I'm experimenting with a new type of blog post focused solely on market technical analysis. No major rants and no Econ data. That way I can show more charts and cut down on Twitter spam.
What we're looking for is a second overbought bull trap which will lead into the final meltdown phase.
The SPX is back to overbought and upper trendline:
The pandemic marked the apex of the largest bubble in world history - Globalization. Investors lured by the promise of virtual prosperity are now trapped between recession and inflation. Which means there is no economic or financial bailout this time around. All that's left is lethal denial. Unfortunately, what the sheeple STILL haven’t learned is that Wall Street’s entire business model is predicated upon monetizing denial…
The pandemic super bubble was the first global bubble in history. It was inflated by the largest coordinated global fiscal and monetary stimulus, without any comparison. The problem is that it was far too much stimulus. Coming out of the pandemic many pundits claimed that the pandemic unemployment programs were creating inflation. There is only one issue with that theory - those programs ended almost a year ago (September) which is when inflation accelerated. It turns out the biggest accelerators of inflation were corporate profits, commodities, and the housing bubble. The prime beneficiaries of Quantitative Easing. Once again, it was socialism for the rich which was driving inflation, not the middle class. Something to keep in mind when this hyper bubble explodes. Because this time there will be no bailout for the wealthy.
No bailout means there will be tremendous de-leveraging of the corporate sector in this impending recession. A lot of investors don't seem to know that after the pandemic, Congress removed the Fed's *special* bailout powers.
"Toomey said the deal achieved his four goals: to sweep out $429 billion in unused CARES Act funds allocated for Fed lending and repurpose the money, to shut down the four lending facilities, to forbid the reopening of those facilities, and to ban future clones of the program"
The pandemic was the first time in U.S. history when corporate debt actually grew during recession. Bulls are therefore betting this will be the SECOND recession in a row with no deleveraging. Sure.
From a valuation standpoint, during the pandemic stocks reached a record over-valuation relative to GDP. A ratio called the "Buffett indicator". As we see, prior to the pandemic stocks were bubbling back up to the Y2K record over-overvaluation level. And then the pandemic caused a breakout above that prior peak valuation. A return back to a 1:1 market cap/GDP ratio would imply a -50% drop in stock prices ASSUMING GDP does not collapse. Which is an asinine assumption. Given the attendant collapse in GDP, stocks could easily fall -75%.
That said, central banks will do everything possible to prevent true valuation. Which is why I say that stocks will ultimately become dead money, because they will not reflect proper valuations. Which is something the Japanese and Chinese have already learned the hard way.
The problem of course is that Nouriel Roubini has acquired a bearish reputation, hence he is called "Dr. Doom". Which is why many people ignore his warnings. He has always been right of course as to where this monetary orgy was heading, but it took the pandemic blow-off top to coalesce all of the risks he has warned about for years. Meaning it took a pandemic sugar rally to convince the masses to fully buy into virtual prosperity.
Make no mistake, the magnitude of this meltdown will ensure that anyone deriding Dr. Doom in the days to come, will have ZERO credibility.
In summary, U.S. gamblers are now addicted to VIRTUAL prosperity. Japanese investors were the first to learn the hard way not to trust printed money illusions. Next Chinese gamblers learned the hard way. Japan's market peaked in 1990 and China's market peaked in 2008.
What today's Fed pivot zealots don't understand is that after Y2K and 2008, when the Fed began cutting rates, the market STILL went down. The pivot was not the end of the bear market, it was the beginning.
It's very hard to make the u-turn from boom to bust, when you don't see it coming...
We're receiving glimpses of this impending horror story, but only pieces at a time. We hear about this economic implosion or that one, but no one wants to put the pieces together to assemble the impending disaster. Which makes for a con man's paradise. One in which a public wanting nothing to do with the truth finds ample con artists willing to meet their inflated demand for bullshit.
This week it's highly likely the Fed will tighten at the fastest pace since 1980 in the exact same week we get confirmation of recession. Q2 GDP Now is currently at -1.6%, the same as final Q1 GDP. The very definition of recession.
