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Are We Heading Into a "Debt Supernova"?

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Financial luminaries such as Ray Dalio, Kenneth Rogoff, Bill Gross, Kyle Bass, BCA ResearchJohn Mauldin and Martin Armstrong think that we’re at the end of a debt supercycle.

Former director of the Office of Management and Budget said we’re facing a “debt supernova“.

Former Fed chief Alan Greenspan said recently

Debt, deficits and entitlement programs are all coming to a head in a few months, all over the world.

The European chief executive of Goldman Sachs Asset Management warns:

There is too much debt and this represents a risk to economies.

***

The demographics in most major economies – including the US, in Europe and Japan – are a major issue – and present us with the question of how we are going to pay down the huge debt burden. With life expectancy increasing rapidly, we no longer have the young, working populations required to sustain a debt-driven economic model in the same way as we’ve managed to do in the past.

The world’s most prestigious financial institution, the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) – known as the “Central Banks’ Central Bank” –  writes:

We are not seeing isolated tremors, but the release of pressure that has gradually accumulated over the years along major fault lines …

 

The sum of non-financial private and government debt has not fallen
since the crisis ….  Total debt in advanced
economies has continued to expand (by 36 percentage points of GDP since 2007),
with some exceptions mainly reflecting the recent decline in private sector debt in a
limited number of countries. Meanwhile, total debt in emerging market economies
has risen even more (by 50 percentage points).

 

***

 

Aggregate private debt has barely stabilised, let alone started to correct downwards, even in the corporate sector. And government debt continues to rise steadily, in a manner reminiscent of Japan’s trend deterioration in the 1990s.

BIS notes that this is a recipe for disaster:

Early warning indicators of banking stress pointed to risks arising from strong credit
growth …. Credit-to-GDP gaps – the deviation of private sector credit from
its long-term trend – were well above 10% in Brazil and China. This ratio was also
above 10% for a number of [other] countries … including Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand …. In the past, two thirds of all readings above this threshold were followed by serious banking strains in the subsequent three years.

It’s not just conservatives who think that debt is too high.  Liberals think so as well.

And see this.


The Fed's Long Awaited Decision Day Arrives, And Chinese Stocks Wipe Out In The Last 15 Minutes

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The long awaited day is finally here by which we, of course, mean the day when nobody has any idea what the Fed will do, the Fed included.

Putting today in perspective, there have been just about 700 rate cuts globally in the 3,367 days since the last Fed rate hike on June 29, 2006, while central banks have bought $15 trillion in assets, and vast portions of the world are now in negative interest rate territory.

As we noted yesterday, while the fed funds market implies a 32% probability of a rate hike one day ahead of the decision (which compares to 70% in 1994, 76% in 1999 and 92% in 2004) investors are even more torn, with 57% of respondents in an RBS survey saying the Fed should hike today, but only 42% expecting the Fed will announce a rate hike at 2pm. Of the 113 estimates on Bloomberg, 59 are calling for the Fed to stay put and 51 are calling for a 25bp hike, with the remaining 3 estimates calling for a 12.5bp move.

“Experts” and “pundits” haven’t reached a consensus either: Goldman Sachs, the World Bank, IMF, and people like Larry Summers are imploring the Fed to retain ZIRP for a little while longer while individuals such as Axel Weber (former Bundesbank head and current UBS chairman), Haruhiko Kuroda, the G-20, and a bunch of EM central bankers all want to see liftoff occur.

The Fed itself is not sure what to do: according to many a hawkish move would be not to hike but layer the statement with many caveats how strong the economy is (even as the Fed again chickens out) while the dovish thing would be a "one and done" rate hike with the Fed potentially unleashing a recession-inducing curve inversion.

Then there is the problem with the Fed's rate hike machinery: the Reverse Repo-IOER corridor has never actually been tried in practice, only in very specific "in vitro" settings: at such a turbulent time will the Fed risk crushing its only possible and very much theoretical rate hike mechanism, and perhaps as importantly, with China undergoing currency devaluation and a massive capital outflow, will the Fed risk blowing up the entire Emerging Market complex (even more)?

Finally, unlike any other rate hike in the past, there are the algos to contend with: in the 2004-2006 rate hike cycle HFTs barely existed; this time the Fed's "reaction function" has to take into consideration momentum ignition, spoofing, quote churning and countless other headline-driven market reactions.

So all eyes on the Fed's website at 2pm, if not perhaps for Goldman's - the firm that runs that Fed has spoken, and it see at least four more weeks of ZIRP, if not a zero-bound winter stretching well into 2016.

Should the Fed hike, the biggest question is not what stocks or the short-end of the Treasury curve do, but what the reaction of the long-bond is. After the usual initial kneejerk reaction, if the long-end concurs with the Fed’s view of economic recovery, then banks,
cyclicals and value stocks will receive a bid. Asset allocation toward “strong dollar” & “Fed tightening plays” will harden, with the exception that value will likely outperform growth. If the long-end rallies, signaling a policy mistake, then cash, volatility, gold &
defensive growth will be the way to go. Also, a quiet exit stage left may be prudent at this moment.

One thing that is certain is that while the Fed fiddles, China's market manipulators continue to burn in ever more spectacular fashion, and while yesterday the SHCOMP entertained Chinese market watchers with a tremendous surge in the last hour of trading, today it was the opposite, when the Shanghai Composite Index fell 2.1% to close at sessions low at 3,086.06, sinking in final 15 minutes after gaining as much as 1.7% on light volume. 

"The market continues to be rather volatile with investors becoming bearish at the slightest indication," says Gerry Alfonso, Shenwan Hongyuan director. "There seems to be significant expectations for some type of policy support." Well, and the market gets them... every other day. Then on days like yesterday when it doesn't, it panicks.

"The market is in recovering trend, but without any significant increase in trading volume to support that, greater volatility is inevitable,” Northeast Securities Shanghai-based analyst Shen Zhengyang says by phone, adding that "investors may be selling to lock in profits; there’s also uncertainty over Fed decision."

So in addition to US stocks, Yellen has China to worry about to. Oh, and the rest of the world too.

But going back to the overnight market, aside from China's last minute swoon, Asian equity markets traded higher, tracking gains on Wall Street where energy outperformed in the wake of the latest DoE release. ASX 200 (+0.9%) was bolstered by strength in commodities, while Nikkei 225 (+1.4%) was led by a rebound in Telecoms. JGBs saw tepid trade with volumes ahead of the Fed's decision, while the BoJ were also in the market for JPY 780bln in government debt.

The key event during European hours has been Altice announcing it is to buy CableVision for around USD 17.7bIn to see Altice (+3.3%) among the best performers in Europe. Price action elsewhere in equity markets has been relatively rangebound (Euro Stoxx: -0.2%), with no firm sentiment ahead of the aforementioned Fed rate decision. Similarly, Bunds reside in modest negative territory weighed upon by supply out of both France and Spain, while T-Notes are modestly higher to pare some of the losses seen yesterday after T-notes fell in sympathy with the gains seen in US equities.

In FX, the notable event of the European morning came in the form of the SNB rate decision, with the central bank keeping rates on hold as expected, with CHF strengthening on the back of the release after less dovish than expected comments from the central bank. The SNB noted that CHF has depreciated although consider it still to be overvalued, while also reiterating that they are to remain active in FX markets and downgrading their 2015 CPI outlook by 20bps to 1.20%. Elsewhere, FX markets have seen relatively light newsflow, with UK retail sales (Inc Auto Fuel Y/Y 3.70% vs. Exp. 3.80%) failing to see a sustained reaction and the USD-index residing in negative territory (-0.2%) and as such bolstering both GBP and EUR ahead of the key risk event of the week, the highly anticipated Fed rate decision at 2pm Eastern.

A look at commodities sees the energy complex with mild profit taking after yesterday's DoE inventories showed a build (-2104K vs. Exp. 2000K), with Brent and WTI futures both lower heading into the NYMEX pit open and the former failing to hold gains above the USD 50.00 handle. In terms of metals news, copper has seen strength overnight following reports that a magnitude 8.3 earthquake struck Chile, with the rest of the metals complex seeing relatively choppy price action.

On today's calendar, in addition to the most anticipated FOMC meeting ever until th enext one, we also get US housing starts, building permits, and weekly initial claims data as well as the Philadelphia Fed business outlook.

Market Wrap

  • US futures are down 4-5 points (down 25bp)
  • Asia: Japan Nikkei +1.43%, Japan TOPIX +1.31%, China -2.10%, Hong Kong -0.51%, KOSPI
  • 05%, Taiwan +1.35%, Australia +0.94%
  • EuroStoxx 50 +0.08%, FTSE -0.23%, DAX +0.16%, CAC +0.06%, Italy -0.16%, Spain +0.96%
  • USD (DXY) down 0.07%, EUR up 0.22%, GBP up 0.11%, JPY down 0.24%, AUD down 0.36%
  • Gold down 0.15% to $1,117.80
  • Silver down 0.34% to $14.84
  • Copper down 0.65% to $243.60
  • WTI Crude down 1.44% to $46.47
  • Brent Crude down 1.21% to $49.15
  • Natural Gas up 0.34% to $2.67
  • Corn down 0.52% to $3.84/bu
  • Wheat down 0.10% to $4.88/bu
  • Treasuries 2s yields are down ~0.8bps at 0.803%, 10yr yields are down ~2.1bps at 2.273% and 30yr yields are down ~2.5bps at 3.058%
  • Sov CDS Japan +0.33bps, France -0.70bps, Germany +0.11bps, Ireland +0.46bps, Italy - 0.72bps, Spain -1.25bps
  • Japan 10yr yields 0.355%, down ~0.5 bps on the day
  • France 10yr yields 1.152%, down ~1.1bps on the day
  • Italy 10yr yields 1.897%, down ~1.8bps on the day
  • Spain 10yr yields 2.108%, down ~1.3bps on the day
  • Germany 10yr yields 0.765%, down ~0.7bps on the day

Bulletin Headline Summary from Bloomberg and RanSquawk:

  • SNB keeping rates on hold as expected, with CHF strengthening on the back of the release after less dovish than expected comments from the central bank
  • European equities are relatively rangebound, while stock specific news has seen Altice announce it is to buy CableVision for around USD 17.7bIn
  • Today's highlights include the highly anticipated FOMC rate decision as well as US housing starts, building permits, weekly jobs data, Philadelphia Fed business outlook and EIA NatGas storage change
  • Treasuries post modest gains, curves little changed before Fed statement and updated SEP at 2pm, Yellen presser at 2:30pm as economists/analysts remain split on prospect of 1st rate increase in more than 9 years.
  • China’s stocks sank in the last 30 minutes of trading in thin volumes as traders tested the limits of state support amid the biggest price swings since 1997
  • China reduced its stake in U.S. government debt in July by about $82.7b, TICS data showed; calculation includes securities held in Belgium, which Nomura says is home to some Chinese accounts
  • Bridgewater’s Ray Dalio said in an interview with Bloomberg that he’s worried about the next economic slowdown because monetary policy will be less effective than in the past
  • The Swiss National Bank kept interest rates at record lows and signaled the recent depreciation of the franc hasn’t diminished its willingness to intervene in currency markets if needed
  • As Greeks prepare for their third vote in less than a year, election fatigue has set in, with voters are bracing for more economic pain no matter who’s elected
  • A glut of crude may keep oil prices low for the next 15 years, according to Goldman, with a less than 50% change prices will drop to $20/bbl; firm’s long-term forecast is $50/bbl
  • Sovereign 10Y bond yields mixed. Asian stocks higher with the exception of China and Hong Kong, European stocks mixed, U.S. equity-index futures decline. Crude oil, gold and copper fall

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Current Account Balance, 2Q, est. -$111.5b (prior -$113.3b)
  • 8:30am: Housing Starts, Aug., est. 1.160m (prior 1.206m)
    • Housing Starts m/m, Aug., est. -3.8% (prior 0.2%)
    • Building Permits, Aug., est. 1.159m (prior 1.119m, revised 1.130m)
    • Building Permits m/m, Aug., est. 2.5% (prior -16.3%, revised -15.5%)
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, Sept. 12, est. 275k (prior 275k)
    • Continuing Claims, Sept. 5, est. 2.258m (prior 2.260m)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, Sept. 13 (prior 41.4)
    • Bloomberg Economic Expectations, Sept. (prior 46)
  • 10:00am: Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, Sept., est. 5.9 (prior 8.3)
  • 2:00pm: FOMC Rate Decision: Upper Bound, est. 0.25% (prior 0.25%); Lower Bound, est. 0% (prior 0%)
  • 2:30pm: Fed’s Yellen holds news conference

As usual, DB concludes the overnight wrap

A total of 3,367 days have passed since the Fed last raised rates. In roughly 12 hours we’ll know one way or another whether the Fed has decided to end this streak and go against the market and (slight) majority of economist expectations in commencing liftoff, or instead stand pat. Yesterday’s inflation data did little to help fuel support that a move is warranted and so we head into the final trading session before the meeting with a hike priced at 32%. That’s unchanged versus this time yesterday and we’ve been sitting in a small 4% range now for a couple weeks, but that’s well below the peak of 54% back in early August prior to the China devaluation and slightly above the YTD low of 21% back in July. As we’d noted earlier in the week it’s a much more evenly weighted split if you look across economist expectations. Of the 113 estimates on Bloomberg, 59 are calling for the Fed to stay put and 51 are calling for a 25bp hike, with the remaining 3 estimates calling for a 12.5bp move. We still maintain our long-standing call that a hike is unlikely this year, but for now it’ll be all eyes on the FOMC and Yellen tonight.

On this, DB’s Joe Lavorgna, while of the view that the Fed will hold off from raising tonight, is of the belief that Yellen will emphasize in the press conference shortly after that depending on near-term economic and financial market developments, a rate hike remains very much a possibility at the October or December meetings. Meanwhile, DB’s Alan Ruskin makes an interesting point on this too in that the Fed could feel that they could signal something about October closer to the October meeting instead, assuming they stand pat now which would likely be seen as a ‘dovish hold’. While Alan thinks a ‘hawkish hold’ is a more appropriate strong market consensus view leading into the meeting (holding but making October live), the Fed could instead choose to hold firm, not pre-signal October and wait on the data and probably more importantly markets.

Ahead of the outcome and fresh off the back of a decent day for global equities yesterday, bourses in Asia this morning are off to strong starts. The Nikkei (+1.15%) and Topix (+0.91%) have ignored any concerns following the one-notch downgrade of Japan’s sovereign rating by S&P yesterday to A+. The better sentiment is perhaps being helped by weaker than expected export numbers this morning (+3.1% yoy vs. +4.3% expected), down materially from +7.6% in July and which may help support expectations of a response from the BoJ. Elsewhere, in China the Shanghai Comp (+0.51%) and CSI 300 (+0.34%) have recovered from a soft opening start into the midday break, while the Hang Seng (+0.77%) and ASX (+1.32%) are also up. The Kospi (-0.09%) is the only index to see a decline this morning. S&P 500 futures are more or less flat and 10y Treasury yields are down 1.3bps. Credit indices in Asia are around a basis point tighter.

Back to markets yesterday. Indeed, it was a pretty supportive day all round for equity markets with the S&P 500 closing +0.87%, Stoxx 600 +1.53% and other DM markets up similar amounts. Those moves got a kick start from the big rally into the close in China (where the Shanghai Comp finished up nearly 5%).

This was followed in the European session by the news that SAB Miller had been approached for a takeover by AB InBev, helping SAB’s share price to rally nearly 20%. Then later in the day, some supportive US crude inventory data helped fuel a surge in the Oil complex which eventually saw WTI and Brent close up +5.74% and +4.19% respectively. That saw energy stocks lead gains, while the rest of the commodity complex also had a relatively decent day with broad BCOM commodity index up 1% and snapping a three-day losing streak.

The USD had initially traded with some early optimism, although that was quickly pared following the release of yesterday’s CPI data with the Dollar index eventually finishing -0.20%. While the data was pretty much as expected, importantly the release did little to advance the case for a hike today. Headline CPI printed at -0.1% mom as expected in August, leaving the annualized rate on hold at +0.2% yoy. The core reading was soft at +0.1% mom, or just 0.074% unrounded, which saw the annualized rate hold steady at +1.8% yoy (vs. +1.9% expected). The three-month annualized rate however did nudge down to 1.6%, a decline of two-tenths from last month. DB’s Joe Lavorgna also noted that along with the currently low inflation, 5-year forward inflation expectations are comfortably below 2% with the latest reading at 1.44% (down substantially from 1.99% when policymakers last met in July). Elsewhere yesterday, there was some better news on the housing front where the September NAHB housing market index rose 1pt to 62 (vs. 61 expected). Meanwhile, the latest TIC data confirmed a decent decline in Treasury holdings in Mainland China, down $30.4bn in July. 10y Treasury yields eventually nudged up 0.7bps to close at 2.295% while 2y yields (+0.8bps) extended their recent high after closing at 0.813% yesterday.

Data wise in Europe, much of the focus was again on the UK where there were some positive signs in the latest employment and wage growth reports. The July unemployment rate dropped one-tenth to 5.5% (vs. 5.6% expected), while the quarterly employment change of +42k was well above the +18k expected. Average weekly earnings rose +2.9% (vs. +2.5% expected) in the three months to July which was up three-tenths from June. That helped spark a strong day for Sterling which closed +0.97% stronger against the Dollar and +0.79% against the Euro. Comments from BoE Governor Carney also helped support some of that strength after he reiterated that should economic expansion be above trend, labour costs and wage growth continue to rise and core inflation accelerate, then the decision comes into much sharper relief around the turn of the year and as a result ‘it may be appropriate to begin to withdraw stimulus at that point’.

Wrapping up the rest of the data yesterday, Euro area CPI saw a slight downward revision to the final August print at both the headline (down 0.1pp to +0.1% yoy) and core (down 0.1pp to +0.9% yoy). European sovereign bond yields edged slightly higher during the session with DM markets up 2-3bps generally.

Onto the day ahead now. This morning’s focus will again be on the UK where we get August retail sales data. Prior to the main event tonight with the conclusion of the FOMC meeting, datawise in the US we’re due to get more housing data in housing starts and building permits while initial jobless claims and the Philly Fed business outlook are also expected. The focus will however be on the Fed and subsequent Yellen press conference.

The Misguided Paperati & Bifurcated 'Gold' Markets

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Submitted by Jesse via Jesse's Cafe Americain,

 

 
There is a short excerpt of a video interview with hedge fund titan Ray Dalio at the Council on Foreign Relations below.

I think it is priceless.   Ray lays out his thoughts on wealth and hedging with gold to the chuckles and sniggers of the pampered ruling class  in a very clear and straightforward manner.

There is also another video interview in which Dalio discusses his views with the smirking chimps from CNBC.   It is almost a scene out of Huxley’s Brave New World,  with Dalio as some kind of monetary savage trying to explain reality to those who have been incubated in an artificial currency regime of King Dollar and know nothing else.

*  *  *

Here is why I think that this is important.

The gold market in particular seems to have bifurcated, or split into two: one market for largely paper speculation and high leverage, and another for the purchase and distribution of actual physical bullion.

Is this a problem?

Yes it is.  Because the attitude towards gold among the status quo in the West has become rigidly dogmatic, supported by years of lazy thinking and a determined the campaign of ridicule and propaganda to try and extend the unsustainable.

You can see it emerge every so often in sites and media outlets and analysts who can be considered as creatures of the establishment, to use an older phrase, for whatever reason they may have.   Some of the economist manservants of the ruling class talk about gold with the same sneering manner that a Victorian aristocrat might have discussed the ‘rights’ of the peoples of India or of China.

And I do not necessarily think they are bad motives, in the dishonest sense at least.  Some may actually believe what they say, although for the most part I don’t think that the fortunate care what is good or what is true, if it serves their own special interests.  This is how they have been taught to be, how life is.

If you have been brought up, bred, and bombarded with certain points of view for most of your life, it is no surprise that you may reflexively tend to adhere to and promote those views without regard to any intervening facts, past or present.  You have been programmed by your education and, dare I say it, class.  I see it all the time.

And it can sometimes lead to odd divergences in reasoning.   This is why certain Founding Fathers found it perfectly acceptable to declare that ‘all men are created equal’ and also own slaves.  Or to seek to curtail the rights of the non-landed and women in terms of ruling and voting.   They are running on what they knew, without proper and rigorous examination.

It is hard for someone who has come from outside that system to understand how they can rationalize such a glaring discrepancy.  But if you put yourself in their place, and honestly examine some of your own habitual thinking, it is not so hard.

Hypocrisy, maybe.  And maybe it is just the unexamined prejudices of the fortunate.   Sometimes even what seems to be an obvious truth can only be seen clearly through tears.  And we have quite a surplus of the exceptionally fortunate these days, who have been pampered and privileged by an order which care very well for them, but that seems to be passing.

A big change is what we are heading for.   We have a financial system that still holds a vast amount of gold in the central banks, including the US and Europe according to their reports at least.  And more importantly, it is on a mad increase in the East with the central banks and the people buying in ever increasing amounts.   Those who serve the power circles of New York, Washington, and London do not want to hear about it, anymore than Winston Churchill had a regard for the thoughts of Mr. Gandhi.

 

And despite the huge change in the global supply and demand for bullion, we have a holdover, a significant price discovery mechanism in New York and London that is increasingly diverging from the physical realities of supply and demand.

There is going to be a reconciliation of attitudes and realities at some point.  And it may be quite impressive.  The longer that the status quo and their courtiers try to maintain their modern aristocracy, like vast tectonic plates unable to move but building greater and greater pressure, the more dramatic that change may be when it finally comes.

And alas, so many of our politicians are servants, although well paid and well taken, of the moneyed interests.  So they will do nothing that would perturb their true lords and masters, if they wish to also become fabulously rich and rise within the existing system.

The thought of the harm that this careless disregard for justice and right reason is doing to a very large group of relative bystanders and innocents, whose proper role is to be protected by those who have been gifted with greater talents accompanied by oaths of office, is almost disheartening.

 

Weekend Reading: Fed Rate Failure

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Submitted by Lance Roberts via STA Wealth Management,

Over the last year, I have written extensively about how despite the Fed's best intentions to raise rates, the real economic backdrop would likely impose a major impediment in doing so. However, I also suggested that with the Fed now caught in a liquidity trap, they would potentially hike rates to avoid being caught at zero during the next economic downturn. To wit:

"Currently, there is little evidence that is supportive of higher overnight lending rates. In fact, the current environment continues to support the idea of a 'liquidity trap' that I began discussing in 2013.

 

'...a situation described in Keynesian economics in which injections of cash into the private banking system by a central bank fail to lower interest rates and hence fail to stimulate economic growth. A liquidity trap is caused when people hoard cash because they expect an adverse event such as deflation, insufficient aggregate demand, or war.

