% GEM Ex-China FX reserves, yoy 50% Figure 354: …which should support domestic money supply growth, and thus asset prices 40% GEM ex-China rel. price perf., 6-month change,rhs 14% 40% 30% 12% 20% 30% 10% 20% 10% 8% 10% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 0% 2008 -30% 2007 2% 2006 -20% 2005 4% 2004 -10% 2003 6% 2002 0% 0% -10% -20% -30% 2001 2003 2005 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse Finally, dollar strength is not explicitly a negative for GEM equities, particularly over a shorter-term horizon. Considering five-year periods, GEM equities have only outperformed 10% of the time when the dollar strengthens, but on a quarterly view the fit is far less clear: Global Equity Strategy 171 2 December 2016 GEM equities have outperformed 44% of the time the dollar strengthened (and 30% of the time GEM equities have outperformed over a one-year period when the dollar has been strong). Moreover, recently, the correlation between the dollar and commodity prices has broken down, reducing the negative side-effects of dollar strength on EM performance. Figure 356: … but increases over the longer-run Figure 355: The sensitivity between GEM and the USD is less significant in the short term… GEM rel performance with dollar TWI, q/q % chg 35 GEM rel, quarterly % chg ($ terms) 25 Percentage of times GEM equities outperform when… 100% When dollar weakens, GEM outperforms 63% of the time Dollar weakens 90% Dollar strengthen 80% 70% 15 60% 5 50% -5 40% 30% -15 20% -25 10% When dollar strengthens, GEM underperforms 56% of the time -35 10 5 0% 0 -5 Quarterly % chg in USD TWI, invert 1Q -10 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1Y Time horizon of change 5Y Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research On a country level, when comparing currency valuations against their fundamentals, we find that Taiwan, Hungary, Russia and Malaysia have the most attractive valuation versus fundamental trade-offs. The worry for GEM currencies has been the risk of a significantly weaker RmB, but we continue to believe that its decline will be orderly, for reasons highlighted in the currency section. Figure 357: Currency valuation versus fundamentals Red denotes a net commodity importer, blue a net exporter Expensive Currency and more vulnerable Philippines Currency valuation (higher number = expensive) 0.9 South Korea Brazil 0.4 Chile -0.1 China India Czech Republic Turkey Taiwan Hungary -0.6 Indonesia South Africa Poland -1.1 Malaysia Russia Mexico -1.6 1.2 0.7 0.2 -0.3 -0.8 -1.3 -1.8 Cheap Currency and less vulnerable -2.3 -2.8 External vulnerability (high number = lower vulnerability) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 172 2 December 2016 ■ Commodity prices: a fading tailwind There remains a close correlation between GEM relative performance and commodity prices. Indeed, the correlation between the global mining sector and GEM equities has historically been very tight, with an interesting disconnect recently. We believe that the oil price (the critical commodity variable for GEM) will be largely range-bound, trading in a $40-$55pb range. Credit Suisse's energy team is more optimistic, however; their view is that the Brent oil price will be $46 in Q1 2017, $56 in Q2 2017 and $62 by Q4 2017. For more details see Light at the End of the Tunnel: Oil & Gas into Year-End, 24 October. Figure 358: The relationship between the relative performance of mining and GEM equities has historically remained close 460 290 270 410 250 360 600 3.8 210 260 190 550 MSCI EM / MSCI AC World CRB spot, rhs 3.3 230 310 500 450 2.8 400 2.3 350 170 210 150 160 110 60 Nov-04 Figure 359: GEM relative performance has been correlated with commodity prices Nov-06 Mining, relative to global, lhs 130 GEM, relative to global 110 Nov-08 Nov-10 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Nov-12 Nov-14 90 Nov-16 300 1.8 250 1.3 0.8 1996 200 150 1999 2002 2006 2009 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research However, the commodity sensitivity tends to be exaggerated, in our view. The direct commodity exposure of GEM has nearly halved, with commodities now accounting for only c.18% of market cap compared with nearly 40% in 2008. This is also the case if we look at the indirect commodity exposure (where, for example, Mexico used to have nearly 30% of fiscal revenues from oil compared to just 15% currently). Indeed, the majority of GEM market cap is now accounted for by commodity importers (58%, compared to 42% in 2008). The reason that GEM tend to correlated with commodities is because they remain more exposed to commodities directly and indirectly than developed markets. Global Equity Strategy 173 2 December 2016 Figure 360: Resource-related sectors account for 18% of GEM market cap, down from 37% in 2011 (they account for 11% of developed markets) 40% Figure 361: Commodity-dependence of national income, exports and government revenues in major EMs Resource-related sectors (energy&materials), % market cap 35% 30% 25% Brazil Indonesia Malaysia Mexico Russia 20% 15% 10% GEM 5% 0% 2001 % of total Commodity merchandise exports % GDP exports 7% 57% 13% 55% 28% 36% 7% 21% 20% 78% % of fiscal revenues 10% 25% 33% 15% 50% Developed 2004 2007 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters ,, Credit Suisse research Thus, while we do not think commodities are likely to surprise to the extent they did in 2016, neither do we see them falling sharply. ■ China: stimulus boost fading As we show in the macro section, many of the stimulus channels which had been used to support Chinese growth through the first half of 2016 look set to slow: property turnover is rolling over (implying a small decline in property prices), FX outflows are modestly accelerating, state and local infrastructure investment is slowing from very high run rates and several policy variables are being tightened. However, none of the four hard landing indicators we look at is even 'flashing amber' (with the key variable being the loan to deposit ratio) and China, with net government debt to GDP of zero and a current account surplus, does have the ability to utilise its fiscal flexibility. We suspect that, at least in the near term, policy will be geared toward maintaining economic stability. It is only until after the 19th Party Congress (Q3/4) that we see a risk policymakers refocus on reform, rather than growth. 2. Trump and protectionism The threat from President-elect Trump, as we have already seen with his commitment to withdraw from TPP, is that there will be fewer free trade agreements made, more encouragement for US corporates to reshore, and it may be tougher to use migrant workers (affecting remittances to places such as Philippines, India or Mexico). Emerging markets also tend to be much more open, and greater beneficiaries from globalisation, than developed markets. However, we are relatively sanguine that a lot of the protectionist rhetoric that featured in Trump's campaign will ultimately be toned down. ■ General protectionist trade policies: it seems that President-elect Trump, in forming his cabinet, is surrounding himself with businessmen whose businesses benefit from Global Equity Strategy 174 2 December 2016 free trade – and his VP, Mike Pence, is very much a free trader. Moreover, the US consumer is far more dependent on cheap imports and corporates are far more interlinked owing to the globalisation of supply chains (meaning the costs to corporates and consumers from protectionism are likely to be politically untenable). Thus we think that consumer and corporate America is better off with free trade than without it – and we think that President-elect Trump and his team will start to realise this. ■ Tariffs on Mexican exports: we think it is unlikely a blanket tariff of 35% will be applied to Mexican exports. US imports of final goods from Mexico contain 40% of US value added, while the level of integration of US manufacturers' supply chains between the US and Mexico (for example, cars built in the US are said to have their components cross US borders – including the border with Mexico – between 8 and 11 times) would make undoing or discouraging these trade links highly costly for US industry. It is worth noting that, at one point, Obama threated to renegotiate NAFTA and in the video statement outlining his plan for his first 100 days in office, President-elect Trump did not mention NAFTA. ■ Tariffs on Chinese exports: again, we see blanket 45% tariffs on Chinese exports as highly unlikely. In the opinion of our public policy team, such tariffs would need to be classified as anti-dumping duties, which the US has already imposed on certain Chinese products. It can take 12 to 18 months to impose new duties and the risk is that a country could appeal to the WTO and if the appeal is upheld, the US would have to abide by the ruling or withdraw from the WTO – an event we do not believe will occur. Moreover, as is the case with Mexico, supply chain integration between the US and China is highly advanced, with stock of US FDI in China being five times greater than the stock of Chinese FDI in the US. 3. Regional scorecards Our regional composite scorecard ranks our five main investment regions based on monetary conditions, economic momentum, valuation, earnings momentum, positioning and sentiment, and macro factors. On this basis, and as a function of the factors discussed above, GEM ranks second from the bottom. GEM also ranks second from the bottom on our regional positioning and sentiment scorecard (which scores regions based on risk appetite, fund flows, and sell side recommendations). Why do we avoid a downgrade to benchmark? We see the following factors as still supportive for a longer-term overweight of GEM equities. 1. A structural improvement in absolute and relative profitability One of the key drivers of emerging market underperformance since 2011 has been a steady decline in profitability, leading to a complete erosion of the emerging market ROE premium. This has been reversing as emerging markets undergo a structural improvement in profitability, in absolute and relative terms. This is in contrast to US, where we believe profit margins have peaked as labour is gaining pricing power. The majority of the decline in profitability was driven by a fall in margins, as the DuPont analysis below shows (an increase in leverage has added to profitability, while the impact of asset turns has been minimal). The key driver of this margin compression has been wage growth in excess of productivity growth. Global Equity Strategy 175 2 December 2016 Figure 362: After steady deterioration, the gap between emerging and developed markets' ROE has now closed… 18% 6% 16% 4% 14% 2% 12% 0% 10% -2% 8% -4% Figure 363: …with the decline in EM ROE largely driven by a fall in margins 3% 2% 4% 1996 2000 2004 2008 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1% 0% -1% -2% -3% -4% -5% Return on equity Spread, rhs MSCI Developed World MSCI Emerging Markets 6% GEM contribution to change in ROE - 10y average vs. 2015 ex financials -6% -8% 2012 2016 -6% -7% Tax Burden Interest EBIT margin Asset Turn Leverage Burden RoE Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We think that GEM margins are now set to improve. Our Global Emerging Markets strategists identify the three primary drivers for profit margins being: (i) commodity prices (which our GEM equity strategy team assume will rise by 5% from current levels by the end of 2017); (ii) EM industrial production growth (assumed to rise from to 5% by 2017 year-end); and (iii) the gap between productivity and wage growth (which our GEM strategists estimate to increase to 1.5% by the end of 2017). Combining these factors into a regression model suggests a 50bps increase in EM margins by end-2017. We believe the most important of these three factors is the gap between real wage growth and productivity growth. For the first time in over five years, wage growth is below productivity growth, allowing unit labour costs to fall and margins to recover. This contrasts with developed markets, where wage growth is already in excess of productivity growth. Global Equity Strategy 176 2 December 2016 Figure 364: EM non-financial net income margins are forecast to improve by c.50bps by the end of 2017 Figure 365: Productivity growth in EMs is now outpacing real wage growth, in contrast to DMs Year on year change EM7 real wages EM7 productivity Emerging markets non-financial margin (%) 11% Predicted 10% DM real wages Actual 10% DM productivity 8% 9% 6% 8% 4% 7% 6% 2% 5% 0% 4% 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 -2% 2005 2016 Source: Credit Suisse Global Emerging Markets Strategy research 2. 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 Source: Credit Suisse Global Emerging Markets Strategy research Relative economic momentum is improving in GEM versus DM At its simplest level, there is a clear correlation between GEM relative performance and relative growth differentials (both relative to the developed world). On both Credit Suisse and IMF forecasts, growth in emerging markets is set to accelerate further beyond that in developed markets. Figure 366: GEM equity performance tracks relative growth differentials Emerging vs Developed real GDP growth diff. (4Q rolling, LHS) 8% MSCI EMF/World (rebased, RHS) 340 7% 310 6% 280 5% 250 4% 220 3% 190 2% 160 1% 130 IMF forecasts 0% 100 -1% 70 1989 1993 1997 2001 2005 2009 2013 2017 2021 Source: Credit Suisse Global Emerging Markets Strategy research More timely indicators of emerging market relative economic momentum, such as the PMI differential with developed markets, have also improved. GEM equities have normally followed PMI new orders versus the developed world. Global Equity Strategy 177 2 December 2016 Figure 367: GEM relative performance versus PMI differentials 15 Manufacturing PMI new orders, EM relative to DM,lhs GEM, relative to global (y/y, rhs) 35% 10 5 Figure 368: GEM manufacturing PMI new orders have continued to rise 2 GEM manufacturing PMI new orders, z-score 25% 1 15% 0 5% -1 0 -5% -2 -5 -10 2006 LatAm NJA EMEA -15% -25% 2007 2009 2011 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -3 2007 2008 2010 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As relative economic momentum has picked up, so has earnings momentum. Indeed, the right hand side chart below shows that GEM equities should have performed better given the sharp improvement in earnings revisions. Figure 369: GEM earnings revisions (absolute and relative to global) GEM: 13-week earnings revisions 40% Figure 370: GEM earnings revisions versus GEM equities GEM 13w earnings revisions yoy (abs) rel Global GEM equity market perf, $ terms, yoy (%), rhs 100% 30% 20% 120 80% 100 60% 80 10% 40% 60 0% 20% 40 0% 20 -10% -20% -30% -40% -50% 2002 2004 2006 2009 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 -20% 0 -40% -20 -60% -40 -80% -60 -100% 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 -80 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Emerging markets have plenty of policy response potential In the developed world, conventional monetary flexibility is largely used up. Emerging markets, on the other hand, typically have more clear-cut policy flexibility, and in some cases the scope for easing of monetary conditions is sizeable. Global Equity Strategy 178 2 December 2016 We believe that investors have under-estimated the disinflationary forces within emerging markets, which should allow rates to fall. These disinflationary forces arise from: i. China exporting its excess investment on an artificially low cost of capital; and ii. Disruptive technology (e.g. online retail sales and services, the general move towards a sharing economy and the use of mobile banking for those people without a bank account) brings corporates and consumers into the formal economy and allows a much greater access to efficient financial products. Emerging markets have a less well developed physical infrastructure and thus the disinflationary impact of disruptive technology is likely to be higher. Figure 371: In a number of emerging markets, there is significant scope for central banks to cut rates… Figure 372: …and for real government bond yields to fall Nominal rate less 3mma CPI inflation rate Central bank policy rate (%), versus 10 year range 18 Real government bond yield (10-yr, %) versus 10 year range 12 16 8 14 12 4 10 8 0 6 -4 4 2 -8 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research *reduced history Chile * Japan India US China Turkey * Russia Brazil Poland South Africa *reduced history -12 Mexico Japan US Poland Chile China Mexico Indonesia Turkey* India South Africa Russia Brazil -2 Indonesia 0 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As importantly, emerging markets outperform when rates fall. A fall in real rates from high levels signifies a risk-on environment, re-rates assets and earnings streams in general and alleviates funding concerns. Further, in the case of financials, there is a benefit from a fall in rates – in contrast to DM financials. Not only does the fall in rates help improve loan growth and loan quality but it is possible to expand NIMs as rates fall from high levels. Indeed, in the case of DM financials, it was only when rates fell below 3% that the sector tended to suffer from a further fall in yields. Global Equity Strategy 179 2 December 2016 Figure 373: DM banks have only recently recorded a positive correlation with interest rates… Correlation coefficient 18 -0.15 15 +0.2 Figure 374: …and the correlation between banks and rates in most GEMs remains strongly negative 0.2 Banks' relative performance, 10-yr correlation with bond yields 0.1 16 13 14 11 -0.1 12 9 -0.2 10 7 8 5 -0.5 3 -0.6 0 -0.3 1995 2000 2005 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Turkey Russia Indonesia India China 2016 South Africa 1990 Poland 1 1985 Brazil US 10-year bond yield, %, rhs 4 1980 Chile Mexico US banks rel market 6 -0.4 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In addition, the emerging market public sector is generally not significantly leveraged, and government debt-to-GDP is, in most cases, still relatively low, leaving space for greater public fiscal flexibility. Aggregate public sector debt in emerging markets is just 43% of GDP, compared to over 100% in the developed world. Figure 375: In the majority of emerging markets, government debt as a share of GDP is low… 140% GEM countries government debt to GDP 120% 233% Figure 376: …unlike developed markets, where public debt levels have risen significantly 120% Public debt, % GDP Developed 100% GEM 100% 80% 80% 60% EM aggregate 40% 60% 20% Japan United States United Kingdom Hungary Brazil Mexico Poland Malaysia South Africa India China Argentina Korea Turkey Czech Republic Thailand Indonesia Saudi Arabia Russia 0% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 40% 20% 1990 1992 1995 1997 2000 2002 2005 2007 2010 2012 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Contrary to the experience of developed markets in the wake of the financial crisis, releveraging in EMs has largely been driven by the private – not the public – sector. While the worry is the build-up of private sector debt within GEM, aggregate leverage for the level of GDP per capita is only particularly high in China. Global Equity Strategy 180 2 December 2016 Figure 377: Post-crisis re-leveraging in EMs has largely been driven by the private sector… Figure 378: …but only China appears overleveraged 180% 450% GEM debt 160% Belgium Private debt to GDP 140% Japan 400% Total debt to GDP 350% Public debt to GDP 120% Total debt, % of GDP 300% 100% Canada France Netherlands Denmark US Sweden Italy HK Singapore Austria Australia UK Finland Spain China 250% Korea 200% Malaysia Hungary Thailand Brazil Poland 150% Czech South Africa Turkey Republic 100% India Mexico Russia 50% Indonesia 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 1995 1997 2000 2002 2005 2007 2010 2012 0% 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Germany 0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 GDP per capita 50,000 60,000 70,000 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. GEM equity valuations look attractive On a sector-adjusted basis, GEM equities trade at around an 18% P/E discount to DM equities, towards the lower end of their 10-year range. The following sectors trade on both a P/E discount to their developed world peers and a larger discount than has been the case historically (i.e. they are in the bottom left hand quadrant of the chart below): materials, banks, diversified financials, transport, capital goods, commercial services, tech hardware, utilities and food/beverages/tobacco. Figure 379: GEM equities trade only slightly above their 10-year low on sector-adjusted P/E relative to DM 110% Figure 380: More GEM sectors trade on a discount to their DM peer group than a premium GEM sector-adjusted 12m fwd P/E rel Dev.World 25% Cons Dur/App Average (+/- 1SD) Retailing EM / DM, deviation from 10-yr average 100% 90% 80% 70% 15% 5% -5% Semi Auto Pharm/Biotec Consr Svs H/C Eq/Svs Materials Fd/Bev/Tob S/W & Svs Transpt Fd/Drug Rtl H Pers Prd -15% Banks Tch H/W/Eq Capital Goods Coml Svs/Sup -25% Utilities 60% 50% 40% 1996 Media T/cm Svs Div Fin -35% -50% 1999 2002 2005 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2008 2011 2015 -30% -10% Insurance 10% 30% 50% 70% EM / DM, 12m fwd P/E Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 181 2 December 2016 GEM equities look particularly cheap on trend earnings measures. On a price to book basis, emerging market equities trade on a 29% discount to developed market equities, close to the lower end of their 10-year range. Similarly, a Shiller P/E approach shows GEM equities to be at financial crisis-type valuations, and at a substantial valuation discount to the US. Figure 381: The P/B of emerging markets is trading at a discount of 29% relative to DM 1.4 MSCI EM P/B rel DM Figure 382: GEM equities are very depressed on Shiller P/E relative to the US 30 Average +/- 1 Stdev US: Shiller's P/E = 26.1x GEM: Shiller's P/E = 9.2x 1.3 25 1.2 1.1 20 1.0 0.9 15 0.8 0.7 10 0.6 0.5 0.4 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 5 2005 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2006 2008 2009 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters , Credit Suisse research 5. Equities have lagged behind bond spreads Not only are equities cheap, but they have also lagged behind other EM assets. The relative performance of GEM equities typically follows the EMBI spread, but has this time significantly lagged behind the tightening of EM bond spreads from their peak. Figure 383: GEM equities have underperformed by more than the EMBI spread would imply 2.7 4.8 S&P 500 / MSCI EM EMBI spread, rhs 2.5 4.3 2.3 3.8 2.1 3.3 1.9 2.8 1.7 Sep-14 2.3 Dec-14 Mar-15 Jun-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 182 2 December 2016 6. Still under-owned Although inflows to emerging market equity funds have picked up from to a 2-year low relative to developed market funds, they remain relatively muted, especially after recently having returned to seeing outflows. Furthermore, and most importantly, investments in GEM equity funds (at cost value) are still down over 50% from peak levels. Figure 384: GEM relative to global equity funds: 3-month annualized flows 40% GEM vs global equity funds: 3-month annualized inflows, relative to net assets 30% Figure 385: Cumulative flows into GEM equities are down over 50% from their peak 290k Cumulative flows into GEM equity funds, USD million 240k 20% 190k 10% 140k 0% 90k -10% -20% 40k -30% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 -10k 2001 Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: EPFR Global, Credit Suisse research Our recent investor survey highlighted that there remains a mismatch between short- and long-term views of emerging markets. Just under a third of survey respondents expected EM to be the best performing region on a 3-month view and 38% on a 12-month view. However, 51% of respondents think this will be the case on a 5-year view. We think this mismatch between shorter- and longer-term views can continue to drive further allocation to EM equities. Despite positive views on EM equities, respondents were not particularly bullish of EM FX, with nearly half thinking the USD will be the best-performing currency over the next 12 months. We think currencies have significant scope to strengthen further, which should help drive returns. Global Equity Strategy 183 2 December 2016 Figure 386: Investors have warmed up on GEM in the near term… 50% Proportion of respondents who believe GEM will be the bestperforming region over the next 3 months Figure 387: ...but despite this, there is a still a mismatch between how investors are positioned on a 3- or 12-month view in GEM and on a 5-year view 60% Which equity market will show the strongest performance (in lc terms) over the next… 12 months? 5 years? 51% 50% 40% 38% 40% 30% 30% 20% 20% 25% 24% 20% 14% 10% 10% 12% 5% 7% 4% 0% 0% Aug-12 Mar-13 Oct-13 May-14 Dec-14 Jul-15 Source: Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy Investor Survey (October) 7. Feb-16 Sep-16 Continental Europe UK US Japan Emerging Markets Source: Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy Investor Survey (October) In some instances, and in contrast to DMs, politics is becoming more stable Some of the major emerging market countries have recently seen their political environment improving or remaining more or less stable. In general the politics of the emerging markets is about de-regulation (for example, in Brazil, India, Indonesia). This is in contrast to the developed countries where domestic politics is increasingly dominated by populist rhetoric. The problem in developed markets is that the political debate is focusing more on measures that appear negative for growth and profits. An increase in protectionism, reshoring, a rise in minimum wages and limits to immigration (when immigration has driven in the US around half the rate of growth of the labour force) are likely negative for growth and thus earnings. We list in the appendix some of the positive developments in specific emerging market countries which we feel may be under-appreciated. 8. Our GEM strategists' model gives c.8% upside potential for 2017 Our GEM equity strategists' four-factor macroeconomic regression model for emerging market equities (based on the US dollar trade-weighted, ISM new orders, global industrial production growth and CRB metals prices) suggests c.8% potential upside to MSCI EM by year-end 2017. Global Equity Strategy 184 2 December 2016 Figure 388: Multi factor regression model for MSCI EM Model inputs Coeff. P-value Current Scenario Upside from 24 Nov y/e 2017 Figure 389: Predicted versus actual MSCI EM 1500 Predicted MSCI EM current US$ TWI -0.62 0.000 101.3 103.3 2.0% ISM New orders 0.77 0.000 52.1 57.0 4.9 ppt Global IP, % yoy 1.05 0.000 1.3% 2.7% 135 bps CRB metals^, SDR 0.55 0.000 523 523 – 1300 Actual MSCI EM 1100 900 MSCI EMF 24 Nov y/e 2017 Adj R square: 0.73 Current 852 852 Observations: Intercept 250 0.00 Predicted Upside % 983 15.4 923 8.3 700 500 300 ^ Equally weighted index of Copper, Steel, Zinc, Lead and Tin 100 Jan 96 Jan 99 Jan 02 Jan 05 Jan 08 Jan 11 Jan 14 Jan 17 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 185 2 December 2016 How to play this? 1. Local currency GEM debt Below we discuss our preferred GEM country investment strategies in more detail, but we stick to our view that, in absolute terms, one of the most attractive asset classes is local currency denominated GEM debt. Real rates remain abnormally high in either an historical or global context, and, as already highlighted above, for the most part GEM currencies are cheap. Real bond yield, standard deviations from 10 year avg Figure 390: Local currency real bond yields are higher than their historical average in many EM countries Figure 391: Emerging market real yields are elevated relative to the US Real 10-year bond yield gap between EM7* and the US (in pp) Average Poland 1.0 India 0.5 Russia Indonesia Mexico 3.5 Malaysia South Africa 0.0 3.0 Hungary China Philippines -0.5 Taiwan Czech -1.0 Republic *simple average of respective data for Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Turkey 2.5 2.0 South Korea -1.5 1.5 Brazil -2.0 -1 0 1 2 3 Current real bond yield (%) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4 5 1.0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Companies that have high GEM exposure but limited exposure to China Below we screen for European companies with high GEM sales exposure but less than 15% sales to China that are Outperform-rated by our analysts (with a market cap above $5bn). Of these stocks, Erste, Nokia, BAT Vodafone, Reckitt, ENEL, Assa Abloy and Sanofi are cheap on HOLT. Global Equity Strategy 186 2 December 2016 Figure 392: European companies with high GEM sales exposure but less than 15% sales to China that are Outperform-rated by our analysts (with a market cap above $5bn) -----P/E (12m fwd) -----Sales Exposure to GEM YTD rel performance (%) Abs rel to Industry Sgs 'N' 79% 14% 22.7 Technip 76% 47% 17.5 Bureau Veritas Intl. 67% 2% Erste Group Bank 65% Nokia HOLT 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- 2016e Momentum, % rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales 123% 4% 8.0 47% 3.9 3.4 -14.7 -1.1 -0.5 3.2 Outperform 71% 13% 1.7 3% 3.6 3.0 -9.8 3.5 1.2 2.5 Outperform 17.5 95% -9% 6.9 -4% 5.5 3.1 -21.5 -3.4 -1.3 2.8 Outperform -4% 9.6 82% -25% 1.0 14% na 3.5 8.0 3.3 -0.5 2.3 Outperform 59% -35% 16.3 121% -40% 1.5 -34% -5.0 4.4 72.0 -3.7 -1.7 2.2 Outperform British American TobaccoN Sonova 57% 9% 15.7 90% -2% 16.8 135% 4.0 3.7 2.8 2.0 2.7 2.1 Outperform 47% 5% 19.8 121% -11% 4.3 0% 6.1 1.8 -5.6 -1.5 4.4 3.0 Outperform Pernod-Ricard 45% 0% 17.5 87% 1% 2.0 17% 5.2 1.9 -15.2 -0.1 -0.8 2.5 Outperform Vodafone Group 37% -18% 30.3 218% 93% 0.5 -30% 6.3 6.4 42.8 -6.1 2.0 2.3 Outperform Airbus Group 36% 4% 16.6 98% 4% 7.9 192% 1.7 2.2 -41.8 -3.1 -0.9 2.1 Outperform Diageo 36% 0% 18.8 93% 5% 6.0 9% 4.1 3.0 -36.3 0.7 1.2 2.3 Outperform Philips Eltn.Koninklijke L'Oreal 35% 23% 15.8 93% 10% 2.2 65% 5.5 2.9 -18.5 0.2 -0.2 2.3 Outperform 33% 10% 23.4 115% 0% 3.8 37% 2.8 2.0 -30.7 -0.5 0.0 2.8 Outperform Reckitt Benckiser Group Vopak 32% -1% 20.2 99% 3% 7.0 44% 3.3 2.2 14.6 0.9 1.1 2.1 Outperform 29% 18% 15.9 64% -4% 2.8 16% 3.6 2.5 -13.3 4.8 0.4 2.6 Outperform Casino Guichard-P 29% 7% 13.8 81% -2% 1.1 2% -4.1 7.1 -71.1 -10.0 0.2 2.6 Outperform Experian 26% 15% 19.1 103% 7% 5.2 93% 5.6 2.2 -32.2 -1.7 -0.3 2.2 Outperform Enel 26% 2% 10.9 72% -4% 1.1 2% 13.9 4.8 61.1 2.3 -0.7 1.7 Outperform Dassault Systemes 25% 5% 27.2 136% 14% 5.3 59% 3.4 0.7 -0.9 1.0 0.1 2.8 Outperform Wpp 25% 1% 13.7 75% -2% 2.9 93% 6.5 3.2 -1.3 4.2 2.0 2.1 Outperform Prysmian 24% 15% 14.2 83% 12% 3.7 23% 8.4 2.1 -3.3 -0.9 -1.0 1.9 Outperform Sanofi 23% 2% 13.7 95% 13% 1.7 27% 7.0 4.0 15.0 1.7 -0.7 2.5 Outperform Assa Abloy 'B' 21% -5% 21.1 124% 21% 5.2 85% 3.5 1.7 7.1 -2.3 -0.6 2.5 Outperform Name Consensus recommendation Credit Suisse rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: Company data, MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research We also screen for US stocks that have significant GEM sales exposure but no more than 15% of sales to China and are Outperform- or Neutral-rated by Credit Suisse analysts (with a market cap above $5bn). Of these stocks, Delta Air Lines, Activision Blizzard, Pfizer, Ingredion and Citigroup look cheap on HOLT and are Outperform-rated. Figure 393: US stocks that have significant GEM sales exposure but no more than 15% of sales to China and are Outperform-rated by Credit Suisse analysts -----P/E (12m fwd) -----Sales expsoure to GEM YTD perf rel mkt ($) Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Kansas City Southern Kla Tencor 48% 10% 17.2 106% -22% 45% 11% 14.8 93% -34% Delta Air Lines 32% -11% 9.3 57% -37% E I Du Pont De Nemours Jetblue Airways 30% -1% 19.1 114% 30% -15% 10.6 Activision Blizzard 27% -10% Philip Morris Intl. 25% Pfizer 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 2.4 21% 2.9 1.5 18.6 234% 6.3 2.6 3.5 -74% 12.6 26% 6.3 60% 66% -49% 2.1 16.9 85% -16% -5% 18.5 106% 23% -9% 12.1 Ingredion 18% 16% Boeing 18% Emerson Electric Name Abs 2016e Momentum, % Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 3m EPS 3m Sales -6.9 -4.3 -0.4 2.6 Neutral -0.6 13.4 5.0 2.7 Outperform 1.4 12.2 -4.6 -1.1 1.8 Outperform 4.9 2.3 -20.1 2.0 -0.7 2.3 Neutral 90% 0.6 0.0 76.7 -1.1 0.4 2.2 Neutral 3.4 -39% 3.9 0.7 46.9 4.7 0.3 1.9 Outperform 8% -10.5 na 5.0 4.6 -40.5 0.5 -0.7 2.2 Neutral 83% 2% 3.0 54% 5.8 3.8 12.9 -1.9 0.0 2.4 Outperform 15.8 81% 11% 4.0 124% na 1.6 10.7 3.8 0.7 2.1 Outperform -4% 16.3 96% 2% 15.8 16% 7.8 2.9 -0.1 12.3 0.3 2.4 Neutral 17% 6% 22.2 130% 29% 4.7 40% 5.6 3.5 -24.9 -22.0 -27.7 3.2 Neutral Biomarin Pharm. 