Which is why policy-makers are now attempting to redefine the standard definition of recession from two quarters of negative growth to "whatever we want it to be". As in something wholly subjective that will contain the growing sense of panic. The fact that this is an election year will in retrospect be viewed as a key factor burying a lot of people. Just as 2008 was a critical election year featuring all manner of inflated bullshit right up until the Lehman meltdown.
Fortunately for policy-makers, investors are now fully conditioned to believe that recession is a buying opportunity which is why complacency is rampant. In the same week we are witnessing what will likely become the greatest economic policy error in modern history, the Fed's Financial Stress Index just reached an all time low. With a stress index like that, who needs enemies?
Two quarters of negative GDP and a flattened yield curve, but recession is not inevitable yet. The 2s/10s yield curve has successfully timed every recession in the past 30 years.
Government economists have successfully timed ZERO recessions.
Do you know what would make a recession LESS likely? RECORD tightening during a period of extreme economic uncertainty. Because what could go wrong?
Ok, so the Fed is hellbent on burying everyone.
We are told that investors have "capitulated", however there is no sign of that anywhere other than in subjective sentiment surveys. The money has to go somewhere. And in an "inflationary" environment the last place it goes is cash. People don't want to buy stocks, but they are told they have to. Otherwise, they will lose to inflation.
Similarly, from a consumer sentiment standpoint, retail sales unadjusted for inflation remain high even though consumer sentiment is at record lows. People are conditioned to buy and to borrow as much money as possible. Why? Because an inflationary environment favors the borrower. Prices go higher and inflation-adjusted liabilities go LOWER. Unfortunately, in a deflationary environment, it's the opposite - prices go lower and inflation-adjusted liabilities go HIGHER. Which is the scenario we are now about to enter - an inflationary collapse. Which is arriving just as most people have been TOLD to believe that inflation is NOT transitory.
And amid all of this chicanery, economists cling to their linear economic models, which in no way can make the u-turn from inflationary boom to deflationary bust. Linear economic models are useless at the end of the cycle. However, that doesn't stop economists from using them. Today's economists are on the cusp of losing ALL credibility.
So it is that we learn about the housing market imploding. The Tech sector having mass layoffs, the car market seeing a spike in repossessions, AT&T customers not paying their bills anymore, commodity markets imploding, and yet it all adds up to soft landing.
Which gets us to the latest most popular investor narrative - rate hikes this year followed by rate cuts next year to mitigate recession. Unfortunately that fairy tale implies a 5% Fed Funds rate by the end of 2022 from 1.5% today. There has never been a recovery from recession at anything less than a 5% Fed rate EXCEPT the pandemic which required fiscal and monetary QE at a combined level of 15% of GDP. Yes, you read that right.
NONE of which risk is priced into stocks right now. What IS priced into the stock market is a soft landing. In a run of the mill recession, stocks decline 20% which is where they are now. In a deleveraging recession such as 2000 and 2007, stocks decline 50% or more.
Which means that what we've seen so far in markets is the denial phase. Which will be followed by the investor panic phase. And finally the Fed panic phase.
One other UNPRECEDENTED risk that NO ONE mentions is that regardless of investor sentiment and Fed rate hikes, the Fed will be draining liquidity at record levels for the indefinite future via Quantitative Tightening.
Never mentioned.
Now, consider the fact that the U.S. is doing better than the rest of the world. Europe, China, and Emerging Markets are imploding in real-time.
And there's your bull shit market. If that's your thing.
"As the endgame approaches, those still nominally in charge of the collapsing empire resort to all sorts of desperate measures—all except one: they will refuse to ever consider the fact that their imperial superpower is at an end, and that they should change their ways accordingly...Because, you see, if they had an inkling of what's going on, they wouldn't take their jobs seriously enough to keep the game going for as long as possible."
I've been too bullish. Like many investors, far too focused on markets. What's happening under the surface of the Disney markets is far more dire than what's happening on top. This "Everything" bubble is a multi-pronged attack on the middle class. We are witnessing the final meltdown of the U.S. middle class at the zero bound.