 

Signature characteristics of a liquidity trap are short-term interest rates that are near zero and fluctuations in the monetary base that fail to translate into fluctuations in general price levels.'

 

Please review the chart on monetary velocity above. This is a major issue for the Federal Reserve, which remains firmly committed to a line of monetary policies that have had little effect on the real economy.

 

While the Federal Reserve clearly should not raise rates in the current environment, there is a possibility that they will anyway - 'data be damned.'(Which is ironic for a 'data dependent Fed.')

 

They understand that economic cycles do not last forever, and that we are closer to the next recession than not. While raising rates would likely accelerate a potential recession and a significant market correction, from the Fed's perspective if just might be the 'lesser of two evils.' Being caught at the 'zero bound' at the onset of a recession leaves few options for the Federal Reserve to stabilize an economic decline. The problem is that it already might be too late."

The current surge in deflationary pressures is not just due to the recent fall in oil prices, but rather a global epidemic of slowing economic growth. While Janet Yellen addressed this "disinflationary" wave during her post-meeting press conference, the Fed still maintains the illusion of confidence that economic growth will return shortly.

Unfortunately, this has been the Fed's "Unicorn" since 2011 as annual hopes of economic recovery have failed to materialize.  

FOMC-Forecasts-GDP-031915

"The problem for the Federal Reserve is that they are still looking for that elusive economic recovery to take hold after more than five years. Unfortunately for the Fed, economic recovery cycles do not last forever, and the clock is ticking."

This weekend’s reading list is dedicated to the views surrounding the latest Fed announcement. What are they really saying? What impact does that potentially have for the markets? And what will they do if a recession rears its head? 


THE LIST

1) Federal Reserve And Economy Stands Pat by Steve Forbes via Forbes

“THE FEDERAL RESERVE'S announcement that it will continue to suppress interest rates is going to harm the economy. We won't be breaking out of the rut we're in, which is bad news for us and the rest of the world.

 

The Federal Reserve thinks its zero-interest-rate policy stimulates the economy, but it's actually doing the opposite. It's the equivalent of bleeding an anemic patient.

 

In a nutshell, if a product can't be properly priced, you get less of it, and you get distortions in how that market operates. Alas, our central bank remains obtusely ignorant of this basic truth.

Read Also: Fed Gives Economic Growth A Chance by Editorial Board via NY Times

 

2) Central Banks Missing What They Don't Know by Jeffrey Snider via Real Clear Markets

“It was no surprise the FOMC failed to find its own exit this week given that a few days earlier Deutsche Bank announced yet another restructuring including massive layoffs. It doesn't appear as if any of those job cuts will be applied to US operations, which seems to render this a quite curious correlation with domestic monetary policy. If you like, you can substitute Citigroup's 5% decline in FICC "revenue" this quarter, or Jefferies Group 50% collapse in fixed income losses (tied to the corporate bond bubble, no less). It's all one and the same.

 

On the surface, the relationship between banking and the Fed seems to be just that straightforward. In very general terms, interest rate targeting is supposed to reduce the "cost" of funds for banks so that they can "earn" a greater spread to the assets they hold or will hold. If only it were as easy as economists believe.”

Read Also: Janet Yellen Did The Right Thing by John Cassidy via The New Yorker

 

3) Negative Rates Coming To The U.S.? by Tyler Durden via ZeroHedge

“Of course, this should come as no surprise to our readers: just in January we wrote "Get Ready For Negative Interest Rates In The US", but for the Fed to admit this possibility just when it was widely expected to at least signal a rebound in the economy with the tiniest of rate hikes, or at worst a hawkish statement, was truly a shock.

 

This is what she [Janet Yellen] said:

 

'Let me be clear that negative interest rates was not something that we considered very seriously at all today. It was not one of our main policy options.'

 

'I don't expect that we're going to be in a path of providing additional accommodation. But if the outlook were to change in a way that most of my colleagues and I do not expect, and we found ourselves with a weak economy that needed additional stimulus, we would look at all of our available tools. And that would be something that we would evaluate in that kind of context.'

FOMC-negative

Read/Watch Also: Ray Dalio Worried About Downturn by Katherine Burton via BloombergBusiness

 

4) Fed Delay's Interest Rate Lift-Off by Jon Hilsenrath via WSJ

"The decision left uncertain for a while longer just when the Fed would raise its benchmark rate, which has been near zero since December 2008. Most of the policy makers at the meeting, 13 of 17, indicated they still expect to move this year, but that was down from the 15 who held that view in June. The central bank has two more scheduled policy meetings this year, in late October and mid-December.

 

One reason for the shifting outlook: Officials have become a bit less optimistic about the economy's long-run growth potential. They projected the economy will grow at a rate between 1.8% and 2.2% per year in the long-run, down from their June estimate of growth of 2.0% to 2.3% in the long-run. A more lumbering economy has less capacity to bear much higher rates."

Read Also: Fed To Economy: Party On, Not So Excellent by Brian Doherty via Reason.com

 

5) A Roadmap For Stocks After No Rate Hike by Michael Kahn via Barron's

"Given the volatility levels today, it is important to step back to look at the bigger picture. After all, the major trend and structure of the market provides the framework within which the short-term condition operates.

 

For example, if the bull market is still intact, then the spin on the Fed news will be positive even if on the surface it seems it is not. And if this is a bear market, then the spin will most likely be bad. Stocks should fall further.

 

While the bull market seems to be over, thanks to a rather convincing breakdown of the major trendline and 2015 trading range, I do not yet see enough evidence to conclude this is a major bear market (see Chart 1). I need one more price breakdown to get there."

Kahn-Market-091815

Read Also: Fed Makes Same Mistakes As It Did In 1927 by Martin Armstrong via Armstrong Economics


Other Reading


“Nothing is more suicidal than a rational investment policy in an irrational world.”– John Maynard Keynes

Have a great weekend.

Don't Show This Chart To Your Hedge Fund Manager

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Make no mistake, the 2 and 20 crowd are having a rough go of it lately. 

As we reminded readers in the wake of Nassim Taleb’s massive $1.1 billion payday on August 24, hedge funds are supposed to “hedge” - i.e. guard against all manner of black swans, tail risks, six sigma events, and other things that statistically speaking aren’t supposed to happen but in today’s broken markets occur with alarming frequency - but instead they merely “ride the beta train with the most leverage possible, hoping that the Fed will prevent any events that actually need hedging, and blow up in a fiery crash any time the market tumbles.” 

For those who need a refresher, here’s how some of the more prominent funds had performed through August 21:

 

Indeed, even the zen master himself, Ray Dalio, isn't immune as the $80 billion "All Weather" fund recently found itself caught in the rain with no umbrella after an utter breakdown in the historical relationships between asset classes (volatilities and correlations) that are used to construct optimal "risk-parity" led to what Dalio called a "lousy" August that saw the fund down more than 4%. 

The bottom line, as Goldman succinctly put it last month, is that "hedge funds are on pace to lag the market index for the seventh straight year in 2015," suggesting that you'd be far better off paying 0 and 0 for SPY and calling it a day than you would paying 2 and 20 especially considering you're relying on the Fed put either way.

For anyone still not convinced, we present the following chart from Citi's Matt King which sums up all of the above in just about the most straightforward, idiot proof manner imaginable by simply comparing hedge fund returns to a 50/50 mix of stocks and HY credit. Put simply, if you had bought SPY and JNK four years ago for a gross expense ratio of just 0.10% and 0.40%, respectively, not only would you would have saved yourself quite a bit of money, you'd have better performance as well.

Summing up...

"What Does The Fed Know That We Don't" - Bridgewater's Ray Dalio Answers

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In the aftermath of last week's FOMC "dovish hold" disappointment, it is not only the Fed that has seen its credibility crushed; so have plain-vanilla tenured economists and Wall Street strategists. Recall that it was on August 13, one month before last week's FOMC meeting, when 82% of economists said the Fed would hike in September.

Oops.

Post-mortem: more than four out of five economisseds were, as always, wrong. Hardly surprising: after all, when voodoo art pretends to be science, this is precisely the outcome one gets.

But while there is no surprise in everyone being wrong (because quite simply nobody realized that the only thing is what Goldman wants), one question remains: "what does the Fed know that we don't."

Of course, one has to clarify what "we" means, because Zero Hedge readers know precisely what the Fed knows - it knows that a recession is coming if not already here, as we won't tire of showing week after week.

Here are some examples of what the Fed (if less than 20% of economists) "knows":

1) Business Inventories-to-Sales are at recesssion-inducing levels...

 

1a) Sidenote 1 - Wholesale Inventories relative to sales have NEVER been higher

 

1b) Sidenote 2 - here is why that is a problem

2) Industrial Production is rolling over into recession territory

 

2a) Sidenote - as Empire Fed confirmed this morning for August - inventories are collapsing (and along with that Q3 GDP)

 

3) Retail Sales is not supportive of anything but a looming recession...

 

And finally,

4) The last 6 times Auto Assemblies collapsed at this rate, the US was in recession...

 

* * *

But for those who are unable to form an independent though and would rather ignore reality unwinding before their eyes, instead demanding an "authoritative" voice to crush their cognitive bias, here is Ray Dalio, head of the world's biggest hedge fund Bridgewater, who explains what the recent 4% drop of his All Weather risk-parity fund means.

This is what he said: "different risk parity managers structure their portfolios somewhat differently to achieve balance, so we can't comment on them all. But we can show you how this wealth effect has worked by showing you how our diversified portfolio mix (which simply represents a well-diversified portfolio of assets) would have led economic growth, which is shown in the below two charts, one of which goes back to 1950 and the other which goes back to 1915. These charts show how the excess returns (the returns of the portfolio over the return of the cash interest rate) led economic growth relative to potential (i.e., estimated economic capacity)... If a well-diversified mix of assets underperforms cash, there will be a negative wealth effect and negative incentives to invest in economic activity, which will be bad for the economy. The Federal Reserve and other central banks would be well-served to pay attention to this relationship to make sure that this doesn't happen for long and/or happen too severely. The chart speaks for itself.

The chart in question:

And just in case it "does not speak for itself", here is Ice Farm Capital's Michael Green explaining what is says: "The recent weak performance of All Weather would suggest global growth six months from now will be running nearly 2% below its already reduced potential."

In other words, while the rest of the levered-beta 2 and 20 chasers formerly known as "hedge funds"recently accused risk parity of blowing up their August returns (September is not shaping up much better) the biggest risk-parity fund in the world also found a scapegoat: the global economy, which according to Dalio, is the reason for All Weather's dramatic August slump.

But while blaming the amorphous economy is a rather weak argument, Dalio already has a far more tangible scapegoat ready: the Fed itself, who as the Bridgewater letter cautions "would be well-served to pay attention" to the hedge fund's sudden P&L drop. Because as Dalio goes, so goes the economy.

For now, however, the message is far simpler: absent far more easing, what the charts above signal is that the US economy is about to slam head-on into an economic recession... or rather depression, one which some would add, is only inevitable due to some 40 years of Fed easing starting with Greenspan's great moderation, and continuing through three sequential credit-fuelled bubbles which merely delayed the inevitable "mean reversion" moment

"US Profit Growth Has Never Been This Weak Outside Of A Recession"

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On Sunday, in addition to numerous charts we have shown previously we used the latest Ray Dalio "in defense of risk parity" letter, we showed "what does Fed know that we don't", which was a simple one-word answer: recession. Specifically, Dalio looked at the performance of the All Weather fund which is highly correlated with 6 month forward world growth...

... and concluded that the recent weak performance would suggest global growth six months from now will be running nearly 2% below its already reduced potential. In other words a global economic contraction, something Citi recently made its base case for 2016.

However, while we have been chronicling the US economy's slide into contraction for the better part of the past year mostly on the back of the collapse in the US energy sector, what is odd is that the Fed only now admitted that not all is well in the land of central planning.

In fact, as SocGen's Andrew Lapthorne writes this morning, "that the US Federal Reserve is only now declaring itself worried about global economic growth is perhaps the only real surprise of last week. After all, global earnings momentum (the ratio of analyst upgrades to estimate changes) has plummeted from a respectable 47% in May this year to a recessionary 32% last week. Even once the weak Energy sector is excluded, global EPS momentum has still dropped to 35%, also from around 47% in May."

But while in our previous post on this topic we focused extensively on what the economy itself is signalling, here is another reminder that the real life blood of the US economy, corporate earnings, are about as bad as they were... in 2009. In fact as SocGen confirms,  "US profits growth has never been this weak outside of a recession."

From SocGen:

The chart below shows the annual change in 12-month forward S&P 500 EPS expectations. This series is based on forward consensus expectations and therefore excludes many of the write-downs and exceptional items that are currently pushing down actual reported profits. It is more akin to operational profits and has never been this negative outside of a recession!

And with this latest chart, in addition to the ones we showed previously, everyone should know exactly the same as what the Fed does, which however isn't saying much. Because what the Fed knows and what the Fed does, are two entirely unrelated things, with any Fed "action" quite simply a function of what Goldman Sachs tells the Fed to do.

Bull Retest Or Bear Failure?

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Submitted by Lance Roberts via STA Wealth Management,

Several weeks ago I suggested that we had seen the "Mark of the Bear" stating:

"The Bulls have remained firmly in charge of the markets as the reach for returns exceeded the grasp of the underlying risk. It now seems that has changed. For the first time since 2007, as we see initial markings of a potential bear market cycle."

I followed up that analysis by suggesting the markets would likely experience a "sucker's rally" which is extremely normal following declines in the market. These short-term reflexive rallies generally suck inexperienced investors into the market to "buy the dip," while more experienced investors use the rally to protect capital against further declines. As I stated then:

"One thing is for certain, if the market does muster a rally strong enough in the week's ahead to retest the previous bullish trend moving average, it could very well be a 'sucker's rally.' Any failure will likely mark the beginning of a new bear market cycle. And, just as before, there will be no warnings, no announcements by the media, or acknowledgment by Wall Street analysts. However, the consequences will likely be just as severe."

I began addressing at the end of August that the market collapse had gotten extremely oversold. As such, that set up the probability for a reflex rally back to previous support levels. 

The chart below is the orginal from the August 25th report mentioned above. It shows the oversold condition. The blue dashed line shows the potential short-term reflexive rally that would likely occur.

SP500-MarketUpdate-082515

Here is that same chart updated through yesterday's close.

SP500-MarketUpdate-092915

As you will notice, the reflexive rally, and subsequent failure, have tracked the original predictions very closely up to the point. 

With the market once again very oversold on a short-term basis, it is likely that the markets could manage a weak rally attempt over the next few days. The good news is that such an attempt will provide individuals another opportunity to reduce portfolio risk accordingly.

The Test Of The Bull

 The bad news is that the rally will likely fail due to the same factors I discussed last Tuesday: 

"The failure at overhead resistance, combined with a continued weak technical backdrop of momentum and relative strength, suggests that a retest of lows in the weeks ahead is a likely probability.

 

As shown in the chart below, the deviation from the long-term bullish trend line was greater than at the previous two bull market peaks. In both previous cases, a break of the market below the shorter-term moving average (red dashed line) subsequently led to a least a test of the longer-term bullish trend line. However, a "test" would assume that the current cyclical bull market is still intact."

SP500-MarketUpdate-092915-2

"If the market fails to hold support at the long-term bullish trend, currently at 1860ish, such a failure will dictate a fully completed transition into a more destructive cyclical bear market."

Is QE 4 Coming?

While the mainstream analysis remains quite bullish on the underpinnings of the market, the ongoing deterioration of market internals and fundamentals suggests something more pervasive. The chart below shows the previous post-financial crisis corrections following the end of Central Bank interventions.

SP500-MarketUpdate-092915-3

As you will note, each correction was contained within a Fibonacci correction band of either 38.2% or 61.8%. It was at these correction points that the Federal Reserve responded with some form of monetary intervention or support. 

With the markets currently at an initial 38.2% correction from the low that marked the beginning of QE 3, the question is whether the Federal Reserve will once again intervene with another monetary liquidity program? This was a point recently made by Bridgewater's Ray Dalio (excerpt via ZeroHedge.)

"That's where we find ourselves now—i.e., interest rates around the world are at or near 0%, spreads are relatively narrow (because asset prices have been pushed up) and debt levels are high. As a result, the ability of central banks to ease is limited, at a time when the risks are more on the downside than the upside and most people have a dangerous long bias. Said differently, the risks of the world being at or near the end of its long-term debt cycle are significant.

 

While, in our opinion, the Fed has over-emphasized the importance of the "cyclical" (i.e., the short-term debt/business cycle) and underweighted the importance of the "secular" (i.e., the long-term debt/supercycle), they will react to what happens. Our risk is that they could be so committed to their highly advertised tightening path that it will be difficult for them to change to a significantly easier path if that should be required.

 

We believe the next big Fed move will be to ease (Via QE) rather than to tighten."

As I have addressed so many times in the past, the Fed is now becoming well aware of the dangers of being caught in a "liquidity trap." As Dalio correctly points out, the end of the debt cycle has significant long-term implications to both the global economy that is overly indebted in dollars and holding large leveraged long positions.

The long-term implications of a liquidity trap, and the end of a debt cycle, are significant. While many believe that the "financial crisis" was a "one-off" event that is now long past us, the reality may be it was just the beginning. While Central Banks globally have intervened to rescue the financial system by injecting trillions into it, they failed to use that support to restructure the debt problem that lay beneath. Now, more than six years later, the global economy is once again potentially on the brink of a recession and there have been few improvements in the structural underpinnings. 

The question is what will they do next time?

For investors, the markets have been sending a fairly clear warning signal. Market topping processes take time to develop fully and, unfortunately, are only fully recognized in hindsight. The problem in waiting for "recognition" is that the destruction of capital is already far larger than previously expected. This leads to a series of "psychological" responses that exacerbate the problem such as "hoping to get back to even." 

The last point is critically important. In the world of investing, "hope" has never been an investment strategy that one could profit by. It likely won't be successful this time either.


Who Will Be Blamed?

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It was one week ago, when we read with great curiosity (and commented on) a research report drafted by none other than the NY Fed called "The Liquidity Mirage", which was not only a confirmation of our article from July explaining "How High Frequency Traders Broke, And Manipulated, The Treasury Market On October 15, 2014", but a validation of all our work since we first wrote our inaugural post on the dangers from HFT on that long ago April 10, 2009: "The Incredibly Shrinking Market Liquidity, Or The Upcoming Black Swan Of Black Swans" (for those who have not read it, it may be an interesting read: over 6 years ago, when virtually nobody had head of HFT, it predicted just how the market would break under the weight of the fake liquidity provided by these very "liquidity provider" as it did for the first, and certainly not last, time on August 24).

None of the authors' conclusions were surprising: we have been repeating for years that what HFTs do is create a broken market topology at the micro level, where the noise of an infinite of HFTs algos becomes the signal in itself, and whenever a major countertrend move happens, the market simply shuts down as these "New Normal" liquidity providers are simply finely-tuned momentum creation and frontrunning machines, and most certainly not market makers.

What was curious is that the NY Fed went one step further than the Joint Staff Report released in July of this year, which stopped just short of blaming HFTs for the October 2014 Treasury flash crash. The NY Fed report did not have such qualms and openly accused HFTs of generating the conditions that were necessary and sufficient for the October 15 2014 flash crash (and every other one both before and since following the implementation of Reg NMS). From the report:

This situation, which we term the liquidity mirage, arises because market participants respond not only to news about fundamentals but also market activity itself. This can lead to order placement and execution in one market affecting liquidity provision across related markets almost instantly. The modern market structure therefore implicitly involves a trade-off between increased price efficiency and heightened uncertainty about the overall available liquidity in the market."

Our take:

Goodbye to "fat fingers" being blamed for flash crashes, and welcome to the Heisenberg uncertainty market: you can have your 1 millicent bid/ask spreads... but you can't have any real market depth at the same time.

Which then leads to the logical and final question: why do this? Why admit (not only that we have been right all along), but that HFTs - far from a benign influence on the market - are a latent threat one which may lead at any given moment, to a market crash so profound the only recourse is "circuit breaking" the entire market?

Our conclusion from a week ago is what we have said for the past 6 years: HFTs have become the perfectly willing and eager scapegoat, one which will be blamed for everything that is wrong when the next crash finally comes.

In other words, from market predator HFTs are now one millisecond - and market crash - away from become regulatory prey. Why? Simple: so these culprit which have broken the market at the micro level deflect all attention from those responsible for breaking the market at the macro level: the central banks. This was our conclusion:

In the aftermath of this report, one can be sure that the days of current market structure are numbered, and that the scene is now set to throw the book at the HFTs. The only thing that is missing is the appropriate catalyst. And what is better than an orchestrated, or ad hoc, market crash, one which exonerates the real culprit for the stock market bubble - the Federal Reserve - and unleashes populist anger by millions of investors who lose their net worth in an HFT instant, aimed squarely at the HFTs, and the 20-year-old math PhDs behind them?

A few days ago, in his latest article "Invisible Threads: Matrix Edition", Epsilon Theory's Ben Hunt confirmed just that. To wit:

... you can bet that whenever an earthquake like this happens, especially when it’s triggered by two invisible tectonic plates like put gamma and call gamma and then cascades through arcane geologies like options expiration dates and ETF pricing software, both the media and self-interested parties will begin a mad rush to find someone or something a tad bit more obvious to blame. This has to be presented in soundbite fashion, and there’s no need for a rifle when a shotgun will make more noise and scatters over more potential villains. So you end up getting every investment process that uses a computer – from high frequency trading to risk parity allocations to derivative hedges – all lumped together in one big shotgun blast.…you use computers and math, so you must be part of the problem.

Hunt may disagree with this blunt assessment, and he may revolt at the "prejudice" against the algos, but what he is missing is the far bigger question: why? Why is the "computer trading" crowd is being primed for the biggest fall ever. The answer is simple - someone has to be held accountable.

Whether it is a scapegoat why Leon Cooperman crashed in August and blamed Ray Dalio's "risk parity" trade, or why Ray Dalio indirectly blamed the Fed when "smart beta" suddenly became very dumb, or why the Fed, which will have seen trillions in fake paper wealth evaporate overnight, will need to deflect the anger of a few billion furious investors worldwide out for blood, someone will need to take the fall.

That someone will be those who use "computers and math" to trade, or - as we have shown it repeatedly in the past for "soundbite" reasons - look like this:

And best of all, you can't arrest a vacuum tube, or lynch an algo: the market can wipe itself out... and nobody will go to prison.

Which means that the only question is when will this scapegoating kangaroo court of diversion begin; answering that question will also answer when the next, and most epic yet, market crash will take place.

This Is What Happened The Last Time The Fed Hiked While The U.S. Was In Recession

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Back on June 17, Bank of America started its 66-day countdown to the moment it was convinced the Fed would hike rates, September 17, 2015. We, correctly, said that "we disagree entirely" with BofA's conclusion that the Fed would hike rates, and sure enough, it did not after the Chinese August devaluation unleashed the ETFlash crash, the EM debt rout, a surge in the VIX and a correction in the S&P500, which crushed the Fed's carefully laid rate-hike plans.

