Wednesday, May 3, 2023
BOOM AND BUST
Thursday, April 27, 2023
FOMC: FEAR OF MISSING CRASH
In 2023, bulls are trapped between the Scylla and Charybdis of Monetary and Fiscal dumb and dumber. It's a good thing they have artificial intelligence on their side...
The so-called "x-date" for U.S. default is now somewhere in June or July. No one knows for certain. Suffice to say, it's close enough to start garnering the attention of *some* markets. As of last week, the bond market had priced in a six sigma premium on the 3 month t-bill. However, that premium dropped when the House passed their smoke and mirrors spending bill:
WSJ: Democrats Reject House Spending Bill
As we see below, the bond market is far more worried than it was in 2011.
The problem is that this debt ceiling fight has now become all about the 2024 election. Biden this past week said he is running for re-election. Therefore House Republicans see this as their best chance to implode his presidency. Neither side is willing to compromise because both sides are convinced they MUST "win" this battle or admit failure to their own base of morons. This is all politics now.
Here we see the gap between the Treasury VIX (Move index) and the S&P 500 VIX is the largest since 2008:
Also this week, bank explosion re-started after a six week hiatus. The issue for banks is that the pandemic flooded them with unprecedented deposits and they invested those deposits into long-term bonds, creating history's largest duration mismatch. Next, the Fed panic raised interest rates at the fastest pace in history, causing unprecedented bond losses.
Now, deposits are leaving banks for higher yields, because money market funds are yielding 10x higher than typical deposit accounts.
It's looking more and more likely that First Republic will be the next shoe to drop and very likely the first bank NOT to receive a FULL bailout. Meaning that the standard FDIC depositor limit of $250k per account would apply.
Should that happen, we would very likely see mass panic across the ~$7 trillion of uninsured deposits still sitting in banks.
That's when that middle pane black line would meet the blue dotted line and keep on truckin'.
You DON'T have to be a genius to figure this all out. But you DO have to be able to fog a mirror.
All of which gets us back to the much-loved 1930s monetary "pause" rally.
Since bank stocks imploded in early March, Tech domination has reached three decade breadth extremes.
"The S&P 500 at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 19x would be a high hurdle even at lower rates let alone one where the growth outlook is diminishing, monetary policy is tight with risk-free yielding about 5 per cent, and event risks are increasingly disconnected from VIX"
Overvaluation, profit recession, monetary tightening, unprecedented event risk.
Sound familiar? It's the bull case in a nutshell.
Tech over-weight has been further stretched this week by Tech earnings which have come in "better than feared". Which is the new Wall Street mantra for sucking dumb money into the casino.
Because, let's face it, that's where it belongs.
Monday, April 24, 2023
DENIAL IS DEFLATIONARY
Wednesday, April 19, 2023
RALLY INTO RECESSION
Sunday, April 16, 2023
BTFP
Wednesday, April 12, 2023
A BUBBLE IN COMPLACENCY
What we are witnessing in real-time is monetary policy failure. The full cost of which will be revealed during the deflationary phase...
There has never been a rate hiking cycle without a recession and there has never been a recession without a significant rise in unemployment. Therefore, today's bullish pundits are of the mind that for the first time history, we will have both - no recession and no significant unemployment.
Unemployment rate (red)
Fed funds rate (green)
The two most recent cycle downturns were the Tech bubble in Y2K and the housing bubble in 2008. This pandemic hangover bubble features both six sigma Tech overvaluation and RECORD housing overvaluation yet pundits don't predict a meaningful correction in either market. What we are witnessing is 15 years of central bank moral hazard unwinding the hard way. Amid abject denial.
Here we see homebuilder stocks inversely correlated to homes sold, for the first time in history. Which is why the ratio of homebuilder stocks to homes sold is at a record high (bottom pane).
In Tech-land, delusion is likewise rampant. The best performing sector so far in 2023 is about to see the largest earnings decline of any sector:
"This year’s rally in the shares of the biggest technology companies is the best thing going for bulls. It’s about to run into an earnings season that’s expected to deliver the biggest profit drop for the tech sector in more than a decade."
The (15%) projected drop for tech earnings in the first quarter would be the biggest since 2009. The consensus has been consistently weakening: Six months ago, analysts in aggregate were expecting that tech-sector earnings would edge up by 1%"
Q4 2022 saw the biggest decline in Tech spending in U.S. history:
At the beginning of a Tech bubble, the stocks hiring the fastest perform the best. When the bubble collapses, the stocks laying off the fastest perform the best.
