There's no question the pandemic created wealth for the ultra-wealthy - at the expense of everyone else, which is how all Ponzi schemes work. There is a period of time during which asset flows provide the illusion of wealth for everyone. Which keeps them drawing in new cash. For the all time record, 2021 drew over two decades' worth of new cash into the casino:
Sunday, February 20, 2022
The End Of Disney Markets
There's no question the pandemic created wealth for the ultra-wealthy - at the expense of everyone else, which is how all Ponzi schemes work. There is a period of time during which asset flows provide the illusion of wealth for everyone. Which keeps them drawing in new cash. For the all time record, 2021 drew over two decades' worth of new cash into the casino:
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
Don't Look Down
The Netflix movie, "Don't Look Up", is a timely analog for the monetary euthanasia that has a death grip on society. Fortunately, this impending reset won't be a world ending event. But for consumption addicts forced to go cold turkey, it will feel like it anyways...
I finally got around to watching "Don't Look Up", which is essentially a slightly more intelligent version of "Idiocracy" i.e. a society of idiots hellbent on self-destruction. A very timely movie clearly targeted at climate change, but equally relevant to all other aspects of society that are currently imploding in broad daylight amid mandatory denial. Since the pandemic collapsed the carbon level down to decade lows, I've started worrying more about this society's latent mental breakdown than the environment. Why? Because once this monetary illusion implodes, the overall carbon level will collapse like a cheap tent.
Case in point, in the same week we learned that consumer confidence has collapsed, we learned that retail sales are skyrocketing. This only makes sense in a society of hoarders fretting about inflation while their overall sense of economic confidence implodes. These people are hoarding merchandise going into a deflationary depression. Something we never saw in 2008. It goes without saying that the hangover will be brutal.
But really, who could warn them?
This hoarding/asset bubble scenario has created the perfect set-up for a bidless market and the fastest demand collapse in modern history. There is no way this could be more cataclysmic than this unique combination of idiotic events.
As we see below, the inflation hypothesis is now universal consensus. Even though at this latent juncture neither gold, nor oil, nor Treasury bonds are confirming it.
On the subject of timing, we have now entered the ninth consecutive week of short-term treasury bond yield rise. The last time we saw that was back in February of 2000. Which made me realize that the set-up now is eerily reminiscent to that one. Back then, the Fed kept the spigots open through the Y2K date change because they were worried the world was going to end, computers offline, planes falling out of the sky etc. When all of that turned out to be a non-event, the stock market bolted higher. At that point, the Fed realized they were way behind the curve on tightening policy. So what did they do, they started hiking rates as fast as possible. And then by March 2000 the Tech bubble exploded. Which when you think about it is very similar to the current scenario. The Fed has been preoccupied with the pandemic and the various mutations. Which left them way behind the curve as supply bottlenecks grew and pent-up demand exploded. So now, in this new year they're making up for lost time.
The main difference is of course that now yields are far lower than in 2000 because that was the strongest economy in decades. Whereas this is the weakest economy in U.S. history. In Y2K, GDP growth was at 7% and the U.S. budget was in surplus. Now, GDP growth is at 2% and the deficit is 6%. In any other era that would have been considered a 4% recession.
Putting it altogether and we now have end of cycle inflation hysteria worse than 2000 and 2008, attending a 100 year asset bubble. Which means double policy error. However, the populace is far more concerned about the price of eggs than sky high asset prices. One is expensive short-term. The other costs everything long-term.
Once the global margin call reaches its crescendo, there will be no possibility for central banks to stop it. The Fed is now boxed in by the lethal inflation narrative. In 2008, it took four months and -40% for the Fed to arrest the decline of the stock market. Albeit there were some massive short-term rallies along the way.
Today’s pundits are 100% convinced the Fed can save every market despite the fact that the collapse is already well underway.
In summary, the consumption-addicted masses are now hoarding insolvency heading into a depressionary asset collapse. On the other side of which there will be a glut of EVERYTHING. Which is apropos for a society that trusts opinion over fact every single time without the slightest question. A society of dedicated denialists placing ALL faith in their overwhelming strength of numbers.
On the topic of the casino, this week the Nasdaq has round-tripped back to the high of last February, while breadth has collapsed for a YEAR straight:
Since the top on January 5th (yes my birthday), the Dow is declining faster than it did in 1987. Today's Dow has already tested the 200 dma three times. Back then, a solid break of the 200 dma is when the crash got out of control.
Rally volume as we see has been abysmal:
The broad based Wilshire has the clearest wave form. It peaked back in November and it's now exhibiting nested "1s" and "2s". This is my interpretation and it implies the most bearish of outcomes.
Suffice to say, bulls can't afford for this to be accurate, because it implies the end of mass delusion.