But while we disagreed with BofA's countdown timing, we agreed with something its strategist Michael Hartnett said, namely that "gradual or otherwise, the first interest rate hike by the Fed since June 2006 marks a major inflection point for financial markets."

BofA then laid out several key factors why "this time is indeed different" when evaluating the global economy's receptiveness to a rate hike:

  • Central banks now own over $22 trillion of financial assets, a figure that exceeds the annual GDP of US & Japan
  • Central banks have cut interest rates more than 600 times since Lehman, a rate cut once every three 3 trading days
  • Central bank financial repression created over $6 trillion of negatively-yielding global government bonds
  • 45% of all government bonds in the world currently yield <1% (that’s $17.4 trillion of bond issues outstanding)
  • US corporate high grade bond issuance as a % of GDP has doubled to almost 30% since the introduction of ZIRP
  • US small cap 5-year rolling returns hit 30-year highs (28%) in recent quarters
  • The US equity bull market is now in the 3rd longest ever
  • 83% of global equity markets are currently supported by zero rate policies

However, to the Fed none of these matter: only the price action of the S&P500 does, which as everyone knows, is trading just shy of its all time highs so "all must be well."

Which is why Janet Yellen and the Fed are now intent to hike rates, steamrolling over the Fed's "data dependency" and committing the latest error, this time of communication, with the rate hike coming at a time of non-existent headline CPI inflation, of GDP which in Q4 will be 1.4% according to the Atlanta Fed, and when the US manufacturing sector officially entered into contraction for the first time since the crisis. The reason for this is the following statement from her just delivered speech laying out "The Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy":

... recent monetary policy decisions have reflected our recognition that, with the federal funds rate near zero, we can respond more readily to upside surprises to inflation, economic growth, and employment than to downside shocks.

Translated this means that the Fed is desperate to hike rates just so it can lower them when the recession is too entrenched to be ignored any longer by the NBER.

But therein lies the rub: as so many pundits have already noted, the Fed has woefully missed its window to hike rates, and is instead preparing to do so just as one half of the US economy is in recession. In other words, the Fed has waited too long and now the economy is already on its downward glideslope.

So what happens if the Fed does tighten conditions as the economy is slowing?

Conveniently, we have a great historical primer of what happened the last time the Fed hiked at a time when it misread the US economy, which was also at or below stall speed, and the Fed incorrectly assumed it was growing.

We are talking of course, about the infamous RRR-hike of 1936-1937, which took place smack in the middle of the Great Recession.

Here is what happened then, as we described previously in June.

[No episode is more comparable to what is about to happen] than what happened in the US in 1937, smack in the middle of the Great Depression. This is the only time in US history which is analogous to what the Fed will attempt to do, and not only because short rates collapsed to zero between 1929-36 but because the Fed’s balance sheet jumped from 5% to 20% of GDP to offset the Great Depression.

Just like now.

Then, briefly, the economy started to improve superficially, just like now, and as a result the Fed tightened in a series of three steps between Aug’36 & May’37, doubling reserve requirements from $3bn to $6bn, causing 3-month rates to jump from 0.1% in Dec’36 to 0.7% in April’37.

Here is a detailed narrative of precisely what happened from a recent Bridgewater note:

The first tightening in August 1936 did not hurt stock prices or the economy, as is typical.

 

The tightening of monetary policy was intensified by currency devaluations by France and Switzerland, which chose not to move in lock-step with the US tightening. The demand for dollars increased. By late 1936, the President and other policy makers became increasingly concerned by gold inflows (which allowed faster money and credit growth).

 

The economy remained strong going into early 1937. The stock market was still rising, industrial production remained strong, and inflation had ticked up to around 5%. The second tightening came in March of 1937 and the third one came in May. While neither the Fed nor the Treasury anticipated that the increase in required reserves combined with the sterilization program would push rates higher, the tighter money and reduced liquidity led to a sell-off in bonds, a rise in the short rate, and a sell-off in stocks. Following the second increase in reserves in March 1937, both the short-term rate and the bond yield spiked.

 

Stocks also fell that month nearly 10%. They bottomed a year later, in March of 1938, declining more than 50%!

Or, as Bank of America summarizes it: "The Fed exit strategy completely failed as the money supply immediately contracted; Fed tightening in H1’37 was followed in H2’37 by a severe recession and a 49% collapse in the Dow Jones."

As can be seen on the above, in 1938, the stock market began to recover some. However, despite the easing stocks didn't fully regain their 1937 highs until the end of the war nearly a decade later.

It needed a world war for that.

But wait, the Fed hiked only to ease? That's right: in response to the second increase in reserves that March, Treasury Secretary Morgenthau was furious and argued that the Fed should offset the "panic" through open market operations to make net purchases of bonds. Also known now as QE. He ordered the Treasury into the market to purchase bonds itself.

Fed Chairman Eccles pushed back on Morgenthau urging him to balance the budget and raise tax rates to begin to retire debt.

How quaint: once upon a time the US actually had an independent Fed, not working on behalf of the banks, and pushing back on pressure to monetize debt and raise stock prices.

So is the imminent rate hike which guarantees the ghost of 1937 is about to wake up and lead to stock losses which could make the Lehman crash seem like a dress rehearsal just the precursor to QE4, as happened nearly 80 years ago? We don't know, but neither does the manager of the world's biggest hedge fund. This is what Ray Dalio says ahead of the upcoming rate hike:

... in our opinion, inadequate attention is being paid to the risks of a downturn in which central bankers' abilities to ease are significantly impaired. Please understand that we are not sure of anything but, for the reasons explained, we do not want to have any concentrated bets, especially at this time.

What we do know that if the S&P is cut in half following the Fed's upcoming "policy error" the Fed will launch not just QE4, but 5, 6 and so on, together with NIRP, resulting in every other central bank doing the same as global currency war goes nuclear, and the race to the final currency collapse enters its final lap.

Presenting Saxo Bank's 10 "Outrageous Predictions" For 2016

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On Tuesday, we brought you Bloomberg’s top 10 “worst case scenarios” for 2016. The list, compiled by polling "dozens of former and current diplomats, geopolitical strategists, security consultants, and economists" included everything from devastating cyber attacks by Iranian and Russian hackers to a military coup in China. 

They even threw in a Trump victory in the national elections for good measure.

Bloomberg’s “pessimist’s guide” to 2016 was just the latest in a number of outlook pieces by pundits, journalists and sellside macro strategists who are all engaged in a black swan spotting expedition. We've laid out a number of risk factors both for capital markets and on the geopolitical front that are worth paying attention to as we head into the new year. Here are a few notable flashpoints:

  • soaring junk bond redemptions; 
  • rising investment grade (and high yield) yields pressuring corporate buybacks; 
  • record corporate leverage and sliding cash flows; 
  • Chinese devaluation back with a vengeance; 
  • capital outflows from EM accelerating as dollar strength returns; 
  • corporate profits and revenues in recession; 
  • CEOs most pessimistic since 2012, 
  • the Fed's first rate hike in 9 years expected to soak up as much as $800 billion in excess liquidity
  • Syria’s seemingly intractable civil war
  • the still simmering conflict in Ukraine
  • Brazil’s political crisis which threatens to keep one of the world’s most important emerging markets mired in a stagflationary nightmare
  • a migrant crisis that threatens to tear Europe apart at the seams
  • the resurgence of the far left and far right as voters lose faith in the political status quo

For their part, Saxo Bank has taken a unique approach by presenting ten "outrageous" and in some cases counterintuitive predictions that could play out over the course of the next 12 months. 

*  *  *

From Saxo Bank

Intro by Steen Jakobsen 

The irony in this year’s batch of outrageous predictions is that some of them are “outrageous” merely because they run counter to overwhelming market consensus. In fact, many would not look particularly outrageous at all in more “normal” times – if there even is such a thing!

In other words, it has become outrageous to suggest that emerging markets will outperform, that the Russian rouble will be the best-performing currency of 2016, and that the credit market will collapse under the weight of yet more issuance. We have been stuck in a zero-bound, forward-guidance lowering state for so long that there exists a whole generation of traders who have never seen a rate hike from the Federal Reserve. 

As we close out 2015, it has been nearly 12 years (early 2004) since the US economy was seen as recovering strongly enough to warrant starting a series of hikes - and that series ended in early 2006, nearly ten years ago.

Mind you, I have been trading for over 25 years and I have only seen three Fed rate hike cycles in my entire career: 1994, 1998 and 2004.

We are truly entering a new paradigm for many market participants and the new reality is that the marginal cost of money will rise, and thus so will volatility and uncertainty.

All of this is embedded in this year’s Outrageous Predictions.

EURUSD direction? It’s 1.23…

Many years ago back in 1989 I wrote one of my first research reports and I made the call that USDDEM should trade all the way down to 1.23. It was an outrageous call and colleagues from back then still remind me when we meet (the dollar to the deutsche mark was trading in the high 1.60s at the time). Now it’s again time to call for 1.23 but this time in EURUSD. In four of the last five Fed rate hike cycles, the US dollar has peaked around the first hike indicating that the direction of the US dollar is inversely correlated to the Fed rate cycle. A higher EURUSD will not only make the European Central Bank lose face but also catch the consensus out as most investors and traders believe parity between the EUR and USD is only a matter of time.

Russia’s rouble rises 20% by end-2016

By late 2015, the combination of collapsing oil prices and financial sanctions against Russia over the situation in Ukraine saw a rough ride for Russian assets and its currency, the rouble. But in 2016, oil prices surge again as demand growth in the US and especially China outstrip overly pessimistic estimates, just as US oil production growth is slowing and even reversing on a financial debacle linked to shale oil companies. This is a boon to Russia’s energy dependent economy. Meanwhile, in 2016, the US Federal Reserve allows the US economy to run a little bit hot as the strong USD sees the Fed raising rates at perhaps an inappropriately slow pace. This represents a bonanza for emerging markets and their currencies, in particular Russia as commodity bears are left out in the cold in 2016. 

Silicon Valley’s unicorns brought back down to earth

The first half of 2015 had the lowest number of venture capital deals in 25 years as VC firms rushed to plough money into so-called unicorns – startups valued above $1 billion each. This rush to capture everything that might have blockbuster potential inflated the bubble in unlisted US tech firms. 2016 will smell a little like 2000 in Silicon Valley with more startups delaying monetisation and tangible business models in exchange for adding users and trying to achieve critical mass. Remember the dotcom gospel of clicks and page views instead of focusing on revenue and profits? 

Olympics to turbo-charge EM’s Brazil-led recovery 

The poster child for emerging market weakness is Brazil with its recession, collapsing consumer confidence, skyrocketing unemployment and plunging currency. USDBRL has nearly doubled so far this year while confidence is at a decade low and unemployment is at a five-year high. Oh, and lest we forget; yearly GDP growth has been negative for five straight quarters – and this count could turn double-digit before it is over. A poster child, maybe, but Brazil is hardly alone in struggling to come to terms with the end of the commodity super-cycle, which has morphed into a full-scale oil price meltdown, a weakening China-led global manufacturing cycle and a run-up in dollar-denominated debt. Add uncertainty about the Federal Reserve’s first rate hike in more than a decade to the mix and the picture is bleak. Against this disturbing backdrop we look for the host of the 2016 Olympics to lead EM out of the current malaise with equities outperforming. Leading indicators are stabilising in China and climbing in India, and recent policy easing furthermore helps the outlook for the former. 

Democrats retain presidency, retake Congress in 2016 landslide

In 2016, the Republican primaries descend into chaos after the party’s voters narrowly manage to nominate another weak, centrist candidate after the long self-destructive process of the nomination process. Donald Trump goes down in flames, taking the Republican Party with him and leaving its voters demoralised with their weak options in the presidential and congressional elections. In Congress, the Republican Party goes from strength to dramatic weakness as the rifts from its civil war on its future direction play out over the next four years. This leads to a landslide victory for the Democratic Party as the Democrats successfully execute a successful get-outthe-vote campaign. That campaign gains traction among the US’ now largest generation: the younger, more diverse, more liberal, overeducated and underemployed Millennials, who come out to vote in droves in favour of the Democratic ticket as they have been frustrated by the political stalemate and weak job prospects of the last eight years. 

Opec turmoil triggers brief return to $100/b oil

The oil market remains under pressure as we enter 2016 with oversupply and the imminent increase in exports from Iran adding some additional downside pressure. During the first quarter, Brent crude reaches and breaches the 2009 recession low as US tight oil producers continue to show resilience. The selling is driven by capitulation from investors in exchange-traded products while hedge funds build a new record short position in the futures market. Opec’s crude oil basket price drops to the lowest since 2009 and the unease among weaker as well as wealthier members of the cartel over the supply-and-rule strategy continues to grow as the economic pain spreads across the 12-member group. The long awaited sign of an accelerated slowdown in non-Opec production finally begins to flicker. Suitably buoyed, Opec catches the market on the hop with a downward adjustment in output.That move breaks the downward price spiral and price mounts a quick recovery with investors scrambling to re-enter the market to the long side. 

Silver breaks golden shackles to rally 33% 

Semi-precious metal silver’s price direction is driven by movements in both gold and industrial metals. Its third consecutive annual decline in 2015 was driven by worries about demand (industrials) and tightening US monetary policy (gold). However, towards the end of 2015, mining companies began responding to falling prices by announcing production cutbacks of key metals such as copper and zinc. Silver is often mined as a by-product from the extraction of other metals including copper, zinc and gold with primary production only accounting for a third. With copper and zinc both hitting six-year lows at the end of 2015 as the outlook for Chinese demand deteriorated, the only way to support prices was to cut production even more. During 2016, this will add to production cuts already in place from major producers such as Glencore and BHP Billiton. While production of silver from these reductions slows economic activity and demand in key markets such as China, both Europe and the US strengthen, helping to boost confidence in silver. 

Aggressive Fed sees meltdown in global corporate bonds

When Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio told markets last August that the next big Fed monetary policy move would be to ease and not to tighten, it was a clear message that a tightening path will not be common sense as long as strong secular disinflationary forces are at play. More importantly, he argued that ending the long-term debt cycle with a series of rate hikes would inevitably cause turmoil, because ever-declining interest rates have encouraged endless borrowing and leverage, growing the cycle into a monstrous supercycle. In other words: the bubble is simply too big to burst. But late in 2016 the Fed will come to believe that there is no way out, and growing evidence of overheating markets – affecting labour, housing, equities and bonds – will propel Fed chief Janet Yellen down a hawkish path with a series of aggressive rate hikes.Although expected for years, this action triggers huge selloffs in all major bond markets as global bond yields start to rise, quickly magnifying the risk premium investors demand on riskier assets, when the risk free rate is not zero anymore. All of this is expected and normal in a rate hike scenario. But what happens next is so unusual and scary that it’s eerily reminiscent of the bond market apocalypse after the Lehman collapse. As the portions of bank and broker balance sheets allotted to bond trading and market making have almost disappeared, one of the vital parts of a functioning market is simply not there.

El Niño sparks inflation surge

According to many climate forecasters, 2015 and 2016 will likely be the hottest two years on record, adding to the growing number of droughts around the world. The volatile weather we’ve experienced in recent years has also increased the number of floods and other devastating weather extremes. On top of this, next year’s El Niño will be the strongest on record and will cause moisture deficits in many areas of southeast Asia and droughts in Australia. Global agricultural production will be affected negatively. Lower yields across agricultural commodities will curb supply at a time when demand is still increasing on the back of global economic expansion. The outcome will be a 40% surge in the Bloomberg Agriculture Spot Index, adding some much-needed inflationary pressure.

Inequality has last laugh on luxury

Luxury is the reflection of an unequal society. The conspicuous consumption of luxury goods and services is a way of demonstrating membership of the elite. The elite is ready to pay extra just for the privilege of it and to differentiate themselves from the rest of society. It is what we call the snob effect. The money spent on luxury cars, jewellery and clothing items could have been used for better infrastructure, education or for poverty alleviation. In that sense, luxury is a net economic loss. Since the global financial crisis, poverty has increased in Europe because of the economic downturn and austerity measures. The International Labour Organization estimates that 123 million people are at risk of poverty in the EU, which represents a quarter of the European population. This total has risen from 116 million in 2008. Faced with rising inequality and unemployment of over 10%, Europe is considering the introduction of a basic universal income to ensure that all citizens, regardless of whether they work, can afford to meet their basic needs. In a more egalitarian society where other values are promoted, demand for luxury goods decrease sharply.

See the full presentation here

2015 Year In Review - Scenic Vistas From Mount Stupid

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Submitted by David Collum via PeakProsperity.com,

Background

“To the intelligent man or woman, life appears infinitely mysterious, but the stupid have an answer for everything.”

~Edward Abbey

I am penning my seventh “Year in Review.” These summaries began exclusively for myself, evolved into a sort of holiday cheer for a couple hundred e-quaintances with whom I had been affiliating since my earliest days as a market bear in the late ’90s, and metastasized into the Tower of Babble - longer than a Ken Burns miniseries -summarizing the human follies that capture my attention each year Jim Rickards kindly called it “a perfect combination of Mel Brooks, Erwin Schrodinger & Howard Beale.” I wade through the year’s most extreme lunacies as well as a few special topics while trying to find the overarching themes. I love conspiracy theories and detest detractors who belittle those trying to sort out fact from fiction in a propaganda-rich world. My sources are eclectic, but I give a huge hat tip to sites like Peak Prosperity and Zerohedge. If half of what they say is right, the world is a very weird place.

“Ninety percent of everything you read or hear is crap.”

~Sturgeon’s Law

“The amount of time you waste online doubles every 18 months.”

~Collum’s Law

In an e-mail in early April, I told a friend and Master of the Universe that I wasn’t grasping the year’s theme. He assured me the year was young, but I had a deeper angst. I eventually realized that I had ascended Mount Stupid (Figure 1) and may be heading down The Far Side. Whether we are talking Greece, the Middle East, monetary policy, bonds, domestic politics, or sex changes, I am baffled by it all. Maybe life in the third millennium is like a sci-fi movie: it doesn’t have to make any sense. So my qualifications to comment on geopolitics are not in dispute: I am an organic chemist, a clueless academic one at that. Nothing should inspire you to read on. But—a big Kim Kardashian butt—I have somehow managed to capture a readership.

Figure 1. Mount Stupid

Occasionally I get a few selfies with prominent players, airtime on Russia Today, and some ink in The Guardian and Wall Street Journal.1 All help keep the ruse going. As this review is being uploaded to Peak Prosperity and soon thereafter to Zerohedge (hopefully). I offer just a little more elevator résumé disguised as a survey of personal events. My favorite interview this year was with a colleague-and sponsored by Cornell.8 I did podcasts with the likes of James Kunstler,9 Chris Martenson,10 Ed Rankin,11 and Jason Burack.12 Four BTFD.tv episodes chaperoned by Bob Lehman included a solo shot,13 two with Eric Hunsader of Nanex,14,15 and the last as a threesome with Eric and Joe Saluzzi,16 founder of Themis Trading and author of Broken Markets. A gig at the Stansberry Investment Conference in Vegas landed me some free meals and a shared stage with some actual famous guys. (Porter Stansberry is a self-proclaimed huckster and, in my opinion, brilliant.) The title of my talk was “College Life: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.” It came out a week before Yale and Mizzou went batshit and mercifully hid behind a paywall while outrageously uneventful ideas triggered mayhem across college campuses. I even found my nose stuck in the tail end of the Tim Hunt scandal, which I talk about herein. Last, I'm taking a bow for using a single Tweet to nip some corporate misbehavior in the bud.17 Ya gotta tweet ‘em right.

I draw inspiration from a Bloomberg headline:18

And with that, I am obliged to offer the following:

**Trigger Warning**

We face an epidemic of wusses, which is sanitized for “pussies,” which some believe finds its origins at pusillanimous. This document is laced with childish tripe, microaggressions, horsemeat, rat hairs, human DNA, central bankers, and presidential candidates. If I’ve already offended you, I apologize. (Just kidding. It only gets worse.) But you need not read on.

Presenting such a review poses a multitude of challenges. There are important topics from past years that remain important but will not be repeated. How many times can one rail on underfunded pension plans, unfunded liabilities, or a quadrillion-dollar derivatives market? These matters are important, but the plot line doesn’t change much year to year. I’m skipping right over Japan; it’s a basket case, but not enough has changed to spill some ink. Despite reams of accrued notes and links, I am light on the Middle East because nobody understands it (or eats parsley.) It’s that Mount Stupid descent again. I leave topics like global warming, mass shootings, and Israel versus Palestine to those who like to shout a lot. Other ideas manage to stay at center stage year after year. Compartmentalizing the topics can seem artificial. How does one separate broken markets from the Federal Reserve? Sovereign debt levels from bond markets? Government from civil liberties? It is also laced with blogger porn (quotes). Somehow 450 pages of notes, quotes, and anecdotes describing a web of interconnected concepts must be distilled into the “Year in Review,” all in a few short weeks. So let’s head to the choppers.

Contents

Part 1

Part 2

Investing

Precious little of my portfolio changes most years. I began 2015 with the distribution shown below. Owing to downward adjustments in energy and metals prices and upward adjustments of putting savings back into those asset classes, my percent allocations remain about the same.

1/1/15

Precious metals etc.: 21%

Energy: 10%

Cash equiv (short term): 60%

Standard equities: 9%

The total change in my net wealth over the year was -5%. This results from downdrafts in physical gold (-11%), gold equities (-19%), and energy (-21%). The standard equities moved little (-1%). The huge short-term fixed income and cash attenuate even the most abrupt upward and downward movements. A net savings of 24% of my gross income elevated the total wealth accumulation by 1%.

My 16-year return beginning 01/01/00—a wild period to say the least—is an annually compounded 7%. Although this handily beats most investors, the huge commodity rout starting last year and precious metal rout beginning in 2011, which contrasts sharply with a 170% run in the S&P since 2009, has eroded what was once a huge lead. For a little perspective to the braggadocious chortlers, however, gold is up approximately 300% and the XLE up 128% over the 16-year period compared with only 46% by the S&P (ex-dividends). I am expecting to see many of the extreme moves over the last few years reversed, but only time will tell. In the infinite loop we loosely call markets, there is a relentless debate:

Market winners: “See. I told you so!”

Market losers: “Just you wait!”