16% -22% -67.6 nm na 6.0 4% na 0.0 -62.0 nm -1.2 1.8 Outperform Citigroup 15% 0% 11.2 95% -49% 0.8 5% na 0.7 38.7 1.4 0.7 2.0 Outperform Fluor 14% 6% 18.8 110% 4% 2.5 -4% 7.4 1.5 52.3 -29.3 -1.9 2.9 Neutral Source: Company data, Credit Suisse US Equity Strategy team, MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 187 2 December 2016 3. Quality, high-yielding GEM listed stocks With GEM government bond yields having declined, companies offering relatively low-risk dividend yields are likely to remain in focus. Below we screen for those companies listed in emerging markets with an eCap award from HOLT, with a full covered dividend yield above 3% and an Outperform rating. We would highlight FGI group, TSMC, Padini and Walmart, all of which have positive earnings revisions and are cheap on HOLT. Figure 394: High-yielding quality GEM stocks with Outperform ratings -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Country eCap Award Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best Zhengzhou Yutong Bus 'A' China X 10.7 63% -31% 3.6 25% na 6.0 na 1.2 0.1 1.5 Outperform Coca-Cola Femsa Sab De Cv Sr.L AdrGroup 1:10 Lenovo Mexico X 18.2 90% -7% 2.2 1% na 3.4 na -20.3 -4.7 2.8 Outperform China X 9.8 73% -51% 2.3 -22% 1.6 4.4 546.3 -4.8 0.0 3.0 Outperform Catcher Technology Taiwan X 8.1 60% -34% 1.5 -21% 8.8 4.5 105.7 -4.8 -0.8 2.8 Outperform Indonesia X 11.0 61% -26% 1.8 -40% 13.1 3.8 74.8 -5.3 -1.7 3.0 Outperform Fuyao Glss.Ind.Group 'A' China X 13.9 149% -9% 2.8 -8% na 4.1 68.3 1.9 0.3 1.9 Outperform Taiwan Semicon.Mnfg. Taiwan X 13.2 83% -13% 3.9 48% 3.9 3.5 52.6 4.3 2.4 2.2 Outperform Padini Holdings Malaysia X 11.3 48% 6% 4.0 86% 6.8 3.8 49.4 8.7 3.5 1.9 Outperform Advanced Info Ser. Thailand X 14.1 101% -14% 8.9 15% 3.8 7.2 41.0 -3.5 -1.4 2.2 Outperform Novatek Microels. Taiwan X 12.0 75% -5% 2.3 -5% na 7.1 20.7 -5.6 -1.6 2.8 Outperform Makalot Industrial Taiwan X 14.3 86% 11% 2.7 -5% 12.9 6.6 16.6 -12.4 -5.7 3.4 Outperform Kt & G Korea X 12.2 70% -12% 2.1 14% na 3.5 7.8 -5.7 -0.4 2.0 Outperform Indonesia X 17.6 74% -32% 37.2 45% 7.6 3.4 7.1 -2.5 -1.8 2.2 Outperform Walmart De Mexico 'V' Mexico X 21.2 124% -16% 4.3 11% 8.4 4.5 4.0 2.4 -0.6 2.2 Outperform Bolsa Mexicana De Valores Mexico X 16.0 107% -24% 3.0 39% 11.5 4.2 -1.0 0.9 0.5 2.4 Outperform Delta Electronics Taiwan X 18.8 139% 4% 3.3 15% 5.3 3.2 -4.3 -1.9 -0.9 2.2 Outperform St Shine Optical Taiwan X 15.8 96% -18% 6.9 38% na 4.1 -6.0 -0.4 0.2 2.5 Outperform India X 12.7 51% -10% 5.7 24% 2.2 6.2 -7.7 -10.0 -4.5 2.2 Outperform Taiwan X 19.0 113% -20% 7.0 100% 3.6 3.0 -15.3 -13.2 -7.3 2.1 Outperform Name Semen Gresik Matahari Department Soe. Coal India Eclat Textile 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: Company data, MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research 4. Focus on DM Banks with GEM exposure Most developed market banks with EM exposure have underperformed their emerging market peers year-to-date. Figure 395: GEM and GEM-related banks price relative to global banks Relative to Global Banks, (2016 = 100), (in USD terms) 130 Santander Standard Chartered HSBC GEM banks BBVA 120 110 100 90 80 70 Jan-16 Mar-16 May-16 Jul-16 Sep-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In addition, they appear cheap on a sum-of-the-parts basis. Global Equity Strategy 188 2 December 2016 Figure 396: On a regional-weighted P/B basis, Standard Chartered, SAN, Citigroup, BBVA, Unicredit and HSBC appear relatively inexpensive Bank Emerging market revenue exposure Unicredit 23% Central and Eastern Europe Standard Chartered 92% (72% NJA, 20% Africa & Mid. East) Santander BBVA YTD Price perf rel local mkt YTD weighted price perf by YTD Price perf regional exposure rel to resp. rel Global Banks regional banks Price to Book PB disc/prem to the relevant bank sectors Credit Suisse rating -49% -64% -32% 0.2 -58% Neutral 3% -9% -5% 0.7 -33% Underperform 37% LatAm (7% Mexico and 30% Brazil) 3% -12% -10% 0.7 -31% Neutral 39% LatAm (29% Mexico) -3% -17% -2% 0.8 -31% Neutral Citigroup 31.5% (15% Asia, 13% EMEA, 4% LatAm) 0% 4% -3% 0.8 -28% Outperform HSBC 26% Hong Kong, 17% NJA, 8% LatAm Erste Bank 68% Eastern Europe 8% -4% 2% 1.0 -6% Neutral -14% -15% -14% 1.0 1% Outperform 3% 1.9 34% Neutral Swedbank 25% Eastern Europe 11% 0% Note: The discount/premium is calculated over the regional banks P/B ratios, weighted by the exposure of each bank to that region Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 189 2 December 2016 Country selection The correlation between GEM equity markets has fallen to more normal levels suggesting that country selection is becoming more important. Figure 397: Correlation between GEM countries has fallen, suggesting country picking is becoming more important 0.5 0.7 0.9 1.1 1.3 1.5 1.7 6-month correlation among emerging markets (proxied by the standard deviation of performance, adjusted for market volatility, inverted) 1.9 2.1 Nov-96 Nov-98 Nov-00 Nov-02 Nov-04 Nov-06 Nov-08 Nov-10 Nov-12 Nov-14 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Our GEM Equity Strategy team led by Alexander Redman are overweight China, Korea, Brazil and Indonesia. For their broader EM equities view, please see Global EM Equity Strategy – 2017 outlook: Staying the course, 01 December. Within Asia, Sakthi Siva is overweight Taiwan and Korea (her biggest overweights). From our perspective, we adopt a relatively simple quant approach to country selection, which we discuss below, before highlighting some of the countries and regions where we think opportunities exist in more detail in the sections that follow. Our top down approach is built around three scorecards (all of which are shown in full in the appendix). These assess currency valuation, equity market valuation and economic balance sheet. We favour those GEM countries that have the following characteristics: ■ Cheap currencies: We assess this on the basis of the deviation of REER from longterm trend, real bond yields, the Economist's Big Mac index deviation from PPP, and IMF PPP deviation from long-term average. The cheapest currencies currently belong to Mexico, Malaysia, Poland, Russia, and South Africa. ■ Cheap equity markets: We assess this by looking at the 12-month forward P/E, P/B and DY relatives to the world market versus their long-term averages. The cheapest equity markets currently are Poland, Russia, China, Korea, Czech Republic and Taiwan. ■ Good macro fundamentals: We base our macro fundamental assessment on external balance sheets, i.e. on current account, net foreign assets, portfolio inflows, FX reserves less financing needs (all expressed as a share of GDP) and internal leverage (credit to GDP versus trend). Global Equity Strategy 190 2 December 2016 ■ Spare capacity in the labour market: We prefer to invest in economies where there is some spare capacity in the labour market (proxied by unemployment rate's deviation from average). ■ Relatively low exposure to China which we proxy by looking at exports to China as a percentage of GDP. Until 2016, we had a bias to commodity importers; this is now neutralized given our slightly more constructive view on commodity prices. We bring these factors together in our composite country scorecard, and this highlights Russia, Taiwan, Czech Republic, Poland and Malaysia. Figure 398: Emerging markets composite scorecard Country Currency Equity valuation (zvaluation (zscore) score) Overheating (Unemployment dev from average) External/Internal vulnerability (zscore) Exposure to China as % of GDP Net commodity imports (% of GDP) Weighted zscore Weight 25% 25% 15% 25% 10% 0% 100% Russia 0.91 0.92 -13% 0.22 2% -17% 0.48 Taiwan 0.40 0.38 -9% 1.50 13% 8% 0.39 Czech Republic 0.44 0.14 12% -0.28 1% 4% 0.33 Poland 1.32 0.94 -30% -0.50 0% 0% 0.29 Malaysia -0.04 0.97 4% 0.14 9% -5% 0.25 Turkey 0.26 0.37 13% -0.91 0% 2% 0.22 South Africa -0.38 0.76 11% -0.50 3% -4% 0.17 Korea 0.66 -0.72 8% 0.62 10% 8% 0.15 Mexico -0.49 1.18 -12% -0.59 0% 0% 0.04 Hungary -0.55 0.52 -47% 0.87 1% 3% 0.04 China 0.76 -0.29 -2% -0.07 na 4% 0.01 India -0.40 0.14 -10% -0.13 0% 4% -0.05 Chile 0.09 -0.20 -9% -0.21 7% -16% -0.19 Brazil -0.64 -0.61 -11% -0.30 2% -4% -0.39 Indonesia -1.20 0.75 -22% -0.66 2% -4% -0.39 Philippines -0.90 -0.20 -23% -0.21 2% 3% -0.47 High z-scores are desirable: cheap markets, cheap currency, low overheating risk, open economy, low exposure to China and a net commodity importer (All z-scores are capped at +/- 1.5 standard deviation) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research China: selectively overweight We recommend a selective overweight of Chinese equities (excluding financials). Our China strategists have revised up their 2017 SHCOMP target to 3800 (c20% upside) and HSCEI to 10,500 (c10% upside). Our GEM equity strategy colleagues are also overweight Chinese equities as is Sakthi Siva, our Asia strategist. We like them for the following reasons: 1. Excess liquidity remains supportive The key positive is that excess liquidity (which we proxy by looking at money supply growth less nominal GDP growth) in China is highly supportive of a rise in the equity markets. Currently, excess liquidity is increasing at 17% Y/Y, while Shanghai A's Y/Y performance is still negative. Global Equity Strategy 191 2 December 2016 Figure 399: Excess liquidity has now begun to rise and is now supportive 25 Chinese M1 growth - nominal GDP growth 300 Shanghai A y/y % change, rhs 20 250 15 200 10 150 5 100 0 50 -5 0 -10 -50 -15 1997 -100 1999 2002 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 2. There is a lack of investment alternatives beyond equities We believe that Chinese investors alternative avenues for investment are now limited, leaving this excess liquidity little option but to go into equities. The main alternative avenues for investment have been: ■ Property: The government is aggressively tightening up on property regulations and as a result property turnover is falling. ■ Wealth Management Products. In October, PBoC asked commercial banks to count the once off-balance sheet wealth management products to be part of "broad credit" in the Macro Prudential Assessment. While our strategists think this will not cause a significant change in banks' behaviour in the short term, the days of very strong growth have passed. In fact, there are already signs of slowdown: issuance of property backed trust products is down 25% since the start of October. ■ Flows overseas. Again this has become much harder as the government has tightened up the capital account amid worries about declining FX reserves. Global Equity Strategy 192 2 December 2016 Figure 400: Growth in wealth management products is slowing sharply Figure 401: The government has tightened up on hot money outflows 4% 2.5% 2.0% 2% 1.5% 1.0% 0% 0.5% -2% 0.0% -0.5% -4% -6% -1.0% -1.5% Hot money flow as % of GDP, 4Q MA -2.0% Net errors & omissions as % of GDP, 4QMA, rhs -8% 2001 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research -2.5% 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: : Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research ■ Corporate bond yields: Not only are they close to historic lows at just 3.9%, but issuance is also slowing (with a ban on corporate bond issuance for property developers, for example). 3. Some signs that inflation is rising and real rates are turning negative, something which tends to push investors into equities or property PPI inflation has turned positive for the first time in nearly 4.5 years, and this should modestly drive down real rates and in turn lead individuals to seek a hedge against inflation (i.e. normally equities or property, although we note that the latter is seeing a strong degree of tightening). Money supply growth would imply inflation should accelerate further still, as shown below. Global Equity Strategy 193 2 December 2016 Figure 402: PPI have turned positive for the first time in 4.5 years 15 PPI, yoy % Figure 403: Money supply growth imply a small pick-up in inflation 10 CPI, yoy% - rhs 8 35 11 China M1 growth, 6 months lead, yoy% 30 9 CPI, yoy% - rhs 10 6 5 4 2 0 0 -5 -2 -10 2000 -4 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service. Credit Suisse 4. 25 7 20 5 15 3 10 1 5 -1 0 2000 -3 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service. Credit Suisse Equities look cheap relative to corporate bonds Equities look cheap, especially when compared with corporate bonds. The ratio of the dividend yield to the corporate bond yields is near an all-time high, as illustrated below. 5. Margin-financed speculative positions have unwound There seems to have been a sharp unwind from last year's excess speculation, with margin financing now much less extreme. Total outstanding margin purchases have more than halved from 9.75% at the peak last July to the current level of 4.7%. Figure 404: The earnings yield is no longer low relative to the corporate bond yield 63% 58% Ratio of Shanghai A DY vs corporate bond yieds Figure 405: Margin purchases are much less extreme, but still remain somewhat high once we adjust for free float market cap 10% 53% 9% 48% 8% 43% 7% 38% Total outstanding margin purchase, % of free float market cap (Shanghai & Shenzhen) 6% 33% 5% 28% 4% 23% 18% 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2014 2015 2016 3% Jan-14 Jul-14 Feb-15 Sep-15 Apr-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 194 2 December 2016 6. Cash flow and earnings momentum are improving There are some signs of a recovery recently in both operating cash flow and relative earnings revisions, which are now just positive relative to global markets. As PPI is turning positive and gaining momentum, we would expect earnings to rebound further still. Figure 406: Operating cash flow has shown some recovery… Figure 407: …as well as 3-month relative earnings revisions 60% 100% Shanghai A share: 13-week earnings revisions relative to global Operating cash flow, YoY 80% 40% 60% 20% 40% 20% 0% 0% -20% -20% -40% -40% -60% 2010S1 2011S1 2012S1 2013S1 2014S1 Source: Credit Suisse China Equity Strategy team 2015S1 2016S1 -60% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 7. Some progress in supply side reform As discussed in the macro section, China has made good progress in reducing excess capacity in the steel and coal sectors, according to our China material analyst, Trina Chen. 8. MSCI Index inclusion and increased accessibility The equity market in China is becoming more open with fewer restrictions. CSRC/SFC approved the SZ-HK stock connect in mid-2016, removed the total quota for stock connects and expanded the existing QFII/RQFII framework making it more flexible. With increased accessibility, we believe China's weighting in MSCI index will increase over time. Currently, China accounts for only 26% of MSCI EM index (through stocks listed in Hong Kong and New York) with a market cap of nearly US$12trn (China, HK and ADR combined). MSCI is proposing a 5% partial inclusion which approximates to around 1% of the total MSCI EM weight. A full inclusion could mean a weight of 39%. The positive fund flow story could support the Chinese equity market in the long term. Our China strategists estimate US$2.2bn passive funds inflow with a partial inclusion, and more than US$40bn fund inflow with a full inclusion (The dawn of the mega market, 23 September 2016) Vincent Chan, in his 2017 market strategy outlook, highlights that he would prefer A to H shares and old economy to new economy areas. (China-HK Market Strategy: Outlook for 2017) On the global equity strategy team we find ourselves structurally underweight Chinese banks We have held a long-standing underweight of Chinese old economy financials, and would continue to do so for the following reasons: Global Equity Strategy 195 2 December 2016 1. The credit bubble China has seen its private credit to GDP ratio increase by 93 percentage points from 2011-2016. Only Ireland has experienced a bigger increase in a five-year period. China's debt to GDP level is now 44 percentage points above trend, way beyond the 'danger point' of 10 percentage points above trend identified by the BIS. 120% 100% 150% 40% 100% 20% 50% 0% 0% USA 1951-60 140% 60% 120% 100% 1995 1997 2000 2002 2005 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2010 2013 2015 Ireland 2003-08 160% 200% China 2008-16 180% 250% Spain 1996-10 200% 300% 641% / 1156% 80% Thailand 1986-97 220% Japan 1985-90 20-year trend UK 1997-09 China: Total debt to GDP 240% Max 7-year change private sector debt to GDP (% point) Peak in private sector debt (% of GDP), rhs Korea 1988-98 260% Figure 409: The seven-year change in private sector debt to GDP in China has been comparable to Thailand and Spain prior to their crises USA 1993-09 Figure 408: Total debt to GDP is now 44 percentage points above trend Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. The property developers are underperforming Typically one of the major sources of collateral for banks has been real estate, and thus the two sectors have tended to be quite closely correlated. The property developers are underperforming (and real estate turnover has peaked), which could create downside risks for the Chinese banks. Global Equity Strategy 196 2 December 2016 Figure 410: Chinese banks vs Chinese property developers MSCI China real estate, relative to market MSCI China banks, relative to market 14.5 Figure 411: Banking profits as a % of GDP 2.0% 4.1 4.0 Bank's net profit as % of GDP 1.5% 3.9 13.5 3.8 1.0% 12.5 3.7 3.6 11.5 3.5 0.5% 10.5 3.4 9.5 Jan-13 Jul-13 Feb-14 Aug-14 Mar-15 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Oct-15 Apr-16 3.3 Nov-16 0.0% China Japan US European Union Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Profitability is threatened by competition and regulation Our worry is that Chinese banks' profits appear to be abnormally high with profit as a proportion of GDP more than triple that of banks in the US and EU. Their profitability is likely to come under threat, in our view, from the ongoing deregulation of deposit rates and the rise of internet banking (which has a greater reach than conventional banking, better technology and may also be more trusted). 4. NPLs have been under-estimated… Currently, the official NPL ratio is 1.76%. In our judgement, the market is discounting NPLs of c.12%, assuming a 50% coverage ratio. We reach that conclusion by noting that Chinese banks trade on 2.6x pre-provisioning operating profits compared to a norm of 4.0x since July 2006. A year of PPOP equates to 3.7% of total gross loans and thus by trading 1.4x PPOP below the norm, the market is suggesting that c5.2% of assets have to be written off. This means, assuming a 50% recovery rate, NPLs will rise by an extra 10.4 percentage points to around 12%. The risk may be that the amount of NPLs being discounted is less than this because deregulation means that the PPOP for reasons described above are likely to fall. This risk, in our judgement, is that NPLS end up rising to more than 12%. Twice NPLs have risen to more than 20% in the past 30 years. Given the scale of the current credit bubble, a sharp increase in NPLs above 20% is likely eventually, in our view, but only when the four hard landing indicators which we identify elsewhere in this report flash rednone of this is happening now. …and with this, zombie capitalism is a problem As our Chinese strategists point out, corporate bond defaults are just 6% of US levels and are just 0.01% of total corporates. At some point, NPLs will not be able to be rolled over (we suspect that this will be the case when the loan to deposit ratio including the shadow banks rises to above 100%). We would, however, warn that investors ignored the dividend yield attractions of US and European banks post 2005 and thus yield is probably unlikely to provide much support. Global Equity Strategy 197 2 December 2016 Stocks: Below we show our China equity strategists' top stock picks. Figure 412: Vincent Chan's top stock picks -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Name Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average Alibaba Group Hldg.Spn. Adr 1:1 Sctc. Xinjiang Goldwind 24.7 123% -18% 6.9 7.8 46% -53% 1.8 'H' An Insurance 'H' Ping 10.8 92% -47% Geely Automobile Hdg. 10.0 109% China Resources Land 6.5 na FCY DY 14% 3.1 0.0 43% -15.4 5.2 2.1 -19% na 1.5 -5% 3.0 104% 1.8 -58% 1.1 -13% 2.4 HOLT Price, % change to best 2016e Momentum, % Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 3m EPS 3m Sales 6.7 4.0 -0.4 1.8 Outperform -1.8 -2.7 -2.7 2.3 Outperform 18.6 2.1 -2.6 1.7 Outperform 0.8 42.1 22.3 15.9 2.1 Outperform 3.5 -19.3 0.8 0.0 1.6 Outperform Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 198 2 December 2016 Korea: reducing to a small overweight We reduce Korean equities to a small overweight for the following main reasons: 1. A challenging external environment, especially with the weaker Yen Competitive threat from Japan and China: With Korean companies closely competing with corporates in Japan in several areas (including autos, consumer electronics, semis, shipbuilding and steel, which account for c.40% of South Korean market cap), the Yen/Won exchange rate is one of the key drivers of Korean equity market performance relative to global markets. As we discuss in the currency section, we think that the Yen could weaken substantially against most other currencies including the Won. Figure 413: Korea is an export-oriented economy Figure 414: When the Yen weakens against the Won, Korea underperforms Japan 80 70 Exports of goods and services (% of GDP) 60 0.67 1600 0.62 1400 50 0.57 40 30 0.52 20 0.47 10 1200 1000 0.42 0 0.37 Korea relative to World 800 KRW/JPY (rhs) 0.32 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 600 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Our economists' view is that the RmB is going to weaken further over the next year. Given the Chinese effort to move up the value chain and building up its own technological brands, it is increasingly posting a competitive threat to Korean exports in the world market and also may reduce the demand for Korean intermediate goods imports further. There is a residual Trump threat, though probably not substantial. According to our economist, Korea fulfils two of the three key criteria of the Trade Protection and Facilitation Act of 2015 for being labelled as a currency manipulator (as it is running a trade surplus with US larger than US$20bn and the Korean central bank is accumulating FX reserves). 2. Growth outlook in both the near term and medium term remain challenging Relative economic momentum has rolled over. Additionally, Christiaan Tuntono, our economist, expects Korea’s potential growth trend to slide further to 2-2.5% over the medium term on the basis of an ageing population, a rigid labour structure and an inefficient non-trade service sector (Korea: potential growth trend continue to slide, 18 October 2016). Structural reforms are needed to tackle these problems. However, the recent corruption scandal involving President Park has shaken the confidence in her administration and may divert domestic attention from the much needed reforms. Our economist remains doubtful whether the President can regain the confidence before her term ends in January 2018. Global Equity Strategy 199 2 December 2016 Figure 415: Korean PMIs suggests a slowdown in growth 75 Korea manufacturing PMI new orders 70 Korea real GDP growth (%), rhs Figure 416: Korea real retail sales have rolled over as well 11 20% Korean real retail sales (% chg yoy), 3mma 13 9 Korean nominal retail sales (yoy chg), rhs, 3mma 15% 65 7 60 8 55 5 50 3 45 5% 3 0% 1 40 -2 -5% -1 35 30 2004 10% -7 2002 -3 2005 2007 2009 2011 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -10% 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Earnings revisions have rolled over Korea's earnings momentum has also rolled over recently and has just turned negative relative to the global market. Figure 417: Korea's relative earnings momentum has been deteriorating 35% South Korea: 3-month earnings revisions relative to Global 25% 15% 5% -5% -15% -25% -35% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research However, we remain a small overweight of Korea for the following reasons: 1. Korea is a leveraged play on the global cycle While we expect global growth to remain generally subdued, we would not be surprised to see a small pick-up in global economic lead indicators. Korea equities have one of the largest overweights of cyclicals globally and the third-highest operational leverage among the major economies, making them very sensitive to the global economic cycle. Global Equity Strategy 200 2 December 2016 Figure 418: Korea's equity market is unusually skewed towards cyclical sectors Figure 419: Korea has the third-highest operational leverage among large economies 6 100% 5.7 90% Beta of EPS to Global IP 5 80% 4.4 % of market cap in cyclical sectors 70% 4 60% 3.4 50% 3.0 3 40% 3.0 2.5 2.4 30% 2.4 2.4 2.0 2 20% 10% 1.7 1.5 1 Spain Brazil India France UK China Italy US Germany Korea Russia Belgium Israel China Russian Federation Norway Poland Colombia Indonesia Brazil Chile Switzerland Italy Australia United Kingdom Canada Malaysia Turkey Austria Thailand Philippines Netherlands Singapore Hong Kong Denmark Mexico New Zealand Spain South Africa Greece India France Luxembourg United States Sweden Japan Germany Finland South Korea Taiwan Peru Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0 Japan 0% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Corporate change might improve shareholder returns in the medium term Korean equities have a payout ratio of below 20%, which is the lowest of all major global equity markets. We would, however, highlight while the scope for corporate change remains large, our Korea strategist, Gil Kim, sees only modest follow-through after the SEC buyback announcement. Nevertheless, we do think it is an important signal that SEC, which is currently going through a generational shift, has very recently committed to allocate 50% of free cash flow to shareholder returns for 2016 and 2017, which is at the top of the 30-50% range announced in 2015. For more details see Samsung Electronics - Quick Take: First Impressions from shareholder return policy update, 29 November. Figure 420: Korea has one of the lowest pay-out ratios in the world… Figure 421: … having risen, it has been stabilizing 80% 25% 70% Payout Ratio 60% 50% Korean pay-out ratio 20% 40% 30% 15% 20% 10% 10% Brazil Chile Europe South Africa Taiwan Thailand Malaysia Mexico Indonesia U.S.A Poland Philippines Japan China India Russia Turkey Korea 0% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 5% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 201 2 December 2016 3. P/E relatives close to a 10-year low In fact, Korea ranks as the fifth-cheapest equity market within EM on our traditional valuations scorecard shown in appendix. Figure 422: Korea is trading 0.4std below its average P/E relative to other emerging markets Figure 423: Korea's 12-month forward P/E relative to global is trading 0.4std below its average 145% 120% 12m fwd P/E - Korea relative to GEM Average (+/- 1SD) 135% 125% 100% 115% 90% 105% 80% 95% 70% 85% 60% 75% 50% 65% 40% 55% 30% 45% 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 12m fwd P/E - Korea relative to global 110% 20% 1996 Average (+/- 1SD) 1998 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. Korean equities continue to be unloved by investors As we show in the Taiwan section below, Korea continues to be one of the largest underweights of EM-focused funds. 5. Easing of monetary and fiscal policy Given the weak growth outlook, Christiaan Tuntono, our Korea economist, maintains his view that the BoK will maintain loose monetary policy over the medium term. He also expects greater government fiscal spending and subsidies in the government’s effort to stabilize growth (Korea: Potential growth trend continues to slide, 18 October). 