The greatest risk isn't even currently acknowledged by anyone in the mainstream media - monetary policy failure at the zero bound. This Volcker gambit has no chance of succeeding. Not only does it wrongly assume the Fed will have sufficient rate cut powder it ALSO ASSUMES the middle class is as strong now as it was in 1980 when the middle class was at its apex of power. Whereas, now the U.S. middle class is at the lowest share of GDP in history. No unions, no labor protections, no pension plans, no job security. All strip mined and fed into the stock market and out to the Cayman Islands. A multi-decade crime spree capped off by a COVID-driven monetary sugar rally. Because we are to believe a pandemic improved the economy.
This belief in the enduring strength of the serially laid off and underemployed "consumer" is the greatest fantasy underlying this era. The magnitude of this disaster far exceeds the ability of central banks to "fix" when it explodes. Ironically, the stock market's durability to date has been covering up the carnage taking place below the surface. As is end of cycle inflation. Sales VOLUMES are collapsing, but prices are staying high. For now. This is how every bubble crash begins - buyers and sellers move further apart. At first sellers are reluctant to lower their asking prices. But then the market slows down to a point at which they have to sell. And then the race to the bottom begins.
I call this period the apex of criminality. The full weight of super cycle criminality is now arrayed against the general public. From the S&L Crisis in 1990 to the DotCom bubble in 2000, the housing bubble in 2007, and on to now, we have witnessed serially greater widely accepted corruption in financial markets. Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme was a rounding error compared to the losses in Ponzi crypto markets - less than one hundredth in size. And yet there is STILL no regulation around Crypto currencies. It's fucking ridiculous. However, on an even larger scale albeit more insidious, today's economic "soft landing" predictions are totally driven by conflict of interest. No one on Wall Street wants to be outside of the consensus. On Wall Street, the people who make these forecasts are called "the sell side". And the people who are to believe these predictions are "the buy side". Except Wall Street doesn't believe their own hyperbolic bullshit, which is why THEY are all sitting in cash right now. Not their clients however.
Throughout this time, the public has come to believe that all of this is now just "corruption as usual". Robert Prechter of Elliot Wave International informs us that ignoring and embracing malfeasance is common in boom times. However, when boom turns to bust, social mood turns dark and what was generally accepted during the good times is generally rejected during bad times.
Given that there were NO major prosecutions on Wall Street arising from the 2008 subprime meltdown, this time we will see a level of public rage that is hard to fathom. Basically, the industry that got bailed out by the middle class in 2008 is the one that is now leading to their final destruction.
History will not be kind.
From a markets standpoint, getting the T-bond market and the stock market under control will be the Fed's top priority. However, in the meantime, most other markets will collapse to levels currently unthinkable - I am of course referring to cryptos, housing, commodities, muni bonds, corporates and Emerging Markets.
When that happens, confidence will collapse like a cheap tent.
Even zombified down -60% the stock market will in no way convey the full extent of the economic damage.
Ultimately there will be far more "value" in other types of investments than the ones directly manipulated by the Fed. When the BOJ zombified the Japanese stock market, the public abandoned it en masse. They found far greater value in markets that were not manipulated by central planners.
In summary, the contrarian view at this juncture is NOT for a rally. The contrarian view is for monetary failure at the zero bound.
And no, they don't see it coming.
To today's experts now looking in the rearview mirror, this is a "six sigma" Black Swan event that is outside of their purview. Their entire baseline is wrong.
NOTE: Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
At times like this, what everyone wants to know is "How soon is inevitable?"...
So far, this year is evolving eerily similar to 2008. The year started with inflationary hysteria, and it's ending with unforeseen deflationary collapse. Then as now, forecasters were continually behind the curve. Their predictions were outdated the moment they were printed. What follows is a comparison of 2008 risks vs. now:
First, on a relative comparison of this monetary asset bubble. Put it this way, Crypto losses in 2022 are MORE than the entire size of the subprime mortgage market equaled in 2007: $2.15 trillion vs. $1.3 trillion.
The size of the 2021 IPO market in total IPO count and subsequent collapse is vastly larger than every other year in market history including Y2K.
Which is why this week when we learned that Goldman Sachs "beat" earnings expectations, that meant their profits DECLINED -48% year over year. Following their own standard Wall Street model of lowering earnings expectations so it always looks as if companies are beating expectations even when profits are collapsing.