I have been on both sides of that debate (preferring the former). I believe we are still in a secular bear market despite the evidence accrued over the last six years. For almost 20 years I have subscribed to a “three legs down” model of secular bears that translates as follows:

Phase 1 (2000–03): a flesh wound

Phase 2 (2008–09): damaging pain

Phase 3 (20??–??): deracination of hearts, minds, and souls

It’s the third leg down that causes generational changes in attitudes. Let me be clear, however. I have an exit strategy—a strategy to repot myself—from my bearish conundrum (assuming, of course, that I am not neuroplasticly too damaged to react.) I was deeply moved by A Random Walk Down Wall Street (see Books). Author Burton Malkiel convinced me that under most circumstances average blokes cannot beat the markets through active management. My premise is that the next recession will be a barn-burner—a category 5 shitstorm—that ushers in Phase 3. If the Fed fails to juice the markets (unlike in ’09), the markets will finally overcorrect and drop well below fair value. (The Fed snuffed this overcorrection in ’09.) When the next recession is in full bloom—when it is so obvious that even economists are writing about it—I will once again try to enter the markets. I will be taking my cue from Tobin’s Q (discussed later in Broken Markets). I started buying at fair value in ’09, figuring I would average down, but the markets jumped away from me too quickly. I will again start buying at fair value, be seriously buying at well below fair value, and wishing I had saved my ammo at rock bottom. Hopefully, at this point of maximum remorse, I will have reconstructed a long position from the spolia and asset carrion.

“There are segments of the perma-bear community that literally live their lives on the lunatic fringe.”

~David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff

What will I buy? Probably a global index fund, but I have a few specialized ideas. Russia interests me as a scratch-and-dent opportunity. I recently began buying token quantities of closed-end Russian mutual funds (RBL, RSX, and TRF)—0.2% of my total assets—simply to put them on my radar. TRF will be liquidated as of December 18, 2015, which has a bottom feel to it. Commodity funds were locking their doors on me 15 years ago. Iran and parts of Persia look interesting, although it is legally difficult to invest there right now. How about Africa? Not a chance. Hernando de Soto (The Mystery of Capital) convinced me that Africa’s problems are deeply structural.

The Economy and the Next Recession

“I think there is more of a risk of a depression than a recession.”

~Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates

“I think we could have five or 10 years without a recession.”

~Paul McCulley, May 2015 Strategic Investment Conference

Thousands of economists see low unemployment, but 100 million people (41% of working-age adults) not in the workforce disagree. On January I got into a minor Twitter disagreement—a Twiff?—with a confident young economist, which led to a gentlemen’s bet:

George Pearkes: We will not see a recession starting before 2017, in my opinion. I could well be wrong of course.

Me: OK. I'll take now.

My cockiness stems from a 1991 survey described in John Mauldin’s Code Red in which a poll of 53 economists put the probability of a recession that year at 3%, ignoring the 15% probability for recession in any year. The final arbiter of recessions—the NBER—eventually showed that the poll had been taken five months into a recession. Economists use the tools of science, but they are still tools. (How ambiguous.) The bet got edgier in April when Barry Ritholtz asked me which indicator I was using. I suggested it was many indicators, which promptly ended the discussion. I wasn’t alone, however. Many pundits not endorsed by the mainstream were reporting negative first derivatives. Even Bank of America seemed to lack optimism—but then predicted no recession for 10 years.19 That’s just stupid.

“This drop in oil prices, this drop in industrial metal prices, this is not good. It’s a canary in the coal mine that something is not right in the global economy.”

~Stephen Schork, The Schork Report

As I reminded Barry, a number of indicators were heading south. Wholesale inventories began surging at the end of 2014 (Figure 2), reaching an all-time high by the second quarter.20 Energy and energy sector jobs were getting annihilated. Commodities (not just energy) were getting crushed. Commodity routs often precede recessions. The Baltic Dry Index had turned down (Figure 3), indicating a global slowdown. The Chicago PMI crashed to 45.8 verses expectations of 58.7, reaching the lowest level since June 2009.21 U.S. labor participation was still dropping, undermining all claims of strong employment. Exports and U.S. factory orders were headed south (Figures 4 and 5.) Vehicle sales dropped in January. Q1 GDP “missed economists GDP targets” by fivefold to the downside.22 (Note to economists: your predictions miss the facts, not vice versa.) Credit was noticeably tightening by May. Consumer spending dropped as steeply in late spring as in the 2008 financial crisis.23 By April, Goldman was claiming four months of contraction.24 A survey of Wall Street forecasters blamed the slowdown in the first quarter on winter weather and the West Coast port slowdown.25 Of course, we have winter weather every winter, and the port slowdown might be a consequence rather than a cause. In a bit of journalistic genius, one headline noted “plant closings could make jobless claims jumpy.” The often-overlooked story is that Caterpillar sales had been quietly contracting for almost three years.26 This undoubtedly reflects emerging market problems, but it’s also our problem.

Figure 2. Wholesale inventories (shading are recessions)

Figure 3. Global economic activity

Figure 4. U.S. exports (shading are recessions)

Figure 5. U.S. factory orders (shading are recessions)

“This goes down as the sixth longest expansion since the Civil War.”

~David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff

“Business cycles don’t typically die of old age. They are usually killed off by higher interest rates, a financial crisis, or some other shock…”

~Greg Ip, Wall Street Journal

That is some crisply worded gibberish. Yes, Greg, and people die of coronary heart disease, strokes, and organ failure rather than old age. Maybe we missed a recession by the technical definition and Pearkes was right, but there is a suspicious odor emanating from the basement. The yield curve can’t fully invert with rates at zero, but it sure flattened (Figure 6).27 The economy seems sick; capital expenditures—capitalism’s seed corn—have been largely sacrificed to buy back shares (vide infra). Pensions are being left underfunded to maximize profits per share. How underfunded will they be at the next downturn? Overstock.com’s CEO Jonathan Johnson has gone TEOTWAWKI and stockpiled $10 million in small-denomination gold coins to meet payroll and three months of food for his employees.28 I’m not that bearish.

Figure 6. Two years of yield curve flattening

Broken Markets

“These markets are all rigged, and I don’t say that critically. I just say that factually.”

~Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, Inc.

“Whether it’s QE in the West or China’s recent regulatory intervention in the aftermath of the bursting of its equity bubble, market manipulation has become global in scope.”

~Stephen Roach, Yale University and former executive director of Morgan Stanley

The markets began breaking way back when Alan Greenspan went narcissistic and accepted the dual mandate to (1) preclude equity price discovery, and (2) subvert the business cycle. Let’s look at the bomb we’ve strapped on by first considering valuation. Goldman put price–earnings (P/E) ratios in the 98th percentile. Not a problem. The Fed model asserts that equity prices should correlate inversely with interest rates, which are at ridiculous multi-century lows. As the Fed jams rates to zero in the limit, the composite P/E ratios should go to infinity, right? (Hey: I didn't invent the model.) Now let’s drop some acid and ponder Fed chair Janet Yellen’s recent warning:

“Potentially anything—including negative interest rates—would be on the table. But we would have to study carefully how they would work here in the U.S.”

What does the Fed model predict now? Cliff Asness nicely explains why we should fight the Fed model.29Common sense says fight the Fed model. David Einhorn says negative interest rates are like taking the square root of minus one.

“Nobody ever talks about the incentives to lie about the earnings.”

~Benjamin Friedman, Harvard University

Apparently Harvard doesn’t have Internet yet. In any event, guys with market experience have alternative back-tested metrics for market valuations with historical comps. Warren Buffett’s favorite, the market cap-to-GDP ratio (Figure 7), began the year at all-time highs. The understated Mr. Buffett noted, “if we get back to normal interest rates, stocks at these prices will look high.” A regression to the mean would require a >40% equity haircut. Regression through the mean? Priceless. Lest we forget, folks, mathematically you must spend half your statistically weighted time on each side of the mean.

Figure 7. Buffett’s valuation model 1950-2015

The always popular CAPE--Robert Shiller's cyclically adjusted P/E ratio smooths earnings over 10 years and began the year looking for a 40% correction to reach the historical mean. These nosebleed levels were surpassed only by the blackout levels in the tech bubbles of 1929 and 2000. Societe Generale has a proprietary guesstimate that predicts a “30% correction if all goes well and 60% if China hits a snag.” What are the odds of that? Mark Spitznagel likes Tobin’s Q (Figure 8), which is essentially the price-to-book ratio, and he assured me “it is the cleanest metric.” It’s not at a record level but is massively above the norm. Tobin’s Q reached fair value in 2009 and bounced like a golf ball off a cart path. After the ’09 crisis, Jeremy Grantham lamented the remarkably brief stay at fair value with deeply discounted bargains rare and fleeting at best. Even more interesting, check out Tobin’s Q in 1938—the year the Fed sinned by tightening monetary policy. Supposedly this little faux pas—French for “f*** up” (asterisk speak for “fuck up”)—elicited a belated apology from Ben Bernanke to Milton Friedman. I didn’t realize Ben did it or that Milton tried to stop him. In any event, Tobin’s Q had soared: the Fed had blown yet another frothy equity splooge with raging pinkeye. Maybe it had to act. Maybe, just maybe, the modern Fed is deathly afraid of being forced to act again.

Figure 8. Tobin’s Q 1900-2015

These plot-rich approaches to looking at valuations with those fancy schmancy, small-fonted x- and y-axes and hard data may be too confusing. Let’s just get the sage advice of grizzled gurus:

“On balance there’s no margin of safety.”

~Mario “The Bull” Gabelli, founder of Gamco Investors Inc.

“We're in the middle of a disastrous market mania . . . historically, these kinds of gaps get closed in one of three ways: by revolution, higher taxes, or wars. None are on my bucket list.”

~Paul Tudor Jones, Tudor Investment Management

“The good times are over.”

~Bill Gross, Janus Funds

“The median New York Stock Exchange stock is currently at a postwar record high P/E multiple, a record high relative to cash flow, and near a record high relative to book value!”

~Jim Paulsen, Wells Capital’s perennial bull

“[G]lobal financial markets are more distorted than ever before.”

~Felix Zulauf, Zulauf Asset Management and Barrons Round Table

“Sadly, I don’t think anybody’s capable of telling you precisely how and when the whole thing will come unstuck. Nevertheless, you know that at some point, it has to.”

~William White, Bank of International Settlements

“Markets will discover that they have been pushing asset prices to an excessively high level, and there will be a major downward shock to asset prices.”

~Mervyn King, former governor of the Bank of England

Here we are: ridiculous valuations for the third time in two decades, and you’ve been warned. You’ve been warned by Jim friggin’ Paulsen. The requisite leverage was provided by central banks worldwide. What makes this all so absurd is that there isn’t even a good narrative bias. The 1995–2000 mania was based on a very cool, world-changing tech revolution not unlike the tech revolution of the 1920s. Being duped by the narrative bias was forgivable. The current global equity run, by contrast, is based on the assumption that a bunch of second-rate economists (but first-rate bureaucrats) running monetary policy using third-rate Gaussian models have our backs covered. And get this: they are going to help us with controlled demolition of our currencies because . . . wait for it . . . inflation is good, and they know exactly how much is optimal because they are omnipotent.

You’ve all seen some variant of the plot of margin debt versus equity prices in Figure 9, unless of course you’ve been hanging out in the basement of the Eccles Building with Governor Boo Radley. It is collective debt accrued within the entire system, however, that fuels bubbles (Figure 10). In this grand game of Texas Hold‘em, the Big Money is all-in, waiting to distribute the equities to retail investors. But this ain’t gonna play out like a typical blow-off top: the retail investor is broke and broken. As the 75-month-old expansion stretches 30 months past the historical mean, the Big Money is the dumb money. I actually heard a bull say, “I am smart enough to get out early.” Ding. Ding. Ding. All those smart guys will be exiting through a keyhole if history is a guide. In the meantime, keep listening to the sell-side analysts: they have called every equity rally since the beginning of markets.

“At particular times a great many stupid people have a great deal of stupid money.”

~Walter Bagehot, clueless geezer

Figure 9. Margin debt and S&P 500 price 1990-2015

Figure 10. Debt showing the near fatal blip

Doom porn aside, the markets seemed rather typical. Ken Griffin of Citadel brought in $1.3 billion owing to high-frequency earnings.30 The Swiss National Bank (SNB) picked up the slack in equity markets by increasing its exposure to U.S. equities by 40%.31 The SNB is ahead of the crowd by buying the dip before it appears. Very sneaky. With timing like a Swiss watch, they even bought pre-dip Valeant, the pharma that largely went bust on corporate shenanigans.32 A fake leveraged buyout (LBO) offer triggered a 22% short squeeze on Avon Products and was good for a few laughs.33 The dollar flash crashed 4%. Gilead did a 10% flash crash for a few minutes.34 Commodity trader Glencore was said to be doing a Lehman, but that was to be expected in a commodity rout.35

Meanwhile, bargains were to be had for those with a discerning eye. In San Francisco, shacks that, if they weren’t so run down, would normally be sold in the parking lot of a Home Depot are selling for $1.2 million (Figure 11).36 Closets under stairwells in London are renting for $700 per month.37 The pinnacle of value investing, however, appeared in the art market (Figure 11) when Geriatric Patriot was scooped up for a mere $1.5 million38 and Big Fat German Chick on Sofa was wrestled down by an eager investor for $58 million ($100K per pound).39 You want classy art, you gotta pay up. And if those gems are unappealing, you could have dipped your toe into an IPO of a company searching for Sasquatch.39a

Figure 11. $1.2 million (left), $1.5 million (center), and $58 million (right).

The good times seemed to be long in the tooth as fears of a Fed rate hike began to exact their toll. Stresses in the global economy (see The Economy and the Next Recession) finally registered on radars; equity markets began to shudder. The economic and asset price cycles had been diverging for some time (Figure 12). Companies like Intel and Coke started assuming lower tax rates (and buying back shares) to juice their per-share earnings.40 The markets were narrowing: Amazon, Google, Apple, Facebook, Gilead, and Disney accounted for more than 100% of the gains in the S&P.41 Deterioration in leverage and credit conditions by midsummer foreshadowed trouble. We started to see oddities like Apple flash crashes that could only be stemmed by phone calls from CEO Tim Cook to market maven Jim Cramer.42

Figure 12. Earnings driving equity prices?

Something was fundamentally wrong, however, and markets began seizing up. Sites like Charles Schwab went dark.43 On July 8, 2015, the NYSE froze three times for four hours,44 Zerohedge and the Wall Street Journal went dark,45 and United Airlines grounded its fleet.46 (United grounded its fleet three times.47) Seems like cyber problems to me. I suspected the Russians when nobody blamed them. By August, the markets were fishtailing wildly. Despite little net change in direction, triple-digit intra-day swings became the norm. Zerohedge estimated that in a single day the triple-digit upward and downward moves of the Dow spanned 4,500 points (Figure 13).48 The concern was not how far the market moved but how much it was moving to go nowhere.

Figure 13. Single-day swings in the Dow

“It ain’t the meat, it’s the motion.”

Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes

Share Buybacks and Balance Sheet Rot

“Stock buybacks and LBOs are the bastard offspring of the IRS and Federal Reserve.”

~David Stockman, Director of Management and Budget under Reagan

Corporate debt is a hot topic this year. Before the 2008–09 calamity, U.S. nonfinancial corporate debt teetered at $2.6 trillion dollars. It is now $5.8 trillion (Figure 14).49 The reported $2 trillion of corporate “cash on the balance sheet” constitutes only 30–35% of the corporate debt. So much for that meme. The high-yield debt placed in peril by the collapse of commodities is putting serious pressure on the high-yield (junk) bond indices (Figure 15). GM and Chrysler are way out on the subprime yield curve50; a recession would be poorly timed, which is precisely why it will arrive soon. Auto loans are pushed out 67 months.49 Liquidity in the market is faltering—a sell-off could get ugly.

Figure 14. Share buybacks and corporate debt 1990-2015

Figure 15. High-yield (junk) bond index since April

So what’s all this debt being used to fund? Share buybacks, of course. More is spent on share buybacks than on capital expenditures (Capex).51 Companies are making corn dogs from their seed corn. The record buying spree is twice that of the early months of 2014.52 Cisco Systems, toting a market cap of $150 billion, will have spent $90 billion on stock buybacks by the end of 2015.53 GE announced a bold 3-year, $50 billion share buyback program to “offset lower earnings” by GE Capital.54 How buybacks offset bad earnings is beyond my imagination. GE Capital subsequently wrote off over $16 billion of those “lower earnings.”55 And it’s gone. GE Capital is now for sale, presumably to “unlock shareholder value.” Wall Street loves obfuscating euphemisms.

Citi analysts noted that “if leverage is going up today because it’s funding tomorrow’s growth that might not be a bad thing. Unfortunately, that’s not what’s going on.” Companies reaching for returns on their cash have found another overpriced investment on which to squander their shareholders’ value—other companies’ bonds.56 The sellers of these corporate bonds are reputed to be using the proceeds to . . . wait for it . . . buy back shares of their companies! This is financial engineering that would make Escher proud.

In 2007, S&P 500 firms allocated more than one-third of their cash to buybacks just before the S&P 500 plunged by 56%.57 Dumb money buys the tops. The new-era corporate dip tip buyers fund their purchases in a variety of ways. Hewlett-Packard announced almost 100,000 layoffs to foot the bill (whatever “foot the bill” means). The S&P has collectively let pension funds slip to approximately 80% funded.58 If only it was that simple. The S&P is “returning” 104% of earnings as dividends and share buybacks.59 To achieve this relativistic miracle, companies are using credit—lots of credit. GM announced a $5 billion share buyback to keep an activist investor away from the board,60 and, ignoring the fact that the company has $45 billion in debt, boldly promised that all cash over $20 billion would be used to reward shareholders.51 Qualcomm borrowed $10 billion to “return some of its $29.5 billion cash stockpile to shareholders.”62 What does that even mean? As you can see, the financial engineers should work on their timing (Figure 16). Looks like the dumb money to me.

Figure 16. Share buybacks

It was Peter Lynch who spawned this zombie apocalypse. (BTW-Tie the dearly departed’s shoelaces together.) Decades ago he declared that companies buying back shares know their shares are undervalued. When insiders are buying, you should be buying! Well that’s a quaint notion that metastasized into financial engineering, allowing top execs to jack up their stock options by driving up the share prices. How about dividends? Come again? They decrease the value of stock options, so they are not so popular among options-entitled executives.

There are many layers to this magical onion. If Eugene Fama was correct, an efficient market would reduce the P/E ratios to account for the rotting imbalance sheet; leveraged share buybacks should be a zero-sum game (like stock splits). With almost a third of the “buying pressure” in the S&P coming from share buybacks, however, markets are not very efficient. Let’s take this notion to the limit. Imagine you borrow enough to buy up almost all the shares. The last share represents ownership in a company whose assets are entirely offset by debt. The P/E ratio of that share will head to zero in the limit. So who owns the company? The creditors! Yes indeedy, leveraged share buybacks constitute a sale of the company to creditors. It’s an LBO. Long before the LBO is complete, however, corporate debts that soared with century-low interest rates will lead to an 80-car pileup. Shale companies are being forced to re-issue shares—the reverse of a share buyback—at fire sale prices to cover their debt payments. A bond crisis will force an analogous deleveraging across the broader equity markets. The flawed TINA—There Is No Alternative—equity model will morph into TINWA—There Is No Worse Alternative. But until then, you just keep buying shares because insiders are buying, and they know what’s best.

Gold and Silver

“Growing numbers of investing experts have been declaring that gold is a bubble: an insanely overvalued asset whose price is bound to burst. There is no basis for that opinion . . . [gold miners] seem cheap—based not on subjective forecasts of continuing fiscal apocalypse, but on objective measures of stock-market valuation.”

~Jason Zweig, Wall Street Journal, 2011

“Let’s Be Honest About Gold: It’s a Pet Rock”

~Jason Zweig, Wall Street Journal Moneybeat, 2015

Jason Zweig is no idiot, but he may be a world-class contrary indicator. The goofiest gold bug award goes to a guy who tried to gold-plate his testicles—pelotas de oro. He was unsuccessful if surviving was his goal.63

“If you don't own gold . . . there is no sensible reason other than you don’t know history or you don’t know the economics of it.”

~Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates

Ray Dalio runs the biggest hedge fund in the world. I sense he is a reluctant gold enthusiast, as am I. What are us VAXers hedging? Calamities such as inflation and other forms of mayhem. Of course, the detractors note that any idiot can see there is no inflation, and gold doesn’t hedge it; equities do. I would disagree in part. By example, shovels and bulldozers both move dirt, but it would be a mistake to confuse the two. Similarly, both equities and gold hedge inflation, but it would be a mistake to confuse them as well. Gold hedges calamity, which is considered very rare unless, of course, you live in most countries around the world now or are a student of history. Gold is a bet against inept bureaucrats who happen to have the monetary nuclear launch codes and seem to be fumbling furiously at their keyboards. It is a bet that excessive debt and faltering economies will result in both foreseeable and unforeseeable problems. It is a bet that the War on Cash (vide infra) will soon become a hot war against the peasants (us) via absconding with civil liberties and wealth. Gold is a bet that the current system is at considerable risk. Risk is not about what happens but about what could happen and what the consequences could be. Russian roulette is statistically a 5:1 winner . . . until you lose.

“Buying gold is just buying a put against the idiocy of the political cycle. It’s that simple.”

~Kyle Bass, Hayman Capital Management

The coyote-like plummet in gold starting in 2011 has slowed to trickle, which has prompted me to spend approximately 20% of my gross salary on physical gold this year (my first purchases since my 1999–2005 binge.) Of course, the gold miners are priced like pillows at a thrift store, and investors are plastered across milk cartons. Maybe this is a bottom, but the inability of management to make money is epic. Harmony Gold is trading at 16% book value, but such numbers are often the costs of assets purchased in haste that have not yet been written down. Rumors of corporate insider buying in the industry in a profoundly beaten-down sector is arguably bullish, but I am leaving the gold equity “buying opportunity of a lifetime” (Figure 17) to others; my shrunken stash of equities is it for now. Maybe I just called the bottom.

Figure 17. Gold-to–gold equities ratio, 1996–2015.

Juicy stories always keep the bulls and bears shouting at each other. There appears to be a scrum by sovereign states to get their gold away from one another. Venezuela started the whole repatriation mania in 2011 by retrieving their sovereign gold,64 only to be squeezed into a forced liquidation by hyperinflation,65 which is the ultimate insult. Germany is said to have gotten from the U.S. 120 tons of the 700 tons demanded in 2014.66 (The German gold repatriation social movement actually started with one crazy German.67) It appears that the U.S. was too busy providing the Dutch with 122 tons covertly.68 (Shhh! It’s an Internet secret.) China finally announced its newest gold tallies at only 1,600 tons.69 I don’t believe the numbers, but that tonnage would be bullish if true because it means the country has a long way to go to achieve the estimated >8,000 tons needed to make it a Forex superpower.

India is a little schizo, putting barriers (tariffs) to block gold importation and then removing them.70 I asked Shashi Tharoor, former deputy director of the UN, about it, and he gave me the party line: they want investment not gold hoarding. India attempted to use gold as collateral for loans; it’s either a tacit gold standard or a fractional reserve Ponzi scheme.71 In a Monty Python “bring out your gold” solicitation, India rounded up a grand total of one kilogram in the first month.72 That’s the take of a good Indian wedding.