6. Samsung Samsung's recent recall of its Note 7 may have hurt investor sentiment towards Korean equities given Samsung accounts for c.35% of MSCI Korea market cap. However, the impact of the recent incident may be smaller than initially seems the case. Samsung is still Outperform-rated by our analyst. The strength in Display and Memory units has partly offset revenue lost due to the Note 7 incident (display panels, TV and Monitors, Semiconductor devices together account for 46% of revenue), and the recall has not seriously affected sales of other smartphone models, according to our analyst. (see Samsung Electronics: 3Q16 review: reset for growth, 27 October 2016). Global Equity Strategy 202 2 December 2016 Figure 424: Samsung' share of Korea equity market cap 50% Samsung Electronics market cap rel MSCI korea market (%) 45% 40% Figure 425: Samsung price performance versus KOSPI 800 Samsung price perf 700 KOSPI price perf, rhs 250 200 600 35% 500 30% 25% 400 20% 300 15% 150 100 200 50 10% 100 5% 0 1999 0% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Stocks Below we show the top stock picks chosen by our Korea equity strategist, Gil Kim, on our aggregate scorecard. Figure 426: Korea top stock picks by our Korea equity strategist, Gil Kim, on our aggregate scorecard -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ Name Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Samsung Electronics 9.6 72% -2% 1.4 24% 3.4 1.5 49.6 -7.9 -3.5 1.9 Outperform Naver 24.4 122% 8% 11.1 34% 4.4 0.2 -21.5 1.1 -0.4 1.8 Outperform Kb Financial Group 8.2 70% -10% 0.6 -20% na 2.8 36.4 17.4 3.5 2.0 Outperform E-Mart 13.0 77% -4% 0.7 -12% na 0.8 -9.3 0.5 0.9 2.0 Outperform Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 203 2 December 2016 Taiwan: a small overweight We maintain a small overweight of Taiwanese equities within a global context, although we fully acknowledge our GEM Equity Strategy team is underweight within a global emerging market context (and our regional strategist, Sakthi Siva, is overweight of Taiwan within an Asian context). We agree with their view that Taiwan is the most vulnerable of all the Asian countries to both the competitive threat from China as well as the structural slowdown in the Chinese economy (40% of Taiwanese exports going to China). However, we find that the following factors are still supportive, in our view: 1. Taiwan ranks second on our GEM country scorecard Taiwan ranks second on our GEM country scorecard and particularly well on external/internal vulnerability. 2. Taiwan, a hedge on a stronger dollar One of the biggest risks to GEM is the stronger dollar. We view Taiwan as a potential hedge of an overweight of emerging markets when dollar strengthens or a rate hike as illustrated by its positive correlation to a rise in the dollar trade-weighted. Taiwan tends to outperform emerging markets in aggregate as the USD strengthens. This is because c.85% of Taiwanese revenues are USD denominated, and thus a 1% strengthening in the USD against the TWD adds 2% to Taiwanese EPS (3-4% to Taiwanese Tech EPS), according to Chung Hsu, Credit Suisse's Taiwan equity strategist. Moreover, Taiwan has the best combination of current account surplus and net foreign assets of any major country we examine (making the Taiwanese dollar less vulnerable in a period of US dollar strength). Figure 427: 10-year correlation of EM markets price relative (in dollar terms) with the dollar tradeweighted Figure 428: 24-month rolling correlation of Taiwanese equities relative to GEM with the dollar TWI 10Y correlation perf in $ terms, rel EM vs USD TWI 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.1 -0.2 -0.1 -0.4 -0.2 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy Brazil Russia Indonesia South Korea India South Africa Mexico China Taiwan Philippines -0.6 -0.3 2003 2005 2007 2009 2012 2014 2016 24m rolling correlation between Taiwan rel EM vs USD TWI Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 204 2 December 2016 3. Taiwan is a leveraged play on the global recovery Overall, exports makeup c.62% of Taiwanese GDP and thus Taiwan is abnormally sensitive to improvements in global growth (exports to the US are 6.3% of GDP, more than double that found in Europe or Japan). The sensitivity to the global cycle can be seen with the recent improvement in Taiwanese IP momentum or Taiwanese equities' high positive correlation with ISM new orders. Figure 429: Taiwan is one of the most correlated markets within EM to ISM new orders 10Y Correl of rel Global perf, in LC terms with US ISM new orders 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 -0.1 -0.2 Malaysia South Africa Chile Philippines Mexico Turkey Indonesia Poland India China Brazil Thailand Korea Taiwan Russia -0.3 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Many investors are too concerned about Taiwan's exposure to China, in our opinion. Our Taiwan strategist, Chung Hsu, estimates that more than half of the Taiwanese exports to China (which are 40% of GDP) are destined for end markets in the US and Europe, aligning Taiwanese growth with the global market rather than Chinese economic momentum. 4. Deflation diminishing After experiencing deflation during most of 2015, Taiwanese CPI and WPI have now rebounded sharply. Global Equity Strategy 205 2 December 2016 Figure 430: Taiwanese industrial production and export orders, yoy, % 60 Figure 431: Taiwan CPI and Taiwan WPI (wholesale price) have recovered sharply 5.7 50 Taiwan IP, yoy chg % 40 Taiwan exports orders ($), yoy % chg Taiwan CPI, yoy % 20 Taiwan WPI, yoy %, rhs 15 4.7 10 3.7 30 5 20 2.7 10 1.7 0 0.7 -5 -0.3 -10 -1.3 -15 0 -10 -20 -30 -40 2006 -2.3 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -20 1991 1995 1998 2002 2005 2009 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. Improving earnings momentum While Taiwanese absolute earnings revisions remain negative, they improved sharply over the past months and are now slightly better than global earnings revisions. This is in line with the view of our strategist who sees the Taiwan earnings downgrade cycle coming to an end. Chung expects Taiwanese earnings growth to continue their recovery into the first half of 2017 after an already strong third quarter. Earnings growth is normally good for Taiwanese equities, whose performance is closely correlated to profit growth. Figure 432: Taiwan relative earnings revisions are now marginally positive 20% Taiwan 3m breadth Figure 433: Taiwanese profit growth is likely to continue to recover into 2017 40% Rel Global Taiwanese equities YoY profit growth 35% 34% 34% 30% 22% 15% 12% 10% 0% 2% 2% 4Q17E 20% 3Q17E 10% 0% -10% -7% -15% -20% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2013 2016 2Q17E 2010 1Q17E 2007 4Q16E 2004 3Q16 2001 -28% 2Q16 1998 -18% 1Q16 -40% 1995 -40% 2Q15 -30% 1Q15 -30% 3Q15 -20% 4Q15 -10% Source: Credit Suisse Taiwan Equity strategy team research, Credit Suisse research 206 2 December 2016 Figure 434: Taiwanese equities are closely correlated to YoY profit growth Taiwan profit growth YoY 200% TAIEX YoY performance 90% 70% 150% 50% 100% 30% 50% 10% 0% -10% 2Q16 1Q15 4Q13 3Q12 2Q11 1Q10 4Q08 1Q05 3Q02 3Q07 -50% 2Q06 -100% 4Q03 -30% 2Q01 -50% Source: Credit Suisse Taiwan Equity strategy team research, Credit Suisse research 6. Valuations look reasonable Taiwanese equities look cheap relative the global market on 12-month forward P/E and are trading in line with their norm relative to global equities on price-to-book. Figure 435: The relative 12-month forward P/E for Taiwan is 0.6std below average… Taiwan 12m fwd PE rel global Average (+/- 1 SD) 200% Figure 436: …and its P/B relative is trading around its average 150% Taiwan PB rel global 140% Average (+/- 1 SD) 130% 170% 120% 110% 140% 100% 90% 110% 80% 70% 80% 60% 50% 1998 2001 2004 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2010 2013 2016 50% 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Furthermore, Taiwanese net cash as a share of total market cap has reached a 15-year high of 8%, as the market's free cash flow yield is now nearly 7%, according to our Taiwan strategist. As discussed below, Taiwan also has one of the largest gaps between the dividend yield and the government bond yield - a clear reason for some degree of asset allocation shift. Global Equity Strategy 207 2 December 2016 7. Still an attractive fund flow story and bearish sentiment Chung Hsu, our strategist, sees the potential for an attractive fund flow story into Taiwanese equities to continue driven by two factors: i. On 2 August, the FSC (Financial Supervisory Commission) reduced the risk weight of domestic equities for Taiwanese life insurers, with a reduction in risk weights by 19% and 5% for domestic ETFs and individual stocks respectively. Meanwhile they increased the risk weight for international equities, which should result in a shift from international to domestic equities. ii. Chung expects Taiwanese life insurers and pension funds to increase their buying of equities on the back of low bond yields, with the gap between the dividend yield of Taiwanese equities and the yield of Taiwanese government bonds remaining at a very high level. Overall, our Taiwan strategist expects life and pension funds to buy US$25-35bn of Taiwanese equities over the next five years with the equity holdings of Taiwanese insurers rising to above 8% of market cap (from c.5-6% of market cap currently). Figure 437: The Taiwanese gap between DY and the yield of government bonds is the most attractive among Asian economies…. 8% Dividend yield minus 10Y Bond yields 3% Figure 438: …and this gap is near a non-crisis alltime high 2% 6% 1% 0% Dividend Yield minus 10Y Bond yields Taiwanese market 4% -1% -2% 2% -3% -4% 0% -5% -2% Source: Credit Suisse Taiwan Equity strategy team research, Credit Suisse research Indonesia India Philippines China South Korea Malaysia Thailand Singapore Hong Kong Taiwan -6% -4% 2001 2003 2004 2006 2007 2009 2010 2012 2013 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Furthermore, Taiwan is one of the largest underweights within GEM funds, according to the EPFR data from our GEM equity strategy team, and sell-side analysts continue to be bearish on Taiwanese equities. Global Equity Strategy 208 2 December 2016 Figure 439: GEM equity fund positioning in Taiwan relative to the MSCI benchmark is very low Figure 440: Relative net sell side recommendations are bearish 2.4 Taiwan rel World on sell side recom. (+=Buy,-=Sell) Analyst recom. (1=Buy, 5=Sell) 7% 2.0 2.2 India 2.2 2.0 2% 1.8 2.4 1.6 -3% 1.4 2.6 Russia 1.2 Brazil 1.0 China 0.8 Taiwan 3.0 S Korea 0.6 0.4 Jan 02 2.8 -8% -13% 1995 Jan 05 Jan 08 Jan 11 Jan 14 1998 2002 2005 2009 2012 2016 Jan 17 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, EPFR, Credit Suisse research Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, EPFR, Credit Suisse research Taiwan's exposure to semis might become a headwind Semiconductors make up c.37% of total Taiwanese market cap. While semis are one of the most sensitive sectors to a recovery in US growth (as proxied by their sensitivity to ISM new orders) and have been a key driver of Taiwanese performance over the last 12 months, we wonder if the sector could now become a headwind for the reasons we discuss below. Figure 441: US semiconductors are one of the most positively correlated to ISM new orders 0.6 US sectors 10Y corr with ISM 0.4 0.2 -0.1 -0.3 -0.5 Beverages Pharmaceuticals Food Retail Household Products Food Producers Utilities Tobacco Telecoms Hotels & Leisure Healthcare Equip Commercial Services Software Transport Construction Materials Banks Real estate Retailing Consumer Durables Media Energy Insurance Chemicals Capital Goods Pulp & Paper Technology Hardware Div. financials Semiconductors Automobiles Metals and Mining -0.7 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The Taiwanese semis book/bill ratio has fallen sharply and is now in line with semis underperforming. Furthermore, deteriorating capital discipline within global semis should Global Equity Strategy 209 2 December 2016 be a headwind for Taiwanese semis going forward (i.e. capex to sales is high, and that tends to lead semis underperforming). Figure 442: Taiwanese semis tend to outperform when the book to bill ratio picks up Figure 443: Lower capex to sales tends to help performance of Taiwanese semis 26% Taiwan semis price relative, 6m %ch Taiwan semis book / bill ratio, rhs 40% -41% Global semis (ex equipment makers) capex to sales Taiwan semis rel perf, % chg y/y, rhs, inv 1.5 23% -31% 1.3 20% -21% 20% 1.1 0% 0.9 -20% 0.7 -40% -60% 1996 0.5 0.3 1998 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -11% 17% -1% 14% 9% 11% 19% 29% 8% 2001 2004 2006 2009 2011 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Stocks Below we show top stock picks in Taiwan as selected by our equity strategist, Chung Hsu. Figure 444: Top stock picks by our Taiwan equity strategist -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Hon Hai Precn.Ind. 9.9 74% -19% 1.4 -18% 9.3 4.2 54.3 2.7 1.3 2.8 Outperform Taiwan Semicon.Mnfg. 13.2 83% -13% 3.9 48% 3.9 3.5 52.6 4.3 2.4 2.2 Outperform Largan Precision 15.6 116% -6% 7.6 85% 4.8 1.8 76.3 -2.0 -1.9 2.2 Outperform Mega Financial Holding 10.7 91% -20% 1.1 11% na 5.5 10.3 -16.4 -4.3 2.7 Outperform Name Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 210 2 December 2016 India: structurally overweight, but near-term caution We remain structural positive on Indian equities in a global context. This is more optimistic than the view of Alex Redman or Sakthi Siva who are both underweight within a regional context. Some challenges have emerged in recent quarters which make us a little more cautious in the near term, even if we think the long-term story is very much intact. The challenges India faces are as follows, in our view: 1. Near-term (i.e. 9-12 months) disruption from demonetisation Cash usage in India is very much higher than the global norm (at c.14% of GDP compared with the GEM norm of 5%). As a result, the Indian government's decision to cease usage of R500 and R1000 notes is disruptive. Together, these two denominations account for around 85% of the currency in circulation by value, implying that around 10.5% of GDP has effectively been demonetised. Our India strategist, Neelkanth Mishra, believes demonetisation will have a disruptive impact, particularly on the asset quality impact of microfinance and non-banking financiers. It may take many years for currency in the black market to replenish, hurting real-estate, land transaction volumes and hence property prices (with real estate in turn accounting for 60% of cement demand, c.80% of construction jobs in rural India and c.90% of household wealth. For more details see Ideas engine - India Market Strategy: A long winter before the spring, 15 November). However, long-term demonetisation should be a positive for the economy as it should stimulate online banking, boost the formal economy (which is just 15% of GDP) and limit corruption and fraud. Figure 445: 85% of the currency demonetised Figure 446: India has very high cash usage Source: RBI, Credit Suisse India Equity Strategy team research Source: tradingeconomics.com, Credit Suisse India Equity Strategy team research 2. Near-term disruption from the Goods and Services Tax Bill (GST) The GST is a value added tax to be introduced across India from April 2017 and, again, the impact is likely to be characterised by near-term disruption. As our India strategists highlight, Malaysia introduced its own, simpler version of the GST in 2014, and yet the smaller economy took 3-6 months to stabilise, offering a worrying precedent. One channel for the transmission of this volatility will be state government finances. The R9tn or so of taxes subsumed under the GST should by design not change, and may in fact turn out to be higher once the system stabilises as compliance improves. However, the distribution of these between the states will change, disturbing the spending pattern at the state level. As states now spend 65-70% more than the centre, this is likely to be another source of volatility in the economy, in our India strategists' view. Global Equity Strategy 211 2 December 2016 In the longer term, though, the GST allows consolidation (rather than having warehouses in every state to exploit local tax rates), reduces the need for working capital and, above all, allows companies to think of India as one market (in much the same way as the EU did in Europe). Moreover, it aids and reduces the cost of revenue collection. The National Council of Applied Economic Research estimated gains in the range of 0.9%-1.7% of GDP for each year post the implementation of GST. Our India economist, Deepali Bhargava, recently downgraded her growth outlook for the next six months, cutting her FY2016-17 India GDP forecast to 6.9% from 7.8% to reflect the demonetisation and GST disruptions discussed above. Our economists also cut their growth forecast for FY2017-2018 to 7.4% Y/Y from 8.0% given their view that there will be a lasting economic impact from destruction of wealth for higher income segment of the population. For more details see India: Assessing impact on GDP from demonetization – a J-curve effect, 22 November. 3. Earnings revisions are weakening India's relative earnings revisions continue to be negative relative to emerging markets, and have been deteriorating lately. 4. A consensus long Equity fund positioning on Indian equities on EPFR data remains extended relative to other GEM countries and relative to its own history. This is a concern, but should be seen in a context where, in general, emerging markets are still relatively under-owned. Ownership levels (relative to GEM) are back to 2002-03 levels, levels from which India was able to historically outperform. As above, net buy recommendations have fallen to low levels. Figure 447: India earnings revisions relative to EM are still negative and rolling over 50% Figure 448: GEM equity fund positioning in India relative to the MSCI benchmark is extended, though it has fallen from its historical high India: 13-week earnings revisions 2.4 rel to GEM 2.2 India 30% 2.0 1.8 10% 1.6 -10% 1.4 Russia 1.2 -30% -50% Brazil 1.0 China 0.8 Taiwan S Korea 0.6 -70% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2015 2016 0.4 Jan 02 Jan 05 Jan 08 Jan 11 Jan 14 Jan 17 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, EPFR, Credit Suisse research However, we remain positive structurally on Indian equities, and consider the following longer-term positives: Global Equity Strategy 212 2 December 2016 1. Structural positives ■ India has little economic exposure to China (the biggest long-term risk within an overweight of GEM). India's exports to China account for just 0.5% of GDP and just 1.0% of value added exports, according to our India economics team. Moreover, if there were a hard landing in China, India would represent something of a macro hedge given that it is a large net commodity importer (with net commodity imports c.4.7% of GDP). Now that China has had most of its positive growth surprise, this becomes a support. ■ India has exceptionally good demographics. India's working age population will grow by 1.4% p.a. between 2015-2025 according to the World Bank, the fastest of any of the world's biggest 10 countries. Over the same period, China, Germany, Japan and Russia are set to see their working-age populations contract. ■ India has significant catch-up potential with a very low urbanization rate at just 31% and productivity per hour worked still only 42% of that in China. Indeed, India's manufacturing share of GDP is just 17.5% compared to the 39% share of the industrial sector in China. When GDP growth per capita hit 10% of US levels (India is at 11%), China and Korea were able to grow by 11% and 8.2% a year, respectively, over the next five years. Figure 449: Asian economies’ GDP per capita (at PPP) as a share of US levels – India is at just 11% of US levels GDP per capita at PPP (as % of US) 100% Japan (1950-) South Korea (1965-) Taiwan (1963-) Malaysia (1969-) India (1987-) Hong Kong (1951-) China (1978-) 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 0 10 20 30 40 Years since acceleration 50 60 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Figure 450: GDP per capita growth after reaching 10% of US GDP per capita (India's current level) GDP per capita at PPP Country <10% of US 5 years post 10 years post 20 years post To present Period CAGR Period CAGR Period CAGR Period CAGR Period CAGR India 1950-2015 2.9% - - - - - - - - China 1950-2003 4.4% 2003-2008 10.9% 2003-2013 9.6% - - 2003-2015 8.4% Korea 1950-1966 3.7% 1966-1971 8.2% 1966-1976 8.3% 1966-1986 6.9% 1966-2015 Average 3.7% 9.6% 9.0% 6.9% 5.9% 7.1% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 213 2 December 2016 ■ A cheap currency: In our view, there are three indications that the rupee is still cheap: i) India's current account deficit is forecast by our economists to be only 1.0% of GDP in 2016 (down from a deficit of 4.8% of GDP in 2012), while net FDI is 1.8% of GDP and exceeds 2% of GDP for gross FDI inflows, according to our India economist, Deepali Bhargava. This allows India to run a basic balance of payment surplus. Foreign direct investment is up by 16% year on year, more than any other country. ii) The rupee continues to look very cheap relative to its export market share (if the rupee discount to PPP were to match its export market share then the rupee would be up by around 31%). iii) FX reserves are up c.$56bn over the past two years (and $15bn year to date), according to our India economist. Indeed, such a rise in FX reserves typically helps excess liquidity and in turn money supply growth. Figure 451: India’s current account position has significantly improved to a deficit of just under 1% of GDP 4% Figure 452: The rupee is cheaper than implied by its export market share 1.8% India current account balance, % of GDP, 4 qtr average 3% 1.6% 2% -64% India exports % of World exports -66% Currency deviation from PPP 1% -68% 1.4% -70% 0% 1.2% -1% -72% 1.0% -2% -74% -3% 0.8% -76% -4% 0.6% -5% -6% 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0.4% 1996 -78% -80% 1999 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The real bond yield at just around 1% remains reasonable (with inflation forecast to fall to 5.2% next year). 2. Clear signs of reform In our judgement, there have been some signs of positive progress on reform. We would highlight the following: The GST should be a large longer term positive (as highlighted above). ■ 99% of the population now has access to a bank account compared to 50% a year ago. This should limit the scope for corruption and enable the efficient transmission of subsidies and rural payments. ■ There have now been 1bn unique identification numbers (AADHAAR numbers) issued to Indian citizens, covering c.86% of the population. These provide Indians with a universal identity infrastructure which can be used for any identity-based application (e.g. for social benefits, passports, etc.) and should reduce corruption. Global Equity Strategy 214 2 December 2016 Critically it also brings many more people into the formal economy (which aids productivity and tax collection) and also allows the expansion of e-commerce which in turn aids supply side driven deflation and efficiency gains. ■ The appointment of new RBI Governor, Urjit Patel, should help ensure continuity of the existing monetary policy framework. Moreover, with the RBI Governor having the casting vote, then the RBI's strong anti-inflation credentials are likely to allow real bond yields to fall. ■ A new bankruptcy code has been established, making it possible to liquidate a company within 180 days (with time taken to resolve insolvency having been an area where India lagged most other economies), with management ceded to ‘insolvency professionals’. This should help the recovery rate, which is 25% in insolvencies (according to the World Bank). ■ Other factors that are supportive: efforts to lend at formal sector rates to the large number of micro enterprises continue via MUDRA, and the auctioning of mining assets. 3. Valuations are still quite reasonable A 4% P/E premium to global equities for a 25% RoE premium looks realistic to us, especially when we consider that India has double the trend rate of growth of the US. Figure 453: India's PE premium is justified due to superior ROE and not extended if adjusted for growth Figure 454: India's 12-month forward P/E relative to global markets is only slightly above its five-year average MSCI India: 12m fwd P/E rel to MSCI World Average 175% 12m fwd P/E 12m fwd ROE PEG 15.9 0.2 0.9 GEM 135% 135% 104% Global 104% 125% 67% India Relative to 155% 135% 115% 95% 75% 55% 35% 2000 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research. *G = 3-5 year EPS growth estimate by IBES consensus Global Equity Strategy 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 215 2 December 2016 4. Oil unlikely to be a headwind As a significant oil importer, India underperforms when the oil price rises. We on the Global Equity Strategy team think that it is unlikely that the oil price will rise much beyond $55pb in the H1 2017. Figure 455: India has typically underperformed GEM oil exporters when the oil price rose 8.5 10 India rel to Oil Exporting countries (Russia, Brazil, Malaysia and Mexico) 7.5 30 Brent price, rhs, inverted 6.5 50 5.5 70 4.5 90 3.5 110 2.5 130 1.5 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. Our GEM strategy team's macro model suggests upside Our GEM equity strategy team's macro regression model (based on India IP growth, the Indian rupee to dollar exchange rate, ISM new orders and money supply growth) suggests around 19% upside potential to 2017 year-end for the MSCI India. Figure 456: Macro regression model predicted versus actual MSCI India Model inputs Coeff. P-value India IP (% yoy) USDINR Current Scenario 24 Nov y/e 2017 Upside from current 384 bps 1.5% 2.12 -2.02 0.000 0.000 -0.8% 68.5 3.0% 69.5 US ISM new orders 0.68 0.000 52.1 57.0 9.4% M3 growth (% yoy) 0.74 0.000 10.9 12.5 1.6 ppt Figure 457: Macro regression model predicted versus actual MSCI India 700 600 500 400 MSCI India 24 Nov y/e 2017 Adj R square: 0.83 Current 430 430 Observations: Intercept 167 0.00 Predicted Upside % 463 7.6 512 19.0 300 200 100 Predicted MSCI India Actual MSCI India 0 Jan 03 Jan 05 Jan 07 Jan 09 Jan 11 Jan 13 Jan 15 Jan 17 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, Thomson Reuters Global Equity Strategy Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity strategy team research, Thomson Reuters 216 2 December 2016 Stocks Below we show top stock picks chosen by our India strategist, Neelkanth Mishra. Figure 458: Top picks by our India strategist -----P/E (12m fwd) -----rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average 101% 20% 2.9 62% -19% 4.1 12.4 62% -12% Cipla 23.6 163% Tata Motors 9.0 96% Name Abs rel to Industry Lic Housing Finance 11.9 Hcl Technologies 12.5 Tech Mahindra 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 84% na 1.2 -56.1 0.5 1.2 2.1 Outperform 22% 4.8 2.9 60.2 0.5 -1.4 2.1 Outperform 3.3 -17% 3.5 1.8 48.3 -6.4 -0.7 2.1 Outperform 3% 3.8 18% 3.7 0.4 28.9 -6.1 -1.7 2.5 Outperform -36% 1.9 -17% -1.7 0.3 42.6 -19.8 -2.4 2.0 Outperform 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 217 2 December 2016 Russia: staying overweight We would recommend an overweight position in Russian equities within a global portfolio (noting that our GEM equity strategy team is benchmark within a GEM portfolio). We see the following supports: 1. Top of our emerging market country scorecard Russia ranks top on our GEM country scorecard, scoring particularly highly on the currency and equity valuation metrics. Exposure to China is also relatively low. 2. A US détente with Russia post Donald Trump's victory? The election of Donald Trump could lead to improved relations with Russia. In their first phone call, President-elect Trump stated he looked forward to a 'strong and enduring relationship' with Russia (see FT, 15 November 2016). It would seem possible that some lifting of sanctions on Russia could follow from this change of tone in the relationship. 3. The rouble is still one of the most undervalued currencies The rouble is one of the most undervalued currencies, ranking fourth on our EM valuation scorecard (see Appendix). The real effective exchange rate is below 2009 lows, despite the oil price being at much higher levels than those seen in the financial crisis. Moreover, using the current exchange rates, Russian GDP is only c.10% larger than that of Spain despite having a population more than 3 times the size. The currency is critical: if the rouble appreciates by 10%, inflation falls by about 0.75pp, allowing monetary policy to loosen. Our economists expect inflation to fall to 4.2% in 2017 (from its peak of 13% year on year), and rates were cut for the first time in almost a year in mid-June by 50bps to 10.5%. Our Russia economist expects 9% rates by the end of 2017, and we think it could be lower still. The undervaluation of the currency is reflected in the Russian current account surplus which is expected be around 3.0% of GDP in 2016 and 2.6% of GDP in 2017, according to our economist, despite the recovery in the rouble. 4. Russian economic momentum is picking up Russian manufacturing PMI new orders have been rising relative to global PMIs. Our economists project growth of 1.5% in 2017 on the back of the expected pick-up in the investment cycle (as companies have de-levered), lower interest rates and stronger consumer demand. Global Equity Strategy 218 2 December 2016 Figure 459: The REER is still below 2009 lows despite the oil price being at higher levels Figure 460: Russian manufacturing PMI new orders have been rising relative to global PMIs 150 65 Russia PMI mfg new orders 60 rel Global Russia REER 120 Oil price, rhs 125 110 7 55 100 100 75 90 50 80 50 2 45 -3 40 35 25 70 60 2001 0 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 12 -8 30 25 -13 2004 2005 2007 2008 2010 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. Oil Russia is clearly a play on oil, economically and from an equity market perspective. Oil accounts for 54% of equity market capitalisation, 40% of tax revenues, 55%-60% of exports are energy-related, and oil revenues are 13% of GDP, according to our Russia economist. In this Outlook, we find ourselves incrementally more positive on the outlook for the oil price, as discussed in our commodity section. 6. Government bond yields remain too high The local bond yield of 8.8% gives a real bond yield of 4.5% on our economists' 2017 inflation forecast (with yields up from a recent low of 8%). To us, this seems attractive given the undervaluation of the currency and the very limited sovereign credit risk, with the budget deficit for the past 12 months at 3.8% of GDP and government debt to GDP at just under 10%. There has been a reasonable correlation between the Russian 10-year government bond yield and Russian equity market price performance relative to emerging markets. 