Criminality is built right into the standard valuation model.
And of course the current housing bubble features the largest two year price increase in U.S. market history. By any valuation measure - price/income, price/rent, price/CPI this bubble is larger than the one in 2007.
Not just in the U.S. but across the developed markets world (Europe, Canada, Australia) are all RECORD overpriced with central banks RECORD tightening.
I've been writing a lot about policy error lately so I will give the summarized version now. It's shocking to me that not one pundit has raised the risks of the Volcker gambit taking place right now. That is by FAR the greatest risk in conjunction with Fed-induced EM meltdown.
"The odds of a 1 percentage point hike were at 83% early Thursday, but later dropped to about 45% following comments from Fed Governor Christopher Waller:
"We don't want to make snap policy decision based on some knee-jerk reaction to what happened in the CPI report"
That's EXACTLY what they did last month. The CPI report came out on the Friday before FOMC, and they leaked to the WSJ a .75% rate hike over the weekend. They totally panicked.
However, instead of Fed-induced depression all we hear from pundits (and the Fed) now is that rates will go up this year and down next year. And it will all end in a "soft landing".
By the way, we were told the same thing back in 2008:
Which gets us to the related topic of recession denial which today has reached epic levels. Wall Street is going to bury a lot of people, which is what they do best.
"The current recession exists purely in the imagination, not in the real world"
The Fed as always is laser focused on stale data months old at this time. They are totally ignoring the bond market and the flattened yield curve. The difference between now and 2008 is that year over year CPI "inflation" is higher now than it was back then. However, nominal prices of commodities are LOWER now than they were back then. Either way, it's the same result. Far more focus on inflation than recession.
I put together this comparison list of current factors pointing to recession vs. factors currently pointing to expansion. What you notice is that the expansion list is mostly comprised of lagging indicators. Whereas the recession list is driven by real-time market indicators. Except GDP, which forms the very basis of economic growth and is likely ALREADY in confirmed recession. In other words today's experts are ignoring their OWN definition of recession as I write. Similar to 2008 when the economy entered recession NINE months prior to Lehman. But the Fed thought the economy was still growing.
One big difference between now and 2008, is that back then the banking dominoes were already falling - New Century Financial, Bear Stearns, Countrywide, Washington Mutual, Fannie/Freddy, AIG etc. etc.
This time, the dominoes are sovereign nations. Led by Russia and China. China pulled the WORLD out of recession in 2008, this time around they are leading the world into recession.
Ironically, COVID started in China and they are handling this crisis worse than every other country on the planet. They are STILL in lockdown mode two years later. The wealthy are leaving China like rats on a sinking ship:
"Scarred by Shanghai’s chaotic lockdown under the Covid-Zero policy that has made China a global outlier, Hu is joining what investment migration consultancy Henley & Partners estimates is a cohort of 10,000 high-net-worth residents seeking to pull $48 billion from China this year — the second-largest predicted wealth and people outflow for a country after Russia"
China's GDP growth rate is now predicted to be 3.4%, however it has been a moving (lower) target all year. Similar to the U.S., crash is happening faster than analysts can change their models.
Which gets us to positioning. We learned this week that professional fund managers are the most bearish since 2008. Which, we are to believe is bullish because it means they have "capitulated". The term everyone is using.
The problem of course is that there is now a massive divergence between Wall Street and Main Street. The latter of which has remained far too complacent and over-positioned in stocks:
Final bagholder transfer of ownership is now complete.
A necessary and sufficient condition for final collapse.
In summary, the S&P 500 peaked in October 2007 and then exploded a year later in October 2008.
This past year, the S&P peaked in December 2021. Therefore, if anything this current disaster is AHEAD of schedule.
But, you don't see headlines like this one at the bottom, you see this at the top. Because that's what this is, the second denialistic top prior to the second and bigger crash.
Deja vu.