Austria repatriated 110 tons of their gold from the Bank of England.73 Zerohedge accused Spain of “repatriating” gold from Catalonia right before a Catalonian secession vote in what seemed like an outlier even for Zerohedge.74 The story was validated when officials denied it.75 Rick Perry took Kyle Bass’s advice and took possession of a billion dollars worth of gold for the Great State of Texas.76 Texas also put in an anti-seizure law just in case the paranoid wingnuts are right.77 Retail investors tried unsuccessfully to repatriate their gold from gold supplier Tulving to no avail; court proceedings are scheduled.78 Let us not forget that allocated ingots—ingots owned by investors—stored by MF Global clients got repatriated by JPM.79 Counterparty risk includes both insolvency and criminality.

“The price of gold is largely determined by what people who do not have trust in [the] fiat money system want to use for an escape out of any currency.”

~Fed minutes, 1993

Where is the gold coming from? Evidence suggests a combination of sovereigns, global mining operations, and possibly GLD (reputedly losing 48% of the stash since 2012).80 I have doubts GLD actually has gold and, even if it does, I have argued that liquidation of shares for physical gold by the global megabank cartel (bullion banks) is bullish not bearish.7 We must remind ourselves that somebody is selling as well, but that argument falters when the seller is the Perth Mint and its head says business is unprecedented.81 Reported gold shortages at the London exchanges82 coincided with shrinking supplies at the Comex (Figure 18).83 The Comex got down to several hundred kilograms—27 bricks—of available gold,84 which was followed by a rumored midnight JPM bailout.85 The stories about the Comex shortages are provocative, but they could be natural ebbs and flows. Similarly, a tenfold increase in JPM’s gold derivatives book (and Citi’s silver derivatives book) is very provocative and very difficult to grasp.86

Figure 18. COMEX gold inventories, 2000–2015.

“Therefore, at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold price, manage it.”

~Sir Eddie George, Bank of England, September 1999

If one subscribes to a model that the gold market is rigged—actually, all markets are rigged—one can easily find confirmation (bias). Sell-offs often begin with derogatory press releases, and they ramped up this summer. Gold was suggested to be a “pet rock” and gold enthusiasts to have “rocks in their heads.”87 There were ludicrous claims that Indian dealers were offering discounts per ounce to offload their inventory88 and because it was raining a lot.89 (No kidding.) Sixteen analysts—16 of them—said gold would drop below $1,000,90 Deutsche Bank said it would reach “fair value” at $750 (whatever fair value means),91 and “a study” suggested $350 was dead ahead.92 On queue, Jeff Christiansen denounced shortage theories.93 The gold story was said to be based on conspiracy theories that were “patently untrue.” There is no hyperinflation, so gold bulls are brain-dead idiots. Yes, we are.

“The sudden debunking of gold in the financial press is circumstantial evidence that a full-scale attack on gold’s function as a systemic warning signal is under way.”

~Zerohedge

We’ve seen this plot line before. After the bad press, which provides cover to convince the regulators all is fair and square, the smackdowns are close behind. On July 7, somebody purged $1 billion of gold and silver in one futuristic wad.94 Some thought it was tied to the Citi and JPM precious metal derivatives positions. During the evening of July 19, while the western world slept, $2.7 billion of paper gold selling struck in one second.95 That was followed by another hard sell, effectively crushing the bid stack. After market seizures and dust settling, gold was $50 cheaper. A $26 flash crash of gold derived from “a huge dump of bullion, equivalent to one-fifth of a whole day’s trade in a normal session” in China occurred within two minutes.96 ANZ Bank analyst Victor Thianpiriya noted “the nature, size, and timing of the heavy selling” suggests someone “was taking advantage of low liquidity.”96 Five tons sold on the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) in two minutes; the market only averages 25 tons a day. Meanwhile, on the other side of the globe, the Comex witnessed 7,600 contracts traded in the very same two-minute window.96 What are the odds, eh? Michael Krieger calls such behavior brazen market manipulation and “peak condescension.”97 The ultimate smash came in the wee hours of the morning on the Friday after Thanksgiving—Black Friday—when everything goes on a deep discount. A couple of billion dollars of gold derivatives drove the price of gold down in four distinct plunges (Figure 19) during peak market illiquidity.98 That’s classic bear raid stuff.

Figure 19. Black Friday massacre on gold.

Gold market manipulation was hung on a couple of patsies—Nassim Salim and Heet Khara—by the CME using Nanex data.99 Patsies are often foreigners ’cause xenophobia sells (see Patsies and Scapegoats). Mirus Trading was soon implicated in gold market rigging and fined a 1.0 Hillary ($200,000).100 The Department of Justice opened a case, which will sit dormant.

What is the bullish case for gold? For starters, it is claimed that the futures market—the so-called paper gold market—is currently leveraged over 200:1.101 Seems like a single bold hedge fund could leave 99.5% of customers holding worthless claims. Cash settlements are legal but may not be satisfying when the fur flies. I do not, however, buy into the notion that premiums and shortages of gold or silver coins constitute anything more than a coin shortage. Some claim they are seeing ingot shortages. Wake me when that is confirmed.

Gold bears often argue that rising rates will crush gold, an assertion that flies in the face of history. The most pronounced upward moves occurred while the Fed was tightening (1971–74, 1976–80, and 2001–07).102 Smart guys like Einhorn, Bass, Druckenmiller, and Grant have placed big bets that the fatal conceit—the belief that a complex system can be engineered rather than left to evolve—is circumnavigating the globe.

“Signs are emerging that the long Nikkei/short gold trade, which has done so much damage to gold’s price, is becoming problematic.”

~Paul Mylchreest, ADM Investor Services International

The gold community has serious confirmation bias—the tendency to disproportionately weight the data that supports a conviction. Confirmation bias, however, plays dichotomous roles: (1) it blinds you from the truth by confirming your hypothesis at any cost; and (2) it provides support while you white-knuckle an unpopular, but quite possibly brilliant, investment. When I entered gold in ’99 I would read anything that told me I wasn’t alone. Time will tell which category gold buggery falls into this time around. Gold enthusiasts will continue to draw inexplicable scorn for simply attempting to mitigate the risk of state-sponsored insanity. A little decorum please. We’re in this mess together.

Energy

“We keep thinking that lower energy prices are somehow good for the economy. That can’t be, because energy prices or commodity prices in general don’t drive economic growth. Economic growth drives commodity prices.”

~Stephen Schork

“If oil prices stay below $90 per barrel for any length of time, we will witness massive fiscal squeezes and regime changes in one or more of the following countries: Iran, Bahrain, Ecuador, Venezuela, Algeria, Nigeria, Iraq, or Libya. It will be a movie we have seen before.”

~Steve Hanke, Johns Hopkins University and the Cato Institute, 2014

“I hope it does not go to $40, because then something is very, very wrong with the world, not just the economy. The geopolitical consequences could be—to put it bluntly—terrifying.”

~Jeff Gundlach, Doubleline Capital and New Bond King

Figure 20. Price of oil

Ouch. I asked Steve about oil under $40 and he noted that “the commodity price rout has created an unsustainable blood bath that won't last forever.Markets will see to that.” Also, Jeff: could you possibly rephrase that? Maybe a little sugarcoating—possibly some euphemisms? The energy sector began to collapse last year when the Saudis overtly jawboned the price of oil lower (Figure 20).103 Seemed obvious (to me) that they did it to hurt Putin while we agreed to deal with the emerging ISIS threat, which supposedly we now support . . . but I digress. The jabronis who hatched this plan—oddly referred to as the intelligence community—were not tasked with assessing the long-term consequences to the commodity sector at large, the U.S. energy industry, the global economy, or world peace. You guys grazed Putin—a flesh wound really—and at what cost?

Although I had expressed concerns that the energy sector was vulnerable to the credit markets,7 I was wildly bullish. (I still am but must admit to having to shift my timescales out a bit . . . OK, a lot.) I also did not grasp the role of the energy sector on the credit markets. I thought nobody did, but that’s not true. Todd Harrison discussed the risk of dropping oil prices in 2006.104 Probably others did too, and I just wasn’t listening. Everybody gets it now.

So what are these consequences? There were 100K oil industry layoffs worldwide by February and an estimated 250,000 by November.105 Alaska gets 90% of its revenue from oil taxes. Alaskans can see bankruptcy from their front porches. About two years ago, friends at University of Montana and Montana State were complaining that Montana legislators were refusing to spend the profits. The legislators were showing a little higher-order brain function after all, eh? The oil frackers hit the wall especially hard given that high prices are needed to break even. We owe the Fed for keeping the losers drilling unprofitably, leading to this mess. You can see the influence of the collapse on the XLE (Figure 21). I don’t think the energy equities have really corrected yet, however, presumably owing to the use of hedges rather than outright selling. Coal miners such as Alpha Natural Resources and Patriot Coal are going belly-up as well. 

Figure 21. XLE, January 1 to December 4, 2015.

The world seems to have underestimated how structurally important collapsing crude prices are to global finance. High-yield energy debt (junk bonds) lost a whopping 16.1% between July and September alone.107 The yield reachers are feeling some pain. The most severe consequences are that oil-producing economies in developing countries are both losing their income streams and getting crushed, while the spiking dollar is obliterating dollar-denominated debt. There is a huge feedback loop: shortages of petrodollars are driving the dollar even higher. Kazakhstan let its currency drop 25% in one night.108 Petrobras and Brazil’s “century bonds” are going to hell fast.109 Whocouldanode? The Carlyle Group’s energy holdings in a flagship fund collapsed from $2 billion to $50 million.110 I imagine leverage was at play. Norway’s gargantuan $830 billion sovereign wealth fund is in forced liquidation.111 Commodity trading firm Glencore scrambled to convince markets that it’s liquid, which confirmed it was not. Glencore appears to have $100 billion of debt and is said to be the next Lehman.112 (Deutsche Bank detractors think it is the next Lehman, so the race to the bottom is on.) Some are calling this commodity rout “reverse QE” (reverse quantitative easing) or “quantitative tightening” because it is fighting central bank efforts to trigger the desired inflation. The quest for inflation by central banks is morally vile.

As they say, however, the secret to low prices is low prices. Rigs are being taken offline as expensive energy sources become a liability. Oil trading guru Andrew John thinks shale oil output will moderate this year as production peaks in 2016.113 So let’s wrap our brains around this mess: the U.S.’s goal to attain energy independence is going to be crushed by emerging market debt crises? That’s a bit twisted, wouldn’t ya say?

Some see a silver lining in the demise of the frackers. California frackers are consuming more than their share of fresh water during an epic drought. Water rationing excluded the frackers. Claims that fracking causes earthquakes don’t make sense to me at all—they would relieve extant stresses. During a discussion of oil fracking, Einhorn excluded natural gas fracking from his shitlist, noting that “natural gas frackers . . . are globally competitive low-cost energy producers with attractive economics.” Obsess over his recent (negative) returns at your own risk. The energy equities are giving me restless leg syndrome, but I am waiting for the next full-blown recession-induced sell-off.

Personal Debt

“Central banks have sought to address ‘under-consumption’ . . . how many people do you know who voluntarily under-consume?”

~Paul Mylchreest, ADM Investor Services International

“The excess liquidity has manifested itself in surging levels of subprime auto loans, student debt, corporate share repurchases, rising levels of margin debt, and record levels of mergers and acquisitions.”

~Lance Roberts, Chief Strategist and Editor, Clarity Financial

“One-third of Americans have no financial plan.”

~Eddy Elfenbein, author of Crossing Wall Street blog

And the other two-thirds are planning to fund their retirements through state lottos, crowdsourcing, and “working till I drop.” On this final point, an estimated 80% of all retirements are out of the control of the retiree, coming in the form of health problems and layoffs.114 I have railed on personal debt and profoundly deficient retirement savings. The problem has been building for decades and will play out for decades. When the top-heavy markets correct, a serious update on the situation may be in order. For now, let’s just peek at a couple of 2015-specific stories.

“We also know you shouldn’t have taken out that large second mortgage during the housing boom to fix up your kitchen with granite countertops. You’ve been working very hard to pay off this debt and we admire your fortitude. But these shocks seem like a long time ago to us in a newsroom. Is that still what’s holding you back?”

~Jon Hilsenrath, Wall Street Journal, gettin' down and talkin' trash

Hilsenrath wrote an open letter to consumers about their unwillingness to spend.115 It was pure tongue in cheek and seriously tone deaf. Many others could have pulled it off, but Jon is “the Fed's bitch”—its mouthpiece—and he got the blood eagle sans Valhalla. The ruction began. Comments totaled in the thousands, all negative. Bloggers had a field day. Hilsenrath tried to recover to no avail.116

Down to business. It is said that if you have $10 in your pocket and no debt, you are better off than 25% of adult Americans.117 Thirty million Americans tapped their retirement accounts prematurely this year.118 Why? Because 40% of all American households spend more money than they make each month. Fifty-one percent of American workers made less than $30,000 last year. That means that the middle class—more appropriately called the median class—is making $15 per hour. How do you have a financial plan making $15 per hour with a family? Auto loans are soaring, and they are subprime ugly. Ally Bank reports 20% delinquencies, and that bank certainly knows delinquencies, having done a few itself. Auto loans may be too small to be systemic to banks, but people losing their cars will experience systemic risk (Permageddon™). In short, consumers are broke, and they are going to stay broke. Any Gaussian-driven economist thinking the rational consumer is still resilient is clueless. Personal balance sheets have now corrected the real estate froth but have a very long way to go (Figure 22). That’s not one of those plots that is supposed to go lower left to upper right.

Figure 22. Sixty years of household debt

State and Municipal Debt

“High debt levels, whether in the public or private sector, have historically placed a drag on growth and raised the risk of financial crises that spark deep economic recessions.”

~The McKinsey Institute

“For all intents and purposes, we are out of money now.”

~Leslie Geissler Munger, Chicago comptroller

The muni debt problem is a combination of demographics and over-promising. This analysis is short because I have laid out the risk before, and the ice has not yet audibly cracked under our feet. But it will.

State-run pension funds are more than $1 trillion in the hole during strong markets.119 This is old news, but lifeguards in Orange County are “retiring at age 51 with over a $100K pensions plus health-care benefits.”120 That pays for a lot of sunscreen, Dude. CalPERS says that the state pension funds are underfunded by $80 billion assuming 7.5% returns going forward.120 Good luck getting those returns. The problem is not CalPERS but rather the promises made by various unions and then expected to be handled by CalPERS.

Illinois has a $33 billion state budget and pension funds that are underfunded by almost $100 billion (Figure 23).120

Figure 23. Illinoisan pension woes.

The Illinois Supreme Court ruled that scaling back government promises is unconstitutional.121 The protection was built into the state constitution. The problem is that there is no money. Put that in your constitution. I suspect, however, that the judge is not precluding a solution but rather telling them to pay up or go Chapter 9 bankruptcy. Seems logical to me. Judges elsewhere are starting to let pensions get pared back to ward off defaults. New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Arkansas have saved the least for the next rainy day.122 Chicago’s unfunded liabilities are 10 times its revenues.123 Thank God Rahm Emanuel is calling in favors from his friends to manage the money.124 States are turning to pension obligation bonds to cover pensions.125 That merely moves insolvency down the road. Kansas governor Sam Brownback proposes to withdraw pension contributions to an already-lagging state pension fund to pay for tax cuts.126 Tell us how that works out for ya. Illinois sent IOUs instead of checks to lottery winners.127 You didn’t think the odds of a payout could get even lower, did ya? In New Jersey, Camden is so broke and screwed up that its last supermarket closed.128 The USDA declared Camden a “food desert” (or can’t spell dessert).128 The city’s police force is being disbanded, which will solve that police brutality problem. There will necessarily be more Camdens in the country before this is resolved. The problem may not be “over” until the demographically overbearing baby boomers start dying off. Alas, that is the very last entry on the boomers’ bucket lists.

Bonds

“Bonds have never been more expensive in human history, and yet their supply has never been higher.”

~Tim Price, PFP Group

“If you have the option to hold [bonds] to maturity, your risks are bounded and very small.”

~Brad DeLong, economist at University of California, Berkeley, ignoring inflation risks

“Anyone that complains of a bubble in government bonds is someone that should probably be investigated and perhaps prosecuted.”

~One of Brad DeLong’s Ph.D. groupies

Liz Ann Sonders noted, “I’m amazed at how often I find investors who don’t really even understand the basics of how yields and prices move in the opposite direction.” It’s not that hard, is it?

As rates plumb 700-year lows (Figure 24), bond prices are soaring to 700-year highs. Is there a maxim about buying high and selling low? Didn’t think so. I don’t want to be around when that trend finally reverses. According to Bloomberg, “Bond prices are now so high that yields on more than $4 trillion of the developed world’s sovereign debt have turned negative.” As the price goes to infinity, the rate goes to zero, right? I don’t really know how negative rates are achieved on a pre-existing bond—you probably can’t get there from here (to quote the recently departed Yogi)—but we will talk about it in the ZIRP and NIRP section below. Welcome to Mount Stupid.

Figure 24. 700 years of interest rates.

“We have a bond market bubble and when that decides to work its way off we are in trouble.”

~Alan Greenspan, Chair of the STFU Committee

I previously called the bond market the “bond caldera”—a bubble so large that you can see it only from space (or from Greenspan’s front porch). I believe that someday, we will all be hosed when the liquidity leaves the system. This is not a unique view, but many bond speculators believe that (1) central banks would never let rates rise uncontrollably; (2) they are smart enough to get out first; and (3) their counterparties will actually pay them when the time comes. Apparently, there’s a lot of omnipotence to spread around. Until the burst, I simply marvel at the metastability with awe.

Catastrophe bonds—securitized insurance products that pass the risk of catastrophic payouts onto unsuspecting suckers—will surely be deemed ironic before the Final Exit. This insight comes from former General David Petraeus in his new position as a bond expert at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR).129 (Bonds? I thought you said bombs!) Risk parity funds endorsed by Ray Dalio are premised on the idea that a 200–300% leveraged bond portfolio will bring the return and the risk of bonds to parity with equities.130 Be careful what you wish for, Ray. You may find that risk you are looking for and then some. Unwinding risk parity funds will add some serious fuel to the inferno. Bridgewater Associates will probably apply for bank status late some Sunday night. Bond Kings Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach called the top of the German bond bund market (Figure 25).131,132 Gross called them “the short of a lifetime.” Actually, they probably didn’t call the top but rather caused it. Epilogue: the German bunds are rallying back already. Human folly knows no bounds.

Figure 25. German bund prices 11/14–5/15

“The risk is there could be a run on the bond funds, causing further downward price movement. . . . They’ve been searching for yield and throwing caution to the wind.”

~Jeff Gundlach, Doubleline Capital

Bond market liquidity is a topic of considerable concern of late. You would be forgiven (by me, at least) if you found this confusing. Contextually, liquidity can refer to the ability to exit an asset without seriously altering the price. In the bond market, it seems to refer to an availability of legally mandated collateral for the money markets. From the horses' mouths', Andy Huszar and Deron Green, had trouble buying $5–9 billion of qualifying bonds per day while running QE I (first quantitative easing). Fortunately, the Fed cared little about the quality; only quantity mattered. The Bank of Japan is said by an IMF paper to “need to reduce the pace of its bond purchases in a few years due to a shortage of sellers.”133 Ewald Nowotny of the European Central Bank Governing Council noted that “there are simply too few of these structured products out there.”133 According to Jim Reid of Deutsche Bank, “the combination of high money liquidity (ZIRP and QE) and low trading liquidity (regulation and bank capital constraints) creates air pockets.” He went on to say, “I can't help thinking that when the next downturn hits, the lack of liquidity in various markets is going to be chaotic. These increasingly regular liquidity issues we’re seeing might be a mild dress rehearsal.”134 I’m not sure which liquidity Jim is referring to in that statement. FINRA is worried about the liquidity of high-yield (junk) bond funds: “Investors might get locked out again.”135 This concern is certainly in reference to a buyer’s strike. FINRA also worries about “bond investors losing money when interest rates rise.” Yield reachers will also lose their shirts. Remember: rates up/prices down.

I think we’ve got big problems with sovereign debts reaching unsustainable levels. Debtors will default and creditors will get hosed. Central banks are struggling to guide this system back to safety like a shot-up World War II bomber. World debt is 40% higher than it was at its peak before The Crisis.136 Central banks are buying up (monetizing) 100% of newly issued debt in an effort to—how do they say it?—trigger inflation.137 It’s probably not going to play out fast (although it could). Collapsing energy prices are putting huge pressures on emerging markets relying on cash flows (petrodollars) to pay off dollar-denominated debt.138 Rumor has it that 2017 is the big year for emerging market debt rollovers. Put that on your calendars—your 2016 calendars. Noah built the ark before the rains.

Inflation versus Deflation

“For the people who say there will be inflation, yes, when, please? Tell me: within what?"

~Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank

“We may be headed into a world where capital is abundant and deflationary pressures are substantial. Demand could be in short supply for some time.”

~Larry Summers on the Great Stagnation

“The next shoe to drop will be the realization that the U.S. recovery is stalling and outright deflation . . . is every bit as immediate as that in the Eurozone.”

~Albert Edwards, Societe Generale

“There’s a lack of faith in monetary policy—you’ve thrown the kitchen sink at it, you’ve cut rates to zero, you’re printing money—and still inflation is lower.”

~Lee Ferridge, State Street

“Believe me, our misery will increase. The scoundrel will get by. But the decent, solid businessman who doesn’t speculate will be utterly crushed; first the little fellow on the bottom, but in the end the big fellow on top too. But the scoundrel and the swindler will remain, top and bottom. The reason: because the state itself has become the biggest swindler and crook. A robbers’ state!”

~Adolf Hitler, cornerstone of Godwin’s Law

“Our kids can’t readily provide all goods and services; we outnumber them. I believe that unfunded liabilities, promises made that were not cashed in at the time, represent latent inflation pressures. The cashing in of these IOUs—large numbers of chits chasing limited goods and services—could trigger a virulent inflation. In this paygo system, we flourished while the boomers produced and were compensated with promises. Now we are about to hit the downslope.”

~Collum, 2013 “Year in Review”

I am a reformed inflationist. I had faith in the omnipotence of central bankers, and they seemed determined to destroy the currencies of the world while hoping We the People didn’t notice. Their omnipotence is in doubt, and their impotence is showing. First, let’s be clear that describing something so complex as the collective price levels of bazillions of commodities, healthcare, tuition, stocks, bonds, and labor in a binary language—inflation or deflation—is an absurdity of a higher order. It’s not that I think generalized price levels will drop—I don’t—but rather that we could face a deflationary liquidation of assets and debt (negative inflation to the euphemists.) That maximum-pain, Black Swan moment is gonna smart.