Don't look down.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Goodbye To All That
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Global Coordinated Meltdown
"A dramatic week of central-bank meetings and economic data has changed the game for global rate-hike bets"
Monday, February 7, 2022
There's No Bailout From Idiocracy
This society has a lethal addiction to cheap money. One that comes with an exorbitant price tag: Super asset crash at the zero bound, sans bailout. The Fed is following the exact course of action that will ensure they have neither interest rates to cut to save the economy, NOR QE to deploy to save the imploded asset bubble. History will say that the Fed and Congress were too busy front-running retail bagholders in the stock market to notice the bubble was out of control...
Many people don't like my writing style, because I am biased towards the bearish point of view. I leave nothing to the imagination. More importantly, I don't pander to idiots. The predominant writing style on the other hand, spews multiple opinions across the full spectrum of IQ and leaves the reader to get buried by the ball of confusion. Monetizing useful idiots is by no means limited to Wall Street in this era.
More importantly, I personally would never pass up this once in a lifetime opportunity to point out how fucking stupid this species has become. Looking back from an historical standpoint, this era will be the new 1929 - whereas that era stood for almost 100 years as the apex of insanity, per legendary investor Jeremy Grantham, the insanity of this bubble far exceeds that one. Did anyone alive twenty years ago believe they would see a Dotcom bubble bigger than the original one? Or a housing bubble bigger than 2007? Of course not, but here we are with both at the same time. The pandemic arrived at an unfortunate time because the cycle was already in its late stages. Many companies that had borrowed excessive amounts of cheap money were already starting to implode. However, the pandemic and its "special lending programs" threw them a lifeline to double down on balance sheet impairment.
On the topic of the Tech bubble, the delusion that abides this bubble is that overvaluation is limited to the Ark ETFs and the profitless junk issued by Wall Street at double the rate of Y2K. That junk bubble has been collapsing since LAST February. Since that time there has been a massive rotation to "quality Tech". A rotation that has only amplified the overvaluation of this era's Tech behemoths, which as of December reached the same extreme as Y2K:
"The dramatic fall in some of the "flaky" parts of the stock market so far this year has followed the paths of previous implosions, including the bursting of the dotcom bubble in 2000"
These mega caps: Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Facebook are also at the happy intersection of the LARGEST stock market bubble, which is the passive indexing bubble. What some of us call the "Dumb money bubble". Michael Burry warned that passive indexing was creating a bubble of monumental magnitude which would lead to MOAC: Mother Of All Crashes. But then he capitulated, because this madness went on too long. The very protagonist of The Big Short couldn't fight the Fed any longer. 2008 was a mere micro-subset of this current bubble.
It's no secret that the Tech sector has driven the majority of gains since the 2009 low. When the pandemic hit, investors rotated out of cyclical reflation trades into Tech stocks which were deemed "safe havens" from lockdown. That set off a decade high blowoff top in the spirit of the Y2K date change melt-up which capped off the 1990s internet bubble.
We can surmise that we've seen peak Amazon as the pandemic drove massive online sales at the expense of small service businesses. However, now sentiment towards durable goods is at a record low:
I don't know much about NFTs, I just know they're worthless. I was in the IT industry long enough to remember the "hype cycle" which was the cycle of hype that every new technology went through - the highs and the lows. Right now the Crypto space is coming off its all time crack high. This bubble will explode and then from the ashes we will find out if Crypto has any value beyond paying porn stars and child traffickers, off the books. Because right now that's it's only "utility" aside from bankrupting latecomer speculators.
Which gets us to this era's housing bubble. For the past decade HGTV has been on in the background in our household, as every home in the U.S. seemingly got remodeled to all white interiors and stainless steel appliances. The modern style being a replica of an institutional insane asylum.
To say that we've mass overbuilt and commodified the housing stock is a ludicrous understatement. We've basically created a formula for mass bankruptcy on an industrial scale.
Last year, Zillow made news because they were EXITING the home buying business. That news should have been a massive warning as to what is wrong with this current housing market: Robo buying. Flipping houses on an industrial scale.
"Wall Street and Silicon Valley have already transformed U.S. housing markets since the 2008 financial crisis, which had its roots in real estate"
The millions of foreclosures in the housing collapse created new opportunities for global investment firms to buy homes at scale, becoming corporate landlords controlling tens of thousands of homes"
The sheer irony is unbelievable. Wall Street creates a financial crisis that explodes the housing market at all time highs. Then, they come in at the bottom and buy up all the houses using cheap money leveraged 100x. All of which is leading to an even BIGGER housing crisis this time. In 2008, most of the leverage was in subprime, now the entire market is over-leveraged.
Which makes today's headline that much more dire:
Contrary to popular belief, there will be no bailout from Idiocracy this time.