Wednesday, August 30, 2023
SUPER CYCLE FRAUD
Friday, August 25, 2023
THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE HYPE CYCLE. IS OVER.
This is a special blog post to tie out the events from the past week...
Two major events took place this week in markets:
1) The artificial intelligence hype cycle exploded
Nvidia released its earnings after the close on Wednesday and at first the stock sky-rocketed after hours similar to what it did last quarter. But Thursday's open was the high of the day for Tech stocks. After that it was straight down.
This reversal of fortune is due to the confluence of several risks. First and foremost social mood has turned down on the right shoulder of the two year head and shoulders top. What was deemed great news in May was now deemed to be solely a Nvidia-specific story. There is no carry over to the rest of the Tech sector. Secondly, since that rocket launch in May, the majority of Tech stocks have already rolled over and imploded. Including semiconductors. So it would be hard to launch another hype cycle rally, when the last one is still imploding. AMD is a case in point. This company is developing their own AI chip to compete with Nvidia. They are the closest thing to a true competitor. And yet the stock is now re-tracing all of its gains from May. Which clearly is reminiscent of the all time high and the 2021 semiconductor pump and dump scheme that crashed in January 2022.
I will say this, that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is a quintessential salesman. He has convinced a majority of CEOs to invest in AI technology despite having no clue what it will do for their businesses. For their part, the CEOs were just trying to impress Wall Street by saying they were "investing in AI". The main benefit is that it's going to give them a write-off at the end of this year. One wonders why this serial criminality is allowed to continue.
For 2023, this artificial intelligence pump and dump was a total act of desperation for the crime syndicate of Wall Street, Silicon Valley and CNBS. These people can't afford another bear market in 2023 following the one in 2022. It would be the first back to back bear markets since the 1930s.
The question for the week is can bulls survive without artificial intelligence? And the answer is, NO. The outside of the right shoulder is the locus of maximum crash risk.
2) The next major event took place this morning with J. Powell's much-anticipated Jackson Hole speech. Once again, he was uber-hawkish. His overall thesis is that the Fed's fight with inflation is "far from over". At the end of his speech he invoked Paul Volcker when he said we will "keep at it", until the job is done. Which was the title of Volcker's autobiography ("Keeping At It"). In other words, what 80% of pundits said would happen earlier in the week, still somehow was not priced into markets. Today, the market is gyrating like crazy due to the weekly options expiration. Next week we will have a much clearer picture of the consequences of this hawkish speech. Needless to say with a jobs report and a few inflation reports due between now and the September FOMC, more rate hikes are most definitely on the table.
However, another related event this was week was the wholesale meltdown of retail stocks. Most CEOs complained that high theft is reducing profitability. High theft is a sign that consumers are getting squeezed by higher costs and higher interest rates. We can expect far more theft in the future. Whether that is morally right or wrong is not my point, only to say that people are getting desperate.
My key point is that clearly there is a major disconnect between the official economic data which is pointing to an almost 6% GDP print in Q3, versus what's happening to the consumer. As always, the Fed is solely focused on the data, while ignoring what CEOs are saying. After all, they have a 100% track record of over-tightening at the end of the cycle to maintain.
So, that's the week. All of 2023 risks have now been kicked into the last week of summer when liquidity will be at the low point of the year when it can do the most damage.
We will find out Sunday night in Asia (Monday) what they think about higher for longer.
Monday, August 21, 2023
GLOBALIZED CLUSTERFUCK
We are watching the endgame for Globalization, but investors are fat and happy...
This past week, an article in the Wall Street Journal aptly described the collapse of the Chinese economy after 40 years of breakneck growth. The Boom Is Over.
China is once again exporting deflation globally. Their strategy of using infrastructure investment to power the economy is ending in a mountain of insolvent debt and excess capacity. Ghost cities. Bridges to nowhere. Multitudes of empty airports. They believed that being an industrial powerhouse was the secret to economic success. And yet, the article also points out that despite all of these extreme efforts, China never achieved a true middle class. Average incomes still linger far below developed world standards. What went wrong? Globalization went wrong. Instead of creating a middle class in the Third World, it bankrupted the middle class in the developed world. All solely for record corporate profit and rampant environmental degradation. If China goes down, the whole world goes down. Therefore it's only fitting that the Walmart junkies don't see it coming.
Here we see the U.S. bank index with 2008 on the left and 2023 on the right. Clearly, banks are descending in a three wave nested waterfall. In the lower pane we see the eight week moving average of retail investor bearish sentiment, still at the lower end of the range.
A lot of people don't know that Lehman Brothers was actually a second rate Wall Street bank. That's why the Fed let it fail. Having organized bailouts for all of the initial dominoes, the Fed finally just let the chips fall where they may with Lehman. But the system went into meltdown, because the system requires ALL wealthy investors get bailed out, not just a lucky few. So now, we are comparing the failure of a minor investment bank to the failure of the country that pulled the entire world out of recession after 2008. And yet investors view this as the minor event.
You have to be brain dead to believe that, hence it's consensus.