7. Our GEM equity strategist's fair value model points to c.9% upside by the end of 2017 Our GEM strategist's four-factor model for Russian equities (based on the oil price, government 10-year bond yield, M2 growth and IFO business expectations) is consistent with c.9% upside by the end of 2017. Global Equity Strategy 219 2 December 2016 Figure 461: Macro regression model predicted versus actual MSCI Russia Model inputs Coeff. P-value Oil (Brent) Govt. 10 year BY % 0.37 -2.79 0.000 0.003 M2 growth % yoy 0.38 0.000 IFO business expec. 1.90 0.000 Figure 462: Macro regression model predicted versus actual MSCI Russia Current Scenario Upside from 24 Nov y/e 2017 current 49.0 60.0 22.3% 8.8 8.5 -30 bps 12.0% 7.5% -4.54 ppt 106 104 1600 Predicted MSCI Russia 1400 Actual MSCI Russia 1200 -1.4% 1000 MSCI Russia 24 Nov y/e 2017 Adj R square: 0.73 Current 538 538 Observations: Intercept 155 0.00 Predicted Upside % 502 -6.7 588 9.3 800 600 400 200 2004 Source: Credit Suisse GEM Equity Strategy team research, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 8. 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 Source: Markit, Credit Suisse research Russian equities look reasonably cheap Russian equities trade slightly below their norm on P/B relative to global markets, but are nearly 0.8 standard deviation cheap on 12-month forward P/E relative to global markets. Figure 463: Russian equities are trading slightly below their norm on P/B relative to global… Figure 464: … and nearly 0.8 standard deviation cheap on 12-month forward P/E relative to global 1.0 0.9 Russia P/B ex Financials rel. World 0.8 MSCI Russia 12m FWD PE rel World Average (+/- 1 SD) 0.9 0.8 Average (+/- 1 SD) 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.5 0.3 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.0 1999 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 2014 2016 0.2 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 9. Earnings momentum is strong The earnings momentum of Russian equities is strong in absolute terms as well as relative to global equities. Finally, we would admit that Russian equities do look overbought relative to GEM equities, but less so relative to global equities. Global Equity Strategy 220 2 December 2016 Figure 465: Russian earnings momentum is strong Russia 3m breadth 22% Figure 466: Russia equities price relative to global market (dollar terms): only 0.4std above its 6-month moving average 40% Rel Global 17% MSCI Russia % devn from 6mma rel Global mkt ($) 30% Average (+/- 1sd) 12% 20% 7% 2% 10% -3% 0% -8% -13% -10% -18% -20% -23% -28% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -30% 2001 2004 2006 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Stocks We can see that European Russia-exposed stocks are closely following the oil price. Figure 467: Oil price versus Russia-exposed stocks price relative 180 Oil price, y/y%, lhs Oil perf, latest Russia exposed eur stock, y/y% Stock perf, latest 130 110 140 90 100 70 60 50 30 20 10 -20 -10 -60 -100 1999 -30 -50 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 221 2 December 2016 The screen below focuses on European stocks with high Russian exposure. Figure 468: European stocks with high sales exposure to Russia -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ Name Telia Company Russian exposure 12m Price perf rel Cont Europe (lc) YTD perf rel Cont Europe (lc) Abs rel to Industry 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 19% of net income -9% -12% 11.4 82% -9% 1.5 -1% 5.2 5.9 42.2 -5.8 0.4 2.6 Neutral Adidas 10% sales 72% 64% 25.1 150% 41% 5.1 131% 1.4 1.4 -17.5 0.5 0.3 2.8 Neutral Unilever (Uk) 3% sales 23% 15% 18.7 92% 3% 7.9 68% na 3.4 -0.2 2.1 1.0 2.6 Neutral Nokian Renkaat 26% sales 4% 9% 16.9 182% 5% 3.7 35% 3.9 4.6 -5.0 0.4 -0.3 2.6 Not Covered Renault 8% sales -12% -15% 5.4 58% -68% 0.8 28% 8.3 3.9 163.9 1.6 1.4 2.5 Not Covered Henkel 6% sales 13% 13% 16.2 80% 5% 3.0 55% na 1.8 na 1.6 0.4 1.0 Not Covered Jcdecaux 4% sales -22% -25% 22.8 125% -12% 2.2 20% 4.2 2.2 -0.8 -13.4 -2.1 2.8 Not Covered 20% of 2015E EBITDA 18% sales 10% 6% 19.7 130% 23% 0.9 -40% -0.1 5.2 21.5 -1.2 2.2 3.7 Underperform 13% 4% 18.1 90% 15% 2.1 64% 5.6 1.6 -27.9 -2.6 -0.4 3.1 Underperform 7% sales -7% -8% 12.2 88% -9% 3.3 53% 4.4 6.1 50.5 -14.3 -0.8 2.7 Underperform Fortum Carlsberg 'B' Telenor Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Our favoured non-commodity-related Russia plays are M.Video, X5 and Magnit (all Outperform-rated). For more details, see Ideas Engine - Russian Food Retail: Modernising to win market share, 16 November. Figure 469: Our favoured non-commodity-related Russia plays -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- Name Abs rel to Industry rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY M Video 11.2 47% -13% X5 Retail Gp.Gdr Reg 'S' Pjsc Magnit Gdr (Reg 15.2 90% -24% 4.8 82% 10.8 1.4 -29% -0.4 17.2 101% -23% na na 2.0 HOLT 2016e Momentum, % Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) 5.8 -7.8 18.2 9.0 2.3 Outperform 0.0 81.8 10.4 1.6 1.6 Outperform 2.2 17.4 -2.7 -1.5 2.5 Outperform S) Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 222 2 December 2016 CE3 We consider Poland, Hungary and Czech Republic to be plays on Continental Europe, a region on which we remain positive both economically and from an equity market perspective. We see the following positives: 1. A European proxy trading on a discounted valuation The performance of CE3 countries relative to the broader emerging market index tends to match the relative performance of Europe. Accordingly, they have underperformed along with European equities, but we think that European equities will outperform from here. CE3 stocks trade on a significant P/B discount to DM European equities; Figure 471: CE3 in aggregate (Poland, Hungary and Czech Republic) are trading 0.6std below average levels on P/B relative to the Continental European market Figure 470: CE3 acts a play on the European recovery CE3 relative to GEM Europe relative to Global, rhs 5.0 4.5 5.2 CE3 stocks P/B rel Cont eur mkt 120% Average 110% 4.0 4.7 3.5 100% 90% 3.0 4.2 80% 70% 2.5 3.7 2.0 1.5 2002 130% 60% 50% 3.2 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 40% 1995 1998 2002 2005 2009 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Earnings revisions are turning higher Earnings revisions relative to GEM have been improving, though are still marginally negative. One of the supports for CE3 earnings is that the group tends to benefit from a weaker euro given that they are part of the supply chain within the euro area. 3. Hourly labour costs are among the lowest in Europe CE3 have among the lowest labour costs in the EU, with hourly labour costs in CE3 countries is a third of the euro area level. Global Equity Strategy 223 2 December 2016 Figure 472: Earnings revisions relative to GEM have been improving 18% CE3 stocks 3m breadth Figure 473: Hourly labour costs in CE3 countries are a third of the euro-area level 60 Rel GEM mkt 13% 50 8% 40 3% Hourly labour costs for the whole economy (€) 30 -2% 20 -7% 10 -12% Norway Denmark Belgium Sweden Luxembourg France Netherlands Finland Austria Germany Ireland EA18 Italy United Kingdom Spain5 Slovenia Cyprus Greece5 Portugal Malta Estonia Slovakia Czech Republic Croatia Poland Hungary Latvia Lithuania Romania5 Bulgaria 0 -17% -22% 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. Sell-side analysts are cautious, and the group is oversold Sell-side analysts remain bearish on the CE3 equities when we look at the consensus net buy recommendations. Figure 474: Sell-side analysts continue to be negative on the CE3 equities Figure 475: CE3 equities relative to GEM are trading marginally below their 6-month MA 15% 2.2 10% 2.3 5% 2.4 2.5 0% CE3 stocks %dev from 6mma, rel to GEM mkt (in $) 20% Average 10% 2.6 -5% 2.7 -10% 0% 2.8 -15% 2.9 -20% 3.0 -25% 3.1 -30% 1997 3.2 1999 2002 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 CE3 stocks on analyst recommendations rel to GEM mkt (+=Buy; -=Sell) Analyst recommendations (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: Eurostat, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -10% -20% -30% 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Stocks Our EEMEA Banks analyst, Hugo Swann, highlights OTP and Erste as Outperforms given low impairment charges and the prospect of accelerating loan growth, which should in turn help stabilize NIM and then grow NII. As retail banks, both the stocks should also benefit from the higher rates theme. Global Equity Strategy 224 2 December 2016 Figure 476: Our preferred plays on CE3 -----P/E (12m fwd) ------ 2016e, % ------ P/B ------- HOLT 2016e Momentum, % rel to mkt % above/below average Abs rel to mkt % above/below average FCY DY Price, % change to best 3m EPS 3m Sales 92% 14% 1.8 67% na 2.5 -5.6 12.1 -2.2 2.8 Outperform 82% -25% 1.0 14% na 3.5 8.0 3.3 -0.5 2.3 Outperform Name Abs rel to Industry Otp Bank 10.8 Erste Group Bank 9.6 Consensus Credit Suisse recommendation rating (1=Buy; 5=Sell) Source: MSCI, IBES, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse HOLT, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 225 2 December 2016 UK: downgrade to underweight In our judgement, there are four key elements to a view on UK equities in a global context: sterling, emerging markets, commodities and the global cycle. If we look at these four variables: the outlook for GEM has deteriorated compared to the first 8 months of the year (as we highlight in the GEM section); two factors which had proved tailwinds through the first half of 2016 are now neutral (oil and sterling); and OECD lead indicators are rising, which tends to be negative for UK relative performance. Figure 477: Macro factors which boosted UK outperformance are set to become much less supportive, in our judgement Macro factor GBPUSD Change: 1 Jan to 25 Oct ↓ -17.7% Oil price CRB Metals EM relative ↑ ↑ ↑ 42.5% 26.2% 11.6% Macro momentum (ISM) FTSE 100 rel to World → 0.6 8.5% → → → ↑ ↑ 12 month outlook Sterling now close to trough Likely range bound Likely range bound Overweight, but near-term challenges Macro momentum now rising globally Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research With the majority of macro factors now more challenging for UK equities in local currency terms, and with a valuation which is not especially attractive, we opt to take UK weightings down. What are the negatives? Sterling resilience a challenge The UK is one of the most international equity markets globally. Around 70% of UK listed sales are derived overseas, while 40% of dividends are dollar denominated. For the large cap FTSE 100, the international exposure is higher still. Figure 478: Only 25% of UK FTSE revenues come from the UK Regional sales, % of total FTSE 100 Euro Stoxx 50 S&P 500 Europe 23.7% 56.3% 5.7% UK 25.4% 2.2% 0.9% North America 20.4% 17.1% 69.7% GEM 24.4% 19.0% 7.3% Others 5.9% 5.3% 16.4% Total 100% 100% 100% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As a result, when sterling weakens, UK equities outperform in local currency terms, and earnings in sterling terms rise. As the chart below illustrates, the trajectory of sterling has tended to be very closely correlated with earnings momentum, which is currently strong. While earnings revisions are stronger in the UK than any other region, this is merely a reflection of currency weakness Global Equity Strategy 226 2 December 2016 Figure 479: The UK market tends to outperform as sterling weakens (and vice versa) MSCI UK rel to World (local currency) Trade-weighted Sterling, rhs, inverted 5.5 5.3 Figure 480: Earnings momentum tracks trade weighted sterling closely 70 40% 75 30% 5.1 80 4.9 85 UK: 13-week earnings revisions relative to global GBP TWI, % chg Y/Y inv., rhs -19 -14 20% -9 10% 4.7 90 4.5 95 4.3 -4 0% 1 100 -10% 3.9 105 -20% 3.7 2002 110 4.1 -24 6 11 2004 2006 2009 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 -30% 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Having been bearish of sterling through 2016, we took the view on 12 October that the currency was at a floor as we discussed in our Thoughts on sterling and review of UK domestic sectors 12 October 2016). We explore the reasons in depth in our FX section, but would just summarise briefly the key aspects of our view as follows: ■ A crisis type devaluation has occurred: Sterling has experienced most of a typical crisis-type devaluation, having fallen at peak by c.30% against the US dollar, against an average crisis devaluation of around 32% looking at events such as the ERM exit or the financial crisis of 2007-08. At the time of writing, sterling is down c.28% from its peak against the dollar, and 22% on a trade-weighted basis. ■ Valuation: Sterling is now 14% cheap against the USD on PPP, a valuation which has represented a trough when reached in the last 20 years. Global Equity Strategy 227 2 December 2016 Figure 481: The post-Brexit sell off saw sterling experience a typical 'crisis' devaluation Figure 482: Sterling is now c.14% cheap against the USD, a valuation which has represented a trough in the last 20 years GBP/USD - Deviation fromfrom PPPPPP GBP/USD - Deviation 40% 30% Event GBP overvalued 20% GBPUSD depreciation Bretton Woods (1949) -30% 10% 1980s recession (1980-1983) -35% 0% ERM Ex it (1992) -29% Financial crisis (2007-2008) -35% Brex it to trough (2014 - 2016) -29% Av erage -32% -10% -20% -30% GBP undervalued -40% -50% 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Positioning: Speculators are extremely short sterling versus the USD on data from CFTC. Figure 483: Speculators remain extremely bearish on sterling 100 # of contracts (000's) . 80 Net long positions GBP/USD 60 40 20 0 -20 -40 -60 -80 -100 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Rate differentials: Real rate differentials are consistent with a modestly stronger GBP against the USD. ■ The current account deficit is likely to improve a little more than expected. It has already fallen from 7% to 6% of GDP, but with 90% of assets foreign currency denominated and 60% of liabilities foreign currency denominated, there is something of an automatic improvement as sterling weakens. ■ Politics: Most market commentators believe that a hard Brexit is a high probability. We think that this probability has been overstated, primarily as a function of the significant Global Equity Strategy 228 2 December 2016 logistical hurdles which exist and the prospect of the House of Lords delaying the passing of Article 50 (see FX section for more details). GEM exposure – clouds on the horizon? Around 18% of UK sales are emerging market related and, if one assumes commodities are a play on GEM growth, then aggregate exposure of the UK to GEM via commodities and direct exposure is c35% of market cap. The relative performance of UK equities has tended to correlate with GEM equities and thus as GEM equities recovered through 2016, this represented a significant tailwind. Figure 484: UK equities have tended to track the performance of GEM equities 150 Figure 485: The commodity weighting of UK equities is greater than that of even GEM 5.5 EM relative - local UK relative - local, rhs 5.3 140 40% 35% Market cap energy & mining (% of total) 30% GEM sales exposure, ex mining and oil (%) 5.1 130 4.9 120 4.7 110 4.5 100 90 80 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 25% 18% 7% 20% 4.3 15% 4.1 10% 3.9 5% 3.7 0% 17% 18% 1% 17% 5% 7% FTSE 100 Euro Stoxx 50 Nikkei S&P 500 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research As we discuss in detail in the emerging market section of this report, while emerging market equities are still, in our judgement, an attractive multi-year investment, there are macro challenges as we enter 2017, namely, a stronger dollar, the rise in US real bond yields, and the increased threat of protectionism. Also, China in 2017 is unlikely to repeat the positive surprise it provided to markets in 2016 at a time when Chinese policy is being clearly tightened. Global Equity Strategy 229 2 December 2016 Figure 486: Real rates in the US are now moving higher Figure 487: The rise in TIPS yields is consistent with GEM equities underperforming in the near-term -2.0 10 year TIPS yield (%) 10yr breakeven inflation (%) 3.0 13 GEM relative to global equities, 6m % chg -1.5 US 10-year TIPS yields, 6m chg, rhs, inv. 2.5 8 -1.0 2.0 1.5 1.0 3 -0.5 -2 0.0 0.5 0.5 -7 0.0 1.0 -12 -0.5 1.5 -1.0 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -17 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Commodities Around 18% of UK market cap is accounted for by commodities, a share substantially in excess of any other major equity market (higher even than GEM, and in Europe ex. UK, the share is just 7%). In our judgement, the oil stocks need a $60pb oil price to give them attractive free cash flow yields (and even then on 2018 numbers). We are more constructive on the mining sector thanks to high free cash flow yields offered by the companies (averaging 17% for the sector on spot commodity prices). Figure 489: This commodity weighting creates a relationship between the relative performance of the UK and the CRB index Figure 488: The commodity weighting of UK equities is greater than that of even GEM 12% 12% 600 Share of market cap Oil & Gas Mining 10% 10% 8% 5.5 CRB commodity index UK equities relative to World, rhs 550 5.1 8% 7% 4.9 500 4.7 6% 4% 4.5 450 4% 4.3 3% 2% 0% 0% 0% UK Emerging markets US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 5.3 Euro area 4.1 400 1% 3.9 0% Japan 350 2011 3.7 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 230 2 December 2016 45% of expected 2017 EPS growth is coming from energy, with a further 11% from materials. Excluding financials and resources, EPS growth expectations are 9% on consensus forecasts. This clearly leaves the UK vulnerable to volatile commodity prices. Figure 490: Resources are contributing more than 50% of expected EPS growth in 2017 MSCI UK sectors EPS grow th Contribution to 2017 EPS 2016 2017 absolute grow th (%) Energy -39.2 89.6 14.9 44.1 Materials -19.2 35.4 6.9 11.3 Industrials -5.6 9.7 7.4 4.1 Cons disc. 9.9 5.6 9.7 3.2 Cons stap. 12.9 13.9 14.3 10.9 Healthcare 11.4 6.9 11.6 4.7 Financials -6.5 11.9 26.1 17.4 IT 21.6 13.6 0.6 0.5 Telecom -1.3 14.8 4.1 3.3 Utilities -0.9 2.7 4.3 0.7 Market -5.5 18.9 Market ex financials -5.2 21.8 Market ex res and fins 6.7 9.2 Market ex resources 1.9 10.1 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Outside of resources, the UK has tended to be a defensive market The UK has historically been a defensive market outside of mining and oil given its weighting in pharma and consumer staples (until recently, consumer staples were the largest sector in the FTSE 100). As a result, it is not the most attractive region in which to invest when global bond yields and global PMIs turn higher. The UK market has the lowest operational leverage of any major market. Global Equity Strategy 231 2 December 2016 Figure 491: The UK’s operational leverage is low 6 5.7 Figure 492: The UK tends to outperform when global economic lead indicators fall, and vice versa 5 3.3 3.2 3 3% -5% 2% 0% 1% 5% 0% 10% -1% 15% -2% 20% -3% 25% -4% 2.9 2 1 0 Emerging markets World Continental Europe US Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4% -10% 2.4 Japan 5% OECD composite lead indicator, 6m% ch, rhs -15% 3.8 4 UK Ex-resorces price rel Global, lc, 6m chg, INVERTED -20% Beta of EPS to Global IP UK 30% 1997 -5% 2000 2002 2005 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research These dynamics, a positive correlation with GEM equities and a relatively defensive market construction outside resources, leave the UK market with a large negative correlation with US 10-year yields at a time when we believe they can continue to move higher. Figure 493: UK equities have a significant negative correlation with US 10-year bond yields 0.32 0.22 0.12 0.02 -0.08 -0.18 Correlation of local currency relative performance with US 10 year yields -0.28 -0.38 -0.48 -0.58 Japan Europe ex. UK US GEM UK Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 232 2 December 2016 Valuations are not especially attractive UK valuations are not particularly attractive if we look at the PE or P/B relative., although the recent re-rating of non-UK markets has pulled back valuations from their Brexitrecovery highs. Figure 494: PE relative valuations are still around a standard deviation above average 1.10 Figure 495: Excluding resources, the PB relative valuation is around average on a relative basis UK ex resources, 12 month forward PE relative to Global 1.05 1.25 Headline UK forward PE relative to Global 1.00 1.15 0.95 1.05 0.90 0.95 0.85 0.85 0.80 0.75 0.75 0.70 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 UK PB relative to Global 0.65 1996 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research UK ex resources PB relative to Global 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research This recent de-rating has picked the UK (relative to global equities) up from the bottom of our regional valuation scorecard, but it is still only middling. Figure 496: UK equities are only middling on our regional valuation scorecard 12m Fwd P/E Region Latest Price to Book Z-score Latest 40% Weight Z-score BY-12m fwd Earnings Yield Latest 20% Z-score DY Latest 10% PEG Z-score Latest 10% Z-score Z-score 20% Japan 14.1 1.1 1.3 0.5 -7.1 1.0 2.0 1.1 1.6 -0.6 0.63 GEM 11.7 -0.1 1.6 0.4 -2.4 -0.2 3.1 0.6 0.9 1.6 0.41 UK 14.3 -0.1 1.9 0.9 -5.5 0.4 3.6 0.6 1.4 0.1 0.28 Europe ex UK 14.3 0.1 1.6 1.2 -6.1 0.9 3.2 0.6 1.7 -1.0 0.23 US 17.0 -1.1 3.0 -1.4 -3.6 0.0 2.1 0.8 1.4 -0.1 -0.67 Cheapest region, with cheaper valuation (12m fwd P/E, P/B, DY & PEG ratios) and smaller spread between bond yields and earnings yields, is ranked at the top A higher z-score is a positive on all measures Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research An uncertain outlook for the UK economy As noted above, the UK equity market's exposure to the UK economy is not exceptionally large, but at around 30% of sales, it is not irrelevant either. While post-Brexit caution on the UK economy was excessive, challenges and risks remain for the UK economy in 2017. Primary among these is a likely sharp rise in the cost of living at a time when the consumer savings ratio is already extremely low by historic standards. Global Equity Strategy 233 2 December 2016 Figure 497: 12-month forward GDP growth estimates have adjusted sharply lower but now appear to have stabilised 3 2 1 0 -1 12m fwd GDP growth estimates UK -2 -3 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL™ service, Credit Suisse research We would admit that PMI service new orders are consistent with growth at or around 1.5% currently. However, we would note that a number of the lead indicators of employment growth, such as vacancy growth, imply a slowdown in employment growth. Figure 498: Service sector PMIs have weakened, but are consistent with c.1.5% GDP growth UK Services PMI new orders 10% UK GDP % chg Q/Q annualised, 3m lag (rhs) 65 Figure 499: Vacancy growth is weakening, and that tends to lead employment growth 3.5 40 8% 6% 60 4% 55 Employment, y/y% 2.5 30 Vacancies, y/y%, lead 3m, rhs 20 1.5 10 2% 0% 50 0.5 0 -2% 45 -4% -20 -6% 40 -8% 35 1998 -10 -0.5 -10% 2002 2007 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2016 -1.5 -30 -2.5 -40 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Most of the lead indicators we look at, whether PMI input prices or the ONS import price series, are consistent with CPI heading up to at least 3% (even the Bank of England's central projection is in excess of 3% against a current inflation rate of 0.9% with 10% off sterling equating to 0.8% on inflation). Our economists see inflation peaking a little lower at around c2.5%. Either this rise in inflation is passed on, in which case real wage growth will slow to zero, or corporate margins are squeezed. Neither is positive for GDP growth. Global Equity Strategy 234 2 December 2016 Figure 500: IP momentum in the UK has weakened 8 50 IP, y/y%, lhs 6 CBI order book, rhs 30 2 20 0 10 -2 0 -4 -10 -6 -20 -8 -30 -10 -40 -12 -50 -60 2005 2007 2009 2011 22% 40 4 -14 2003 Figure 501: Import price inflation is consistent with CPI picking up to 3% Y/Y 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 17% 6% UK import price inflation (with GBP-implied level) 5% UK CPI, rhs 12% 4% 7% 3% 2% 2% -3% 1% -8% 0% -13% 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 -1% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Ordinarily, consumers have been able to cushion the impact of an unexpected rise in the cost of living by allowing their savings ratio to decline. That remains a possibility, but a diminished one given that the savings ratio is the UK is already close to a low at c.5% (while savings ratios are well off their lows in the US and Europe). Figure 502: Wage growth in the UK has stagnated at c.2.5% chart of wage growth versus inflation with BoE projection. 5 16 Whole economy regular pay, % chg Y/Y 4 Figure 503: While the UK saving ratio is already close to a 40-year low Whole economy regular pay deflated by CPI Household sav ing ratio (%) UK 14 3 2 12 1 10 0 -1 8 -2 Real wage growth assuming 3% CPI -3 -4 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2013 2014 2015 2016 6 4 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 235 2 December 2016 What are the risks to an underweight? What are the risks to an underweight stance in UK equities? In a sense, the risks to an underweight would crystallise if our base case macro assumption prove incorrect: ■ Sterling falls more than expected in 2017: If Article 50 is enacted sooner than expected, or the government's appeal to the Supreme Court succeeds in overturning the judgement that parliament should be consulted, sterling could fall further in 2017, supporting local currency performance. ■ A further rally in commodity prices: Creating upside risks for commodity prices would require, we think, a further upside growth surprise in China, or an OPEC agreement to facilitate a concrete cut in oil output. ■ A fall in US bond yields: As noted above, the relative performance of UK equities has a large negative correlation with US bond yields. Although our base case very much remains that US yields will rise, not fall, were President-elect Trump to fail in his attempt to pass an ambitious infrastructure or tax cutting plans, or were the more troubling elements of his trade proposals implemented, downside risks for the US economy, and for US yields, could crystallise. UK domestic sectors Without going into any depth, we make a few observations on the outlook for the more domestic UK sectors. We took the simple view in September 2015 that the UK sector call was largely a sterling call. We moved to underweight UK in September 2015, and reversed most of that in July 2016. The dominant trade in the UK over the past seven years has been to buy dollar earners, but we think this trade is now largely complete. Figure 504: UK sectors relative performance: correlation with sterling 0.4 Figure 505: Sterling and the relative performance of retail has had a close relationship 110 UK sectors correlation with Sterling TWI, last 10y 0.3 0.2 UK Retailing price rel market 2.2 GBPUSD, rhs 100 2 90 0.1 -0.1 80 -0.2 1.8 70 -0.3 1.6 60 -0.4 -0.5 50 Energy Capital Goods Beverages Met & Min Cons spls Chemicals Hh prdcts Pharmaceuticals Tobacco Comm svs Semiconductors Food Retail Media Software Food Producers Utilities Paper prdts Cons mat Healthcare Equip Cons Dur Technology Hardware Insurance Telecoms Transport Retailing Banks Div. financials Real estate Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1.4 40 1.2 30 20 1997 1 1999 2002 2005 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 236 2 December 2016 If we look at sector sensitivity, whether it is retailing or pharma, UK sector trades have been closely related to the moves in sterling. Figure 506: The real estate sector tends to underperform as sterling weakens 110 Figure 507: UK pharma is a significant beneficiary of sterling weakness 1.6 Trade-weighted sterling 1.1 1.4 UK real estate, price relative, rhs 105 1.5 1.4 1.3 1.3 100 1.2 95 1.2 1.5 1.1 1.7 90 1 0.9 85 0.8 80 0.6 75 70 2004 1.0 0.8 0.7 1.9 UK Pharma rel mkt 2.1 GBP USD, inverted, rhs 0.6 2.3 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 0.4 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We revised up four areas of the UK in July and then in September 2016 (when we become less negative on sterling). Our preferred domestic exposure is via: ■ Non-London related housebuilders This is because, outside London and the South East, the house price to wage ratio is attractive (and the rental yield is c5%, well above the mortgage rate). Homebuilders are discounting a 5% fall in house prices, while the RICs survey below is implying around a 5% increase. The stock with the greatest exposure outside London and the South East is Persimmon. We would stress that we remain negative on London related exposure, which leave us cautious on Berkeley Group or Foxtons, especially given the technological disruption to estate agents and the recent changes in the budget on tenant fees. Global Equity Strategy 237 2 December 2016 Figure 508: The sector as a whole appears to be pricing in a 5% fall in house prices 100% UK Home builders rel market, y/y chg (9m lead) Figure 509: RICS sales to stocks is in line with current house price inflation RICS sales to stocks, rhs, lead 6 months 20% Halifax house prices y/y%, rhs UK house price index, y/y chg (rhs) 80% 15% 60% 10% 40% 5% 20% 30% 0.7 0.6 20% 0.5 10% 0.4 0% 0% 0.3 -20% 0% -5% 0.2 -40% -10% -60% -80% 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2015 2016 2017 -15% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -10% 0.1 0.0 -20% 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ UK non-food retailing We took UK retailing up to benchmark from underweight in the summer. The key is that the UK retailing sector is trading on a recession multiple (a 20% discount to the market) and a 40% discount to global retailing, as we show below. Earnings revisions have also turned positive as has growth in non-food retail sales. Figure 510: The sector has de-rated sharply relative to the UK market 150% UK 13w retail earnings revisions rel UK 80% 140% 60% 130% 40% 120% 20% 110% 0% 100% -20% 90% -40% 80% -60% 70% 60% 1995 Figure 511: UK retail sales appear to be improving UK Retailing: 12m fwd. P/E rel. to mkt Average (+/- 1 SD) 1998 2002 2005 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2009 2012 2016 -80% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 238 2 December 2016 Retail has tracked sterling closely, so our view that sterling has troughed should remove this headwind for the sector. Figure 512: Sterling has tracked the performance of retail