You can find evidence of both inflation and deflation depending on where you look. Both Europe and Japan reportedly slipped into deflation in October.139 There is an ongoing deflationary commodity rout. David Stockman notes that “iron ore is . . . the real measure of the violence of global deflation that is currently underway,” yet beef and veal are up 30% in two years.140 Rents have been soaring in the U.S.141 and are so high that in San Francisco, converted shipping containers are being leased for $1,000/month.142

I was asked recently about why I hold gold while facing deflationary risk. That’s easy: people of prominence and authority are still saying incredibly stupid things and making asinine decisions. Let’s look at a few:

“I do not hesitate to say that although the prices of many products of the farm have gone up . . . I am not satisfied. It is definitely a part of our policy to increase the rise and to extend it to those products that have as yet felt no benefit. If we cannot do this one way, we will do it another. But do it we will.”

~Mario Draghi, European Minister of Inflation and Debasement

“Inflation is hopefully giving little signs of moving up in the right direction.”

~Christine Lagarde, director, IMF

“When older cohorts have more influence on the redistributive policy, the economy has a relatively low steady-state level of capital and a relatively low steady-state rate of inflation.”

~James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Fed

"Even if we had some kind of shock that sent prices up for some reason, the Fed has the tools to stop inflation. That’s not very hard. . . . There is a whole generation of people who don’t remember inflation. They don’t know what it is, and so I think inflation is a non-existent threat."

~Alice Rivlin, former Fed governor, making my brain hurt

The award for the most moronic statement goes to . . . envelope please . . . Alice Rivlin! If we don’t know what inflation is, it can’t hurt us. Fabulous! As far back as the Neolithic era when division of labor first appeared, increased efficiency and productivity resulted in deflation naturally: goods improved and prices dropped as production methods evolved. In a highly inflationary world of fiat currency and central banking, however, you only get deflation when central bankers completely screw the pooch. They think central planning precludes deflation when it is the failures of central planning that cause a post-inflation, chaotic deflation. Every bust is preceded by excessive credit.

The authorities—the sharpest bulbs in the deck—fear deflation but are remarkably sanguine about inflation. Why? In the Fed’s version of Field of Dreams, voices say “print and it will come,” but got a big goose egg. Although housewives are hurting from rising prices, economists see a falling money velocity, and fret over assets that have been pumped and are now poised to dump.

“Deflation is clearly the boogeyman . . . and the only thing that will save the middle class.”

~Rick Santelli, CNBC

Let’s take a closer look at the dollar-centric money velocity (Figure 26). Isn’t it a truism that if you jam more money into a system than it can absorb, the velocity will plummet? Back in 2010 I called this a “monetary capacitor” waiting to discharge.3 Even Greenspan frets that the unseemly globs of money on the bank balance sheets are a latent inflation waiting to release (and he has nth stage something.)143 But so far the Fed's efforts to inflict inflationary carnage—debase your currency and your savings—have yet to work their magic: their grand monetary stimulation has been flaccid.

Figure 26. Money (dollar) velocity versus money stock, 1985–2015.

Where have we seen this precipitous drop in money velocity before? Oh. Right. Weimar Germany in the 1920s (Figure 27). In fact, the velocity plummeted twice before the infamous German hyperinflation kicked into gear, eventually hurtling the world into a second world war. If that happens again, we are gonna see some high-frequency quantitative tightening.

Figure 27. Weimar money velocity.

The authorities couldn’t give a hoot about Consumer Price Index inflation: they hide it. (I dealt with MIT’s Billion Prices Project last year;7 it has flaws with statistical weighting and transparency in my opinion.) The authorities also love asset inflation: they promote it. What they care about deeply is preventing asset deflation. There are, nonetheless, some big-brained guys worrying about inflation and its consequences:

“Asset inflation is roaring, but it is sectoral and skewed. Consumer inflation is understated, and thus growth is overstated. Employment data [are] misleading. This combination of factors means that ordinary citizens are not doing well, but the owners of high-end everything are doing just fine, with few concerns for the middle-class people who know things are not ‘all right,’ but cannot put their finger on why.”

~Paul Singer, Elliott Management Corporation

“The idea that when people see prices falling they will stop buying those cheaper goods or cheaper food does not make much sense. And aiming for 2 percent inflation every year means that after a decade prices are more than 25 percent higher, and the price level doubles every generation. That is not price stability, yet they call it price stability. I just do not understand central banks wanting a little inflation.”

~Paul Volcker, former Fed chairman

“In spite of all the paper issues, commercial activity grew more and more spasmodic. Enterprise was chilled and business became more and more stagnant.”

~Andrew Dickson White on the French inflation

“Thus the menace of inflationism . . . is not merely a product of the war, of which peace begins the cure. It is a continuing phenomenon of which the end is not yet in sight.”

~John Maynard Keynes

ZIRP and NIRP

“If rates go negative, the U.S. Treasury Department’s Bureau of Engraving and Printing will likely be called upon to print a lot more currency as individuals and small businesses substitute cash for at least some of their bank balances.”

~New York Fed, 2012

“We are now in the terminal stages of QE, during which the practical limitations of this fatuous and discredited policy are being revealed.”

~Tim Price, PFP Group

“It goes without saying that deeply negative interest rates would be accompanied by a massively expanded QE4 in the US. The last seven years of exploding central bank balance sheets will seem like Bundesbank monetary austerity compared to what is to come.”

~Albert Edwards on a bull session with Bob Janjuah

“When zero interest rates don’t do the trick, we begin to imagine that maybe negative interest rates and penalties on saving might coerce people to spend now. Look around the world, and that same basic policy set is the hallmark of economic failure on every continent.”

~John Hussman, founder and head of Hussman Funds

As the world struggles back from the 2008–09 crisis, the central banks remain at DEFCON 1. Maybe they are lying—the world is not recovering. Maybe they are pusillanimous. Central bankers suffer Hayek’s Fatal Conceit, deluding themselves into believing they are more qualified than the market to set the price of capital—to set interest rates. I find it a breathtaking conceit. We often hear about what rates are telling us about the economy when in fact sovereign bonds reflect the central bankers perception of the economy . . . well, actually, their perception of what is good for the economy . . . or maybe the banking system . . . whatever. Supply and demand meet at price. What’s true for widgets is true for capital. Central bankers have decided they don’t like current prices, the price discovery mechanism, or even free markets. The result is the proliferation of zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) and, most amazing, negative interest rate policy (NIRP). Why zero? It’s a policy . . . try to keep up.

“I am pretty horrified by the global quantitative floodgates that have been opened since the 2008 Great Recession. Once an emergency measure of dubious effect, it is now a never-ending stream of confetti money being thrown around the world to inflate asset prices. QE has now become the policy variable of first resort. Personally I think this will all end very badly.”

~Albert Edwards

Given that yields correlate inversely with price (although my math breaks down with negative rates), this is the largest bond bubble in history, which necessarily makes it the biggest bubble of any kind in history. As the highly flawed theory goes, zero rates can become insufficient such that they must lay siege on savers with NIRP. Just to be clear, in the World According to NIRP, borrowers are paid to borrow and creditors pay to lend. Hmmm . . . must be a theoretical construct, n’est-ce pas? Not exactly.

“Ideas that would have been considered crazy just a decade ago are now seen as much more likely.”

~Mike Bird, Business Insider

Switzerland became the first 10-year bond to go negative; Switzerland profits from borrowing money (Figure 28).144 Sources close to the SNB suggest “a rate of minus 1.5 percent is being considered.”145 Sweden’s Riksbank started its monetary bestiality, keeping its repo rate at minus 25 basis points and announcing that more bond purchases would be in order if the markets didn’t kowtow to the desire for inflation.146 Who doesn’t crave a good dose of inflation? Then the German five-year note went negative. Thirty percent of European sovereign debt is now trading at negative interest rates—2 trillion Euros (Figure 29). Seventy percent of all German bonds and 50% of French bonds are returning wealth-consuming negative rates.147 The Great Danes similarly have jumped the negative interest rate shark. Even the Spaniards pay to loan money to their insolvent state.147 It eventually leaked into the corporate sector with Nestlé enjoying the right to be paid 50 basis points to borrow money.148

“There is an inherent risk of future losses if we buy at negative yields.”

~Ewald Nowotny, European Central Bank Governing Council

Figure 28. Swiss yield curve.

Figure 29. Growth in negative yielding debt

“It is easy to neuter cash taken out of the bank as a way to defeat negative interest rates simply by removing the guarantee that the Bank of Japan will take that cash back at face value.”

~Miles Kimball, economist at the University of Michigan

Operational equivalents of negative yields can be inflicted on retail banking clients through fees that exceed interest rates. The Australians are pondering a tax on savings. The incentives are often oddly perverse. While some are charging fees, others are shunning large deposits. Deutsche Bank no longer wants checking accounts; in the QE world, deposits are no longer the foundation of its capital.

“I’m quite happy to pay a trusted creditor (a.k.a. the government) a moderate fee in the form of a negative interest rate for storing part of my wealth.”

~Morgan Stanley analyst on negative rates

So what’s the problem? Some enthusiasts think that when money is cheap, sovereigns should borrow their collective asses off. Worked well for home buyers in 2000–09. Others have noted that positive yields are available by shorting the debt.147 Very weird. Central banks obsess over expectations, and we are told the deflation mindset is deadly, but the evidence is unconvincing to me.

In the best-case scenario, the whole debt superstructure remains intact and bondholders make nothing on their investments. How will those endowments, defined-benefit pension plans, and 401Ks perform when 40% of their 60-40 portfolios return negative squat? Ya can’t even make it up on volume with risk-parity bond funds because they are all risk, no return. The consequences of this nonsense are legion. The pros will call it a “yield chaser’s market” and assure us they are the smart guys. The 7–8% projected returns required to achieve projected demographic needs don’t look too probable. The more likely scenario, however, is that bond prices and bond portfolios will tank. Unlike the 2008–09 crisis in which bonds cushioned the fall for equities, bonds and equities will drop in concert. Yield-starved investors in the developed world tried to escape NIRP and ZIRP with yield-chasing in emerging markets. That market is collapsing as I type. It could really get out of control.

The War on Cash

“Cash is not a very convenient store of value.”

~Janet Yellen

“The benefits of cash are significant—but they need not be offered for free.”

~Financial Times

How Orwellian. With all this talk of ZIRP and NIRP, it is patently obvious that the return of zero percent on cash in your mattress exceeds the return on money in the bank in a NIRP world. Don’t go hollowing out your Sealy just yet, however. The War on Cash is already circumnavigating the globe and could get fugly.

The initial skirmishes are predictably authoritative jawboning. Folks of wealth and power have been preaching the evils of cash for some time. Willem Buiter penned a screed wailing on the limitations of cash148 (and the dastardly consequences of gold).149 He thinks taxing cash is no worse than inflation. Yes, Willem, and your point is what? Buiter, by the way, began spewing these ideas as early as 2009.150 Charles Goodhart, formerly hailing from the Bank of England, proposes abolishing high-denomination currency, which exists “to finance drug deals.”151 Maybe he’s Charlie McGruff the Crime Dog, but he tips his hand by noting that cash also makes it hard for bankers to “drive interest rates a little bit further down.” Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff wrote a paper favoring the exploration of “a more proactive strategy for phasing out the use of paper currency.”152 He too feigns crime-dog status but goes on to note that “central banks cannot cut interest rates nearly as much as they might like.” A German economist named Peter Bofinger claims that “coins and notes are in fact an anachronism.” The Financial Times, obviously doing a little whoring of its own, gives five specious arguments against cash,153 not the least telling of which is the suggestion that “the existence of cash—a bearer instrument with a zero interest rate—limits central banks’ ability to stimulate a depressed economy.” Andrew Haldane from the Bank of England notes154 that negative rates “encourage people to take their savings out of the bank and hoard them in cash. This could slow, rather than boost, the economy. It would be possible to get around the problem of hoarding by abolishing cash.”

“Faced with seeing their money slowly confiscated, people are more likely to spend it on goods and services. When this change in behaviour takes place across the country, the economy gets a significant fillip.”

~Jim Leaviss, M&G Investments

It’s not just talk: cash is getting pushed to the margins. A number of sovereign states including Italy, Switzerland, Russia, Spain, Uruguay, Mexico, and France have legal caps on cash transactions.155 The U.S. requires cash withdrawals above $10,000 or serial withdrawals exceeding $10,000 in aggregate to be reported to authorities.156 Are you willing to risk asset seizure? Not me. I accepted my loss of civil liberty and stopped withdrawing even 4-digit sums. Louisiana actually has a legal (albeit unconstitutional) restriction on cash transactions.156 Apparently, “all debts public and private” doesn't really mean all debts . . . only little ones . . . maybe no debts . . . and I’m not sure about the private part either.

JPM has been the most aggressive to squash cash. It threatened to charge certain customers a “balance sheet utilization fee.”157 That’s short for ‘stealing your God damned money. ’JPM also banned paper currency or coins in safe deposit boxes unless they are collectibles.158 I suspect American gold eagles are not deemed collectibles. And, by the way, how do they know what’s in your box? Lest we forget, the State of California did a massive smash-and-grab on safe deposit boxes159 until the courts finally stopped it. I trust JPM a lot less.

At least one Swiss bank has banned cash withdrawals. The CEO of MasterCard talks his book by noting, “We generally believe cash has a tremendous cost to society.” Thank God using your MasterCard is free (head slap). A German MasterCard subsidiary has banned cash withdrawals using the card. Given that it could simply bust chops with huge withdrawal fees, one wonders what the angle is. It’s not like we needed another reason to hate credit card companies and their affiliated banks.

Denmark seems to be taking the plunge into a cashless society. The wealth will be held not by a bank but by the government. Phew! So once those crazy Danes go cashless, what is to protect them from a 1% service fee? How about 4%? Maybe that’s too hyperbolic, but I’ve noticed that ATM cash withdrawal fees have gone up massively at both ends of the transaction. With ATMs within a hundred yards of us at all times, you would think the market would drive the cost per withdrawal down, not up.

Let’s summarize restrictions on cash: We can’t hoard it, withdraw it in big chunks, withdraw it in little chunks except with huge fees, or spend it in significant quantities. Now let me be really clear: Cash is a civil liberty that allows you to maintain arm’s reach from the strong arm of the government. I am willing to share it with the drug lords if need be. I also think those who wish to ban cash are, at best, clueless and misguided. Others are wretched people, fascists, quite possibly treasonous, and definitely worthy of a swift beating. If you douchebags in power force people to go to hard assets to avoid oppression, don’t be surprised if those hard assets include firearms. You are playing with fire.

“No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.”

~Section 10, U.S. Constitution

Given its length, we've had to break this report in half so as not to crash your browser. Click here to read Part 2 of David Collum's 2015 Year in Review.

A downloadable pdf of the full article is available here, for those who prefer to do their power-reading offline.

The Game Of Chicken Between The Fed & The PBOC Escalates

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Submitted by Ben Hunt via Salient Partners' Epsilon Theory blog,

There’s more than a whiff of 2008 in the air. The sources of systemic financial sector risk are different this time (they always are), but China and the global industrial/commodity complex are even larger tectonic plates than the US housing market, and their shifts are no less destructive.There’s also more than a whiff of 1938 in the air (hat tip to Ray Dalio), as we have a Fed that is apparently hell-bent on raising rates even as a Category 5 deflationary hurricane heads our way, even as the yield curve continues to flatten. 
 
What really stinks of 2008 to me is the dismissive, condescending manner of our market Missionaries (to use the game theory lingo), who insist that the US energy and manufacturing sectors are somehow a separate animal from the US economy, who proclaim that China and its monetary policy are “well contained” and pose little risk to US markets. Unfortunately, the role and influence of Missionaries is even greater today in this policy-driven market, and profoundly misleading media Narratives reverberate everywhere. 
 
For example, we all know that it’s the overwhelming oil “glut” that’s driving oil prices down and wreaking havoc in capital markets, right? It’s all about OPEC versus US frackers, right?
 
Here’s a 5-year chart of the broad-weighted US dollar index (this is the index the Fed publishes, which – unlike the DXY index and its >50% Euro weighting – weights all US trading partners on a pro rata basis) versus the price of WTI crude oil. The blue line marks Yellen’s announcement of the Fed’s current tightening bias in the summer of 2014.

 
 
Ummm … this nearly perfect inverse relationship is not an accident. I’m not saying that supply and demand don’t matter. Of course they do. What I’m saying is that divergent monetary policy and its reflection in currency exchange rates matter even more. Where is the greatest monetary policy divergence in the world today? Between the US and China. What currency is the largest contributor to the Fed’s broad-weighted dollar index? The yuan (21.5%). THIS is what you need to pay attention to in order to understand what’s going on with oil. THIS is why the game of Chicken between the Fed and the PBOC is so much more relevant to markets than the game of Chicken between Saudi Arabia and Texas.
 
But wait, there’s more.
 
My belief is that a garden variety, inventory-led recession emanating from the energy and manufacturing sectors is already here. Maybe I’m wrong about that. Maybe I spend too much time in Houston. Maybe low wage, easily fired service sector jobs are the new engine for US GDP growth, replacing the prior two engines – housing/construction 2004-2008 and energy/manufacturing 2010-2014. But I don’t see how you can look at the high yield credit market today or projections of Q4 GDP or any number of credit cycle indicators and not conclude that we are rolling into some sort of “mild” recession. 
 
My fear is that in addition to this inventory-led recession or near-recession, we are about to be walloped by a new financial sector crisis coming out of Asia. 
 
What do I mean? I mean that Chinese banks are not healthy. At all. I mean that China’s attempt to recapitalize heavily indebted state-owned enterprises through the equity market was an utter failure. I mean that China is going to need every penny of its $3 trillion reserves to recapitalize its banks when the day of reckoning comes. I mean that China’s dollar reserves were $4 trillion a year ago, and they’ve spent a trillion dollars already trying to manage a slow devaluation of the yuan. I mean that the flight of capital out of China (and emerging markets in general) is an overwhelming force. I mean that we could wake up any morning to read that China has devalued the yuan by 10-15%.
 
Look … the people running Asian banks aren’t idiots. They can see where things are clearly headed, and they are going to do what smart bankers always do in these circumstances: TRUST NO ONE. I believe that there is going to be a polar vortex of a credit freeze coming out of Asia that will look a lot like 1997. Put this on top of the deflationary impact of China’s devaluation. Put this on top of an inventory-led recession or near recession in the US, together with high yield credit stress. Put this on top of massive market complacency driven by an ill-placed faith in central banks to save the day. Put this on top of a potentially realigning election in the US this November. Put this on top of a Fed that is tightening. Storm warning, indeed.
 
So what’s to be done? As Col. Kilgore said in “Apocalypse Now”, you can either surf or you can fight. You can adopt strategies that can make money in this sort of environment (historically speaking, longer-term US Treasuries and trend-following strategies that can go short), or you can slog it out with a traditional equity-heavy portfolio.
 
Also, as some Epsilon Theory readers may know, I co-managed a long/short hedge fund that weathered the 2008 systemic storm successfully. There were trades available then that, in slightly different form, are just as available today. For example, it may surprise anyone who’s read or seen (or lived) “The Big Short” that the credit default swap (CDS) market is even larger today than it was in 2008. I’d welcome a conversation with anyone who’d like to discuss these systemic risk trades and how they might be implemented today.

 

"If Assets Remain Correlated, There'll Be A Depression": Ray Dalio Says QE4 Just Around The Corner

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CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin and Becky Quick, donning their finest goose down bubble coats to remind viewers they’re reporting live from scenic Davos, generously took some time out of their busy schedules to chat with Ray Dalio on Wednesday and unsurprisingly, the “zen master” again predicted the Fed will reverse course and embark on more QE.

Dalio begins by noting that the Fed’s move to inflate financial assets by pumping money into the system means there’s an “asymmetric risk on the downside.”

The rationale is simple: the trillions in fungible, excess cash the Fed unleashed in the wake of the crisis has driven asset prices into bubble territory and at this juncture, there’s essentially nowhere to go but down.

That, Dalio says, will create a “negative wealth effect”, the opposite of Bernanke’s infamous virtuous circle wherein Americans would supposedly spend more and thus boost the economy if only the Fed could repair the damage their 401ks suffered in 2008.

In short, Dalio reiterated his contention that the Fed will ultimately be forced into QE4 and that the much ballyhooed tightening cycle will essentially amount to a one-off, “just to show you we could do it,” blip on the ZIRP radar screen. “Every country in the world needs easier monetary policy,” Dalio said, before noting that central banks now have less room to ease. He made similar comments in September of last year in an interview with Bloomberg TV.

Dalio also said he’s concerned that the Fed isn’t concerned. When Becky Quick suggested the FOMC is more vigilant than the market might think, Dalio responded with this: “I hope you’re right.”

As for the fact that the historical relationships between asset classes (volatilities and correlations) that are used to construct optimal "risk-parity" funds in order that 'risk' is balanced and hedged across bonds and stocks have all broken down dramatically causing funds like Bridgewater’s vaunted "All Weather" portfolio to sink, Dalio warned that if assets remain correlated and things continue to move in the “wrong” direction, “there’ll be a depression.”

That, he concluded, is why MOAR QE, and thus a return to the “full-Krugman” regime, is a virtual certainty.

So much for the "beautiful deleveraging."

US Equity Futures Fail To Sustain Bounce; Resume Slide On Oil Fears

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Things are looking increasingly shaky for central planners around the globe.

After yesterday's dramatic rout in US equities, which was saved toward the end of trading by a "dash for trash" short squeeze in which several repo desks unleashed forced buy-ins on some of the most shorted companies pushing the Dow Jones 450 points off its lows, China followed up with its own latest intervention spin when it injected a whopping CNY400 billion or $60 billion in liquidity into the financial system, the most in 3 years. This helped push stocks well into three green in early trading, however once the realization spread that this may be taking place in lieu of the much anticipated RRR or rate cut, the Shanghai Composite which first rose just shy of 3,000, subsequently tumbled closing at the lows, down -3.2% at 2,880.

A comparable revulsion in sentiment emerged in Japan where the Nikkei likewise roared higher in early trading, only to plunge at the close, down nearly 400 points, or 2.4%, ending just above 16,000 a new 15 month low. The Nikkei surged more than 300 points in early afternoon trading as investors took heart from a rise in U.S. stock index futures, brokers said. But the rally rapidly lost steam and slipped into negative territory later, with large-cap issues encountering selling from investors in oil-producing countries amid tumbling crude oil prices, they said. The market was also dragged down by a flurry of index futures-led selling, they added.

