"Exxon is confronting one of its biggest crises since Saudi Arabia began nationalizing its oilfields in the 1970s. If the company takes the full $30 billion impairment, it will be the industry’s worst in more than a decade, according to Bloomberg data."
Friday, October 30, 2020
Gambling Through Civil War
"Exxon is confronting one of its biggest crises since Saudi Arabia began nationalizing its oilfields in the 1970s. If the company takes the full $30 billion impairment, it will be the industry’s worst in more than a decade, according to Bloomberg data."
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Party Like It's 1929
No, they don't see it coming. They have a perfect track record to maintain, and easy money to count on...
Watching Fast Money tonight, one of the guests was Tony Dwyer of Cannacord Genuity. He enumerated all of the unprecedented risks - the raging pandemic, existential election, stimulus impasse, geopolitical rancor, but he forgot a few things: the imploded economy, record jobless claims, record Federal debt explosion, technology bubble, global deflation, looming credit crisis, and the bear market in the average stock. Which is why he's still bullish. Because to offset all of those ludicrous risks, he believes the Fed can support the market through it all. Free money. That's it. The Fed versus $350 trillion in misallocated capital in a 1930s economy. He got no pushback from the Fast Money traders.
Over on Marketwatch, behind their new paywall which I have yet to sponsor, this is one of the top headlines:
First off, this is the type of headline for some reason I would never publish. It's called tempting fate to destroy all future credibility. Secondly, it's patently not true, as indicated by current level of bullish active manager positioning (NAAIM), the Barron's October Big Money poll, record call option buying, Rydex bullish asset positioning, the Ameritrade Investor positioning index, and then there is the CBOE Skew index itself which was created specifically to measure crash risk sentiment:
"Prior to the stock market crash of October 1987, investors were not sensitive to tail risk and the curve of S&P 500 implied volatilities had the shape of a smile. Post-crash, investors started to hedge their exposure to tail risk by purchasing S&P 500 puts with low strike prices. This shift in demand bid up the prices of these puts relative to their value under a normal distribution. Black Scholes implied volatilities calculated from their prices therefore increased and transformed the implied volatility smile to a skew. When investors become more concerned about the potential for a market decline, SKEW increases and the implied volatility curve tends to steepen"
In other words, when skew is high, it means that gamblers are actually positioned for a crash. What they say in a sentiment poll, is another matter.
The current skew is not high. The highest level was two years ago in October 2018 right before the mid-term election, when the market tanked -20%.
Apparently, risks have receded in the meantime.
On the side of not seeing it coming, is history's largest IPO and Alibaba fintech spinoff "Ant Group", now scheduled for right after the election:
What could go wrong?
The locus of thermonuclear detonation will be the well conditioned rampant denial over the economy. No matter how bad the economy becomes, Republicans never stop believing that reflation is right around the corner. After all, their portfolio balances reflated months ago.
This past week we got news that net bearish Treasury bond shorts reached a new record. These people have been wrong for two years straight, as deflation has been continuous since the tax cut. Now in the depths of an accelerating pandemic, they've decided to go ALL IN on a position that exploded after the election in 2008.
Suicidal.
Sadly, the Fed can't bail out everyone.
And when the riots start they won't.
One more reason to buy stocks:
Civil war
“Maybe I’m just looking at the news too much, but there are hints of civil war depending on who wins,” Ms. Johnson said
Just Another Trump And Dump
Trump has been lying about the economy for four years straight, why stop now?
The bankruptcy artist known as Donald J. Trump became president at the happy moment in 244 years of U.S. history when the continuously dumbed down populace finally began to believe that debt is GDP. Coincidence? I don't think so.
"As a businessman, Donald Trump ran 6 businesses that declared bankruptcy because they couldn’t pay their bills. As the president running for a second term, Trump is repeating some of the mistakes he made as a businessman and risking the downfall of yet another venture: his own political operation."