closely Sterling TWI, lhs 110 UK Retailing 12m Fwd PE rel Global Retailing Average (+/- 1sd) 130 105 100% 120 100 90% 110 95 100 90 80% 90 70% 80 85 60% 70 80 60 75 70 2002 110% 140 UK general retail relative, rhs Figure 513: The sector now trades on c.40% discount to the global retail sector 50% 50 40% 1996 40 2004 2006 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2000 2003 2006 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ UK life companies UK life companies are not only correlated now to rising gilt yield but abnormally cheap versus fund managers. Figure 514: Ordinarily, when rates rise, life companies tend to outperform 110 Figure 515: UK life insurers are almost .3std cheap against asset managers 7 UK life insurers price relative to market 100 6 UK 10-year Gilt yield, rhs 90 5 80 130% 120% L&G and Standard Life 12m fwd PE rel UK asset managers 110% Average (+/- 1 SD) 100% 70 4 90% 60 3 80% 50 2 60% 40 1 30 20 2001 70% 2004 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2013 0 2016 50% 40% 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 239 2 December 2016 ■ UK small cap Small cap equities have three times the domestic exposure of large cap equities and thus tend to outperform as sterling rises. In addition, small caps are abnormally cheap versus large cap equities. Figure 516: A stabilisation in the sterling exchange rate should support UK small caps relative to large 0.80 110 FTSE small cap / FTSE 100 145% TW£, rhs 0.75 105 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.55 FTSE small cap 12m fwd PE rel large cap 135% 100 125% 95 115% 90 Average (+/- 1SD) 105% 95% 0.50 85 85% 0.45 80 0.40 0.35 0.30 1990 Figure 517: UK small caps relative to large caps is almost 0.7std below their average P/E 1994 1998 2003 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2007 2011 2016 75% 75 65% 70 55% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 240 2 December 2016 US: remain underweight What are the challenges? In each of the last three years, we have been underweight US equities because we believed – incorrectly – that global growth was poised to accelerate and US rates were set to rise. However, although these macro forces have not played out as we thought they would (and accordingly US equities have outperformed), we think 2017 looks different, as we highlight in our macro overview. As a result, we retain a small underweight in US equities for the following reasons: 1. The US is the most defensive of the global markets The defensiveness of US equities in a global context stems from four features: ■ The US has relatively low operational leverage. As we illustrate in other country sections, US equities have the lowest beta of EPS to global IP of any major region, as one would expect for the region with the highest margin; ■ The superior ability of US corporates to cut costs particularly in contrast to Japan and Europe, where labour laws are much more restrictive; ■ The overweight the US has in growth stocks. Hence, as the first chart below illustrates, US equities tend outperform when global PMIs fall and when global GDP growth decelerates. Crudely, the US market appears to be discounting a small fall in global PMIs from current levels, at a time when we think the risk for PMIs, and indeed global growth momentum more broadly, is to the upside. Figure 518: US equities outperform when global PMI new orders fall 25 20 Figure 519: US equities tend to underperform when global GDP growth accelerates US relative to global, US$ terms, 2000 = 100 Global GDP growth, inv, rhs 35 US equities price rel. 12m change, lhs Global PMI composite new orders, rhs, inverted 40 15 1.0 123 1.5 118 45 10 2.0 113 2.5 108 5 50 0 55 -5 60 -10 -15 1998 65 2000 2003 2005 2008 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 3.0 103 3.5 98 4.0 93 4.5 88 5.0 83 5.5 78 2001 6.0 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Rising bond yields should be bad for the relative performance of the US To some extent, the US market is long of 'growth' stocks (technology and biotech are 19% of market cap compared to 12% globally) and short of financials (banks are 6% of US market cap compared to 9% in Europe and 8% in Japan). As a result, rising US yields tend to be associated with US equity underperformance. Global Equity Strategy 241 2 December 2016 There is an investment style element to this too: when yields rise, growth as a style globally tends to underperform (as has been apparent in recent weeks as US yields have risen), as shown below. One disconnect to note is between growth as a style and US equities relative to global markets: expectations surrounding the Trump fiscal package has boosted US relative performance while undermining the performance of growth. Figure 520: Growth as a style tends to underperform when yields rise 0.55 0.5 MSCI AC World Growth relative to market 0.53 Figure 521: Likewise, the US tends to underperform globally when yields rise, although the election of Donald Trump has disrupted this relationship 0.55 5.1 1.0 US 10 year Treasury yield, rhs inverted 1.5 2.0 0.51 MSCI AC World Growth relative to market 0.53 US rel global 4.6 0.51 2.5 0.49 3.0 0.49 4.1 3.5 0.47 4.0 4.5 0.45 0.47 3.6 0.45 5.0 0.43 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2014 5.5 2016 0.43 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 3.1 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 3. Relative valuations look stretched US equities account for 54% of the MSCI All Country World thanks to the relative rally in the underlying equity index, combined with the move higher in the US dollar since 2011. This period of outperformance has, however, left US equities at historically high valuations relative to the rest of the world, which we show below in terms of HOLT P/B relative (now around 2 standard deviations extended) as well as a simple 12-month forward P/E. Global Equity Strategy 242 2 December 2016 Figure 522: US equities are trading 2 s.d. above the average on HOLT® P/B (value to cost) relative to global Figure 523: MSCI US 12m fwd. P/E rel global is trading above its long-term average 115% 1.37 US HOLT P/B rel to Global 110% 1.32 105% 1.27 100% 1.22 1.17 95% 1.12 90% 1997 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 US 12m fwd PE rel world Average (+/- 1SD) 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Source: Credit Suisse HOLT 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. The dollar is strengthening According to S&P, 44% of S&P 500 revenues come from overseas. This is nearly three times the economic exposure of the US, with exports accounting for c.12% of GDP. As a result, when the dollar strengthens, as it has since the election of Donald Trump, it tends to be much more of a challenge for earnings than the economy. As the first chart below illustrates, US earnings momentum tends to track the tradeweighted dollar reasonably closely. If we assume the dollar remains unchanged from its current level into 2017, then the year-on-year will start to climb, which is likely to push earnings momentum back into negative territory. In absolute terms, our US EPS model suggests that 10% on the USD takes around 3% off US EPS. Moreover, the US overseas earners have, thus far, proved surprisingly resilient to the move higher in the dollar. Global Equity Strategy 243 2 December 2016 Figure 524: Dollar strength is likely to weigh on US earnings momentum S&P 500 4-wk Earnings revisions, net upgrades 13-wk Dollar TWI, % chg Y/Y, rhs inv 80% 60% -20 -15 Figure 525: Overseas earners have overshot what the dollar value is suggesting 168 70 163 75 158 40% -10 20% -5 153 0% 0 148 -20% 5 143 -40% 10 138 -60% 15 -80% 20 80 85 90 -100% 25 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 95 133 US exporters price rel to market* US TWI (rhs, inv) 100 128 *US companies with above 60% sales exposure outside the US 105 123 2009 110 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 5. US labour is getting some degree of pricing power The US economy is in a different point in the cycle compared with much of the rest of the world – both developed and emerging markets. In Europe, the unemployment rate remains in double digits, while across emerging markets unemployment rates are rising. In the US, however, labour's pricing power is growing, and the wage share of GDP is increasing. This is compressing US margins, as we highlight in the asset allocation section, and this is a challenge almost unique to US corporates currently. Figure 526: Profit share of GDP and wage share move in opposite directions 14% % of GDP, US 13% Profits 12% Figure 527: US wage growth is now showing signs of meaningful acceleration 52% 5.0 53% 4.5 Wages, rhs, inverted 54% 11% 10% 55% 9% 56% ECI wages and salaries (% chg Y/Y) 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 8% 57% 2.0 7% 58% 6% 5% 1950 Average hourly earnings (% chg Y/Y) 59% 1961 1972 1983 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1994 2005 2016 1.5 1.0 1990 1993 1997 2001 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 244 2 December 2016 6. Earnings and economic momentum relatively weak The recent move higher in the US dollar has served to push the US down our earnings momentum scorecard, leaving the US at the bottom of our regional composite scorecard. Moreover, the US is now at second bottom of our macro momentum scorecard, not so much because momentum is particularly weak, it should be said, but rather because of a pick-up in growth momentum in the world excluding the US. Figure 528: Regional earnings momentum scorecard Normalized scores Regions Weights MCI Economic momentum Valuation Earnings momentum Positioning & Sentiment Macro factors Overall score 15% 20% 20% 15% 15% 15% 100% UK 1.34 1.40 0.22 1.75 0.47 -1.33 0.66 Europe ex UK 0.74 0.71 0.12 -0.31 1.54 -0.49 0.39 Japan -0.35 -0.57 0.92 -0.18 -0.85 1.37 0.07 GEM -1.01 -0.85 0.44 -0.57 -0.61 0.13 -0.39 US -0.72 -0.70 -1.70 -0.70 -0.55 0.31 -0.73 For all the measures above, a high z score is considered as positive Region with higher liquidity, better economic momentum, cheaper valuation, better earnings momentum and more bearish positioning & sentiment is ranked at the top Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 7. Outflows are no longer substantial US equities no longer appear to be under-owned. After an extended period of significant outflows, flows into US equity funds have picked up to more neutral levels. Figure 529: US equities no longer appear to be under-owned 5% 0% -5% -10% 3m annualised net flows into US equity funds, as a % of assets, rel Global -15% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: EPFR, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 245 2 December 2016 Where could we be wrong? The main positive for the US is that it is overweight of technology and, apart from the risk of rising bond yields, we like many of the fundamentals of technology outside of hardware (especially software and internet-related areas). The challenge for 2017 is that of rising bond yields. While, bottom-up, the sector is likely to remain attractive, the top-down is likely to become more challenging as yields rise, after an extended period of falling yields re-rating longer-duration sectors. Figure 530: When tech outperforms, the US tends to outperform 1.70 1.30 1.60 Tech rel 1.25 US rel, rhs 15 Tech rel, 3mm % change 1.20 1.50 1.15 1.40 US rel, 3mm % change 10 1.10 1.30 1.05 1.20 1.00 1.10 5 0 0.95 1.00 0.90 0.90 0.80 2002 Figure 531: Tech relative vs. US relative, 3mm % change -5 0.85 0.80 2005 2007 2009 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2011 2014 2016 -10 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 246 2 December 2016 2017 macro outlook We see the following main macro drivers for 2017: ■ A broad-based, albeit modest, acceleration in global growth: The past 4-5 years have been characterised by a range of growth shocks emanating from multiple sources including Europe, China and emerging markets. Tight fiscal policy, bank deleveraging and the disruptive impact of the oil price decline on capex have also presented significant headwinds. In our view, 2017 is likely to be a year in which the headwinds from such shocks are diminished and growth momentum is broad-based, if unspectacular. Our economists forecast global GDP growth of 3.0% in 2017, up from 2.5% in 2016, with leading indicators such as global manufacturing PMI new orders (which are at a 19-month high) also suggesting reacceleration. ■ Policy shift to progress: We believe policymakers will ultimately remain supportive of growth globally, but we think that support will continue to shift to the fiscal channel and away from monetary policy. Indeed, QE could face growing logistical challenges in 2017 in both the euro area and Japan. The US now appears to be on a path towards loose fiscal/tight(er) monetary policy following the election of Donald Trump. ■ Inflation back on the radar screen: After almost five years of steady disinflation, we think 2017 is likely to see a reacceleration in headline inflation globally. The tightness of the US labour market is now becoming apparent in accelerating wage growth, supporting services inflation (and Trump's proposed policies on all fronts tend to be inflationary). Goods prices inflation is likely to find support from commodities and Chinese producer prices. ■ US growth to accelerate as headwinds diminish: In the four quarters to Q2 2016, inventories and shale investment together subtracted c.100bps from GDP growth. With inventories now being rebuilt in the US and commodity prices having rebounded, these headwinds will become tailwinds, while the underlying consumption picture should remain solid. President-elect Trump's commitment to fiscal easing and de-regulation is likely to offset the negatives from his push for tighter immigration rules and increased protectionism. ■ Euro area GDP growth to continue to surprise: We believe that investors underestimate both current growth momentum (real year-on-year growth in the euro area at the time of writing is stronger than in the US) and future prospects. Not only are PMIs currently consistent with c.1.8% GDP growth, but we see four factors that are particularly supportive of growth: pent-up domestic demand, a banking system that is allocating credit, the recovery in exports to Russia and China and an abnormally loose monetary policy (allowing the euro to weaken despite the positive growth surprise). We think euro area GDP growth may end up being closer to 2% in 2017, a little faster than the 1.5% our economists predict, which matters globally given that the euro area economy is 66% the size of the US. UK growth is set to modestly disappoint, with our economists forecasting 1.2% GDP growth in 2017 compared to consensus of 1.5%. ■ Chinese government to support growth in the run-up to next autumn's Party Congress: China has done little to address what we have in the past referred to as the 'triple bubble' in investment, credit and housing. Indeed, the government's recent policies have only served to exacerbate aspects of these bubbles. Nonetheless, a combination of infrastructure spending and an export boost thanks to RMB weakness appears set to support growth through 2017. Moreover, China appears to have large fiscal flexibility (with net government debt to GDP very low) and the ability to use it (with a current account surplus of 3% of GDP and net foreign assets). None of our four Global Equity Strategy 247 2 December 2016 hard landing indicators are flashing red, but we do see signs of policy tightening on almost all our indicators, and this needs to be watched carefully. ■ FX – some near-term USD strength, but 2017 should be a quieter year: We see further dollar strength, but we do not expect anything dramatic; we think the risk of a substantial RMB depreciation is relatively small. The three mains risks to global growth are, in our view: ■ The lack of rebalancing in China; ■ The US economy becoming late-cycle. Typically, as wage growth rises, profit margins are squeezed and that in turn depresses corporate spending and thus GDP. Already the US has had its fourth-longest post-war expansion. The good news is that despite the rise in wage growth, we think full employment is likely to be closer to 4% than the Federal Reserve's assumption of 4.8%. We think it is important to monitor the lead indicators of capital spending; ■ Politics. The political challenges of 2016 look set to continue in 2017. But as we saw in 2016 in the case of Brexit, or of Spain (which went without a government for almost a year), political uncertainties do not preclude the possibility of an acceleration in GDP growth. Indeed, they provided buying opportunities for risky assets. Growth: a broad-based, albeit modest, acceleration in global growth We would highlight the following positives: 1. Lead indicators finally turning higher Global PMI manufacturing new orders have been bound in a narrow range for much of the past two years. This PMI measure has now risen to its highest level in 19 months and is consistent with global GDP growth of c.3%, as forecast by our economists. Figure 532: Global PMI new orders appear to be breaking up after 18 months to sideways trading Figure 533: Manufacturing PMI new orders have increased… and suggest an upturn in GDP 65 57 Global macro surprises, lhs 40 4.8% 60 3.8% Global manufacturing PMI new orders 55 20 55 2.8% 50 53 0 -20 51 -40 49 -60 2010 1.8% 45 47 2011 2012 2013 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse Global Equity Strategy 2014 2015 2016 0.8% 40 35 Global manufacturing PMI new orders 30 Global GDP growth, 6m lag, rhs 25 1999 -0.2% -1.2% -2.2% 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse 248 2 December 2016 Growth weakness has not been only a real event; nominal GDP growth has also been exceptionally weak. Indeed, on a global basis, nominal GDP growth over the past 18 months has been commensurate with rates seen in previous recessionary periods. US nominal GDP growth in the four quarters to Q2 2016 was just 2.5% – its slowest annual pace since 2009. However, with inflation now picking up (as we discuss below), nominal GDP growth appears to be past an inflection point. Chinese nominal GDP growth has been accelerating since Q4 2015, while Q2 2016 appears to have been the trough in the US. Figure 534: Global nominal GDP growth is close to the levels seen in previous recessions, but is set to accelerate Figure 535: Both US and Chinese nominal GDP growth have turned up 6.0 10% 21 US nominal GDP y/y 5.5 8% 6% 4% Chinese nominal GDP y/y, rhs 19 5.0 17 4.5 15 4.0 13 3.5 11 3.0 9 2.5 7 2% 0% Real global growth, y/y% -2% Nominal global growth, y/y% -4% 1985 1988 1991 1994 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2017 2.0 5 2011 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Diminishing macro shocks at a time when monetary conditions remain loose G3 global monetary policy has been exceptionally loose for nearly three years in the face of a steady stream of macro shocks. Now these shocks are diminishing, while monetary conditions remain unusually loose. Among the shocks whose impact is now diminishing, we would highlight: ■ Fiscal policy becoming much less tight. Over the past five years, fiscal policy has been tightened by up to 6.4% of GDP in the US. Now, however, the policy tone has shifted decisively towards easier fiscal policy going forward. Figure 536: Advanced economies have seen significant fiscal tightening in the post-crisis period Post-crisis fiscal easing Subsequent cumulative fiscal tightening to 2015 Net fiscal policy change since crisis Euro area 2.82 3.53 Tighter UK 4.96 5.15 Tighter US 6.31 6.38 Tighter Japan 5.38 3.13 Looser % GDP Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 249 2 December 2016 ■ The disruptive impact of the oil price decline: Between the summer of 2014 and January 2016, the oil price fell by 75% – an event that proved more disruptive for the global economy than almost anyone forecast. Our estimates, on a range of assumptions detailed in Figure 536, suggest that the declines in oil opex and capex have reduced global GDP by c.2% and US GDP by 1% over the past year. Now, however, with the oil price up 64% from its low, capex in this sector should soon make a positive contribution to growth. Figure 537: Total commodity capex cuts have hit global GDP growth by c.1.8% since the oil price peak in mid 2014 Scale of capex cut Capex assumption Figure 538: The rise in the oil price suggests that oil capex will soon start to make a positive contribution to growth once again 150 $ billion % GDP -249.4 -0.3% 130 -498.8 -0.7% 110 Associated opex and second round effects -498.8 -0.7% 90 Total energy capex cut impact on global GDP -1246.9 -1.3% -87.2 -0.1% Global listed energy sector capex cut from peak Total energy sector capex cut (assuming listed sector 1/3 total, non-listed cuts capex by half as much) Global listed mining sector capex cut from peak Total mining sector capex cut (assuming listed sector -174.4 -0.2% Associated opex and second round effects -174.4 -0.2% Total mining sector capex cut on global GDP -436.0 -0.5% Total commodity capex cut impact -1682.9 -1.8% 1/2, non-listed cuts capex by half as much) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 1.2% 1.0% 0.8% 70 0.6% 50 10 2000 0.4% WTI oil price 30 Investment in mining, exploration and wells & oilfield machinery, % GDP, rhs 2002 2004 2006 2009 2011 2013 0.2% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse In the US, c.180,000 jobs have been lost in the oil sector since 2014, but employment in the sector is now no longer declining, while oil sector wages are also falling less rapidly. The Baker Hughes rig count is up 40% from its low. Figure 539: c180,000 jobs have been lost in the US oil sector since the peak… 20 Figure 540: …but payroll income per employee in oil is now falling more slowly 25% Employment in the oil sector, monthly chg 15 20% 10 15% 5 10% 0 5% -5 0% -10 -5% -15 -10% -20 2001 2004 2007 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2010 2013 2016 Payroll income per employee in oil sector, y/y% -15% 2001 2002 2004 2005 2007 2008 2010 2011 2013 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 250 2 December 2016 ■ A series of European crises, and only a belated fall in SME-related lending rates: For much of the period between 2011 and 2013, the euro area represented a drag on global growth and posed systemic financial risks given fears of a disorderly Greek exit from the euro area. Subsequently, following the ECB's decision to backstop the euro area sovereign debt market, sovereign spreads have remained contained and the euro area is now delivering steady growth of c.1.5% Y/Y. We would also note that it was really only at the start of this year that SME-related lending rates in the periphery fell to low levels. This is critical because SMEs account for c.58% of GDP and banks are their only source of funds as they are too small to access credit markets. Figure 541: Lending rates to Spanish and Italian SMEs have only recently declined to German and French levels 6.8 Lending rates to non-financial SMEs, 1-5yrs, up to €1m, % 6.3 5.8 5.3 4.8 4.3 3.8 3.3 2.8 Germany 2.3 Spain France Italy 1.8 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Bank de-leveraging: An extended period of bank de-leveraging in the US and, in particular, Europe, was a significant headwind for growth. Now, however, bank deleveraging appears advanced, with assets-to-equity in both the US and Europe at lows. This in turn has allowed lending growth to pick up, allowing the banking system to become a positive, rather than a negative, for growth. ■ A re-basing of Chinese growth expectations: Much of the past five years has seen a steady decline in Chinese GDP growth expectations, from close to 10% in 2010 to around 6.5% now. In nominal terms, we have seen Chinese GDP growth slow by two thirds from peak levels. What is notable is that 12-month forward Chinese GDP growth expectations have started to inflect higher, as we discuss in more detail below. Our judgement is that the Chinese government will support growth until the National Congress to be held next autumn. Global Equity Strategy 251 2 December 2016 Figure 542: Banks in the US and Europe have now de-levered Figure 543: Chinese growth expectations are starting to stabilise 42 12m fwd GDP growth estimates Banks' tangible assets/ tangible equity 37 9 Europe 7 US 32 5 27 3 22 1 17 -1 12 1994 1997 2000 2002 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse 2005 2007 2010 2013 2015 -3 2009 Global 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 China 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse ■ Dollar strength: From its 2011 trough, the trade-weighted dollar rose by around 40% to its 2015 peak, climbing by over 20% in the 12 months to July 2015. This was a contributing factor to dislocation in emerging markets (given their $4.4trn of dollardenominated debt), a fall in commodity prices and a decline in the US net export contribution to growth. More broadly, global GDP declined by 5% in USD terms in 2015. While the dollar might strengthen modestly, we struggle to see very substantial dollar strength. 3. The euro area recovery continues to slowly build and surprise positively The euro area is often overlooked as a driver of global GDP, but the euro area economy is around 66% of the size of the US. Our economists remain of the view that the euro area economy will continue to grow by around 1.5% year-on-year, with PMIs consistent with a run-rate in the near term a little higher than this. The euro area growth story continues to be supported by the following factors: ■ Domestic demand: Domestic demand in the euro area has lagged that of Japan and the US by 4% and 10%, respectively, since 2011, and nearly all of the growth achieved in Europe over recent quarters has been domestic-demand related. Global Equity Strategy 252 2 December 2016 Figure 544: Euro area GDP growth remains steady at around 1.6%... Eurozone manufacturing PMI: new orders, 3m lead 4% Eurozone GDP growth, y/y rhs 60 Figure 545: Domestic demand in Europe has lagged Japan and the US by 4% and 10%, respectively, since 2008 111 3% 109 55 2% 107 50 1% 105 0% 45 -1% 40 -2% -3% 35 30 25 1999 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 101 99 97 -5% 95 -6% 93 Source: Markit, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Euro area US Japan 103 -4% 2016 Domestic demand 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research To some extent, the potential for domestic demand to continue to climb is illustrated by the size of the private sector financial surplus in the euro area, which remains high at c.4.5% of GDP (with a household saving ratio of 12.8%), almost back to its financial-crisis peak. Figure 546: Euro area GDP growth has been driven solely by domestic demand growth 4% Figure 547: The euro area private sector financial surplus is near an all-time high 6% Contribution to Euro area GDP growth Euro area private sector net lending/borrowing (% GDP) 5% 2% 4% 3% 0% 2% -2% 1% Net exports -4% 0% Domestic demand GDP -6% 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 -1% -2% 2000 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Eurostat, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ A recovering banking system: Crucial to the sustainability of this recovery are banks, which are responsible for c.75% of lending flows to the economy. Loans to both households and the non-financial corporate sector are both up 2% year-on-year, lead indicators of loan growth look good and, in general, lending conditions are relatively easy. As discussed above, critically only at the turn of the year did SME-related lending rates in Spain and Italy fall to low levels. Global Equity Strategy 253 2 December 2016 ■ Less of an external drag: As an example, German exports to Russia and China are now recovering, having acted as a large drag in 2015. German exports to Russia and China are 2% and 6% of total German exports, respectively. Figure 548: Euro area banks' loan growth to nonfinancial corporates and households Figure 549: German exports to Russia and China are now stabilising, having been a drag 16 Germany exports to China (in EUR) y/y, 3mma 70% 14 Germany exports to Russia (in EUR) y/y, 3mma Euro area private sector loan growth (adj. for securitization), Y/Y 12 10 50% NFCs 30% 8 Households 6 10% 4 -10% 2 0 -30% -2 -4 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 -50% 2002 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2005 2007 2009 2011 2014 2016 Source: Eurostat, Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ A euro that remains unusually weak: In the past, the problem has been that when European PMIs are strong, the euro appreciates and that in turn hits European GDP growth (with c10% off the euro taking, with a lag, around 0.6% off real GDP growth and 0.5% off inflation). The current PMI differential would historically have been consistent with a much stronger euro. However, ECB QE is keeping the bund yield low relative to the Treasury yield and preventing euro appreciation. Figure 550: The EUR/USD has ignored the improvement in Eurozone relative macro momentum, owing to QE Figure 551: The Treasury/Bund spread suggests euro downside 10 1.54 5 1.44 0 1.20 EURUSD Treasury/Bund spread, rhs, inv 1.18 1.4 1.16 1.14 1.34 -5 1.6 1.12 1.8 1.10 1.24 -10 -15 Euro-area vs US: manufacturing PMI new orders EUR USD, 6m lag, rhs -20 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1.14 1.2 1.08 2.0 1.06 1.04 1.04 1.02 Jan-15 2.2 Jun-15 Dec-15 May-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 254 2 December 2016 4. Some near-term positives for US GDP growth Over the past 12 months, US nominal GDP has grown by only 2.8%, with investment, inventory and net trade weighing on activity. In our view, each of these drags looks set to improve, with some of these headwinds becoming tailwinds. ■ Inventories to become less of a drag Inventory declines subtracted an average of 60bps from growth between Q1 15 and Q3 16, in what was the longest period of negative growth contributions from inventories since 1955. We have now seen the end of this destocking, with inventories adding 0.6 percentage points to GDP growth in Q3, and we think this positive contribution can last for two to three quarters. We also wonder whether some corporates may have postponed their decision-making ahead of the US presidential election in much the same way as happened prior to Brexit, with many of the capital goods lead indicators having been weak. In the case of the UK, the BoE estimated that GDP was hit by 0.7% ahead of the referendum as corporates postponed decision-making. Figure 552: ISM new orders