But once again, the key driver of risk around the globe was oil, which after initially staging a modest rebound after yesterday's NYMEX close after having been down as much as 7%, has since drifted lower once again not helped by the latest far greater than expected API inventory build and certainly not by comments such as this one by BP CEO Bob Dudley who said markets are facing a "flood of oil." So important is every up and (mostly) downtick in oil, that even the ECB's statement due out shortly and Draghi's press conference to follow, both so important in early December when a Draghi's build up to a massive bazooka unveiled a tiny water pistol, have taken on a secondary importance today with most expecting nothing of substance from the former Goldman employee.

So where are we now: the Stoxx Europe 600 Index is up 0.4% while S&P futures, which first soared in early trading, subsequently tumbled as much as 1% to trade about 0.4% lower as of last check. To be sure, as Bloomberg comments, "volatility has coursed through financial markets in 2016 and at least 40 equity markets around the world with a total value of $27 trillion are now in bear territory as turmoil in China shows no signs of abating and the selloff in crude oil deepens."

Investors seeking reassurance will look to President Mario Draghi’s briefing after the ECB’s interest rate announcement for indications of how the central bank will react to the equity slump and oil’s damping effect on inflation.

“There’s no reason to be overweight equities, but the ECB could have a reassuring impact today,” said Francois Savary, the chief investment officer of Prime Partners SA, a Geneva-based investment manager. “Markets need to hear that the bias of monetary policy remains accommodative. We’ll get no lasting rebound without some fundamental news that really shifts sentiment.”

They will likely not get it today from Draghi, who after last month's debacle, will likely be far more muted in what he promises, says or does.

More details on where we stand now:

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.4% to 1848
  • Stoxx 600 up 0.4% to 323
  • FTSE 100 up 0.4% to 5695
  • DAX up 0.4% to 9432
  • German 10Yr yield up less than 1bp to 0.48%
  • Italian 10Yr yield down 2bps to 1.63%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield down 3bps to 1.75%
  • S&P GSCI Index up 0.2% to 272.2
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 1.7% to 115
  • Nikkei 225 down 2.4% to 16017
  • Hang Seng down 1.8% to 18542
  • Shanghai Composite down 3.2% to 2880
  • S&P/ASX 200 up 0.5% to 4864
  • US 10-yr yield up less than 1bp to 1.99%
  • Dollar Index down 0.02% to 99.08
  • WTI Crude futures up 0.1% to $28.39
  • Brent Futures up 0.1% to $27.91
  • Gold spot down 0.3% to $1,098
  • Silver spot down 0.6% to $14.07

Looking at regional markets in more detail, we start in Asia, where equity markets saw choppy trade, with an initial recovery in the commodities complex providing support before most of the major indices fell back into the red ahead of the close, while the PBoC also injected the largest amount of liquidity into the inter-bank market in 3 years and PBoC's chief economist states that cash injections could be used as a substitute for a RRR cut. However, sentiment then reversed in late trade as crude failed to sustain a rebound.

Nikkei 225 (+2.4%) initially gained as Japanese exporters were underpinned by a weaker JPY but then shrugged off gains in late trade, while the ASX 200 (+0.5%) was led by gains in basic materials after several large mining names reported firm quarterly results. Elsewhere, Chinese markets also fluctuated between gains and losses, with the Shanghai Comp (-3.2%) initially recovering after the PBoC conducted a CNY 400bIn open market operation injection, before paring as sentiment soured in late trade.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index slid 0.7 percent, poised for the lowest close since May 2009. The gauge is down 13 percent this year and trades at 10.1 times its 12-month projected earnings, the least since March 2014. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng China Enterprises Index sank 1.8. The Shanghai Composite lost 3.2 percent to the lowest since Dec. 2014. The gauges have both fallen more than 18 percent this year.

Top Asian News:

  • Hang Seng Index Sinks Below Net Assets for First Time Since 1998: Hang Seng Index fell 1.8% at close, sending its price-to-book ratio below one.
  • PBOC Injects Most Cash in Three Years in Open-Market Operations: China adds 400b yuan using 7-, 28-day reverse repos.
  • ’Too Early’ for Further BOJ Stimulus, Abe Aide Shibayama Says: Japan should confer with other nations’ financial authorities.
  • With Modi Handcuffed, Few Dozen Judges Shape India Policy: Supreme Court’s speedy moves contrast with parliament gridlock.

European equities have had a choppy session, are relatively flat in terms of recent volatility and trade in mild positive territory. Most European equity indices broke the trend of Asia and opened in positive territory, swinging between gains and losses.

The Stoxx 600 added 0.5 percent at 10:49 a.m. in London, after rising as much as 1.2 percent and falling 0.2 percent. Commodity producers led gains.

Italian banks led lenders higher, with Banca Popolare dell’Emilia Romagna SC rising 3.7 percent and Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA jumping 26 percent, after Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said the domestic banking system is more solid than people think. Monte dei Paschi jumped 25 percent, after losing almost half of its value over the past three days, as European Union officials signaled they’re ready to speed up the process of setting up an Italian bad bank.

 

Deutsche Bank AG slid 7.3 percent after Germany’s biggest lender forecast a loss for the fourth quarter after setting aside more money for litigation and restructuring costs. As the chart below shows, for the DAX it is all about staying at or just above the long-term support. A drop below this means much more turbulence ahead.

Elsewhere in Europe the FTSE MIB (+0.35%) has managed to stop the rot, after underperforming for the last 2 sessions, after various officials have offered supportive comments. In spite of the looming risk event in the form of the ECB policy meeting Bunds trade flat, also shrugging off EUR 13.6bIn in supply from French and Spanish bonds.

Top European News

  • Deutsche Bank Sees Quarterly Loss on Legal, Overhaul Costs: ~EU1.2b were earmarked for litigation, EU800m for restructuring/severance costs, mainly in private, business clients division.
  • Barclays’ Staley Said to Cut 1,000 Jobs, About a Quarter in Asia: Bank to exit several Asian countries, keep prime brokerage.
  • Pearson to Eliminate 4,000 Jobs as Forecast Trails Ests.: Cuts are equivalent to 10% of workforce; majority will be completed by mid-2016.
  • Remy Cointreau Sales Beat Estimates on China, U.S. Demand: Sales rose 3.2% on organic basis in 4Q after 1H 2015 decline.
  • UniCredit Offers to Buy Back EU1.8b of Junior Bonds: Bank offered to repurchase bonds, maturing from 2019 to 2022, at par or justaccording to statement on Thursday.
  • Glaxo Chief Says Consumer Health Unit Can Exist on Its Own: Consumer health unit could be “conceptually thought about on its own,” CEO Andrew Witty said as he considers investors’ demands to break up co.
  • Goldman Backs Group Campaigning for U.K. to Stay in EU: Contribution made to Britain Stronger in Europe group is latest sign that banking industry is battling Brexit.; JPMorgan Said Near Donation to Campaign to Keep U.K. in EU: Sky
  • Sapa Sees Aluminum-Sales ‘Bump’ in Race to Make Cars Lighter: Co. expects “significant bump” in sales to North American automakers.

In FX, a steadier morning though not without significant incident. The RUB has taken some of the limelight this morning, falling to fresh record lows again and prompting Kremlin spokesmen to dismiss talk of a crash. Weak Oil clearly behind this, sending the MXN to new lows also, but the CAD has been much better behaved, trading a relatively tight range close to 1.4500. Large stops through 1.4430 now widely acknowledged. USD/JPY still on the back foot, but has tested through 117.00 again. Stocks the main driver still, but intervention fears now give the pair an upside 'skew'. All range bound elsewhere — EUR/USD still struggling inside broader 1.0800-1.1000 range.

In  all important commodities, WTI and Brent have had a choppy session and reside just above and below the USD 28.00 handle respectively, and trade relativley flat on the day, a reprieve from the choppy price action of late. Given the price action of late, Algeria's energy minister has said that non OPEC members need a consensus to stabilize oil. Iraq also supports an OPEC meeting to boost price, providing a deal can be reached. However, they also say a non OPEC deal on output cut is required to boost prices, which is a sticking point with several OPEC members.

Base metals trade in negative territory but relatively flat in terms of recent volatility, as markets focus seems to be on the bleak outlook . The show of strength in the base metals at the start of the week has been depleted and prices have fallen as they retest support levels. Gold has broken below the USD 1,100oz level in recent trade, having benefitted from safe haven bids throughout Asia and the early European morning. According to Barclays, Venezuela's reckoning looms and says time may have run out, adding that a credit event may be hard to avoid as the oil price keeps sinking. However, according to four OPEC delegates, an emergency meeting is unlikely to occur as a result of Venezuela's request.

Onto the day ahead where this morning we turn to the aforementioned ECB meeting shortly after midday while Euro area consumer confidence data will be out shortly after. Over in the US this afternoon the main data of note is the Philly Fed business outlook print for January where current expectations are for a near 5pt improvement from December (albeit still at a lowly -5.2). Also due will be the latest initial jobless claims print. Earnings wise 19 S&P 500 companies are due to report today with the highlights being Verizon and Schlumberger – the latter being the first of the big oil names.

Bulletin Headline News from Bloomberg and RanSquawk

  • European equities have had a choppy session, are relatively flat in terms of recent volatility and trade in mild positive territory
  • A steadier morning in FX, though not without significant incident. The RUB has taken some of the limelight this morning, to fresh record lows again and prompting Kremlin spokesmen to dismiss talk of a crash
  • Highlights today include the ECB rate decision, US weekly jobs data, Philly Fed and DoE crude oil inventories
  • Treasuries slightly higher in overnight trading as European stocks rally ahead of ECB meeting, Draghi press conference; Asian stocks slide despite PBOC turning on “the liquidity firehouse.”
  • Investment managers are warning that markets probably have further to fall as China’s growth slows, oil prices plunge and central bankers lack tools to prop up economies
  • “Regulation has made the world more dangerous” as financial regulators failed banks before the financial crisis then stifled the industry’s recovery in Europe, according to Blackstone Group LP CEO Steve Schwarzman
  • Brent oil extended its decline from the lowest close in more than 12 years as rising U.S. crude stockpiles added to a swelling global glut. Inventories rose by 4.6m barrels last week while official U.S. government figures Thursday are forecast to show a second weekly advance
  • Italy’s banks are groaning under a pile of soured debt run up as the economy shriveled after the financial crisis; Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA, UniCredit SpA and Banca Popolare dell’Emilia Romagna SC were among lenders asked to submit data on their non-performing loans
  • Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA rebounded in Milan trading, after losing almost half of its value over the past three days, as European Union officials signaled they’re ready to speed up the process of setting up an Italian bad bank
  • Christine Lagarde picked up nominations from across Europe for a second term as leader of the IMF as part of a selection process that member nations intend to complete by early March
  • Goldman Sachs donated hundreds of thousands of pounds to the campaign to keep the U.K. inside the European Union, to a person familiar with the matter
  •     Sovereign 10Y bond yields slightly lower, led by Hong Kong. Asian stocks drop, European stocks rally; U.S. equity-index futures fall. Crude oil drops, copper steady, gold falls

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, Jan., est. -5.9 (prior -5.9, revised -10.2)
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, Jan. 16, est. 278k (prior 284k)
  • Continuing Claims, Jan. 9, est. 2.250m (prior 2.263m)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Economic Expectations, Jan. (prior 43.5)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, Jan. 17 (prior 44.4)
  • 1:00pm: U.S. to sell $15b 10Y TIPS

Central Banks

  • 7:45am: ECB Main Refinancing Rate, est. 0.05% (prior 0.05%)
  • 8:30am: ECB’s Draghi holds news conference in Frankfurt

Top Global News

  • Foxconn Group Said to Offer About $5.1b for Japan’s Sharp: Japan’s INCJ also reported to be interested in Sharp deal. Sharp Said to Favor INCJ’s Plan vs Higher Foxconn Offer
  • Macy’s Buyout Would Be a Miracle on 34th Street: Investors: 30 years after $3.6b LBO, activist investors are betting Macy’s will again become takeover target.
  • Carlyle, Staples Meet Resistance as Credit Strains Surface: Investors who agreed to lend money to fund Staples’s $6.3b purchase of Office Depot are now trying to negotiate better terms on financing.
  • Sports Authority Said to Struggle to Cut Debt as Default Looms: Co. skipped an interest payment last week on its $343m of 2018 subordinated debt; has been talking to bondholders about haircut on those notes in exchange for other securities.
  • Tesla Sues German Parts Maker Over ‘Sagging’ Door on Model X: Co. said it seeks to avoid “a series of unreasonable demands” by Hoerbiger Automotive Comfort Systems LLC, including payment for breach of contract.
  • Coal Miner ‘On Everybody’s List’ as Next Bankruptcy Victim: investors are wondering if biggest coal co., Peabody Energy Corp., could be next.
  • Schlumberger Seen as Only Oil Servicer Standing as Margins Slump: Co. may be only one of its peers that turned 4Q profit in North America.
  • Blizzard Expected to Bury Washington in Up to Two Feet of Snow: Friday blizzard expected to dump 1-2 feet of snow on Washington, as lesser amounts are forecast for New York City.
  • Lagarde, Panelists Say China Transition Challenge Manageable: In comments echoed by fellow panelists Ray Dalio, Gary Cohn, Lagarde said China’s policy makers have shown “unbelievable determination” to deliver past reforms.
  • Favorite Hedge Fund Holdings Are Among 2016’s Worst Stocks: Of 100 worst-performing cos. larger than $1b as of Jan. 19, more than half are at least 10% owned by hedge funds; 17 are at least 25% owned by such funds.

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

This morning markets in Asia had appeared to be feeding off that late surge into the US close with gains of over 1% following a similar gain for Oil. However a retracement back to unchanged for WTI has seen equity bourses in particular dip lower. The Nikkei (-1.08%), Hang Seng (-1.18%), Shanghai Comp (-1.05%) and Kospi (-0.26%) have all reversed course as we to print while US equity index futures are pointing towards a small loss. There’s been a strong rally in credit indices though with iTraxx Asia and Australia indices 6bps and 3bps tighter respectively. Meanwhile, ahead of the Chinese New Year early next month the PBoC has moved to shore up liquidity by injecting 110bn yuan of 7-day reverse repos and 290bn yuan of 28-day contracts, the most in three years.

I was casually looking at the equity market correction in a longer-term context yesterday and it reminded me that after extreme periods of overvaluation through history you often get multi decade periods of markets going sideways albeit with huge cyclical swings. For example the FTSE, CAC and IBEX are now at levels first hit on the upside in 1998. Looking at the Nikkei it first hit current levels in 1986 and the Italian market has been in the doldrums for decades too. Obviously with dividends more positive returns are still possible even in this long super cycle of stagnation but as a long-term historian of markets it's nice to see the old rules of over valuation taking decades to iron out still apply. Clearly this is irrelevant for market timing but absolutely applies to long-term trends which makes our annual long-term study the easiest document we write. For completeness we should say that the S&P 500 is up 85% since 1998 (albeit only 30% above its 2000 peak) and the DAX up 110%. They are rare DM winners over the period. Just for reference though the S&P 500 has traditionally paid lower dividends so the out-performance is notably less extreme when that's factored in.

With today a fairly quiet one for economic data, the focus looks set to be on the ECB meeting shortly after midday. We share the view of our European economists in that we expect neither a change in policy nor a clear signal of further easing. We do however think that the Council will highlight its capacity to act, the ‘open-ended’ nature of its policies and the flexibility around the asset purchase programme. Our colleagues take the view that the ECB will be reactive in addressing the risks to its inflation mandate and will wait for more visibility on the three key fronts; China, the oil price shock and inflation expectations. Looking further ahead to March, while our colleagues’ baseline case remains for now that the ECB is done, clearly there is material risk of further easing and for this to happen the most important number will be the staff inflation forecast for 2018. From our side we can't help thinking that the ECB will eventually be forced to do more but then again we've always felt the FED will eventually do QE4 so that shows our biases.

Moving on. It was hard to pinpoint an exact reason for that late swing in markets yesterday. Some pointed towards the expiry of the WTI Oil February futures contract yesterday as a reason (with the March contract trading higher) while some also highlighted the S&P dipping close to the key 1,800 technical level. In any case there was a similar swing in credit markets where CDX IG eventually completed a 5bp turnaround from the day’s wides to finish near enough unchanged on the day. Meanwhile US 10y Treasury yields dipped well below 2% for the first time since October, hitting an intraday low of 1.937% before closing out at 1.982% (still down 7.3bps on the day).

That in part also reflected a slightly softer US CPI print yesterday. The December headline reading of -0.1% mom came in a tad below expectations of no change, while the monthly core print (+0.1% mom vs. +0.2% expected) was also lower than hoped. More favorable base effects helped to lift the headline YoY rate to +0.7% (vs. +0.8% expected) from +0.5% while the core YoY rose one-tenth to +2.1% as expected. Meanwhile last month’s housing market indicators were mixed. Housing starts surprisingly dropped last month by -2.5% mom after expectations had been for a +2.3% gain. Building permits, while still soft, declined less than expected last month (-3.9% mom vs. -6.4% expected).

Prior to this, in Europe we saw German PPI come in slightly below market at -0.5% mom vs. -0.4% expected last month. There was slightly better news out of the UK however where the ILO unemployment rate declined one-tenth to 5.1% in the three months to November after the consensus had been set for no change. This reflected a decent bounce in the number employed, up by 267k in the period (vs. 235k expected).

On a slightly more positive note, yesterday’s US earnings were generally encouraging. Of the 7 to report, all 7 beat earnings expectations and 5 beat revenue expectations – although as we’ve highlighted previously that also reflects the now current low expectations in the market. The notable reporter was Goldman Sachs (which beat on both), the last of the big banks to report.

Onto the day ahead where this morning we kick things off in France with the latest January confidence indicators. That’s before we turn to the aforementioned ECB meeting shortly after midday while Euro area consumer confidence data will be out shortly after. Over in the US this afternoon the main data of note is the Philly Fed business outlook print for January where current expectations are for a near 5pt improvement from December (albeit still at a lowly -5.2). Also due will be the latest initial jobless claims print. Earnings wise 19 S&P 500 companies are due to report today with the highlights being Verizon and Schlumberger – the latter being the first of the big oil names.


Ben Bernanke: "China Is Contained"; Ray Dalio Agrees

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On Wednesday, Ray Dalio joined CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin and Becky Quick for the Davos edition of Squawk Box which is inexplicably being filmed outdoors next to some snow-laden conifers despite the fact that it’s 19 degrees in Switzerland.

The “zen master” - whose “All Weather”, risk parity portfolio got caught in the rain without an umbrella during the flash crashing madness that unfolded in late August - weighed in on a number of topics, including the outlook for US rates.

The Fed, Dalio claims, is destined to abandon liftoff and the nascent tightening cycle in favor of more QE.

Why? Well because there’s an “asymmetric risk on the downside” for markets thanks to the fact that the Eccles cabal has spent seven years going “full-Krugman”, as it were. More specifically, by pumping trillions of dollars in fungible liquidity into the system, the FOMC has managed to inflate bubbles in virtually all financial assets meaning there’s really nowhere to go but down from here.

When those bubbles burst, Bernanke’s fabled “wealth effect” will reverse and the virtuous circle wherein Americans supposedly spend more because their 401ks look better will cease to go round, triggering a downturn and forcing Janet Yellen into a humiliating mea culpa.

More QE, more Keynesian insanity, and more leverage. Got it.

So much, we said, for Dalio’s “beautiful deleveraging.”

For those who needed MOAR Ray, you got it on Thursday when Dalio participated in a Davos panel discussion that touched on, among other things, China.

Although Beijing has a “balance of payments challenge,” Dalio says China’s problems are manageable. 

Ben Bernanke agrees. "I don't think China's economic slowdown is that severe to threaten the global economy," the former Fed chair said at the Asian Financial Forum this week, before insisting that "the U.S. and China are not as closely tied as the market thinks."

Back in Davos, Dalio called the fact that Chinese debt is growing faster than incomes "unsustainable but understandable". Debt restructurings have been managed “superbly” in China, he adds.

Yes, a “superb” management of debt restructurings, where “superb” means simply refusing to allow banks to report real NPL numbers and stepping in to prop up SOEs and pseudo-SOEs when they miss a bond payment.

Dalio also weighed in on Beijing’s out of control shadow banking system which, you’re reminded, is responsible for the creation of the 8 trillion yuan, maturity mismatched black swan that we all know as China’s WMP industry. “China has developed its shadow lending system with a lot of balance,” Dalio supposes. Here's what "a lot of balance" looks like:

But the real punchline came when Dalio opined on the folks running the show in China's runaway markets. China is "not being run by loose cannons," he insists, adding that the country has a "real commitment to market reform."

Right. So bascially, "move along, nothing to see here." 

We wonder if Dalio will change his tune once the "weather" (so to speak) worsens and China finally buckles under the weight of its $28 trillion debt burden, which Bernanke said on Tuesday is merely an "internal problem."

Check back in six months once the "beautiful" restructurings multiply.

"Investors Should Sell Any Bounce Back" Top Investors See More To Come

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Investment managers are warning that markets probably have further to fall as China’s growth slows, oil prices plunge and central bankers lack tools to prop up economies. As Bloomberg reports, from the largest asset manager in the world to the most niche investment expert, many of the best known 'gurus' are warning there is more to come just as Morgan Stanley's James Gorman warned this morning "the size of the correction suggests it's not temporary," adding that "it might be too soon to step back into the market."

"I expect a protracted decline in the S&P 500," Jeffrey Gundlach, co-founder of DoubleLine Capital, said in an e-mailed response to questions."Investors should sell the bounce-back rally which could come at any time."

 

“Excessive risk exposure is adding to the selling pressure,” Gundlach said.

 

 

"You need to have some stabilization of fundamentals to give people conviction this has gone too far," Koesterich, whose firm is the world’s largest money manager, said in an interview. "Certainly you are getting closer to capitulation. The magnitude of the drop suggests that."

Hedge fund manager Ray Dalio said global markets face risks to the downside as economies near the end of a long-term debt cycle.

“When you hit zero, you can’t lower interest rates anymore,” Dalio said, according to a transcript of the interview. “That end of the long-term debt cycle is the issue that means that the risks are asymmetric on the downside because risks are comparatively high at the same time there’s not an ability to ease.”

 

The rout in global stocks is being fueled by investors seeking to reduce leverage as central bank run out of options to prop up economies, according to Janus Capital Group Inc.’s Bill Gross.

 

“Real economies are being levered with QEs and negative interest rates to little effect,” Gross, who manages the $1.3 billion Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, said in an e-mail responding to questions from Bloomberg. “Markets sense this lack of growth potential and observe recessions beginning in major emerging-market economies.”

Credit folks are fretting too...

"The negative sentiment in the market has turned into a full-blown high yield selloff and more credits are going to run into trouble." said Kapil Singh, a money manager at DoubleLine. "High yield buyers are becoming choosier and choosier."

 

"A lot of funds limped into the new year hoping for a market rally but that just hasn’t happened," Mark Heron, head of distressed debt at hedge fund Ellington Management, said.