“We have seen very robust, significant activity for about the last 18 months that’s continuing here into the third quarter. So, really a record sales run for us”
I'm spending the weekend in New York city as two of our young adult children live here. I only come here about once a year but I am always struck by the number of brand new mega sky-scrapers in the city. And then I am equally struck by the mounds of trash and homeless people strewn about at ground level amid street life "eau de toilette". The intersection of epic wealth and epic squalor. It's a metaphor for what is wrong with the Ponzi "system". New York is not home of the 1%, it's home of the 0%, wherein subprime dreams of infinite growth are catalyzed by free money. At the base of the modern pyramid are the disposable peons squeezed endlessly to prove that totally unprofitable business models could one day turn a profit amid the most ideal boom times economic conditions. Until it all collapses and turns back into a Silicon Valley pumpkin all over again.
Ironically, our son works in downtown finance aka. Wall Street in the Energy industry. He covers both fossil energy and renewables. He like many others disagrees with my bearish assessment of oil prices. There is now a major disconnect between the spot (physical) oil market and the futures market. The spot market is "tight", but the futures are trading like a brick. I tend to focus on the latter since futures are more subject to speculation. I'm also more looking at the overall commodity complex which is trading even worse than oil. Oil is unique because Russia is the second largest producer and Europe is attempting to ban import of Russian oil. Zerohedge constantly reminds us that Europe will be economically destroyed by their Russian oil ban and in the meantime highly discounted Russian oil will find its way to market in China and India amid global economic collapse, assuring that Russia remains fully intact.
Sure.
All of which was presciently warned about 50 years ago:
"THE COMPUTER MODELING made it plain: If people continued to overextract finite resources, pollute on a massive scale, and balloon the human population in an unsustainable way, civilization could collapse within a century. It sounds like that modeling could have been done last week"
What produces collapse in most of the scenarios is the combination—it's not all only one thing. In the case of fossil fuels, it's both the consumption of the reserves of fossil fuels and the pollution"
What could lead to a more sustainable scenario, or a scenario of balance?...Realizing that it's not higher and higher consumption which makes us live in a good way, have a healthy life and well-being. It's the quality of our relationships with other humans, with nature, that makes possible the scenarios in which you can decouple well-being and the growth of consumption"
Indeed. This is not the end end of civilization, this is the beginning of civilization. One in which the ascendant corporate monoculture of rampant materialism is no longer worshipped. In the meantime, it's clear that a culture in late stage self-imposed decline will deny it's ending right to the very end.
Even at this late juncture, Wall Street is pedaling the myth of a soft landing. In this article, Schwab's Chief Investment officer advises investors to "Backup the truck" to buy stocks in a recession. She believes, like many others, that we are reaching peak inflation which means that Fed rate hikes will soon come to an end. And therefore, once the market figures out the end of rate hikes is near, it will take off.
There is a problem with that investment hypothesis - even if it's true that inflation is peaking - which is far from certain: Currently, the Fed rate is at 1.5% on its way most likely to 2.25% (.75%) or 2.5% (1%) this month. However, WHY would the Fed stop hiking rates at 2.5% when THEY know full well that they cannot offset a recession with that small amount of rate cut firepower? In other words, if they have to start cutting rates in 2023 will they want to start from a level of 2.5%? No.
History informs us that the LEAST amount of rate cuts required to offset a recession in the past 50 years is 5% in both 2000 and 2007. In 2020, the Fed had only 2.5% of rate cut dry powder but they also had unlimited QE AND record fiscal stimulus.
The 1990 recession was considered a "soft landing" but it took 7% of rate hikes to create that soft landing scenario. Otherwise, logic dictates it would not have been a soft landing:
Which means the Fed is now on the horns of a very dangerous dilemma. Do they continue to hike rates and ACCELERATE recession, or do they backoff rate hikes and have insufficient dry powder ahead of recession?
Either way, it's totally fantastical to believe that by the time they need to start cutting rates, they will have sufficient dry powder to prevent economic depression.
In summary, the bull case is to assume non-normalized rates ahead of recession AND to assume soft landing when the everything bubble explodes.
Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on your evolutionary point of view - the cure for idiocy is idiocy...
The trolls are swarming my Twitter feed, which usually means the market is ready to make another leg down. Most criticize me for being too biased towards bearish news. Which is fine, because I have no interest in taking part in the biggest scam in history. Everyone in the mainstream media is now pro-deception. Embedding delusional assumptions in economic forecasts is the new "objectivity". We live in the age of rampant fraud, and if you question the modus operandi of mass delusion, you become an automatic outcast.