"Tech already has cut 5% more than for all of 2022, according to the report, and is on pace to eclipse 2001, the worst year ever amid the dot-com bust"
We saw all this before of course in Y2K. Back then it took 17 years for the Tech sector to overcome the bubble high. This time, gamblers are expecting new highs any day now.
We just got "better than expected" CPI, but the core CPI re-accelerated. There has never been a time when the Fed paused rate hikes with the core CPI above the Fed rate. So another rate hike is a lock for May.
The Fed has raised rates 4.75% but the core CPI has only come down 1%. Which means we are witnessing monetary policy failure for the first time in history:
Warren Buffett says more bank failures are inevitable, but ALL deposits are safe. Which is totally delusional.
"Investing legend Warren Buffett believes there could be more bank failures down the road, but depositors should not ever be worried"
"Buffett said the government would likely step in to backstop all depositors in all U.S. banks if that was ever necessary, though he did note that would require Congressional approval"
Buffett, 92, said he so confident that U.S. depositors are safe that he would put a million dollars of his own money in a bank"
A multi-billionaire doesn't even have $1 million of his own money in a bank, but he says it's 100% safe.
Because if it's not, HE is not getting bailed out this time.
Wednesday, April 5, 2023
SYSTEMIC RISK EXPLOSION
Markets are priced for 100% bailout. Anything less than that and they will spontaneously explode...
Allow me to recap the past month:
Four weeks ago, Powell announced that the Fed was re-accelerating their rate hikes. By the end of that same week, the U.S. had suffered the second (Silicon Valley Bank) and third (Signature Bank) largest bank failures in U.S. history.
Subsequently, the Fed implemented their "BTFP" asset repurchase program whereby banks temporarily trade their unrealized loss encumbered assets in exchange for fresh Fed loans at 4.75%. Unfortunately, the average long bond exchanged in these programs is bearing 1.75% so the BTFP program allows banks to go out of business slowly, instead of instantaneously if they marked to market.
Meanwhile, Congress held a hearing into the collapse of these banks and thoroughly castigated the FDIC for bailing out wealthy depositors using the "Systemic Risk Exception" (SRE). Which is moronic because the entire catalyst for the bank run was wealthy depositors assuming that they can't rely upon the SRE for future bailout. Congress has now conveniently confirmed that assumption.
Therefore, imagine if you will that next some smaller banks implode and the FDIC decides NOT to implement the SRE and instead allows wealthy depositors to get wiped out. When that happens, we will witness mass bank failure as ~$8 trillion of uninsured deposits flees small banks and heads for money market and t-bill funds.
It's the same set of events that led up to Lehman. There had been multiple failures and multiple bailouts followed by a bailout-weary Fed finally deciding that Lehman was NOT too big to fail. So markets exploded. Because they were priced for 100% bailout.
All of which explains why after four weeks of BFTP, the small banks are at new lows. We are one non-bailout away from wholesale meltdown. So what to do?
Load up on risk.
"March recorded the worst U.S. bank failures since the 2008 crisis, but that did not stop some investors from snapping up battered financial stocks"
The other development over the past four weeks since Silicon Valley Bank exploded, is that the economy has fallen off a cliff.
Why? Because banks have tightened lending standards due to the new tighter regulatory and funding environment. Which means that the IPO equity market AND the bank lending market are both shutdown at the end of the cycle.
All of which means that the end of cycle stock to bond rotation has now begun. The exact same pundits who didn't predict the bank run, also did not predict the resulting slowdown in the economy. Which is why t-bond shorts are now getting duly monkey hammered.
Recession is a lock for 2023. And now even the majority of pundits who've been saying it wouldn't happen are finally realizing they were wrong. All because they thought that Fed tightening at the fastest rate in 40 years wouldn't lead to a tightening of credit:
“We have argued for some time that the economy would avoid recession this year," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist and Kiernan Clancy, senior U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. "But that view now looks untenable, given our expectation of a sharp tightening of credit"
The last market narrative that is now imploding is that Tech stocks are safe havens from deflation. During regular slow-growth part of the cycle that is certainly true. However, during the end of the cycle deep recession phase, that is false.
Below, fittingly we see that semiconductors are imploding on the right shoulder amid the highest volume since March 2021 aka. the left shoulder. Consider that volume is already the highest in two years and it's only Wednesday in a holiday shortened week.
In summary, the systemic risk explosion has been slowly coalescing for two years. However, this society has an extreme case of survivor bias and is highly adept at ignoring those who are already under the bus.