Let's recap events to date:
Global markets bottomed in October 2022 on the basis that the Fed and other central banks were mostly done raising interest rates. Markets sky-rocketed into early February and then tanked because inflation had rebounded and the Fed became hawkish again. The same week that Powell raised rate hike expectations, regional banks spontaneously exploded. However, the bank run caused investors to once again believe that rate hikes were over, despite the fact that Powell himself said there was no connection between the rate hikes and the bank run.
Nevertheless, gamblers rotated from cyclicals back to the beloved Tech sector on the basis that artificial intelligence was the next gold rush. The Tech melt-up went vertical in late May when Nvidia released earnings and raised guidance for the year. Now, fittingly Nvidia earnings are on tap again in this seminal week. One Wall Street bank after another has been upgrading their price target on Nvidia this past week heading into earnings on Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Powell, who saw no connection between rate hikes and U.S. bank implosion is widely expected to be hawkish again this week at the Jackson Hole Symposium, on Friday. Below we see that he was hawkish last year at Jackson Hole and he catalyzed a collapse in stocks to their October low. This time the stakes have been raised to global meltdown proportions.
The dotted lines show what would happen if markets follow the same trajectory as last year - they will oscillate ahead of the meeting and then explode lower. Which means next week.
Note GDP Now in the lower pane vs. last year, for those still praying for a dovish speech.
Here we see the S&P Tech sector backtesting the 50 day moving average similar to one year ago. Many bullish pundits claim the market is "oversold", however oversold in a bull market is not the same as oversold in a bear market. Which this chart clearly shows.
In summary, this is Powell's defining moment. Similar to most U.S. gamblers he has zero perspective on the collapse of China and its implications for global markets and the economy.
Here we see what happened last year when Powell monkey hammered the Yuan lower. This year it's at the precipice. The Chinese government is trying to support the currency and lower interest rates at the same time. Which never works.
Something has to give.
Wednesday, August 16, 2023
GLOBAL RISK OFF
Friday, August 11, 2023
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IMPLODING
"The Federal Reserve's aggressive interest rate hike cycle, which kicked off in March of last year and was partly responsible for roiling the crypto market, has ended, according to several investment banks"
Wednesday, August 2, 2023
NOTHING MATTERS, UNTIL IT EXPLODES
We now live in a late stage Idiocracy that is in denial of risks that are unfolding in broad daylight, to say nothing about what's going to happen when this gong show final explodes...
Among the many known risks in 2023 - Tech super bubble, bank run, BOJ carry trade implosion, housing bubble, extreme over-valuation etc. etc. - debt ceiling fiasco was near the top of the list. That is until June, when Congress finally reached an agreement with a mere one day left. Bulls unilaterally decided that the 2011 scenario had been avoided, so the agreement catalyzed a melt-up into the end of July. Which happens to be exactly when the U.S. debt was downgraded in August 2011. And it happened again on Tuesday, August 1st. And yet no bullish pundit saw it coming. So what else could they say now? "It doesn't matter". By the way, they said the exact same thing back in August 2011. But the market plunged -20% anyways.
Incidentally, those who say this entire fiasco "doesn't matter" apparently don't read the news, because Congress is heading for ANOTHER funding clusterfuck in September. In other words, the ratings agencies had to send a message:
Remember Occupy Wall Street? That movement was launched at the nadir of the debt ceiling fiasco. Far worse awaits this incipient collapse "not happening" in real-time.
Of course, the biggest risks of 2023 have yet to be revealed. The known risks are bad enough, but the yet unknown risks will be far worse. Consider that no one predicted the Adani explosion, Carl Icahn's Ponzi revelation, and regional bank meltdown. But those things happened anyways. That's what happens on the right shoulder of a super cycle head and shoulders top. We finally learn who has been doing stupid things with free money.
Nevertheless, pundits continue to say that BOJ policy normalization isn't happening, even though it's taking place RIGHT NOW. They predicted the BOJ would NOT modify their policy twice, and then it happened twice. Now they are saying it again. They don't learn from their own mistakes.
Why? Because placating the stoned masses is now the primary order of business. Making sure that money is spent freely on all manner of goods, but most of all ad-sponsored financial bull shit.
These people are amply proven sociopaths, so anyone who trusts them, does so at their own risk.
Another lethal denial is the belief that the Fed is done raising interest rates. This week we learned that Q3 GDP is heading back to 4%, which guarantees not only more rate hikes but also an IMMINENT u-turn higher in CPI.
But economists say it doesn't matter as these two headlines on my news feed show:
And, as far as Friday's jobs report, we learned today that ADP came in hotter than expected. I've always suspected that a hotter than expected jobs market could explode stocks. We'll find out on Friday when the first test of last week's pause melt-up gets system tested.
Which gets us to the world's largest and most important stock, by market cap. Which reports tomorrow after the close.
As a preview, tonight we got Qualcomm:
"Qualcomm reported third-quarter earnings on Wednesday that beat Wall Street expectations"
Net income during the quarter fell to $1.8 billion, or $1.60 per share, a staggering 52% drop from the $3.73 billion or $3.29 per share reported at the same time last year.
In summary, what else could go wrong?