 

"You get the sense that there is a broader market issue," Heron said.

 

Complacency about the risks of contagion from the weakest segments of high yield is reminiscent of sentiment regarding subprime debt in mid-2007, Heron’s firm wrote in a November report.

And that means all those wonder M&A deals (and the premia they pumped into stocks) won't be there...

"I suspect there are a lot of deals that were teed up, ready to come to the market, that will just have to stay on the shelf for the foreseeable future," said money manager Margie Patel, at Wells Capital Management in Boston, which manages about $350 billion. "The pipeline is going to dramatically shrink."

And nor will the other pillar of support for stocks -  buybacks..

Simply put, the riskiest parts of corporate debt markets are inching closer to panic mode... and stocks are slowly waking to that reality (as the 'knowledge' leaks from professionals to the rest of the market).

But some remain hopeful - "This is a financial crisis and not an economic crisis," Aguilar said during a conference call. "The U.S. economy is stable."

Soros Reveals He Is Short The S&P 500: Warns China Will Have A Hard-Landing, Says "Fed Hike Was A Mistake"

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There’s been no shortage of commentary from market heavyweights this week thanks to the World Economic Forum in Davos, but for anyone who hasn’t yet gotten their fill of billionaire talking heads, George Soros gave a sweeping interview to Bloomberg TV on Thursday, touching on everything from China to Fed policy to Vladimir Putin to Europe’s worsening refugee crisis.

As for China, Soros says he “expects a hard landing,” a contention we won’t argue with considering said hard landing probably arrived a year ago. "A hard landing is practically unavoidable," he said. "I’m not expecting it, I’m observing it. China can manage it. It has resources and greater latitude in policies, with $3 trillion in reserves." $3 trillion in reserves which, we might add, are rapidly evaporating. 

As for the Fed, Soros is on the policy mistake bandwagon, saying Yellen may have mistimed liftoff. That echoes sentiments voiced by Marc Faber among other prominent investors and speaks to what we’ve been saying since September, namely that December's hike might go down as the worst-timed rate hike in history. "The investor said he would be surprised if the Federal Reserve raised interest rates again after hiking them in December for the first time in almost a decade,"Bloomberg writes. He, like Ray Dalio, says the FOMC is more likely to cut than hike going forward.

Draghi, Soros thinks, will ease further. No surprise there. This morning we got a bit of dovish jawboning out of the former Goldmanite and it seems likely that the ECB will move again in March given the rather dour outlook for inflation across the euro.

And speaking of inflation (or a lack thereof), Soros warns that deflation has indeed arrived and China, along with falling oil prices and raw materials, are the root causes.

He also voiced concern over the bloc’s refugee crisis and says he’s worried about the political fate of Angela Merkel. The EU, he contends, is falling apart.

Commenting on Vladimir Putin, the billionaire says the Russian President is operating from a position of weakness and thus has to act erratically and take “big risks.”

But the most important point - for markets anyway - came when Soros revealed that he is short the S&P, and long TSYs which again recalls Marc Faber's take on what's likely to work during a year in which the US slides into recession. Here was the reaction in equities:

Finally, speaking about the outlook for global growth, Soros says that although he "sees the light at the end of the tunnel," he "just doesn't know how to get there."

Neither do we.

Trade accordingly.

Weekend Reading: The Bear Awakens

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Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Of the last several weeks, I have suggested that markets are oversold and that a bounce was likely. However, such a reflexive bounce should be used to sell into as it is now becoming clearer the markets have changed their trend from positive to negative. As I discussed earlier this week:

“The concept of the full-market cycle is critically important to understand considering the markets have very likely broken the bullish trend that began in 2009. Take a look at the first chart below.”

SP500-MarketUpdate-011516-3

“This “weekly” chart of the S&P 500 shows the bullish trends which were clearly defined during their advances in the late 1990’s, 2003-2007 and 2009-present. Each of these bullish advances, despite ongoing bullish calls to the contrary, ended rather badly with extremely similar circumstances: technical breakdowns, weakening economics, and deteriorating earnings.

 

As I have shown in the chart above, when the markets broke the bullish trends (blue dashed lines), the subsequent bear market occurred rather rapidly. The conversion from the bull market to the bear market was marked by a breakdown in prices and the issuance of a very long-term “sell signal” as noted in the bottom of the chart.

 

We can look at this same analysis a little differently and see much of the same evidence.”

SP500-MarketUpdate-011516

“The chart above shows something I discussed last week: ‘Markets crash when they’re oversold.’”

The inability for the markets to muster a rally from currently extremely oversold short-term conditions suggests market dynamics have indeed changed from a “buy the dip” to “sell the rally” mentality.

This weekend’s reading list is a collection of articles on the current state of the market. Is this just a correction within a bullish tend? Or, is this the beginning of the long awaited bear?


1) 7 Reasons Not To Be A Bear by Jeff Reeves via MarketWatch

  • Jobs
  • Housing
  • Oil
  • Insulation From China
  • Valuations
  • US Dollar
  • The Long Term

But Also Read:  Growth Fears Grip The Market by Robert Johnson via Morningstar

2) Charts To Retain Ones Sanity by Scott Grannis via Calafia Beach Pundit

“Financial markets are once again swooning as oil prices collapse, stoking fears of another global financial crisis. Without trying to minimize the angst we all feel, I offer here some charts which are useful for retaining one’s sanity, along with some commentary.”

HY-Energy-spreads

But Also Read: US Economy Slip-Sliding Away by Pater Tenebrarum via Acting Man Blog

Also Read: The Case For Chaos & Equity Bottoms by Anna-Louise Jackson via Bloomberg

3) The Deeper Causes Of The Market Rout by Mohamed El-Erian via Bloomberg

“To shed light on one of the worst starts to a new year for global stock markets, some analysts are turning to macroeconomic explanations, such as China’s economic slowdown and its uncharacteristic policy slips. Others prefer to focus on the cascading influence of unhinged markets, such as oil. Yet neither explanation is sufficiently comprehensive; and each fails to account for major changes in liquidity and volatility.”

But Also Read: Art Cashin – “This Is What You Get Before A Crisis” by Christoph Gisiger via Zero Hedge

And: 7 Numbers To Put The Market Madness Into Perspectiveby Paul Lim via Time

4) Who Let The Bulls Out? by Paul La Monica via CNN Money

“Deutsche Bank chief equity strategist David Bianco defended stocks in a report Tuesday called ‘Gotta swing when you see it.’ He must be eager for spring training to start.

Bianco wrote, ‘We are not panicked by this correction because we understand it. It’s driven by a profit recession centered at certain industries caused by factors that we’ve long flagged as risks.’

 

In other words, nobody should be surprised that the dramatic plunge in oil prices is bad news for the bottom lines of energy and industrial companies.

Bianco added that ‘this correction has overly punished other sectors and now we’re ready to take advantage of it.’  And he said the next 5% move in the S&P 500 is likely ‘to be up and soon.'”

Also Read: Stocks Could Fall 5000 Points by Brett Arends via MarketWatch

Further Read: Ray Dalio On Asymmetric Risk by Tyler Durden via Zero Hedge

 

Watch: Stocks Have Much Further To Fall

 

5) Will The Fed Rescue The Market by Anthony Mirhaydari via Fiscal Times

“It’s far from assured the Fed will ride to the rescue of investors this time.

On Friday, San Francisco Fed President John Williams said he doesn’t see signs that asset values are depressed or below normal and cited the strong dollar as more of a concern than low commodity prices. He defended the December rate hike decision — and he added that the Fed has met its full employment mandate, believes the labor market will continue to strengthen this year and that inflation should return to policymakers’ 2 percent target over the next couple of years.

 

We’ll know more when the Fed holds its next policy meeting on January 26 and 27. We’ll find out this week if the bloodbath continues.”

SP-large-cap-012016

But Also Read:The Bright Side To Stock Rout by John Kimelman via Barron’s

And: Time To Be A Contrarian? by John Plender via FT.com


MUST READS


“Better to preserve capital on the downside rather than outperform on the upside” – William J. Lippman

700 Days In No Man's Land - Why They Can't Keep It Up

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Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

This week brought another reason to get out of the casino, and to sell it short if you can tolerate some volatility.

On Friday the Japanese stock market ripped 6% higher and the European bourses were up 5% because their respective central bankers emitted some hints of more easing just ahead. Even the US market managed to find green for the week.

Apparently, the day traders and robo-machines think BTFD still works. But they are going to be sorely disappointed - just as they have been for nearly 700 days running.

That is, since the S&P 500 crossed the 1870 mark in early March 2014, there have been 35 attempts to rally higher. All of them have failed.
^SPX Chart

^SPX data by YCharts

Like the bloody trenches of World War I, the movement back and forth in “no man’s land” on the chart above has been pointless. At some juncture in the not too distant future, the stock averages are going to break this trading range, and plunge back down to earth.

In the meantime, you can’t blame the punters for trying. This week they succumbed once again to the BTFD delusion undoubtedly because the “moar money” chorus grew ever louder as Friday approached.

That baleful refrain was led this time around by no less than the posse of oligarchs and apparatchiks assembled at Davos. Thus, when Mario Draghi, the world’s most ludicrous monetary dunce, let on that there were “no limits” on how much fraudulent credit could be emitted by the ECB’s printing press, he surely spoke a frightening truism.

Yet the world largest asset gather, Larry Fink, founder of $4.5 trillion BlackRock, gushed with an endorsement of what was pure monetary crack pottery:

“We’ve seen over the last few years you have to trust in Mario,” Laurence Fink, chief executive officer of BlackRock Inc., said in Davos. “The market should never, as we have seen now, the market should not doubt Mario.”

That’s right. You can’t make this baloney up. As Jeffery Snider shows in a nearby post, the massive ECB exercise in QE, which has already emitted some $700 billion in printing press airballs, has had no impact at all on its ostensible targets. Namely, the generation of a burst of private borrowing in order to stimulate spending and inflation.

In fact, European bank lending has been on the flat-line for 7 years and neither the ECB’s massive LTRO of 2012 or the QE explosion during 2015 has changed this trend.

ABOOK Jan 2016 Where is QE Lending HH NFC

 

That’s because Europe is at “peak debt” and has been so ever since the original single currency borrowing binge peaked in 2008.

ABOOK Jan 2016 Where is QE Total Lending

Surely, Larry Fink knows that QE has been a failure in Europe, the US and everywhere else it has been tried. To wit, when the household and business sectors are at “peak debt” central bank money printing amounts to pushing credit on a credit string. It does nothing except inflate the value of existing financial assets and provides cheap carry trade funding for speculators.

That is actually the point, of course. Contemporary central bankers function like a team of monetary wranglers, herding the retail cattle toward the asset gathers. And the latter always and everywhere manage to scalp a fee from investor portfolios being inflated by central bank action. It’s the modus operandi of our regime of bubble finance.

So the Larry Fink’s of the world have become cynical advocates for monetary policies that any half-wit can see amount to gibberish. Here is what the ECB said a year ago when it launched into it $1.4 trillion QE program:

The Governing Council took this decision in a situation in which most indicators of actual and expected inflation in the euro area had drifted towards their historical lows. As potential second-round effects on wage and price-setting threatened to adversely affect medium-term price developments, this situation required a forceful monetary policy response.

 

Asset purchases provide monetary stimulus to the economy in a context where key ECB interest rates are at their lower bound. They further ease monetary and financial conditions, making access to finance cheaper for firms and households. This tends to support investment and consumption, and ultimately contributes to a return of inflation rates towards 2%. [emphasis added]

Needless to say, the first paragraph above is errant nonsense. The idea that Europe was suffering from a dearth of inflation is essentially Keynesian newspeak. What these monetary cranks were talking about as requiring a “forceful monetary policy response” was the tiny area of relatively benign consumer inflation shown in the circle.

3-HICP-a

Even then, the 26-year average rate of consumer inflation shown above was 2.1%. By contrast, the slight relief experienced by wage earners and savers in recent months is entirely due to the great oil and commodity deflation now washing through the world economy.

Yet since the Eurozone produces virtually no fossil energy or industrial raw materials (even most of the coal is produced in Poland which is not in the euro area), it’s a wonderful thing; it results in higher real wages and more real output and wealth.

In fact, after years of deteriorating terms of trade with the rest of the world due to the China driven commodity bubble, the pendulum is swinging favorably in Europe’s direction. But its self-serving monetary central planners and financial class have managed to turn an unequivocal good  into an entirely contrived problem——as in the specious claim that “potential second-round effects on wage and price-setting threatened to adversely affect medium-term price developments”.

That is gibberish. So what if stronger real wages and better purchasing power on global commodity markets result in a lower trend of nominal wages and prices in Europe. For 200 years until about 2009, most economists thought that was a very good thing.

And virtually none of them believed in “inflation targeting”, let alone a magic threshold of 2%. That was the half-baked theory of Ben Bernanke and a small posse of second rate academics like Frederic Mishkin of Columbia Business School, who published indecipherable papers in Ben’s forgettable books.

Simply put, there is no logic or empirical evidence whatsoever that supports the idea that 2.00% consumer inflation is better for economic growth and improvements in real productivity and living standards than is 1.22% or 0.02% consumer inflation.

This is just a postulate made-up from wholecloth that justifies massive central bank intrusion in the financial system and constant efforts to falsify and inflate the prices of financial assets. Since the annual Davos confab has increasingly become the equivalent of an asset gatherers ball, it is not surprising that it has become a loud lobby in favor of moar central bank monetary fraud.

Nor were the BOJ and ECB the only source of renewed hope for monetary ease. Davos based whispers that the Fed’s expected March raise would be taken off the table quickly flooded the canyons of Wall Street. In no time flat the dip buyers were back in force.

But let me pick out Ray Dalio for special mention in the roll call of shame. The founder of the $200 billion Bridgewater complex of  hedge funds was talking his book like there was no tomorrow on the sidelines at Davos, assuring the world’s punters that QE4 is just around the corner:

“I think a move to a quantitative easingwould bolster psychology,” he told CBBC’s “Squawk Box: at the so-called World Economic Forum at Davos…..This will be a negative for the economy, this market movement. The Fed should remain flexible. It’s shouldn’t be so wedded to a path……. “The risks are asymmetric on the downside, because asset prices are comparatively high at the same time there’s not an ability to ease,” he said. “That asymmetric risk exists all around the world. So every country in the world needs an easier monetary policy.”

You can listen to the whole interview if you can manage your blood pressure, but it amounts to this. Dalio’s $80 billion “All Weather” portfolio is in deep trouble because his fabled “risk parity trade” is in danger of puking big time.

So he urges the central banks to plunge into another fit of destructive money printing, and thereby keep tens of millions of ordinary savers and retirees impaled on the economic torture racks of ZIRP. Worse still, without a trace of compunction or embarrassment he urges the retail sheep back to the stock market slaughter for the bald faced reason that he needs to nix the VIX.

Let me explain. Dalio ended up a billionaire not because he created a lot of economic value added or societal wealth gains as did Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Sam Walton or even Jeff Bezos. The latter’s stock is way over-valued, but the immense gains he has delivered to tens of millions of consumers cannot be gainsaid.

By contrast, Dalio did little more than stumble on a Wall Street gambling formula that would be absolutely bogus without the perverted “wealth effects”  policies of today’s Keynesian central bankers.The turbo-charging effect of Wall Street’s fast money traders and robo-machines piling on for the ride only makes Dalio’s rent scalping even more lucrative.

They call the underlying dynamic “risk-on/risk-off” on bubblevision, but it amounts to this. In a rigged financial market in which stock and bond prices are continuously rising over time owing to systematic falsification of financial asset prices by the central banks, you can make tons of money being long. Yet there is even more megatons of windfall gains to be harvested if you add Dalio’s secret sauce, as I explained in a post a few months ago:

Indeed, never in all of history have a few ten thousand punters made so many trillions in return for so little economic value added. But what Dalio did in this context was to invent an even more efficient machine to strip-mine the Fed’s monumental largesse.

 

To wit, Bridgewater’s computers buy more stocks on the “rips”, when equity volatility is falling and prices are rising; and then on the “dips” they rotate funds into more bonds when equity volatility is rising and the herd is retreating to the safe haven of treasuries and other fixed income securities, thereby causing the price of the latter to rise.

 

In short, there is a payday in every type of short-run financial weather because Bridgewater’s computers are monetary sump pumps; they constantly purge volatility from the portfolio.

But here’s the thing. The “risk parity trade” could never exist in an honest free market.

 

You couldn’t create algorithms to safely pump out volatility and milk the market on alternating strokes because the regularity of the waves on which it is based are not natural; they are the handiwork a central bank that has been taken hostage by the casino gamblers.

 

Nor is “hostage” too strong a word. In the days of Paul Volcker and William McChesney Martin anybody who even speculated about 80 months of ZIRP would have been assigned to the William Jennings Bryan school of monetary crankery.

The occasion for these musings was the August market swoon, which was triggered by the initial financial shock waves from the fracturing Red Ponzi of China. This caused something to happen which violated the rules generated by the 29-year regime of Bubble Finance inaugurated by Alan Greenspan in October 1987 when the stock market plunged on Black Monday.

To wit, when stock prices fell by 12% during late August to the 1870 low on the S&P 500, bond prices did not surge owing to risk-off clamoring by the market herd. Accordingly, Bridgewater’s risk party portfolio became swamped with too much volatility on both the bond and equity side of Dalio’s big boat. So the algorithmic sump pumps went into over-time dumping stocks in order to drain the ship.

Consequently, Bridgewater wiped out its entire profits for the year in a few days during August. This spasmodic stock selling, in turn, pushed the casino’s plain vanilla momo chasers and robo-machines into the drink in the process. Needless to say, the capsizing Big Boats in the casino were soon firing at each other in public, but also lining-up for a full court press at the Eccles Building.

Here’s the reason. In an honest financial market in which debt is priced by the willingness of savers to forego current use of their money, there could be no “risk parity” trade because the price of stocks and bonds would not be inversely correlated. Indeed, the price of government bonds and blue chips corporates would fluctuate only modestly over time owing to secular changes in the propensity to save, but they would absolutely not vary inversely to the stock average on a short and mid-term basis.

The graph below, therefore, is a pure product of central bank driven bubble finance. The stock index rose by 11X on a trend basis over the last three decades even as national income (GDP) rose by only 3X. That yawning gap was due to the Fed’s massive financial repression which subsidized the flow of speculative capital into the stock markets.

At the same time, the yield on the 10-year treasury note dropped from 9% to 2%, meaning that the price of the risk free benchmark bond surged by order of magnitude over the period.

So risk parity really worked only because in two stroke engine fashion it deftly moved short-term trading positions back and forth along the rising trend lines of the stock and bond markets, while minimizing the setbacks owing to occasional downward price corrections in both markets.

The rub, of course, is that in a classic world of independent economies and central banks, even Dalio’s two stroke engine would not work. That’s because in response to the egregious money printing of the Bubble Finance era—-the Fed’s balance sheet rose from $200 billion to $4.5 trillion or 22X during the last three decades—-the US dollar’s exchange rate would have collapsed, causing a surge of domestic inflation and a 1970s style crash of bond prices.

So enter the Red Ponzi of China and the linked and derivative mercantilist central banking policies of its EM supply chain and the petro-states which, on the margin, literally fueled the world’s explosive growth between 1992 and 2014

As it happened, however, in the last few months the long reign of the global money printers has begun to sprout fractures. Over on the other side of the earth in China what had become a 20-year long $4 trillion cumulative “bid” for US treasuries and other DM fixed income securities has gone serious “offers”.

This will prove to be one of the great financial pivots of history. During the course of their stupendous inflation of China’s $30 trillion Credit Ponzi, the red suzerains of Beijing bought treasuries hand over fist and thereby kept their price rising and the volatility of the world bond market falling.

To be sure, this wasn’t charity for America’s debt besotted shoppers and governments. It was done in order to peg the RMB exchange rate and thereby keep its mercantilist export machine humming and the people grateful to their beneficent  communist party rulers.

But at length it became too much of a good thing because every time the Peoples Bank Of China (PBOC) bought Uncle Sam’s debt it similtaneously expanded the internal banking system and supply of RMB credit. Moreover, after Beijing launched its madcap infrastructure building campaign in response to the the 2008 financial crisis the phony construction and investment boom which ensued attracted increasing waves of hot money from abroad, thereby inflating the domestic Chinese economy to a fever pitch.

In fact, the PBOC was forced to let the RMB slowly rise against the dollar to keep its banking system from becoming a financial runaway. But the steadily rising RMB drastically accelerated the inflow of foreign capital and speculative funds into the Chinese economy, thereby filling the vaults of the PBOC to the brim at more than $4 trillion early this year compared to a few hundred billion at the turn of the century.

China Foreign Exchange Reserves

But these weren’t monetary reservesin any meaningful or historic sense of the term; they were the fruits of an utterly stupid mercantilist trade policy and the conversion of a naïve old man, and survivor of Mao’s depredations, to the view that communist party power could be better administered from the end of a printing press than from the barrel of a gun.

But Mr. Deng merely unleashed a Credit Monster that sucked in capital and resources from all over the globe into a domestic whirlpool of digging, building, borrowing, investing and speculation that was inherently unstable and incendiary. It was only a matter of time before this edifice of economic madness began to wobble and sway and to eventually buckle entirely.

That time came in 2015 - roughly 30 years after Mr. Deng proclaimed it is glorious to be rich. So saying, he did not have a clue that a credit swollen simulacrum of capitalism run by communist apparatchiks was a doomsday machine.

In any event, what is happening in China now amounts to the end of the risk parity trade. Because China’s state economic prison is not escape proof, it is now experiencing massive, unrelenting capital flight. That means that is will be forced to sell dollar and euro bonds and thereby choke its own banking system and domestic economy.

As we pointed out in a post earlier this week, China’s faltering industrial economy was more than evident in the 10% decline in freight volume it recorded during 2015 - an outcome its has not experienced since Mr. Deng’s proclamation.

But this means its oil consumption will soon stop growing, and actually already has once you set aside its purchases for the strategic reserves’, which are now full.

Needless to say, sinking global oil demand from China and the EM means that oil prices will remain trapped in the $20s and the petro states will be forced to dump growing portions of their $7 trillion in sovereign wealth funds, driving both stock and bond markets lower.

That’s why Ray Dalio is so very afraid. It is only a matter of time before the risk parity machines and their imitators and confederates trigger a selling crescendo like that of October 1987.

But this time there can be no central bank rescue. The latter have already shot their wad - expanding their collective balance sheet from $2 trillion in the mid-1990s to $21 trillion today.

But since the global economy has had its artificial boom and CapEx frenzy already, years of deflationary liquidation and correction lie ahead. Money printing has failed. Any effort by the central banks to double down on another $20 trillion of bond purchases would blow the world’s financial casinos sky high.

At the end of the day, the asset gathers will profoundly regret what they are clamoring for.

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