From: "Ens, Amanda"
To: "Jeffrey E." <jeevacation@gmail.com>, Richard Kahn
Subject: Buy hedges for May expiry
Date: Thu, 16 Mar 2017 18:27:30 +0000
Attachments: Woo_ 13-Feb-2017.pdf; Woo_-_Year_Ahead_-_16-Nov-2016.pdf
Inline-Images: image001.jpg
David Woo (BAML head of FX, Rates and EM Strategy, very highly regarded across our client base) is back from meetings in
DC with senior policymakers.
Bottom line: sees market pullback over the next 6-8 weeks on near term policy disappointment and recommends
buying protection such as S&P puts — very cheap and market is priced for perfection right now.
May 15th expiry 100%/90% SPX put spread costs 1.7% (6:1gross max payout)
David Woo takeaways
• #1 focus these days is tax reform - if they don't get it done by Jan 2018, it won't happen at all, and then
Republicans would be out of a job when midterm elections come
• ACA has to be completed first — and it was a mistake to tackle this before tax reform. Obamacare difficult with
only 52 seats in the Senate but Ryan has gone too far to back away from ACA and refocus on tax reform as a
priority. McConnell's ACA target is mid-April and then they can start to focus on tax reform 2H April at the earliest.
• Position for a market pullback over the next 6-8 weeks on bad headlines, data rollover (consumer confidence)
as market focuses on ACA, low approval ratings and lack of progress with tax reform — vol and SPX puts are
cheap — buy early- or mid-May expiries
• Still long term bullish
• 95% tax reform still happens this year (2H17 or Jan 2018) because Republicans know it has to happen this year or
they are sitting ducks in 2018 and potentially unelectable for 6 years
• Predicts no progress on tax reform over the next 6 weeks and then Republicans rally together to get behind a
new plan and get it done (enter Woo's VAT proposal) — with market messy in the meantime
• Trump is obsessed with the stock market — when he sees it trade lower, he will act
• Regarding valuation adjustment tax (VAT) vs. border adjustment tax, Woo favors a 5% VAT over BAT
o Why there is a <10% chance current proposal of BAT will get passed
• Paul Ryan/Keven Brandy's proposal implies USD will appreciate +25%. Ryan is telling retailers this
will happen but this is completely unrealistic and has serious consequences. Why this cannot
happen:
• $20tn in non-USD assets owned by US households - $Stn hit on country's balance sheet
• EM has —$4tn in USD-denominated debt — increase of $1tn in EM debt and hurts US
investors ultimately
• —30% corporate profits are overseas ($400bn - so $1.00bn hit to EPS) — even exporters
get hit — counterproductive
• Commodity prices are in USD — hits purchasing power of rest of world in commodities —
would see oil in the mid-$30s — hits Russia, Brazil, even Exxon
• 60% of central bank reserves are in USD — this would go above 70% - would foreign CBs
want to hold this much when the US economy is 25% of global GDP? Yields would need to
increase
o BAT could get hung up with WTO (3-4 years.) Under BAT, wages are deductible (imported goods taxed as a
share of total value but domestic goods taxed on only profits) — trade partners like Canada, Japan would
take this to the WTO and we would wait 4 years for a verdict
o 5% VAT is WTO compliant and has several benefits
• VAT levels playing field for US imported vs exported goods (no longer see BMW's cheaper in the US
than Germany)
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• VAT is revenue neutral —would raise enough revenue to cut corporate tax rate to 15%, even 10%
possibly
• While consumption taxes like VAT can hit the poor (Democrats hate them), there is room for carve-
outs on groceries, etc. There will be pushback from Republicans who hate lack of visibility of VAT
as well. Only person who con pass this is Trump.
• Under BAT, the working class is arguably hit even worse than under VAT
o BAT would cause prices to go up at WMT and TGT (most of Trump's supporters
shop there)
o Retailers would raise prices but exporters won't lower prices
o 5% VAT will result in a smaller average rise in prices (not entirely passed through),
so less disruptive — would need USD to strengthen only 3-4%
• Where does this leave us? Only Trump can cut through the logjam.
• Woo prefers Europe over US right now. European equities are climbing a wall of worry
• Getting positive on energy
• Buy the dip in May ("'6 weeks). But own early-May or mid-May equity puts now.
• Other anecdotes
o Regardless of your political preference, he thinks we all need Trump to succeed or the economy will get
Bernie Sanders or worse.
o Tillerson vs Kerry — Woo thinks Tillerson is actually working and getting things done, as opposed to Kerry
who just cared about the Nobel.
