Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Options imply US may struggle to win trade war with China - Janus Henderson Investors

Options imply US may struggle to win trade war with China

Ashwin Alankar, PhD

Ashwin Alankar, PhD

Head of Global Asset Allocation | Portfolio Manager


Myron Scholes, PhD

Myron Scholes, PhD

Chief Investment Strategist


24 May 2019

Chinese President Xi Jinping has more tools at his disposal to deal with the potential negative effects of trade tariffs than his American counterpart Donald Trump, say Myron Scholes and Ash Alankar of the Janus Henderson Adaptive Asset Allocation Team.

US President Donald Trump underestimated Chinese President Xi Jinping’s resolve when he raised tariffs on about $200 billion of imports from China to 25% from 10%, warning his counterpart not to respond in kind. That advice was ignored.

Trump’s action and China’s response – imposing duties on about $60 billion of US exports to take the total of affected products to $110 billion – led to a 2.41% slide in the S&P 500 Index on 13 May 2019, its biggest drop since 3 January. In combination with a drop in the yield on 10-year Treasuries to around their lowest since 2017, the clear conclusion is that investors are nervous about the impact that the latest tit-for-tat salvos in the long-running trade dispute will have on US economic growth.

Investors are right to be nervous. Even though tariffs hurt China more, due to its $379 billion trade surplus with the US in 2018, it does not necessarily mean Beijing is hamstrung. It may actually be able to ride out the storm longer than many think.

Options favour Chinese equities

Options prices, which provide important insights into shifting near-term market risks, suggest that Trump may have picked a fight he has a diminishing chance of winning. For the S&P 500 and other US equities, the ratio of the expected upside (as implied by call options prices) over the expected downside (gleaned from put prices) has declined sharply in recent days. As a result, US equities are among the least attractive of all developed market stocks and less attractive than both Shanghai Stock Exchange A-shares and Hong Kong Stock Exchange H-shares.

From the start of the month to 10 May, the upside to downside ratio declined by 5.5% to 0.98 and 0.96, respectively, for both A-shares and the Hang Seng (which includes a significant proportion of H-shares). Over the same period, the ratio for the S&P 500 slid 13% to 0.89. In other words, in recent weeks, options market prices have shifted and now indicate that market participants’ consensus view is that Chinese equities are a potentially better buy than US stocks.

This may be partly because China has several countermeasures available to help offset any damage from the trade battle which the US lacks. Moreover, if Xi is politically motivated not to accede to US demands, it could mean China may drag its feet in reaching a deal because the costs to defer might be quite low. Rather, the urgency may be on US officials, because Trump is laser focused on an immovable deadline: the 2020 US presidential election.

Fiscal, monetary weapons

China has the option to employ fiscal stimulus to help overcome the potential economic drag caused by trade tariffs. Bloomberg News reported on 16 May that China’s central and local authorities have $3.65 trillion in unspent budget – the equivalent of Germany’s entire annual economic output – to unleash on public projects if needed. A large spending campaign would be a short-term boost to the second-biggest economy. Such stimulus is virtually impossible in the US as a way to contain any short-term fallout from tariffs because, in addition to taking a long time to undertake such programmes, it is unlikely that the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives will sanction further spending on infrastructure projects, due to concerns that it would benefit Trump’s re-election bid.

It is a not dissimilar picture on the monetary policy front. As New York Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams said on 14 May, tariffs are inflationary, something that is exacerbated when the opposing currency, the yuan, does not trade freely, meaning it will not decline to fully adjust for the tariffs (although it has weakened since the trade dispute began). When combined with generationally low US unemployment, such inflationary risk limits the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) ability to offset the impact of duties through monetary easing. Despite persistent pressure from Trump to lower rates, the Fed recently reiterated that it will continue to take a patient, data-driven approach to assessing inflation risks.

China does not face such limitations: US exports to China rank third behind Japan and South Korea, meaning American imports have less influence on Chinese inflation than goods moving in the other direction. That gives the People’s Bank of China more scope to run with monetary stimulus in addition to fiscal spending.

Weaponising Treasuries

In his bid for a second term, Trump wants to be seen as the guy who brought China to book for long-standing unfair trade practices, such as intellectual property theft and the forced sharing of technology. He also needs the S&P 500 to continue to rise. Unfortunately, those two goals may be incompatible. By escalating the trade dispute, Trump looks tough to his base, but he also creates headwinds for US stocks.

China knows this. Beijing can prolong the trade battle, perhaps making it more likely that the US will eventually be the one making concessions. Under this scenario, patience is a virtue for China. In addition to its monetary and fiscal weapons, China may also want – or need – to lower its purchases and holdings of US Treasuries to finance its stimulus programme. That would be an additional blow to the US, hindering its ability to finance its debt and consumption.

The upside to a long battle with China is that it makes it increasingly unlikely that Trump will risk extending his trade spats to partners in other blocs, as he implied he might do recently via tweets threatening tariffs on European automakers. This is consistent with options signals showing greater upside potential than downside risk for equities in large export economies such as Europe and Japan.

So, while on the surface higher tariffs on more goods for a longer period may hurt China more than the US, in the short term, it should not be a surprise if the trade battle rages on or, over the long run, China ultimately outguns the US.

 

Reproduced here with permission and under license from Bloomberg. First published on 20/05/19.

Ashwin Alankar, PhD

Ashwin Alankar, PhD

Head of Global Asset Allocation | Portfolio Manager


Myron Scholes, PhD

Myron Scholes, PhD

Chief Investment Strategist


24 May 2019

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