less inventories is consistent with IP growth picking up 35 US ISM Manufacturing new orders less inventories 30 Industrial Production, % chg Y/Y, 6m lag, rhs Figure 553: Inventories have taken a cumulative 3ppts off growth 5 10 25 3 20 5 15 2 1 10 5 0 0 0 -1 -5 -5 -10 -2 Inventories have subtracted a cumulative 3p.p. off growth since Q2 2015 -3 -15 -20 1986 Inventory % point contribution to growth each quarter 4 -10 1991 1996 2001 2006 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2011 2016 -4 1990 1996 2003 2009 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Investment picking up more broadly Investment more broadly is also likely to prove less of a drag: investment in mining exploration – a proxy for the shale industry – has subtracted an average of 50bps from growth each quarter since the start of 2015. Beyond the oil industry, our economists note that residential investment, which has been weak recently, subtracting 30bps from GDP growth in each of the last two quarters, is also in a position to prove a durable source of growth for the US. Construction as a share of GDP is still depressed relative to both history and lead indicators, such as the NAHB index. Against that backdrop, there is a triple tailwind of demographics (as the millennial cohort enters their 30s); vacancy rates that appear to be troughing, removing a headwind for new construction; and improving access to credit. We would also note that non-residential real estate investment tends to follow residential investment with a lag of 12 months (and we remain positive on the outlook for non-residential real estate investment). Global Equity Strategy 255 2 December 2016 Figure 554: The residential construction share of GDP is still c.1 percentage point below the long-run average 90 7.0% 80 6.5% 6.0% 70 5.5% 60 5.0% 50 4.5% 40 30 20 US NAHB index 10 0 1985 US residential construction (% GDP rhs) 1989 1993 1998 2002 2007 2011 Figure 555: Non-residential investments lag residential investments by 12 months Current prices, y/y% Non-residential private investment, structures (12 month lag) Residential private investment 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 4.0% 0% 3.5% -10% 3.0% -20% 2.5% -30% 2.0% -40% 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research At a time when the non-residential investment share of GDP is low, the lead indicators of capex are starting to rise. The C&I loan survey, CEO business confidence index and Philly Fed capex expectations are all ticking higher, while US new truck sales have started to improve too. Figure 556: The C&I loan survey has ticked higher -40 Figure 557: …so does the CEO business confidence index 80 10% -20 5% US CEO confidence Index (lhs, 2q lead) 25% US Capex yoy (rhs) 20% 70 15% 0 0% 10% 60 5% 20 US C&I loan survey (large & medium) 40 60 -5% 50 -10% 40 Nonresidential fixed investments (y/y%), -15% 3Q lag rhs 80 0% -5% -10% -15% 30 -20% -20% 2001 2004 2007 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 20 1978 -25% 1983 1989 1994 2000 2005 2010 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research These lead indicators are ticking higher at a time when the non-residential investment share of GDP is still well below previous peaks. Global Equity Strategy 256 2 December 2016 Figure 558:… so does Philly Fed capex expectations survey Figure 559: The US non-residential investment share of GDP is still well below previous highs 40% 30% 30 20% 15% 14% 20 10% 13% 0% 10 -10% -20% 0 -30% Core capital goods orders, -10 3m/3m ann. -50% Philly Fed capex expectations 3mma, rhs -60% -20 2005 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2015 2016 -40% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 12% 11% US non-residential investment share of GDP 10% 9% 1955 1963 1972 1981 1989 1998 2007 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ The underlying driver of US growth – employment growth – has remained very steady With c60% of GDP being accounted for by consumption, the underlying driver of US growth has been employment and wages. Year-on-year employment growth has remained very steady in a range of 1.7% to 2.0% despite the oscillation in the Kansas City Fed diffusion indicator. As we highlight later on, wage growth has risen to a 7-year high of c.2.5%. This leaves underlying nominal income growth at around 4.5% and, with a PCE deflator of 1.7%, underlying consumption growth of 2.2%. Figure 560: Employment growth has been steady 5% Figure 561: The Kansas City Fed composite labour market conditions indicator has rebounded 2 2004-07 avg +1.4% 3% 4% 3% 1 2% 0 1% 0% -1 -1% Last 12 months avg +1.7% Clinton years avg +2.4% -3% -4 Employment growth, % 3m annualised 1992 1996 2000 2004 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy -1% -2 -2% -3% -3 -5% -7% 1988 1% 2008 2012 2016 -5 1992 -4% Kansas City Fed Labor Market Conditions Indicators (LMCI) Momentum US employment growth, y/y%, 6m lag, rhs -5% -6% 1994 1997 2000 2002 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 257 2 December 2016 ■ Trumpflation The election of Donald Trump as US President presents both upside and downside risks to US growth. On the upside, his commitment to increased fiscal spending and lower corporate and personal taxes, if implemented, could have a significant impact on growth. The scale of his proposals is large: his tax cuts have been costed at c.20% of GDP over 10 years by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, while his infrastructure spending plan (on which his transition website places a number of $550bn) is worth a further 3% of GDP. Moreover, any attempt to enhance investment tax credits at the expense of reducing interest tax deductibility would be a positive for growth, as would be the lighter regulatory burden on banks. It might even be the case that some of the US c.$750bn of US cash (c.$2.5trn in retained earnings) potentially repatriated from overseas finds its way into GDP (via buybacks and consumption or via investment). On the downside, there is likely to be a period of significant policy uncertainty ahead, while some of Trump's campaign pledges on trade and immigration clearly present downside risks both to US and indeed global GDP growth. There has been some moderation of language (a commitment to remove all undocumented migrants, estimated at around 11.4 million people by the Department of Homeland Security, has become a commitment to remove or incarcerate 2-3 million 'criminal' undocumented migrants, with President Obama having already removed 2.7 million illegal immigrants with a criminal record). We believe, as we highlight in the asset allocation section, that his policies on protectionism will be toned down in the much the same way as Obama's threat to leave NAFTA never materialised. 5. China, in some areas, might not be as bad as we feared but remains the major risk The most recent major move by our EM economists has been to increase their GDP growth expectations for China, raising their 2017 growth forecast to 6.8% from 6.6%. This move was predicated on two factors: first, a recognition that the government appears likely to remain supportive of growth in the run-up to next autumn's Party Congress. It is doing this via the infrastructure channel, which continues to grow at c.15%, even as real estate and manufacturing investment slow. Second, the historical weakness of the RMB is consistent with a significant acceleration in Chinese export growth (our economists believe to 9.4% in 2017E, from -2.3% this year). Global Equity Strategy 258 2 December 2016 Figure 562: Infrastructure investment is growing substantially faster than real estate or manufacturing 60% Fixed Asset Investment growth (% chg Y/Y, 3 m.m..a.) Figure 563: The weaker renminbi suggests Chinese export growth should reaccelerate -12% 60 Manufacturing, 38% 50% Real estate, 29% Infrastructure, 17% 40% -8% 40 -4% 0% 30% 20 4% 20% 0 8% 10% -20 0% -10% 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -40 Chinese export growth, % change year-on-year Chinese yuan, TWI, inverted, rhs 12% 16% 20% 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research On the Global Equity Strategy team, we are structurally more bearish than the consensus on China. Nevertheless, we acknowledge the following fundamental factors likely postpone any hard landing beyond 2017. ■ There is a lot of fiscal firepower. The IMF claims that government assets are 100% to 150% of GDP and thus even in the event of a worst-case bank bailout, net government debt to GDP would be very low. The IMF estimates that local government debt is 45% of GDP, central government debt was last estimated to be 32% of GDP and if NPLs were to rise to above 20% (the levels they went to in the two previous banking crises), then the cost of a bank bail-out could be 40% of GDP. As a result, total government debt in a worst-case scenario would be c.120% of GDP. With nominal bond yields of 2.88% and nominal GDP growth of 6.7%, net government debt to GDP is financeable even if it rises to c.150%. ■ Limited external vulnerability: A typical emerging market crisis occurs when a country ends up with a current account deficit financed by foreign portfolio flows, which in turn leads to a country becoming a net debtor. At that point, a country's only option is to protect the currency by raising rates sharply to cause a collapse in imports. Otherwise it risks a worse recession by devaluing as this would lead to a sharp increase in defaults as the value of foreign currency denominated debt rises. China has a current account surplus of 3% of GDP, net foreign assets of 15.8% of GDP and is thus in a position to be able to use its fiscal flexibility. ■ The impact of a real estate decline is less bad that we had previously thought: One of the critical issues in China has been real estate (which accounts for half of household wealth, a quarter of local government revenue, 40% of banks' collateral and 15% of GDP). Our economists highlight that there are three mitigating factors: Global Equity Strategy i. The house price to wage ratio, which they believe is still reasonable. The team calculate that the average house price to income ratio is 5.5x in China, actually slightly below its average over the last 15 years of around 6x – see their piece China: A correction, not a collapse in the property market, November 7 2016; ii. Housing supply has slowed relative to housing demand; 259 2 December 2016 Figure 564: Sales have surpassed housing starts in China for the first time in over a decade… Figure 565: …which has led to a substantial decline in inventory levels, especially in Tier 3 cities 70 China residential construction, 12m mav, 1m sqm 1,600 1,400 Inventory, months of sales 60 Tier 1 - 9 Completed 1,200 50 Sold 1,000 Tier 2 - 11 Tier 3 - 38 Starts 40 800 30 600 20 400 10 200 1998 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 0 Jan-07 Feb-08 Mar-09 Apr-10 May-11 Jun-12 Jul-13 Aug-14 Sep-15 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research iii. Mortgage debt to GDP is only 25%, a third of US levels at peak (not least because some individuals were given houses in 1991). This combined with low LTVs means that even a 30% fall in real estate prices would only leave 5% of homes in negative equity. None of the hard landing indicators are flashing even amber: We continue to believe that a hard landing in China would be preceded by four factors: ■ Loan-to-deposit ratio rises above 100%. At that point it becomes much harder to roll over the NPLs without printing money. Currently the loan-to-deposit ratio is around 90%. ■ Deflation. Producer prices need to fall sharply, which would depress corporate margins and accelerate NPLs. Recently, PPI deflation has turned positive (though less so if we just look at PPI ex commodities). ■ A 40%+ fall in property prices. ■ When the authorities need to raise rates to protect the RmB. Figure 566: Hard landing indicator Indicator Direction Level of concern Past 2 years' (0-5) progression Latest Loan to deposit ratio ↑ 3 91% Corporate bond y ield (bps) ↓ 1 368 2-y r gov ernment bond y ield (bps) ↓ 0 240 PPI, Y/Y ↑ 2 1.2% House prices, Y/Y ↑ 2.5 12.3% Total score (out of 25) 8.5 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 260 2 December 2016 We do acknowledge that the clear risk is that policy is starting to be tightened in China, there has been little rebalancing and real estate, which has been a key growth driver, is clearly rolling over. That is why, as we discuss later we continue to characterise China as a key risk for 2017, even if a hard landing over the next 12 months is not our base case. In emerging markets beyond China, there are now clear signs of a recovery under way in Brazil, India and Russia, with rates falling in all three (although so far just at the long end in Brazil) and PMIs recovering. Figure 567: Year-to-date, manufacturing PMI new orders have improved steadily in Brazil, India and Russia 65 Manufacturing PMI new orders Brazil India Russia 60 55 50 45 40 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Markit, Credit Suisse research The critical problem in emerging markets had been that they were operating on a negative output gap (i.e. they were overheating, especially in the case of Brazil in early 2014) and then in some instances they were disproportionately affected by the decline in commodity prices. Now, however, GEM countries are operating back below full capacity (according to estimates by the ECB), reducing overheating pressures. Figure 568: The ECB estimates that GEM economies moved from operating at above full capacity in 2014 to below in 2015 4 8 GEM output gap (% of potential output) Potential GEM output growth (% chg Y/Y, rhs) 3 7 2 6 1 5 0 4 -1 3 -2 2 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Source: ECB Global Equity Strategy 261 2 December 2016 What are our concerns for 2017? 1. The US economy could increasingly be considered late-cycle The current US recovery has been the fourth-longest since the Second World War. Its pace has been tepid, however, with the trough-to-peak increase in GDP and employment relatively small compared to the historical average. Figure 569: The US GDP growth recovery has lasted more than two years longer than the average, but has been shallower Start date End Date Duration (No of Quarters) Trough to peak (%) - GDP Trough to peak (%) employment Mar-50 Jun-53 13 24.4% 15.8% Mar-54 Jun-57 13 12.7% 7.7% Mar-58 Mar-60 8 12.6% 5.4% Dec-60 Sep-69 35 53.7% 31.4% Sep-70 Sep-73 12 13.8% 8.7% Dec-74 Dec-79 20 21.4% 15.9% Jun-80 Jun-81 4 3.0% 1.0% Sep-82 Jun-90 31 38.5% 22.9% Dec-90 Dec-00 40 42.3% 21.3% Sep-01 Sep-07 24 17.9% 4.6% Mar-09 Latest 30 16.2% 8.5% Average 02-Nov-16 20 24.0% 13.5% Figure 570: As the wage share of GDP rises, the profit share falls 14% 13% 53% Profits 12% Wages, rhs, inverted 54% 11% 10% 55% 9% 56% 8% 57% 7% 58% 6% 5% 1950 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 52% % of GDP, US 59% 1961 1972 1983 1994 2005 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The worry we have is that labour, with the unemployment rate edging lower, is getting more pricing power. This is evident in the recent wage component of ECI data, average hourly earnings and the Atlanta Fed's wage tracker for job switchers. Ordinarily, as the wage share of GDP rises, the profit share of GDP falls. A fall in profits normally coincides with decelerating GDP growth (as corporates reconsider capex and employment decisions), especially against the current backdrop of relatively high corporate leverage. Global Equity Strategy 262 2 December 2016 Figure 571: Falling profitability tends to coincide with decelerating GDP growth 40% 6% 5% 30% 2.3 2.1 4% 20% 3% 10% 2% 0% 1.9 1.7 1% 0% -10% -1% -20% -30% Figure 572: Net debt to EBITDA is above its norm US y/y% chg in 12m fwd EPS US real GDP, y/y%, rhs -2% -3% -40% -4% 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1.5 1.3 US net debt to EBITDA 1.1 0.9 1986 ex financials ex financials & resources 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Historically capex has not only been the high-beta component of GDP (with a beta of 1.8x), but also it has tended to lead GDP. While it is true that employment growth has remained remarkably steady at 1.7% year-on-year, that has tended to lag, not lead, GDP growth. Figure 573: Capex tends to lead GDP while employment lags GDP Economic indicator C&I lending intentions ISM manufacturing new orders Consumer confidence Core cap goods orders Employment growth Lead (+) / lag (-) with the cycle +9 months +4 months +3 months +3 months -6 months Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Steady employment growth can therefore create a degree of complacency on the part of investors. To us, there are three key trends to watch: ■ Profit growth: the latest trends here, as we discuss elsewhere, are actually incrementally positive thanks to rising commodity prices; ■ The gap between nominal GDP and wage growth, which we discuss in the asset allocation section of this Outlook, could improve in the near term; ■ The near term indicators of corporate spending, which as we show earlier have picked up. Perhaps the most important issue to monitor is the extent to which the US is – or isn't – at full employment. Ultimately, the judge and jury is wage growth, which as mentioned above is trending higher as the duration of unemployment falls. The debate is whether full employment is 4.8% (as the Fed believes), or something lower. Global Equity Strategy 263 2 December 2016 If we look at two different measures of unemployment, we get two very different views: the unemployment rate for those unemployed for less than 6 months is close to historical lows. The U6 unemployment rate, which adjusts for those workers who are partially attached to the workforce (e.g. a part-time worker who wants a full-time job) remains much higher (although it is falling). Our view is that some of the decline in the participation rate is cyclical (with roughly half being demographic) and that ultimately the full employment rate is likely to be lower than 4.8% – probably closer to 4%. Figure 574: U6 has declined to 9.5%, but remains around its previous cycle peak while short-term unemployment is close to its historic low 18 16 14 U6 Unemployment: marginally attached, and part-time for economic reasons (%) Unemployment rate for those unemployed for less than 6 months (%) Figure 575: Around half of the decline in the participation rate is cyclical 68% US labour force participation rate 67% 66% 65% 12 64% 10 63% 8 62% 6 61% Adjusted for demographics (keeping the population ratio by age cohort constant at 2009 levels) 4 60% Actual 2 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 59% 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research This is partly because with better technology it is easier to match job offers to applications. Also, the experience of the UK and Japan would back this up. In the UK the participation rate hit an all-time high but wage growth has not accelerated much and in Japan there are 40% more job offers than applications and again wage growth has been flat. We should also note that historically we have seen that unemployment rates can fall c1% below full employment. Global Equity Strategy 264 2 December 2016 Figure 576: In the UK, an employment ratio in excess of its pre-crisis level has not led to particularly rapid wage growth 75% Figure 577: Historically, the US unemployment rate has fallen considerably below NAIRU as the cycle peaks 6% UK working age employment ratio Private sector regular pay growth, 3mma 6 Deviation of US unemployment rate from CBO NAIRU 5 74% 5% 4 73% 4% 3 72% 3% 2 71% 2% 1 0 70% 69% 2000 1% 0% 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2012 2014 2016 -1 -2 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. China – stabilised, but it remains a source of risk China was perceived to be the biggest risk a year ago, including by ourselves. Instead, it turned out to be perhaps the biggest source of positive surprises in 2016 owing to its growth resilience. Despite China’s economic momentum improving recently, significant risks remain. We would agree with our economists that social stability and steady growth will remain the focus of the government ahead of the Party Congress in the autumn of 2017. What are the risks? ■ Credit-to-GDP has stayed at an unsustainably high level, and most of the new credit growth is driven by the real estate sector Credit to GDP versus trend is more extended than ever. Total debt to GDP is now 42 ppts above trend and the increase in private debt to GDP is higher than in nearly every other banking crisis apart from Ireland ahead of 2008. Global Equity Strategy 265 2 December 2016 Figure 578: Total debt to GDP in China is now 42 percentage points above trend 260% Figure 579: The five-year change in private sector debt to GDP in China has been comparable to previous changes in Thailand and Spain prior to their crises 120% China: Total debt to GDP 240% 100% 20-year trend 220% Max 5-year change private sector debt to GDP (% point) 300% 641% / 1156% Peak in private sector debt (% of GDP), rhs 250% 50% 140% 0% 0% USA 1951-60 120% 100% 1995 1997 2000 2002 2005 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2007 2010 2013 2015 Ireland 2003-08 20% China 2008-16 160% Spain 1996-10 100% Thailand 1986-97 40% 180% Japan 1985-90 150% UK 1997-09 60% 200% Korea 1988-98 200% USA 1993-09 80% Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The ratio of credit to GDP in China is now above that of the US: total credit to the nonfinancial sector is 255% of GDP in China compared to 252% the US. The problem is the credit multiplier (i.e. the impact of each marginal unit of credit on GDP), which has fallen by a factor of 4 compared with a decade ago. What makes the continued credit growth even more concerning is that 40% of new loans are to the real estate sector. Given the questionable fundamentals of the sector, this is clearly problematic, in our view. Global Equity Strategy 266 2 December 2016 Figure 580: Nominal GDP per incremental unit of total social financing has been declining Figure 581: 42% of new bank loans are for real estate 45% 1.0 Change in GDP per unit of new TSF 0.9 40% 0.8 35% 0.7 30% 0.6 25% 0.5 20% 0.4 15% 0.3 10% 0.2 0.1 2004 Real estate loan as % total new bank loan (4 quarter rolling) 5% 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0% 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Credit Suisse China Economics Research ■ The housing market is rolling over The biggest surprise this year has been the recovery in the real estate sector, with prices having risen sharply. Now we can see signs that real estate turnover is falling, and is now at levels consistent with a 5% decline in house prices. We would also note that the listed property developers are now underperforming. While we acknowledge as above that the house price to wage ratio looks reasonable and there has been some inventory rundown, we find it worrying that the rental yield is 1.7% to 2.4%, which is well below the mortgage rate of 4.5%. Figure 582: Property transactions suggest a fall in house price inflation China property transactions (floorspace), y/y%, 3mma 100% House price inflation, rhs, lag 6m Figure 583: Chinese property developers have stopped outperforming 14.0 13% MSCI China real estate, relative to market 13.5 80% 13.0 60% 8% 12.0 40% 20% 12.5 3% 11.5 11.0 0% -2% -20% -40% 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 10.5 10.0 -7% 9.5 Sep-13 Apr-14 Nov-14 Jun-15 Jan-16 Sep-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 267 2 December 2016 ■ There has been no rebalancing away from the investment-driven growth model, and private FAI growth has dropped to nearly zero The investment share of GDP, while slightly reduced at 42% of GDP, is still significantly higher than it ever was in Japan and Korea at similar points in their industrialisation. More worrying is the over-reliance on state-driven investment. SOE and central government FAI has increased by in excess of 25% Y/Y, while private-sector investment growth dropped to nearly zero. Figure 584: China’s investment share of GDP, though decreasing, is still higher than it ever was in Japan and Korea 50% Figure 585: FAI-state and local government is at a 6year high, but is rolling over. Private sector investment growth has improved a little recently 65% Investment, % of GDP FAI, % chg Y/Y 3 m.m.a. China: latest 42% SOE & Central government FAI Private sector FAI 55% 45% 40% Korea peak in 1991 at 38% Japan peak in 1973 at 36% 45% 35% 35% 30% 25% 25% 15% 20% 5% 15% Japan Korea China 10% 1954 1964 1974 1984 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1994 2004 2014 -5% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ The degree of supply-side reform in certain areas (steel, oil refining and coking coal) has fallen short of expectations ■ There are clear signs of attempts at supply-side reform, especially in cutting excess capacity. By the end of October, China had already achieved its annual target of closing down 45m tonnes of steel capacity and is well on track to achieve its annual target of cutting 250m tonnes capacity in coal, according to the NDRC (Reuters, 10 Nov). However, we remain somewhat sceptical of the commitment to reform. To start with steel, the proposed production cuts might not be enough. China plans to cut 100 to 150 million tonnes of steel production by 2020. However, according to Luo Tiejun, an official at the Chinese Steel and Iron Ore Federation, steel consumption is estimated to stay between 630 and 700 million tonnes in the coming 5 years and if exports remain at around 100 million tonnes, production would stay around 800 million tonnes compared to 1.13 billion tonnes of current capacity. Thus, China has to reduce capacity by 223m tonnes, a much bigger cut than has been achieved to date. Credit Suisse's Head of China Economics, Vincent Chan, is sceptical of widespread SOE reform given that: Global Equity Strategy 268 2 December 2016 ■ The job offer-to-application ratio has fallen to 1.05, potentially signalling a rise in unemployment. As SOEs account for c.15% of total urban employment (with c.60m employees), the government is likely to be extra cautious in shutting down capacity. ■ 60% of the top Chinese Communist Party officials, and 40% of leaders, are due to retire before the 19th Party Congress to be held in autumn 2017. As a result, we would expect only limited policy changes to take place prior to this. Thus, the risk is that SOE reform will be more focused on consolidation rather than ownership change or capacity reductions. Nevertheless, on the Global Equity Strategy team, we have to admit to being surprised by the degree of capacity reductions so far this year. ■ China's policy setting is incrementally less loose Some policy indicators we look at have shown recent tightening. We look at four proxies on policy: LGFV, project approvals, Macao casino stocks (as a proxy for the anticorruption drive) and stance of monetary policy (by looking at a combination of total social financing and interest rates). These proxies suggest some moderate tightening of policy in recent months. Figure 586: China policy scorecard 1m chg. 3m chg. Momentum score (0-5) Latest Macau stocks relative ↑ ↑ 3 0.66 Total social financing (RMB bn) ↓ ↑ 2.5 896 Infrastructure spend (Y/Y % chg) ↑ ↓ 2.5 15.7% Local government bond issuance (RMB bn) ↓ ↓ 2 273.5 Policy scorecard Total score (out of 20) 10 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Infrastructure spend has slowed moderately and local government bond issuance has declined. Moreover, the value of project approvals is down 40% compared to last year. Global Equity Strategy 269 2 December 2016 Figure 587: LGFV debt is rising more rapidly this year than 2015, but slowing 350 Figure 588: Project approvals are slowing Y/Y 1000 Local government financing vehicles debt market net financing (RMB bn) 300 2015 Headline project approvals released by NDRC (RMB bn) 900 2016 2014 2015 2016 800 250 700 200 600 150 500 400 100 300 50 200 0 100 -50 0 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Source: Credit Suisse China Economics team Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Source: Credit Suisse China Economics team Growth in total social financing has slowed to a near 13-year low, and we have seen a modest recent rise in the government and corporate bond yields. Regulation on property has tightened across 20+ major cities recently in response to the sharp price increases. Figure 589: Chinese total social financing growth is near a 13-year low 40% Figure 590: Government yields are inching higher, from historical lows 5.0 Total social financing, y/y% China government bond yields 2-year, rhs 35% 4.5 30% 4.0 25% 3.5 20% 3.0 2.5 15% 10% 2003 10-year 2004 2006 2007 2009 2010 2012 2013 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2.0 Jan 14 May 14 Oct 14 Mar 15 Aug 15 Jan 16 Jun 16 Nov 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research FX: fewer fireworks Our FX strategists believe next 12 months will be characterised by USD strength (see their piece FX Compass: Big League Changes, 16 November 2016), and have the following range of forecasts. Global Equity Strategy 270 2 December 2016 Figure 591: Credit Suisse FX forecasts EURUSD CS FX forecasts 3 month 12 month 1.03 1.00 USDJPY 111 108 GBPUSD EURGBP USDCAD EURCHF USDCHF 1.20 0.86 1.38 1.05 1.02 1.20 0.83 1.40 1.04 1.04 USDMXN USDCNY 23.00 7.01 25.00 7.33 Source: Credit Suisse FX Research team We would make the following observations on the major FX markets: US dollar – some upside risks Our FX strategists' forecasts imply DXY will rise by c.2.5% over the next 3 months, and by c.4% over the next 12 months. We would broadly agree with this judgement, and would note the following factors in support of the USD. ■ In the US, a move toward loose fiscal policy… : The post-crisis policy orthodoxy globally has been one of loose monetary combined with tight fiscal policy. International institutions, such as the IMF, have been campaigning for some time for governments to reconsider their policy mix against a backdrop of very low borrowing costs. The election of Donald Trump arguably has the potential to dramatically change the policy mix being pursued in the US, and suggests a move toward loose fiscal and tighter monetary policy is likely, with his fiscal plans costed at $5.3trn by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, even before infrastructure spending. To some extent this can be compared to the dollar bull market of Reagan (which ended up seeing a troughto-peak rise in the dollar of 67% tradeweighted) against a comparable policy backdrop. ■ …and tighter monetary