Today, Trump took credit for the bounce back in GDP following the black hole GDP implosion created by COVID. He seized on the largest ever one quarter increase as a sign of his economic prowess:
It's clear that the Wharton graduate in the White House doesn't understand 5th grade math. Because a 33% decrease in GDP requires a 50% increase to get back to break-even, as explained by one of his unimpressed commentators:
A one quarter bounce back in GDP from depressionary levels is meaningless when looked at from the perspective of the entire year 2020. The IMF currently estimates full year U.S. full year GDP growth at -4.3%. Meanwhile, we see below via the Fed database that the U.S. debt has grown a staggering +27% of GDP in the past four quarters. Something we have heard nowhere in the Financial press.
It's clear that the U.S. debt is now totally out of control due to the three GOP tax cuts under Reagan, Bush Jr., and Trump. Note that the debt is now growing far faster than indicated by the operating deficit (below). Meaning that the deficit is no longer capturing the complete Ponzi borrowing predicament; however directionally one gets the idea of where things are headed:
Another disaster Trump took full credit for today was a de minimis drop in jobless claims from apocalyptic levels.
The four week moving average of claims, also via the Fed database shows that this "recovery" remains worse than at any time during 2008:
When the populace at large is so dumbfucked that they would approve of this level of criminality, then they fully deserve the final implosion that's coming.
Which gets us to Trump Casino:
So far this week, there have been two 90% down days, meaning 90% of stocks were down on the day, all sectors down. Nowhere to hide.
Today (Thursday), "safe havens" are backtesting the last line of support.
The almighty Dow, which peaked back in February, and is now in a bear market, is on the ropes. As the fake reflation trade has now officially turned into pixie dust:
I shit you not:
"A nine-year-old video communication software provider is now worth more than an oil giant that can trace its founding back to John D. Rockefeller's 1870 formation of Standard Oil."
Just seven years ago Exxon was the largest market cap company in the world, when oil peaked in this cycle above $100/bbl.
"And then the work from home bubble exploded"
Tonight, four of the largest Tech giants are releasing earnings: Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook. The stocks are rallying into the event, having been hammered earlier in the week.
Tech companies were on the hot seat yesterday in Washington, attempting to explain to Democrats why they allow so many dumbfuck conspiracy theories on their platforms. While trying to explain to Republicans why they don't allow enough conspiracy theories on their platforms. It's called a no-win situation, and highly indicative of what is going on in the MAGA Kingdom right now:
“Democrats often say that we don’t remove enough content, and Republicans often say we remove too much,” Zuckerberg said in his opening remarks.
Nevertheless, these wouldn't be true Disney markets, if these stocks were not the last ones making new highs this week. I think we all see where I'm going with this:
Outside of the MAGA Kingdom, there is now a renewed fear of a repeat of the March lockdown implosion:
"Europe's COVID-19 outbreak is rapidly resurging, prompting a flurry of new lockdowns like those seen in the spring."
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the country's top epidemiologist, told CNBC on Wednesday: "If things do not change ... there's gonna be a whole lot of pain in this country with regard to additional cases and hospitalizations, and deaths."
"What does he know?"
In summary:
Bueller?
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
2020 Rich Man's Panic
"While few could have foreseen the pandemic’s toll on the economy, the depth of investors’ pain from corporate distress was all too predictable. Desperate to generate higher returns during a decade of rock-bottom interest rates, money managers bargained away legal protections, accepted ever-widening loopholes, and turned a blind eye to questionable earnings projections. Corporations, for their part, took full advantage and gorged on astronomical amounts of debt that many now cannot repay or refinance"
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
The Walls Are Closing In On Donny
"In a surprise release late Sunday, SAP, one of Europe’s largest tech companies, cut its revenue forecast for the full year and said it expected the fresh wave of Covid-19 lockdowns to hurt demand through the first half of 2021. The results caused shares to fall the most ever in a single day, according to data compiled by Bloomberg since 1989."
"Microsoft shares moved 2% lower in extended trading on Tuesday after the company reported quarterly revenue guidance that fell short of analysts’ expectations"