• Thus sees zero risk of a trade war with China
• NAFTA is really more about China, not Mexico - and will ultimately benefit Mexico. Renegotiating
NAFTA will remove the ability for Chinese exports to come in tariff-free through Mexico.
o Mnuchin and Cohn really know what they're doing and Woo thinks they will get there on VAT / tax reform
• Cases for tax reform
1. US marginal tax rate = 35 % = highest among OECD = diminished returns to investment 9 solution = decrease
marginal tax rate
2. US taxed on global income vs. territorial like other major economies. Issue because 1) US companies hold
over $2t in capital overseas and 2) US companies acquiring smaller foreign companies to relocate
headquarters internationally 9 solution = shift to territorial tax system
3. US = only OECD country w/ no VAT which puts US produced goods at disadvantage. (VAT — producer of
exported goods get rebate while importers pay) solution = create VAT
• Solutions have nothing to do with stimulus, will allow companies to take risk, invest, grow, and criticalfor
global growth for next 10 yrs
And from earlier presentations/calls:
1. He mentioned on our March 1st tax reform call that the US is the only country amongst OECD without a VAT.
BMW's thus cost less in the US than in Germany, as foreign companies get a VAT rebate when they export. US
companies do not and they have to pay import tax. He views tax reform as very bullish for USD and yields (bearish
for bond prices) and thinks the market is underpricing this. His rationale for the bullish USD and higher yields
story is that tax reform encourages more money to come home to the US, adds US investment, evens the playing
field for US companies — all good for U5 growth longer term and bullish the dollar. He had wanted tax reform by
the August recess but then Senate would need to pass the bill by July, so they would need a bill to work with by
May for the House to pass it in May — which means they need a bill to work with by the end of March (running out
of time!) BAT is the only really controversial aspect holding back tax reform even though it's a small part (2
paragraphs of the 50-page Ryan-Brady plan) — still vague on details but he hoped they're learning from their
mistake of releasing a half-baked travel ban that imploded after a week.
2. From a panel discussion last week:
• Woo actually disagrees with some people's view that there is euphoria in the market. With real yields at
-30bp, the fixed income market is pricing in pessimism on Trump (and as I've mentioned, our colleagues in
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fixed income/FX and their clients have been quite a bit more bearish than those in equities.)
• Believes there is fear of stagflation in the market, while gold going through the roof on worries of inflation.
• However, if the US$ strengthens by 25%, it will be deflationary. Dangerous for EM countries loaded in US$
debt, esp in the wake of boarder adjustment tax reform talk.
• Tax reform is the only thing that matters.
o US companies have $2-2.5trn of dormant cash sitting on their B/S outside of the US to avoid paying tax.
o US is the only OECD country without a VAT tax.
o What needs to happen is: implement a VAT tax that is border adjusted, and fix corporate tax rate. This
will not only boost US economy, but will give a jolt to the world economy as well.
o Positive that there is a solution, reform momentum on tax is strong regardless of political affiliation.
There is a road out of the quagmire.
o Question is: why when most other issues are getting leaked out of the White House, information on tax
reform is not being leaked at all? Could it be a sign that the administration believes it is that
important, and trying not to mess up on execution? [Or you could argue that there is nothing to leak
at this point!'
o On timing of tax reform: It is crucial we get a blue print of tax reform in the next 2-3 weeks [now 1-2
weeks], because Congress would like to raise debt ceiling while discussing tax reform before summer
recess.
o July 29th is start of summer recess, which means need to pass by May, requiring the bill proposal to be
ready by March. Therefore, in the next few weeks, we need to see progress for an August deadline.
o On personal income tax, Trump and Obama are actually on the same page in terms of taxing the
wealthy.
• US banks have $100bn of excess capital in reserve: beyond what they need. Next big growth area for US
banks is commercial banking loans. Growth driver for US economy will be easy access to credit
• Ryan-Brady Tax Blueprint released in 2016 - not many have actually read it, but many of the corporate clients
seem better informed than hedge fund investors on this topic of late.
• Rates: Just two weeks ago, the market was putting a less than 20% chance of a March 15th rate hike, vs now,
it is priced in at an 86% chance. At this point, equities will sell off if no hike.
• Fed will not hike in May ahead of French elections.
3. David Woo's latest "Cause and Effect" is attached
4. David Woo's Top Rates and FX Trades for 2017 is also attached. Woo believes that Brexit and the US election have
signaled that the world has changed. These ground shifts have been brought on by a backlash to globalization,
increasingly viewed as the culprit for wage stagnation, growing disparity of income and wealth between the rich
and the poor, and the loss of national identity. For the year ahead, we recommend being bearish Sy US rates
(seeing higher yields), long USDJPY (weaker JPY) and short a basket of EM LatAm long bonds (Mexico, Brazil and
Colombia). But in the near term, we urge caution with the reflation trade. Short l0y US real rates (seeing higher
yields) offers the best risk-reward after recent moves.
Regards,
Amanda
Amanda Ens
Director
Bank of America Merrill Lynch
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated
One Bryant Park. 5th Floor, New York. NY 10036
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