policy: Even without significant fiscal easing, our economists expect US rates to be increased three times by the end of 2017 compared to market expectations for two. ■ The return of divergence: The US appears set to embrace a loose fiscal/tight(er) monetary stance at a time when this remains well off the agenda in both Europe and Japan, suggesting the divergence theme so prevalent in 2015 is re-emerging in a way that is likely to remain USD-supportive. The BoJ is likely to retain a very loose monetary policy until the Yen weakens to a level consistent with their 2% inflation target (and that, according to our economists, is a level well beyond Yen/$120). The ECB's rhetoric has been dovish with Draghi focusing explicitly on core inflation and also being acutely aware of the mistaken rise in rates in 2008 and 2011. ■ Populism: Protectionism and repatriation of $750bn of overseas cash are dollar positive, we think. Protectionism is arguably least bad for the economy whose export share of GDP is the lowest (and exports are only c.12% of US GDP, compared to c.19% in the euro area). Global Equity Strategy 271 2 December 2016 Why only relatively modest dollar upside? ■ The Bank of England's trade-weighted dollar is already up 41% from the 2011 low. It is also the case that normally a dollar bull market lasts 6 to 7 years. History would simplistically suggest there that the dollar bull market should peter out in the middle of next year. ■ History tells us Fed rate hikes represent near-term USD peaks. With the Fed having reset its policy path in Q1 2016, the expected rate increase in December 2016 is in a sense the first rate rise of a new tightening cycle. As we have noted historically, USD strength tends to be most acute in the period immediately preceding a rate rise, before diminishing following the reality of an increase. Figure 592: The US dollar has tracked a typical postfirst rate hike performance pattern this year Figure 593: From trough to peak, the USD gained 42%, in line with the last full bull market in the 1990s 180 103 Trade weighted dollar, rate rise = 100 6 yrs +67% 10 yrs -47% 9.5 yrs -39% 7 yrs +40% 5 yrs 42% 160 98 140 120 93 100 88 Date of rate hike 80 Aug-1977 Dec-1986 Feb-1994 Jun-1999 Jun-2004 Dec-2015 Days 83 -80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 60 1975 1980 1986 1992 Trade weighted US dollar 1998 2004 2010 2016 First Fed Rate hike Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 272 2 December 2016 The euro – down but not necessarily out Our FX strategists forecast modest downside for the euro over the next 3 and 12 months, with a forecast of parity. We have sympathy with this view in the near term as the principal driver of this cross rate has been the spread of Bunds versus US Treasuries, as the chart below illustrates. While near term we could see Treasury yields rising more than the Bund yield, we would be a little more doubtful that such a differential will be sustained on a 12to 18-month view (unless there is a political shock in the euro area). Figure 594: The widening Treasury/Bund spread has been placing downward pressure on EURUSD EURUSD 1.20 1.2 Treasury/Bund spread, rhs, inv 1.18 1.4 1.16 1.14 1.6 1.12 1.8 1.10 1.08 2.0 1.06 1.04 2.2 1.02 Jan-15 Jun-15 Dec-15 May-16 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We struggle to be too bearish of the euro over the medium term, and would look at any near term sell-off as more of a buying than selling opportunity for the following reasons: ■ Valuation: The euro is now around 15% cheap on a PPP approach; Figure 595: Real rate differentials are not consistent with a weaker euro Euro vs US 2-year real rates, gap, bps EUR/USD, rhs 1.6 Figure 596: The Euro is now 15.3% undervalued against the dollar on PPP Euro/$ - Deviation from PPP exchange rate 30% 170 120 1.5 70 1.4 20 10% 1.3 -30 0% 1.2 -80 -130 1.1 -180 -230 -280 2003 20% 2005 2007 2009 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2012 2014 2016 -10% 1.0 -20% 0.9 -30% 1996 1998 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 273 2 December 2016 ■ Macro momentum: Relative macro momentum appears consistent with a stronger euro relative to the US dollar; ■ Current account surplus: The euro area is running a current account surplus of 3% of GDP; ■ ECB policy: The ECB will be a critical variable. The issue is that the if the euro weakens too far, the ECB would have to alter their view of growth, with 10% off the euro adding c.0.6% to real GDP and 0.5% to inflation, at a time when growth momentum is already reasonable. We wonder whether the market has become a bit complacent on ECB actions in the 2H 2017, with the risk of tapering perhaps higher than priced; Figure 597: The EUR/USD has ignored the improvement in Eurozone relative macro momentum, owing to QE Figure 598: The euro area is running a current account surplus of c.3% of GDP 10 4% 1.54 5 1.44 0 1.34 -5 Euro area current account balance, % GDP 3% 2% 1% 0% 1.24 -10 -15 -1% Euro-area vs US: manufacturing PMI new orders EUR USD, 6m lag, rhs -20 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Markit, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1.14 1.04 -2% -3% 2000 2003 2006 2009 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 274 2 December 2016 ■ Speculators are still cautious: Finally, we would note that speculators remain short the euro at a time when the currency is oversold. Figure 599: Speculators remain short the euro against the dollar… 150 Figure 600: …and the euro is oversold Speculative net-positions in Euros against dollar futures contracts 100 EUR/USD deviation from 6mma Average (+/- 1SD) 9% 50 4% 0 -1% -50 -100 -6% -150 -11% -200 -250 2001 2004 2007 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2013 2016 -16% 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research The Japanese yen – a leveraged play on US rates The yen has appreciated strongly this year as investors came to the view that the BoJ's ability to pursue aggressive monetary easing was diminished. Our FX strategists forecast a USD/Yen of ¥110 and ¥108 on a 3- and 12-month view respectively. If anything we find ourselves a little more bearish, but struggle over 2017 to see ¥125 to ¥130. We see the following reasons to remain cautious on the yen: ■ Increasing rate differentials: With the BoJ de facto targeting rates of zero, rising US rates have widened out the Treasury-JGB spread in a more pronounced way than would have been anticipated under the old monetary policy framework. Given our view that US rates will rise further, this source of downward pressure on the yen will persist, we think. Global Equity Strategy 275 2 December 2016 Figure 601: Real rate differentials are likely to widen further, and have been driving the yen down 160 6 150 Japan/US 10-year real yield differential USDJPY, rhs 140 4 130 120 2 110 0 100 90 -2 80 -4 1995 70 1997 2000 2003 2005 2008 2011 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ A double play on rates: not only has the BoJ committed to cap rates at zero, but if Japanese institutions or retail investors respond to higher US bond yields and a steeper yield curve by increasing their purchases of US bonds, then the BOJ would have to step up its rate of QQE. Indeed on 17 November, the BoJ committed to an open-ended purchase of 1 to 5 year bonds at a fixed price. Given that the BoJ targets a zero rate, domestic investors are faced with an asset giving zero capital gain, zero yield and, inflation-adjusted, a clear loss. If there is a widespread flight out of JGB into US bonds, then the rate of QQE could step up very rapidly. ■ A Yen/$ below 110 is needed to generate inflation. We have consistently found that c80% of inflation comes from import prices. In the opinion of our economists, an exchange rate of ¥110 is needed to get core inflation back to zero and perhaps as low as ¥140 to get inflation towards the BoJ's target of 2%. What are the supports for the yen from here? ■ Current account surplus: On the positive side, we would note that Japan's current account surplus has expanded significantly in recent quarters almost back to a preAbenomics high, at around 4% of GDP. ■ Already a quite cheap currency. From a valuation perspective, the yen is around fair value on a PPP basis, having been overvalued for much of the past 30 years. Global Equity Strategy 276 2 December 2016 Figure 602: The yen, at just below par to PPP against the dollar, is just off its 30-year low Figure 603: The Japanese current account surplus has widened to 3.8% of GDP 5.0% 110% 90% 4.0% JPY / USD, deviation from PPP 70% 3.0% 50% 2.0% 30% 10% 1.0% Current account balance, % of GDP -10% -30% 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006 2011 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 0.0% 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ A political risk: Finally, we think politically it would be hard for the yen to depreciate much beyond ¥120 because ultimately it is pushing down inflation-adjusted wages (with, for example, only 39% of food produced domestically). The feed-through mechanism of higher inflation leading to higher wages (via the semi-annual shunto) did not work when the yen weakened from ¥80 to ¥125, and thus is unlikely to work now. Sterling – close to lows? We discussed our view on sterling at some length in our piece Thoughts on sterling and review of UK domestic sectors (12 October 2016), but to summarise here, our judgement is that most of the weakness in sterling has now been seen, although it remains too early to position for significant appreciation. Our FX team forecast GBPUSD at 1.20 in 3 months' and 12 months' time. Why do we think that we have seen the lows in sterling? ■ A crisis-type devaluation has occurred: Sterling has experienced most of a typical crisis-type devaluation, having fallen at peak by c.30% against the US dollar, against an average crisis devaluation of around 32% looking at events such as the ERM exit or the financial crisis of 2007-08. At the time of writing, sterling is down c.28% from its peak against the dollar, and 22% on a trade-weighted basis. ■ Valuation: Sterling is now 14% cheap against the USD on PPP, a valuation that has represented a trough when it was reached previously in the last 20 years. Global Equity Strategy 277 2 December 2016 Figure 604: The post-Brexit sell off saw sterling experience a typical 'crisis' devaluation Figure 605: Sterling is now c.14% cheap against the USD, a valuation that has represented a trough in the last 20 years 40% 30% Event GBPUSD depreciation GBP/USD - Deviation fromfrom PPPPPP GBP/USD - Deviation GBP overvalued 20% Bretton Woods (1949) -30% 10% 1980s recession (1980-1983) -35% 0% ERM Ex it (1992) -29% Financial crisis (2007-2008) -35% Brex it to trough (2014 - 2016) -29% Av erage -32% -10% -20% -30% -40% GBP undervalued -50% 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research ■ Positioning: Speculators are extremely short sterling versus the USD on data from CFTC. ■ Rate differentials: rate differentials are consistent with a modestly stronger GBP against the USD. ■ The current account deficit is likely to improve a bit more than expected. It has already fallen from 7% to 6% of GDP, but with 90% of assets foreign currency denominated and 60% of liabilities foreign currency denominated, there is something of an automatic improvement as sterling weakens. Moreover, much of the UK's overseas assets are commodity-related (and thus the recovery in commodity prices helps). We also wonder whether the sharp fall in real wage growth (with inflation set to rise above wage growth) will slow down import growth more than expected. ■ Politics: Most market commentators believe that there is a very high probability of a hard Brexit. We think that this probability has been overstated, primarily as a function of the significant logistical hurdles, including: Global Equity Strategy i. The current system for imports and exports is only fit to process 100m transactions a year, and yet capacity for some 350m transactions will be required. Moreover, according to the Treasury and OECD, the cost of crossborder checks will increase transaction costs by c.24% and the only way to mitigate these is to have a new process on digitalisation. Clearly, setting up and completing new IT systems always takes longer than expected; ii. The UK may have to increase its number of customs officers to levels comparable with Germany (which would entail an eightfold increase); iii. The UK will have to negotiate treaties with the 52 countries that the EU currently has agreements with, a process that could take a very long time. Moreover, the UK will have to replicate the 30 EU agencies that check products; 278 2 December 2016 iv. It could take a long time to negotiate a financial services treaty with the EU (it has taken Switzerland 11 years to try to negotiate one); v. The cost of a divorce from the EU has been estimated to be between £20bn to £60bn. In the Autumn Statement the direct and indirect cost of Brexit was put at £58.7bn over the next 5 years; vi. If, as seems likely, the Supreme Court backs up the judgement of the High Court that Parliament must be consulted prior to the activation of Article 50 at January's appeal, then there is a chance that the House of Lords will be able to temporarily block the passing of Article 50 (which of course was not in the Conservative manifesto). Many of the arguments above suggest that there could be a long transition period between enacting Article 50 and leaving the EU (which would occur, at the very earliest, in March 2019). During that period, the UK will trade with the EU, accept some movement of people and contribute to the EU budget. The longer the interim period, however, the greater the chance of a second referendum on the outcome of exit negotiations, in our judgement. It is also possible that the House of Lords could postpone the passing of Article 50 for a sufficiently long period that it will not be implemented until the next parliament. We do, however, struggle to be sterling bulls, as: i) consensus is now probably too optimistic on UK growth for 2017 (at 1.5% versus our house view of 1.2%); ii) Unless there are more special deals (as with Nissan), FDI into the UK of 2.5% of GDP could fall sharply; iii) the twin deficits, budget and current account, remain exceptionally large. Figure 606: A deterioration in investment income has led to a widening of the UK current account deficit Figure 607: Almost half of the UK's stock of inward FDI is from the EU 5.0% Stock of UK FDI 3.0% Asia 7% 1.0% Other 21% -1.0% EU 48% -3.0% -5.0% Balance, % GDP Goods and services Investment income Current account balance -7.0% -9.0% 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2000 2008 US 24% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research GEM FX (ex the RMB): still cheap, but rising DM rates a challenge In our judgement, GEM currencies (excluding the RMB) remain abnormally cheap, with their discount to PPP not close to the lows seen in the last financial crisis, despite the GEM share of global trade being higher now than it was then. We would note that GEM FX has in aggregate underperformed its historical relationship with both commodities prices and with GEM fixed income. Global Equity Strategy 279 2 December 2016 Figure 609: …and have underperformed the rebound in commodity prices Figure 608: GEM currencies are cheap on a PPP basis relative to history GEM currency valuation (ex China) vs US on PPP -35% GEM export market share, ex China, rhs -40% -45% 13% 12% -55% CRB metals index, rhs 53 14% -50% GEM nominal FX index (ex-China) 55 15% 820 49 770 47 720 45 670 43 620 570 11% -65% 10% 41 9% 39 Jan-14 2000 2003 2005 2008 2010 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 870 51 -60% -70% 1998 920 Jun-14 Dec-14 Jun-15 Dec-15 May-16 520 Nov-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research In general, the very sharp improvements made in the basic balance of payment deficits (especially in India and Brazil), the fall in unit labour costs (for the first time in 6 years), deregulation and the likely-underestimated fall in inflation are all supportive for GEM currencies, and could increase resilience in the face of rising DM yields. We show more detailed analysis of GEM currencies in our emerging market equity section below, but we would note here that the rouble, forint, TWD and ringgit are among the currencies offering an attractive combination of cheap valuation and attractive fundamentals. Figure 610: The rouble, forint, TWD and ringgit are among the GEM currencies which offer cheap valuations and attractive fundamentals Expensive Currency and more vulnerable Philippines Currency valuation (higher number = expensive) 0.9 South Korea Brazil 0.4 Chile -0.1 China India Czech Republic Turkey Taiwan Hungary -0.6 Indonesia South Africa Poland -1.1 Malaysia Russia Mexico -1.6 1.2 0.7 0.2 -0.3 -0.8 -1.3 -1.8 Cheap Currency and less vulnerable -2.3 -2.8 External vulnerability (high number = lower vulnerability) Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 280 2 December 2016 Below, we highlight our FX team's Asian FX forecasts. Figure 611: Our FX team's Asian FX forecasts USDCNY USDCNH USDINR USDIDR USDKRW USDMYR USDPHP USDSGD USDTWD USDTHB 3 month forecast 7.01 7.03 68.5 13500 1190 4.5 50 1.455 32.4 35.7 12 month forecast 7.33 7.34 69.5 13900 1225 4.55 50.5 1.48 33.6 35.9 Source: Credit Suisse FX research team Clearly, one of the key risks to GEM FX is the RMB, where our FX team forecasts USDCNY of 7.33 by end-2017 (from around 6.90 currently). The critical issue is whether the decline is orderly (a slow adjustment) or disorderly (i.e. threatening a much larger decline). We see it more likely to be the former outcome for the following reasons: ■ China has a current account surplus of 3% of GDP and it has already unwound much of its short-term external debt (our economists believe that, excluding trade credit, short-term external debt is $270bn, and net external debt is $800bn); ■ China is clearly in a position to impose capital controls (especially given that Chinese companies have spent substantially on foreign corporates this year); ■ Above all else, the RMB appreciation over the last decade has followed China's rising share of global exports higher, and that remains a support, in our view. The issue in our opinion is that China is pursuing market share at the expense of margin, but this is sustainable until the banking system's loan to deposit ratio rises significantly above 100%. Thus we believe that the decline in the RMB is orderly until the loan to deposit ratio rises much above 100%, or the PBOC is forced to raise rates to protect the currency. For now, the RMB tradeweighted has been stable, while it has weakened against the dollar in periods of dollar strength. Global Equity Strategy 281 2 December 2016 Figure 612: The de factor dollar peg led to substantial RmB appreciation 16% 130 125 120 Figure 613: Simplistically charted against export market share, the RmB looks fairly valued -40% China exports % of World exports CNY CFETS basket Chinese RmB/US Dollar 14% rebased, Jan 2011=100 -45% RmB Currency deviation from PPP, rhs 12% 115 -50% 10% -55% 110 8% 105 100 -65% 4% 95 90 2011 -60% 6% 2012 2013 2014 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2015 2016 2% 1996 -70% 1999 2001 2003 2006 2008 2011 2013 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 282 2 December 2016 Commodity prices Gold: remain cautious We, on the global equity strategy team, highlighted our concerns about gold in Some tactical concerns on gold, 12 August, and we remain cautious, but would acknowledge that the house view remains more constructive. There are four key macro drivers of the gold price, in our view, and all look to be problematic in the near term: 1. Real rates are likely to rise Though often cited as an inflation hedge, we think the most important driver of gold is the real interest rate; the gold price moves inversely to real bond yields (in a sense, the opportunity cost of holding gold), rather than being correlated with inflation expectations. This is due to gold not offering a coupon or yield of any kind, it is implicitly a hedge on inflation rising more than nominal yields, i.e. falling real yields. Figure 614: Gold is highly correlated with the TIPS yield Figure 615: …but not inflation breakevens 3.5 4 3 3.5 R² = 0.7513 R² = 0.0072 2.5 3 2.5 1.5 Inflation breakeven TIPS yield 2 1 0.5 0 2 1.5 1 0.5 -0.5 -1 300 600 900 1200 Gold, $/oz Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 1500 1800 0 300 600 900 1200 Gold, $/oz 1500 1800 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research We believe that the real bond yield is set to rise further. As we highlight in the bond section, the US TIPS yield can rise to c.80bp, in our judgement. Global Equity Strategy 283 2 December 2016 Figure 616: As real rates rise, the gold price tends to fall 2000 -1.5 1800 -1.0 -0.5 1600 0.0 1400 0.5 1200 1.0 1000 1.5 2.0 800 Gold bullion 600 400 2006 10-year TIPS yield, rhs (inverted) 2.5 3.0 3.5 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Gold is a play on confidence in the financial system Historically, gold has always been a proxy on the confidence in the financial system, acting as a 'safe haven' when banks came under pressure. During the financial crisis, this used to be proxied by the close correlation between the gold price and the CDS of banks. However, nowadays, we would highlight the close correlation between the relative performance of bank equities and gold. If banks outperform, the gold price typically weakens. We think banks outperform as rates rise, and, moreover, we remain overweight European banks; in our view, investors remain too pessimistic on the outlook for the sector (see Financials: tactically long, 21 September). Figure 618: …however, recently this correlation has been with bank equities Figure 617: The gold price has historically been correlated with financial CDS spreads… 2100 Gold bullion iTraxx senior financial, rhs 1900 0.029 400 350 1700 300 1500 250 1300 200 1400 Gold bullion $ 0.031 US banks rel market, inv, rhs 0.033 1300 0.035 1200 1100 150 900 100 700 50 500 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 0 0.037 0.039 1100 0.041 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1000 Sep 14 Feb 15 Jul 15 Dec 15 May 16 Oct 16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 284 2 December 2016 3. The dollar is unlikely to weaken Gold tends to do well when the dollar weakens. However, we struggle to see any significant downside to the USD from here. In fact, as we discuss in the FX section, both we and our FX strategists expect dollar strength in 2017. Figure 619: Periods of dollar weakness tend to see the gold price rise Y/Y change 25% -40% -30% 20% -20% 15% -10% 10% 0% 5% 10% 0% 20% 30% -5% 40% -10% 50% -15% -20% 2006 USD TWI, % 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Gold bullion, $, inv, %, rhs 2013 2014 2015 60% 70% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 4. Gold looks quite expensive Gold looks expensive relative to other inflation hedges. As we argue above, gold is a hedge against lower real bond yields. The two other assets classes with similar characteristics are real estate and equities. We would argue gold looks expensive against both of these. Figure 620: Gold looks expensive relative to equities… Figure 621: …and relative to housing -4 Gold to US house price ratio 1.7 Gold to US equities ratio, log scale -6 1.5 1.3 -8 1.1 -10 0.9 0.7 -12 0.5 -14 -16 1854 0.3 1874 1894 1914 1934 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 1954 1974 1994 2014 0.1 1890 1905 1920 1935 1950 1965 1980 1995 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 285 2 December 2016 As another proxy on valuation, we look at the price of gold in real terms or the price of gold relative to other precious metals, such as silver – where the relative price is not far off post-2000 highs – or platinum – where the relative price is near an all-time high. On both of these metrics, we think gold appears expensive. Figure 622: The inflation-adjusted gold price remains well above its long-term average Figure 623: The ratio of gold to silver is not far from post-2000 highs 110 2600 Gold price, inflation adjusted $/oz Average 2200 100 Gold to silver ratio 90 Average since 2006 80 1800 70 60 1400 50 1000 40 30 600 20 200 1968 1973 1978 1984 1989 1994 2000 2005 2010 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 10 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Our fair value model, which is based on the macro drivers identified above, shows gold to be c.8% overvalued. Figure 624: Our model suggests the gold price is modestly above fair value 2000 Figure 625: Model specifications Gold price, $/oz 1800 1600 1400 1200 Model inputs Coeff. t-value Current US dollar index -12.6 -20.7 106 TIPS yield -248 -39.1 0.44 MSCI USA banks / MSCI USA ratio -351 -11.7 0.39 R2 93% Fair value 1,095 Model output 1000 Gold price, $/oz Model +/- 1 stdev 800 Actual 600 400 2006 Fair value 2008 2010 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2012 2014 Std. error 95.7 Intercept 2668 Latest 1,186 Upside (downside) -7.7% 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 286 2 December 2016 However, there are also supportive factors for gold… We would argue there are also some supportive factors for the gold price. We would particularly highlight the following: 1. The inflation-adjusted Fed funds rate is still very low and consistent with a rising gold prices. However, this relationship has recently been weak Figure 626: The gold price has also tended to rise when the real Fed funds rate is below 1%, though this relationship has recently been weak 60 -4 Gold, us$/oz y/y%, lhs 50 -3 Real fed funds rate, %, rhs, inverted 40 -2 30 -1 20 0 10 1 0 2 -10 -20 3 -30 4 -40 1988 5 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 2. Central banks, in many instances, have a low proportion of their reserves in gold. If those central banks that have less than 20% of their reserves in gold were to raise their reserves to 20%, the gold demand would rise six fold. Figure 627: Central banks could create significant additional gold demand World Official Gold Holdings as of June 2016 Assuming an increase to 20% of Additional demand, reserves, tonnes tonnes Tonnes % of reserves US 8,133 75% - - Germany 3,381 69% - - Italy 2,452 69% - - France 2,436 65% - - Spain 282 20% - - Russia 1,477 16% 1,897 420 UK 310 9% 691 380 1,040 7% 3,149 2,109 558 6% 1,762 1,205 Japan 765 3% 6,108 5,343 China 1,808 2% 16,043 14,234 Brazil 67 1% 1,752 1,685 Switzerland India Total additional demand, tonnes 25,377 Total additional demand, multiple of yearly demand 6.1x Source: Thomson Reuters, World Gold Council, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 287 2 December 2016 We would note, however, that we do not think ETF demand is important as it tends to lag behind the gold price, suggesting these flows are momentum-driven and not price-setters. Figure 629: …although these flows seem largely momentum driven, and lag behind gold Figure 628: ETF gold demand is positively correlated with the gold price… 100 1900 90 1700 80 1-month % change in gold price 10% 4-week flows into gold ETFs, % holdings, 1 week lag (rhs) 8% 10 6% 1500 70 1300 60 4% 5 50 1100 40 900 Total ETF holdings, million oz, rhs 2008 2010 2012 2014 0% -5 -4% 10 0 2006 0 -2% 20 500 2% 30 Gold, $/oz 700 300 2004 15 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research -10 -6% Feb-14 Jun-14 Oct-14 Feb-15 Jun-15 Oct-15 Feb-16 Jun-16 Oct-16 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research On a positive note, gold stocks are now looking cheap on a P/E basis and are no longer overbought – relative to the market or relative to the gold price, as had been the case before. Figure 630: Gold stocks are no longer clearly cheap on P/E relative… 280% Gold stocks 12m fwd P/E rel World mkt Average (+/- 1sd) Figure 631: Gold stocks are no longer overbought 50% 40% 240% 30% 20% 200% 10% 0% 160% -10% 120% -20% -30% 80% -40% 40% 1990 1993 1997 2001 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 2004 2008 2012 2016 -50% 1996 Gold stocks %dev from 6mma, rel to World mkt Average (+/- 1SD) 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research 288 2 December 2016 Appendices Appendix 1: political developments Brazil: The new president and economic team have correctly diagnosed the country’s need for a thorough fiscal reform, which will require strong support from the Congress. President Temer’s government coalition accounts for more than three-fifths of Congress members. His strength was already proven in the first rounds of voting of a Constitutional amendment that caps public expenditure growth, which was approved by a comfortable margin at both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. The biggest challenge of this administration, nevertheless, will be the approval a social security reform, expected to be discussed throughout 2017, in the opinion of our Brazil economists. India: There have been positive developments in the following key areas as highlighted by our India economist, Deepali Bhargava: (i) GST: the GST (Goods and Services tax) constitution amendment Bill finally got the nod of the parliament in August. It is a breakthrough on indirect tax reform given India has been on the verge of implementing GST for nearly a decade. We think GST would help boost economic growth, improve ease of doing business, lower inflation and budget deficits in the medium term. Estimates suggest gains to GDP in the range of 0.9%-1.7% of GDP for each year post the implementation of GST. (ii) Bankruptcy law: one of the binding constraints for business in India has been the inefficiency of its insolvency framework. With the passing of the insolvency and bankruptcy bill by the Parliament early this year this should change. Time bound process, along with single-unified law, to deal with all aspects of insolvency should mean speedy resolution and higher recovery. (iii) FDI: the government significantly liberalised FDI norms in sectors like retail, tourism, construction, banking. While gains to the services sector are already evident, the government’s push to ‘Make in India’ should help manufacturing as well. (iv) Financial market reforms: the RBI recently took significant measures to develop the corporate bond market. This should diversify sources of funding of growth away from banks. We see this as a long term positive for infrastructure financing, bank balance sheet risks and overall growth. The key areas to focus on are land acquisition bill, labour law – these haven’t been passed yet. South Africa: As highlighted by our