The fact that CNBC is STILL interviewing Cathie Wood shows that scams are now openly accepted. Investor losses from just ONE of her Ark ETFs now equal all of Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme losses i.e. $20 billion.
"ARKK currently holds $8.5 billion, down from a high-water mark of around $28 billion in February 2021.
Notably, the drawdown in assets is a result of weak performance rather than investors yanking out cash...while such a dismal showing would normally prompt an investor exodus, Wood has cultivated a loyal following on social media"
Inflation just happens to be the LAST and most widely embraced fraud. Almost everyone in the business media is a "supply sider" so they view inflation as an existential risk to corporate profits and stock prices. Didn't they fight for forty years to implode the middle class? We can't have all of that hard work unwound now. Hence they are complicit in a Fed policy error of BIBLICAL magnitude. After all, if you need people to buy your product - be that homes, cars, stocks or cryptos then what you do is you tell them that the prices are going up. No salesmen ever tells someone the price is going DOWN.
As I've said many times, measuring inflation as a year over year rate of change while exiting a pandemic lockdown, is the height of idiocy. And now it has set off an UNCONTROLLED GLOBAL inflation hysteria.
"30+ central banks have hiked rates by at least one percentage point at one time in 2022"
policy makers are willing to countenance triggering a recession if that is the extent to which they need to shift the demand curve in order to meet this aim"
Refusing to go along with the trend is the Bank of Japan, with Governor Haruhiko Kuroda dismissing a pickup in inflation in his country as being mainly driven by commodities -- not the kind of stable price increases he’s been seeking"
Indeed. The Japanese have been doing this much longer than everyone else and they know transitory asset inflation when they see it. Thirty+ central banks are now competing to trigger synchronized global meltdown on a scale that monetary policy can't solve.
The Fed is putting on a show as how NOT to manage monetary policy. Right now, they should be putting rate hikes on hold to give time for their recent hikes to take effect. But instead, they are ONCE AGAIN panic reacting to the CPI and leaning towards a 1% rate hike. The biggest one since Volcker imploded the economy.
However, in the absence of wage inflation, nothing cures high prices like high prices. Consumers don't have the spending power to buy EVERYTHING at inflated prices. Money spent on higher gasoline bills must be taken from somewhere else.
Collapse is NOT the true definition of inflation.
Here we see last week's average hourly earnings divided by this week's CPI. There is nothing sustainable about this equation:
All of which leaves investors trapped between recession and inflation. Which is why cash balances are near all time lows. They've been drinking the inflation Kool-Aid.
There is NO LIE today's bulls won't believe. And no truth they will believe. They call this approach "contrarian" investing. He who believes in the least truth wins. Currently, the U.S.-centric "TINA" ("There is no alternative") trade is oft-cited as the primary reason to own U.S. risk assets. Which is ironic, because that is exactly what I define to be the greatest single risk at this juncture - the outflows of money from the rest of the world to the U.S.
In other words, the greatest bull argument is also the greatest bear argument. Who to believe?
The people who don't believe in the truth of course.
Here is what I see happening next:
The magnitude of this global collapse will be on such a scale that 32+ years of Japanification will end. The Japanese have been using cheap money to AVOID economic reform for over three decades. Now, the last false prophet of economic reform - Shinzo Abe was just assassinated. Coincidence? No. He and his ilk have propagated an era of monetary mass delusion. He was supposed to be a reformer but he turned out to just be another cleverly disguised stimulus addict.
Here in the U.S., Millennial meltdown will ensure things "change". Meaning there will be no more bailouts for the wealthy. Nothing is too big to fail this time around.
That doesn't mean the end of the world, but it does mean the end of rampant lying.
People ask what do I mean when I say that stocks will become "dead money". What I mean is that central banks will do everything possible to prevent true price discovery. And as long as they are trying to reinflate their collapsed bubble, that will zombify the stock market. It will trade in a wide slow range.
The generational highs are in. Our lies are only "exceptional" in their magnitude.