South Africa economist, Carlos Teixeira, political headlines were generally negative in the country in 2016, which unfortunately overshadowed some of the country’s well-established institutional strengths: (i) South Africa conducted another well-organized, well-conducted, free and fair election – the Local Government Election – which resulted in a further move towards a re-balancing of power. (ii) The judicial system proved its independence and sophistication during a number of important legal hearings. (iii) Some of the countries independent institutions (established in terms of Chapter 9 of the Constitution) – such as the Public Protector proved their importance in holding the government and individuals to account for their actions. (iv) Non-government organizations and the media continued to be very active in trying to correct wrongs in society, in particular holding state officials to account. In the opinion of our South Africa economist, these strengths bode well for the country if they are supplemented with structural economic reforms. Indonesia: As our economist, Santitarn Sathirathai highlights, Indonesian President Joko Widodo in July reshuffled his cabinet, the move that was very well received by the market. He brought in reformist, business and investor friendly Sri Mulyani Indrawati who was MD at the World Bank and also ex Finance Minister while rotating another reformist minister of trade to the board of investment promotion to oversee measures to boost FDI. Additionally the Tax amnesty law was finally passed in September and have so far proven to be one of the most successful amnesty programs in the world on terms of revenue raised as a share of GDP. With 3 months into the program it has raised over 0.8% of GDP and also generating around US$10bn in terms of asset repatriation Global Equity Strategy 289 2 December 2016 Appendix 2: Currency valuation scorecard Figure 632: GEM currency valuation scorecard (all factors equal weighted) Deviation of REER from long term trend Real bond yield Big mac deviation from PPP (%) Big mac, std from 10y avg IMF PPP deviation (%) Mexico -21.4% 3.3% -52.9 -2.0 -59.5 -2.4 -1.2 1 Malaysia -10.2% 2.1% -60.6 -1.4 -67.7 -1.5 -1.0 2 Poland -15.2% 3.6% -52.0 -1.5 -57.8 -1.7 -0.9 3 Russia -21.0% 1.2% -59.3 -1.4 -64.8 -1.4 -0.9 4 South Africa -0.4% 2.4% -58.3 -1.6 -59.0 -1.6 -0.8 5 Indonesia -4.8% 3.9% -53.1 -1.2 -69.3 -0.5 -0.7 6 Hungary -14.0% 2.8% -37.5 -1.5 -55.1 -1.5 -0.5 7 Taiwan 12.2% -0.3% -57.3 -1.9 -52.9 -1.7 -0.4 8 Turkey -15.4% 1.8% -29.9 -1.8 -61.8 -1.4 -0.4 9 Colombia -15.5% -0.7% -39.7 -1.7 -60.7 -1.2 -0.2 10 Czech Republic IMF PPP, std from Avg Z-score 10y avg Rank -13.6% -0.2% -39.4 -1.2 -47.5 -1.6 -0.1 11 India 5.7% 1.2% -52.2 1.4 -74.8 -1.4 -0.1 12 Philippines 17.9% 1.7% -44.0 -0.3 -63.9 -0.1 0.2 13 Chile -4.9% 0.6% -29.9 -1.4 -44.3 -0.9 0.2 14 China 4.6% 2.5% -44.7 0.7 -49.0 0.3 0.3 15 Brazil -12.8% 2.8% -5.1 -0.4 -42.4 -0.6 0.6 16 9.5% 0.5% -23.5 -0.7 -29.0 -0.6 0.7 17 South Korea Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 290 2 December 2016 Appendix 3: Equity valuation scorecard Figure 633: GEM equity markets valuation scorecard 12m fwd P/E Price to book DY Absolute Relative Z-Score Absolute Relative Z-Score Absolute Relative Z-Score Valuation Score Singapore 12.5 81% 1.63 1.2 58% 1.64 3.44 135% 1.55 2.04 Poland 11.3 74% 1.33 1.2 60% 1.75 3.29 129% 0.20 1.32 Russia 6.5 46% 0.70 1.6 81% 1.06 4.54 178% 0.68 0.91 China 11.5 75% 0.36 1.0 49% 1.13 4.15 162% 0.63 0.76 Korea 9.6 63% 0.38 1.3 67% 0.50 2.01 79% 1.07 0.66 Hong Kong 15.3 100% 0.73 1.3 66% 1.23 2.94 115% -0.35 0.51 Czech Republic 14.3 94% -0.24 1.2 62% 0.84 6.90 270% 0.81 0.44 Taiwan 12.8 83% 0.63 1.8 92% 0.33 3.93 154% 0.49 0.40 Turkey 7.6 50% 1.25 1.4 71% 0.00 2.68 105% 0.00 0.26 Chile 15.6 102% 0.55 1.6 81% 0.57 3.10 121% -0.35 0.09 Malaysia 15.6 102% 0.14 1.7 83% 0.59 3.14 123% -0.25 -0.04 Colombia 11.7 76% 0.81 1.3 66% 0.43 2.77 108% -1.06 -0.22 South Africa 13.6 89% -0.40 2.3 117% 0.20 3.41 134% -0.04 -0.38 India 15.9 104% 0.13 2.6 129% -0.19 1.55 61% -0.14 -0.40 Mexico 16.6 109% -0.24 2.7 136% -0.34 1.95 76% 0.18 -0.49 Hungary 11.4 74% -0.59 1.2 61% 0.53 2.44 96% -0.58 -0.55 Brazil 14.6 95% -0.79 1.4 73% 0.00 4.11 161% 0.00 -0.64 Thailand 13.8 90% -0.86 2.1 105% 0.10 3.18 124% -0.43 -0.83 US 17.0 111% -1.27 3.0 151% 0.00 2.06 81% 0.00 -0.85 Egypt 12.2 80% -0.35 1.9 94% 0.08 2.69 105% -1.00 -0.89 Philippines 16.4 107% 0.07 2.3 116% -0.53 1.79 70% -0.74 -0.90 Indonesia 14.7 96% -0.38 3.4 169% -0.43 2.02 79% -1.07 -1.20 Country A high z-score indicates the country is trading cheap on 12m fwd, P/B & DY relative to the world market, compared to its long term average Cheapest countries are ranked at the top Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 291 2 December 2016 Appendix 4: External vulnerability scorecard Figure 634: External vulnerability scorecard 2016&17F avg current Net foreign assets, Portfolio inflows FX reserves less Private sector debt to GDP account, % GDP % GDP 2016e avg, % GDP financing needs, % GDP deviation from trend (in pp) Country Weighted zscore 30% weight 17.5% weight 17.5% weight 17.5% weight 17.5% weight Taiwan 14.4 198.8 -11.0 63.2 1% -2.5 Hungary 5.3 79.9 0.7 9.3 -32% -0.9 South Korea 7.5 -2.7 -3.6 20.4 8% -0.6 Russia 2.9 11.6 0.4 22.0 4% -0.2 Malaysia 1.7 5.3 -3.4 19.7 17% -0.1 China 2.3 15.9 -0.7 23.2 30% 0.1 India -1.2 -17.0 0.5 8.3 -6% 0.1 Philippines 1.1 -11.7 0.3 15.0 18% 0.2 Chile -1.7 -22.3 -2.1 2.2 3% 0.2 Czech Republic 0.6 -44.8 0.4 3.0 5% 0.3 Brazil -0.4 -44.4 1.0 13.7 8% 0.3 Poland -1.9 -79.2 0.3 -3.0 -2% 0.5 South Africa -4.0 -8.9 1.4 -3.0 -2% 0.5 Mexico -3.5 -35.5 1.7 11.3 12% 0.6 Indonesia -2.4 -42.1 0.2 -4.5 15% 0.7 Turkey -4.6 -54.8 1.5 -10.8 11% 0.9 Source: Thomson Reuters, Credit Suisse research Global Equity Strategy 292 2 December 2016 Companies Mentioned (Price as of 30-Nov-2016) Activision Blizzard, Inc (ATVI.OQ, $36.61) Adecco (ADEN.S, SFr62.65) Adidas AG (ADSGn.F, €138.62) Advanced Info Service PCL (ADVANC.BK, Bt144.5) Aeon Delight (9787.T, ¥3,140) Airbus Group (AIR.PA, €60.27) Aisin Seiki (7259.T, ¥4,890) Alexion Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (ALXN.OQ, $122.59) Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA.N, $94.02) Alphabet (GOOGL.OQ, $775.88) Alps Electric (6770.T, ¥2,873) Amazon com Inc. (AMZN.OQ, $750.57) Asahi Glass (5201.T, ¥743) Asahi Kasei (3407.T, ¥1,018) Assa Abloy (ASSAb.ST, Skr174.4) Astellas Pharma (4503.T, ¥1,580) Atlas Copco (ATCOa.ST, Skr279.0) Atos (ATOS.PA, €97.53) Azimut (AZMT.MI, €14.08) BBVA (BBVA.MC, €5.83) BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA, €54.78) Barry Callebaut (BARN.S, SFr1207.0) Beiersdorf (BEIG.DE, €77.08) Berkeley Group Holdings Plc (BKGH.L, 2477.0p) BioMarin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (BMRN.OQ, $85.63) Boeing (BA.N, $150.56) Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (BOLSAA.MX, MXN27.23) Brenntag (BNRGn.DE, €49.66) British American Tobacco (BATS.L, 4393.5p) Brookfield Infrastructure Partners LP (BIP.N, $31.5) Bureau Veritas (BVI.PA, €17.76) CKD (6407.T, ¥1,376) COLI (0688.HK, HK$22.4) Calbee (2229.T, ¥3,565) Capgemini (CAPP.PA, €74.5) Carlsberg (CARLb.CO, Dkr597.0) Carnival (CCL.N, $51.41) Casino Guichard (CASP.PA, €42.93) Catcher Technology (2474.TW, NT$231.5) China Resources Land (1109.HK, HK$18.84) Cipla Limited (CIPL.BO, Rs566.55) Citigroup Inc. (C.N, $56.39) Coal India Limited (COAL.BO, Rs308.2) Coca-Cola Femsa (KOF.N, $62.9) Conexio (9422.T, ¥1,400) Credit Agricole SA (CAGR.PA, €10.65) Credit Saison (8253.T, ¥2,051) DIA (DIDA.MC, €4.306) DISCO (6146.T, ¥13,560) DKSH Holdings (DKSH.S, SFr67.75) Daikin Industries (6367.T, ¥10,715) Dassault Systemes (DAST.PA, €72.02) Delta Air Lines, Inc. (DAL.N, $48.18) Delta Electronics (2308.TW, NT$160.0) Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.F, €14.85) Deutsche Boerse (DB1Gn.F, €73.54) Deutsche Telekom (DTEGn.F, €14.83) Deutsche Wohnen (DWNG.DE, €29.06) Diageo (DGE.L, 2005.0p) Dialog Semiconductor (DLGS.DE, €37.4) DuPont de Nemours and Co. (DD.N, $73.61) E-MART Co. Ltd (139480.KS, W188,000) ENI (ENI.MI, €13.14) Eclat Textile Co., Ltd. (1476.TW, NT$330.0) Eiffage (FOUG.PA, €62.28) Eisai (4523.T, ¥6,609) Elecom (6750.T, ¥1,961) Electronic Arts, Inc (EA.OQ, $79.24) Elior (ELIOR.PA, €19.58) Emerson (EMR.N, $56.44) En-Japan (4849.T, ¥1,917) Endesa (ELE.MC, €19.5) Enel (ENEI.MI, €3.81) Erste Bank (ERST.VI, €26.24) Exedy (7278.T, ¥3,145) Experian (EXPN.L, 1510.0p) Global Equity Strategy 293 2 December 2016 Facebook Inc. (FB.OQ, $118.42) Fanuc (6954.T, ¥19,305) Fluor (FLR.N, $53.51) Fortum (FUM1V.HE, €13.7) Foxtons (FOXT.L, 105.25p) Fresenius (FREG.DE, €67.75) Fresenius Medical Care AG & Co. (FMEG.DE, €73.6) Fuyao Glass Industry Group Co., Ltd. (600660.SS, Rmb18.89) Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd (0175.HK, HK$8.02) Gerresheimer AG (GXIG.DE, €68.85) Gilead Sciences, Incorporated (GILD.OQ, $73.7) Grand City Properties (GYC.DE, €15.76) Green REIT PLC (GN1.I, €1.28) HCL Technologies (HCLT.BO, Rs802.8) HSBC (HSBA.L, 635.2p) Harmonic Drive (6324.T, ¥3,015) Hays (HAYS.L, 138.9p) Henkel (HNKG_p.F, €109.1) Hennes & Mauritz (HMb.ST, Skr267.9) Hitachi (6501.T, ¥609) Hitachi Chemical (4217.T, ¥2,510) Hitachi Metals (5486.T, ¥1,495) Hon Hai Precision (2317.TW, NT$82.0) INWIT (INWT.MI, €4.0) Iberdrola (IBE.MC, €5.68) Ingredion Inc (INGR.N, $117.38) IntercontinentalExchange, Inc. (ICE.N, $55.4) Intesa-Sanpaolo (ISP.MI, €2.1) Italgas (IG.MI, €3.38) JCDecaux (JCDX.PA, €24.6) JSR (4185.T, ¥1,646) Japan Exchange Group (8697.T, ¥1,694) Japan Tobacco (2914.T, ¥3,946) JetBlue Airways Corporation (JBLU.OQ, $20.09) Jumbo SA (BABr.AT, €13.42) K Laser (2461.TW, NT$17.15) KB Financial Group (105560.KS, W42,100) KLA-Tencor Corp. (KLAC.OQ, $79.84) KOSE (4922.T, ¥9,170) KT&G Corp (033780.KS, W105,000) Kansas City Southern (KSU.N, $88.71) Kering (PRTP.PA, €205.0) Keyence (6861.T, ¥78,230) Kobe Steel (5406.T, ¥1,079) Koito Manufacturing (7276.T, ¥5,960) Kuraray (3405.T, ¥1,618) Kureha (4023.T, ¥4,670) Kyocera (6971.T, ¥5,436) L'Oreal (OREP.PA, €161.05) LIC Housing Finance Ltd (LICH.BO, Rs563.8) Largan Precision (3008.TW, NT$3690.0) Lazard Ltd. (LAZ.N, $38.85) Lenovo Group Ltd (0992.HK, HK$4.81) Liberty Global (LBTYA.OQ, $31.32) Lintec (7966.T, ¥2,425) Luxottica Group (LUX.MI, €49.1) M.Video (MVID.MM, Rbl373.0) Magnit (MGNTq.L, $40.28) Makalot Industrial Co., Ltd. (1477.TW, NT$125.5) Mapfre SA (MAP.MC, €2.83) Matahari Department Store (LPPF.JK, Rp14,400) McDonald's Corp (MCD.N, $119.27) Mega Financial Holding Co Ltd (2886.TW, NT$22.75) Microsoft Corporation (MSFT.OQ, $60.26) Mitsubishi Chemical (4188.T, ¥720) Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (8306.T, ¥670) Mitsui Chemicals (4183.T, ¥529) Mizuho Financial Group (8411.T, ¥203) Morinaga & Co (2201.T, ¥4,525) Motor Oil (MORr.AT, €12.22) Murata Manufacturing (6981.T, ¥15,425) NGK Insulators (5333.T, ¥2,186) NGK Spark Plug (5334.T, ¥2,346) Nabtesco Corp (6268.T, ¥2,908) Naver Corp (035420.KS, W798,000) Nidec (6594.T, ¥10,240) Nien Made Enterprise Co., Ltd. (8464.TW, NT$357.0) Nifco (7988.T, ¥6,280) Nippon Electric Glass (5214.T, ¥610) Global Equity Strategy 294 2 December 2016 Nippon Shinyaku (4516.T, ¥5,320) Nippon Shokubai (4114.T, ¥7,010) Nissan Motor (7201.T, ¥1,056) Nissha Printing (7915.T, ¥2,423) Nokia (NOKIA.HE, €4.06) Nokian Tyres (NRE1V.HE, €34.08) Nomura Holdings (8604.T, ¥614) Novatek Microelectronics Corp Ltd (3034.TW, NT$106.0) OBIC (4684.T, ¥5,030) OSG Corp (6136.T, ¥2,261) OTP (OTPB.BU, Ft7956.0) Obara Group (6877.T, ¥5,280) Olympus (7733.T, ¥4,020) Orix (8591.T, ¥1,782) Orpea (ORP.PA, €72.9) Otsuka (4768.T, ¥5,570) Owens Illinois (OI.N, $18.37) Padini Holdings Berhad (PDNI.KL, RM2.64) Panasonic (6752.T, ¥1,164) Pernod-Ricard (PERP.PA, €99.0) Pfizer (PFE.N, $32.14) Philip Morris International (PM.N, $88.28) Philips (PHG.AS, €27.14) Ping An (2318.HK, HK$42.9) ProSieben (PSMGn.DE, €32.34) Prosegur (PSG.MC, €5.86) Prysmian (PRY.MI, €22.57) Reckitt Benckiser (RB.L, 6763.0p) Remy Cointreau (RCOP.PA, €79.23) Renault (RENA.PA, €74.34) Roche (ROG.S, SFr226.7) SAP (SAPG.F, €78.7) SGS Surveillance (SGSN.S, SFr2043.0) SMC (6273.T, ¥32,520) SThree (STHR.L, 276.5p) SUMCO (3436.T, ¥1,253) Samsung Electronics (005930.KS, W1,746,000) Sanofi (SASY.PA, €76.11) Santander (SAN.MC, €4.31) Santen Pharmaceutical (4536.T, ¥1,396) Saras (SRS.MI, €1.67) Schneider Electric (SCHN.PA, €62.82) Sekisui House (1928.T, ¥1,870) Semen Indonesia (SMGR.JK, Rp8,875) Septeni Holdings (4293.T, ¥345) Sharp (6753.T, ¥189) Shin-Etsu Chemical (4063.T, ¥8,460) Shinsei Bank (8303.T, ¥183) Shionogi (4507.T, ¥5,410) Siemens (SIEGn.DE, €106.6) Societe Generale (SOGN.PA, €40.58) Sonova Holding (SOON.S, SFr122.9) Sony (6758.T, ¥3,288) St.Shine Optical Co.,Ltd (1565.TWO, NT$610.0) Standard Chartered (STAN.L, 641.1p) Sumitomo Electric Industries (5802.T, ¥1,602) Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (8316.T, ¥4,206) Sumitomo Osaka Cement (5232.T, ¥404) Suzuki Motor (7269.T, ¥3,680) Swedbank (SWEDa.ST, Skr212.9) TDK (6762.T, ¥7,690) THK (6481.T, ¥2,461) TSI Holdings (3608.T, ¥657) TUI (TUIT.L, 1054.0p) Taisei Corp (1801.T, ¥828) Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (2330.TW, NT$183.0) Takeda Pharmaceutical (4502.T, ¥4,685) Tata Motors Ltd. (TAMO.BO, Rs459.35) Tech Mahindra Limited (TEML.BO, Rs485.4) Technip (TECF.PA, €65.36) Teijin (3401.T, ¥2,118) Telefonica (TEF.MC, €7.85) Telenor (TEL.OL, Nkr125.8) Telia Company (TELIA.ST, Skr34.66) Temenos Group (TEMN.S, SFr70.4) The Priceline Group Inc (PCLN.OQ, $1503.68) Tokyo Electron (8035.T, ¥10,475) Toray Industries (3402.T, ¥929) Toshiba (6502.T, ¥425) Global Equity Strategy 295 2 December 2016 Toyota Industries (6201.T, ¥5,360) Trancom (9058.T, ¥5,570) USS (4732.T, ¥1,831) Unicredit (CRDI.MI, €2.02) Unilever (ULVR.L, 3196.0p) Usen (4842.T, ¥344) VINCI (SGEF.PA, €61.23) Vodafone Group (VOD.L, 193.9p) Vonovia (VNAn.DE, €30.43) Vopak (VOPA.AS, €44.1) WPP (WPP.L, 1709.0p) Walmex (WALMEX.MX, MXN37.75) Workman (7564.T, ¥3,375) Wowow (4839.T, ¥2,994) X5 Retail Group (PJPq.L, $30.0) Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co., Ltd. (2208.HK, HK$12.24) Yoox Net-A-Porter Group (YNAP.MI, €25.52) Zhengzhou Yutong Bus Co., Ltd (600066.SS, Rmb21.05) dorma+kaba (DOKA.S, SFr734.5) Disclosure Appendix Analyst Certification The analysts identified in this report each certify, with respect to the companies or securities that the individual analyzes, that (1) the views expressed in this report accurately reflect his or her personal views about all of the subject companies and securities and (2) no part of his or her compensation was, is or will be directly or indirectly related to the specific recommendations or views expressed in this report. The analyst(s) responsible for preparing this research report received Compensation that is based upon various factors including Credit Suisse's total revenues, a portion of which are generated by Credit Suisse's investment banking activities As of December 10, 2012 Analysts’ stock rating are defined as follows: Outperform (O) : The stock’s total return is expected to outperform the relevant benchmark* over the next 12 months. Neutral (N) : The stock’s total return is expected to be in line with the relevant benchmark* over the next 12 months. Underperform (U) : The stock’s total return is expected to underperform the relevant benchmark* over the next 12 months. *Relevant benchmark by region: As of 10th December 2012, Japanese ratings are based on a stock’s total return relative to the analyst's coverage universe which consists of all companies covered by the analyst within the relevant sector, with Outperforms representing the most attractive, Neutrals the less attractive, and Underperforms the least attractive investment opportunities. As of 2nd October 2012, U.S. and Canadian as well as European ra tings are based on a stock’s total return relative to the analyst's coverage universe which consists of all companies covered by the analyst within the relevant sector, with Outperfor ms representing the most attractive, Neutrals the less attractive, and Underperforms the least attractive investment opportunities . For Latin American and non-Japan Asia stocks, ratings are based on a stock’s total return relative to the average total return of the relevant country or regional benchmark; prior to 2nd October 2012 U.S. and Canadian ratings were based on (1) a stock’s absolute total return potential to its current share price and (2) the relative attractiveness of a stock’s total return pote ntial within an analyst’s coverage universe. For Australian and New Zealand stocks, the expected total return (ETR) calculation inc ludes 12-month rolling dividend yield. An Outperform rating is assigned where an ETR is greater than or equal to 7.5%; Underperform where an ETR less than or equal to 5%. A Neutral may be assigned where the ETR is between -5% and 15%. The overlapping rating range allows analysts to assign a rating that puts ETR in the context of associated risks. Prior to 18 May 2015, ETR ranges for Outperform and Underperform ratings did not overlap with Neutral thresholds between 15% and 7.5%, wh ich was in operation from 7 July 2011. Restricted (R) : In certain circumstances, Credit Suisse policy and/or applicable law and regulations preclude certain types of communications, including an investment recommendation, during the course of Credit Suisse's engagement in an investment banking transaction and in certain other circumstances. Not Rated (NR) : Credit Suisse Equity Research does not have an investment rating or view on the stock or any other securities related to the company at this time. Not Covered (NC) : Credit Suisse Equity Research does not provide ongoing coverage of the company or offer an investment rating or investment view on the equity security of the company or related products. Volatility Indicator [V] : A stock is defined as volatile if the stock price has moved up or down by 20% or more in a month in at least 8 of the past 24 months or the analyst expects significant volatility going forward. Analysts’ sector weightings are distinct from analysts’ stock ratings and are based on the analyst’s expectations for the fundamentals and/or valuation of the sector* relative to the group’s historic fundamentals and/or valuation: Overweight : The analyst’s expectation for the sector’s fundamentals and/or valuation is favorable over the next 12 months. Market Weight : The analyst’s expectation for the sector’s fundamentals and/or valuation is neutral over the next 12 months. Underweight : The analyst’s expectation for the sector’s fundamentals and/or valuation is cautious over the next 12 months. *An analyst’s coverage sector consists of all companies covered by the analyst within the relevant sector. An analyst may cover multiple sectors. Global Equity Strategy 296 2 December 2016 Credit Suisse's distribution of stock ratings (and banking clients) is: Global Ratings Distribution Rating Versus universe (%) Of which banking clients (%) Outperform/Buy* 44% (63% banking clients) Neutral/Hold* 38% (59% banking clients) Underperform/Sell* 15% (55% banking clients) Restricted 3% *For purposes of the NYSE and NASD ratings distribution disclosure requirements, our stock ratings of Outperform, Neutral, and Underperform most closely correspond to Buy, Hold, and Sell, respectively; however, the meanings are not the same, as our stock ratings are determined on a relative basis. (Please refer to definitions above.) An investor's decision to buy or sell a security should be based on investment objectives, current holdings, and other individ ual factors. Important Global Disclosures Credit Suisse’s research reports are made available to clients through our proprietary research portal on CS PLUS. 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Credit Suisse's policy is only to publish investment research that is impartial, independent, clear, fair and not misleading. For more detail please refer to Credit Suisse's Policies for Managing Conflicts of Interest in connection with Investment Research: http://www.csfb.com/research-andanalytics/disclaimer/managing_conflicts_disclaimer.html . Credit Suisse's policy is only to publish investment research that is impartial, independent, clear, fair and not misleading. For more detail please refer to Credit Suisse's Policies for Managing Conflicts of Interest in connection with Investment Research: See the Companies Mentioned section for full company names The subject company (2208.HK, 035420.KS, 005930.KS, 8464.TW, 2330.TW, PJPq.L, TELIA.ST, TEL.OL, MVID.MM, MGNTq.L, 105560.KS, CARLb.CO, ULVR.L, ERST.VI, FUM1V.HE, 1109.HK, 0688.HK, 139480.KS, 2317.TW, 2318.HK, BABA.N, PRY.MI, RB.L, EXPN.L, SOON.S, OREP.PA, BBVA.MC, ASSAb.ST, EMR.N, HSBA.L, KSU.N, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, ATVI.OQ, DGE.L, BMRN.OQ, BVI.PA, FLR.N, PM.N, WPP.L, PFE.N, KOF.N, LPPF.JK, ADVANC.BK, DD.N, TECF.PA, ENEI.MI, JBLU.OQ, SGSN.S, SMGR.JK, PERP.PA, NOKIA.HE, 3034.TW, PHG.AS, WALMEX.MX, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, VOD.L, 0992.HK, STAN.L, SASY.PA, BA.N, KLAC.OQ, AIR.PA, DAL.N, INGR.N, FB.OQ, GOOGL.OQ, FOXT.L, AMZN.OQ, LBTYA.OQ, DOKA.S, SCHN.PA, FMEG.DE, GXIG.DE, CAPP.PA, MORr.AT, GYC.DE, LAZ.N, DWNG.DE, BIP.N, LUX.MI, ATCOa.ST, AZMT.MI, TEMN.S, SIEGn.DE, CCL.N, SGEF.PA, PSMGn.DE, ISP.MI, IG.MI, ALXN.OQ, BARN.S, ELIOR.PA, ELE.MC, MCD.N, EA.OQ, FREG.DE, TEF.MC, BNPP.PA, SRS.MI, ATOS.PA, ADEN.S, PCLN.OQ, BABr.AT, ICE.N, TUIT.L, RCOP.PA, IBE.MC, CAGR.PA, ROG.S, GILD.OQ, YNAP.MI, SOGN.PA, BEIG.DE, VNAn.DE, PRTP.PA, BNRGn.DE, ENI.MI, 2914.T, 8591.T, 6753.T, 5232.T, 7733.T, 6762.T, 5486.T, 8303.T, 6758.T, 4217.T, 8411.T, TAMO.BO, COAL.BO, SAPG.F, HCLT.BO, ADSGn.F, DB1Gn.F, DBKGn.F, DTEGn.F, HNKG_p.F, TEML.BO, 6501.T, 5333.T, 8604.T, 6752.T, 8306.T, 1928.T, 8316.T, 6502.T, 4502.T, DAST.PA) currently is, or was during the 12-month period preceding the date of distribution of this report, a client of Credit Suisse. Credit Suisse provided investment banking services to the subject company (035420.KS, 005930.KS, 8464.TW, PJPq.L, TEL.OL, 105560.KS, ULVR.L, ERST.VI, 2317.TW, 2318.HK, BABA.N, SOON.S, BBVA.MC, HSBA.L, KSU.N, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, ATVI.OQ, DGE.L, BVI.PA, PM.N, PFE.N, KOF.N, LPPF.JK, ADVANC.BK, DD.N, ENEI.MI, SMGR.JK, WALMEX.MX, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, 0992.HK, STAN.L, DAL.N, FB.OQ, GOOGL.OQ, FOXT.L, LBTYA.OQ, SCHN.PA, DWNG.DE, BIP.N, ISP.MI, IG.MI, BARN.S, ELE.MC, MCD.N, TEF.MC, BNPP.PA, ADEN.S, ICE.N, CAGR.PA, ROG.S, SOGN.PA, BEIG.DE, VNAn.DE, ENI.MI, 2914.T, 8411.T, HCLT.BO, DBKGn.F, DTEGn.F, HNKG_p.F, 8306.T) within the past 12 months. Credit Suisse provided non-investment banking services to the subject company (ERST.VI, BBVA.MC, HSBA.L, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, STAN.L, LAZ.N, AZMT.MI, SIEGn.DE, ISP.MI, BNPP.PA, CAGR.PA, GILD.OQ, SOGN.PA, 8303.T, 8411.T, DBKGn.F, 8604.T, 8306.T, 8316.T) within the past 12 months Credit Suisse has managed or co-managed a public offering of securities for the subject company (035420.KS, 8464.TW, TEL.OL, 105560.KS, BBVA.MC, HSBA.L, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, BVI.PA, PM.N, PFE.N, LPPF.JK, SMGR.JK, C.N, STAN.L, GOOGL.OQ, SCHN.PA, BARN.S, MCD.N, BNPP.PA, ADEN.S, CAGR.PA, SOGN.PA, VNAn.DE, 2914.T, 8411.T, DBKGn.F, DTEGn.F, 8306.T) within the past 12 months. Credit Suisse has received investment banking related compensation from the subject company (035420.KS, 005930.KS, 8464.TW, PJPq.L, TEL.OL, 105560.KS, ULVR.L, ERST.VI, 2317.TW, 2318.HK, BABA.N, SOON.S, BBVA.MC, HSBA.L, KSU.N, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, ATVI.OQ, DGE.L, BVI.PA, PM.N, PFE.N, KOF.N, LPPF.JK, ADVANC.BK, DD.N, ENEI.MI, SMGR.JK, WALMEX.MX, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, 0992.HK, STAN.L, DAL.N, FB.OQ, GOOGL.OQ, FOXT.L, LBTYA.OQ, SCHN.PA, DWNG.DE, BIP.N, ISP.MI, IG.MI, BARN.S, ELE.MC, MCD.N, TEF.MC, BNPP.PA, ADEN.S, ICE.N, CAGR.PA, ROG.S, SOGN.PA, BEIG.DE, VNAn.DE, ENI.MI, 2914.T, 8411.T, HCLT.BO, DBKGn.F, DTEGn.F, HNKG_p.F, 8306.T) within the past 12 months Global Equity Strategy 297 2 December 2016 Credit Suisse expects to receive or intends to seek investment banking related compensation from the subject company (2208.HK, 035420.KS, 005930.KS, 8464.TW, 2330.TW, PJPq.L, TELIA.ST, TEL.OL, MVID.MM, MGNTq.L, 105560.KS, 2886.TW, 3008.TW, CARLb.CO, 0175.HK, ULVR.L, ERST.VI, FUM1V.HE, 1109.HK, 0688.HK, 139480.KS, 2317.TW, 2318.HK, BABA.N, PRY.MI, RB.L, 033780.KS, EXPN.L, SOON.S, OREP.PA, BBVA.MC, ASSAb.ST, EMR.N, HSBA.L, KSU.N, SAN.MC, 2308.TW, CRDI.MI, PDNI.KL, ATVI.OQ, BOLSAA.MX, DGE.L, BMRN.OQ, BVI.PA, FLR.N, PM.N, WPP.L, 2474.TW, PFE.N, BATS.L, KOF.N, LPPF.JK, ADVANC.BK, DD.N, TECF.PA, ENEI.MI, JBLU.OQ, SGSN.S, SMGR.JK, PERP.PA, NOKIA.HE, 3034.TW, PHG.AS, WALMEX.MX, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, VOD.L, 0992.HK, STAN.L, SASY.PA, BA.N, KLAC.OQ, AIR.PA, DAL.N, INGR.N, FB.OQ, GOOGL.OQ, FOXT.L, AMZN.OQ, 7201.T, LBTYA.OQ, DOKA.S, FOUG.PA, SCHN.PA, FMEG.DE, GXIG.DE, CAPP.PA, MORr.AT, GYC.DE, LAZ.N, DWNG.DE, BIP.N, LUX.MI, ATCOa.ST, TEMN.S, SIEGn.DE, CCL.N, SGEF.PA, PSMGn.DE, ISP.MI, IG.MI, ALXN.OQ, BARN.S, ELIOR.PA, ELE.MC, MCD.N, EA.OQ, FREG.DE, TEF.MC, BNPP.PA, SRS.MI, ATOS.PA, ADEN.S, PCLN.OQ, BABr.AT, ICE.N, TUIT.L, OI.N, RCOP.PA, IBE.MC, CAGR.PA, ROG.S, GILD.OQ, YNAP.MI, SOGN.PA, BEIG.DE, VNAn.DE, PRTP.PA, BNRGn.DE, ENI.MI, 3401.T, 7988.T, 2914.T, 8591.T, 6753.T, 6268.T, 4507.T, 7733.T, 6762.T, 4185.T, 5486.T, 6367.T, 6981.T, 6273.T, 8303.T, 6594.T, 2229.T, 3407.T, 6758.T, 6971.T, 4217.T, 3405.T, 3402.T, 4114.T, 4183.T, 4188.T, 4503.T, 4523.T, 4922.T, 8411.T, TAMO.BO, COAL.BO, LICH.BO, SAPG.F, HCLT.BO, ADSGn.F, DB1Gn.F, CIPL.BO, DBKGn.F, DTEGn.F, HNKG_p.F, TEML.BO, 6501.T, 8604.T, 6752.T, 4063.T, 8306.T, 1928.T, 8316.T, 5406.T, 6502.T, 4502.T, DAST.PA) within the next 3 months. Credit Suisse has received compensation for products and services other than investment banking services from the subject company (ERST.VI, BBVA.MC, HSBA.L, SAN.MC, CRDI.MI, SWEDa.ST, C.N, CASP.PA, STAN.L, LAZ.N, AZMT.MI, SIEGn.DE, ISP.MI, BNPP.PA, CAGR.PA, GILD.OQ, SOGN.PA, 8303.T, 8411.T, DBKGn.F, 8604.T, 8306.T, 8316.T) within the past 12 months As of the date of this report, Credit Suisse makes a market in the following subject companies (ATVI.OQ). Credit Suisse may have interest in (PDNI.KL) Please visit https://credit-suisse.com/in/researchdisclosure for additional disclosures mandated vide Securities And Exchange Board of India (Research Analysts) Regulations, 2014 Credit Suisse may have interest in (TAMO.BO, COAL.BO, LICH.BO, HCLT.BO, CIPL.BO, TEML.BO) As of the end of the preceding month, Credit Suisse beneficially own 1% or more of a class of common equity securities of (2330.TW, 2886.TW, 2317.TW, 2318.HK, EXPN.L, HSBA.L, 2308.TW, CRDI.MI, 1476.TW, 2474.TW, SGSN.S, 1477.TW, 3034.TW, 0992.HK, STAN.L, DKSH.S, DOKA.S, TEMN.S, ISP.MI, FREG.DE, TEF.MC, ADEN.S, BNRGn.DE, 3401.T, 8303.T, DBKGn.F). As of the end of the preceding month, Credit Suisse beneficially own between 1-3% of a class of common equity securities of (SOON.S, BARN.S). Credit Suisse beneficially holds >0.5% long position of the total issued share capital of the subject company (035420.KS, 005930.KS, 105560.KS, 3008.TW, 139480.KS, 033780.KS, GOOGL.OQ, FREG.DE). Credit Suisse beneficially holds >0.5% short position of the total issued share capital of the subject company (ERST.VI, 7988.T, 6861.T, 6981.T, 6273.T, 6954.T). Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (SOON.S) . Credit Suisse AG is acting as an agent in relation to the company’s announced share buy-back program for the purpose of capital reduction Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (SGSN.S) . Credit Suisse AG is acting as an agent in relation to the company's announced share buy-back program. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (C.N) . Credit Suisse is acting as a financial advisor for Springleaf in relation to the acquisition of OneMain Financial from CitiFinancial Credit Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Citigroup. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (FB.OQ) . Credit Suisse has been named as a defendant in various putative shareholder class-action lawsuits relating to Facebook, Inc.’s May 2012 initial public offering. Credit Suisse’s practice is not to comment in research reports on pending litigations to which it is a party. Nothing in this report should be construed as an opinion on the merits or potential outcome of the lawsuits. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (LBTYA.OQ) . Credit Suisse International is acting as financial advisor to Liberty Global plc in relation to the announced acquisition of Multimedia Polska S.A. through its subsidiary UPC Poland. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (BIP.N) . Credit Suisse is advisor to Global Infrastructure Partners and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board in relation to the acquisition of an interest in the shares of Asciano Limited. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (ICE.N) . Credit Suisse acted as a principal advisor to Interactive Data Corporation in Intercontinental Exchange's acquisition of Interactive Data Corporation. Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (VNAn.DE) . Wulf Bernotat, a Senior Advisor of Credit Suisse, is a supervisory board member of Deutsche Annington Immobilien SE (now renamed Vonovia) Credit Suisse has a material conflict of interest with the subject company (DTEGn.F) . Detusche Telekom AG - Wulf Bernotat, a Senior Advisor of Credit Suisse, is a supervisory board member of Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE) As of the date of this report, an analyst involved in the preparation of this report has the following material conflict of interest with the subject company (PFE.N). As of the date of this report, an analyst involved in the preparation of this report, Vamil Divan, has following material conflicts of interest with the subject company. The analyst or a member of the analyst's household has a long position in the common stock Pfizer (PFE.N). A member of the analyst's household is an employee of Pfizer (PFE.N). Global Equity Strategy 298 2 December 2016 As of the date of this report, an analyst involved in the preparation of this report has the following material conflict of interest with the subject company (C.N). As of the date of this report, an analyst involved in the preparation of this report, Susan Katzke, has following material conflicts of interest with the subject company. The analyst or a member of the analyst's household has a long position in the common and preferred stock Citigroup (C). 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