Global Market Comments
October 9, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE NEW AI BOOK THAT INVESTORS ARE SCRAMBLING FOR),
(GOOG), (FB), (AMZN), MSFT), (BABA), (BIDU),
(TENCENT), (TSLA), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU), (LRCX)
Global Market Comments
October 9, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE NEW AI BOOK THAT INVESTORS ARE SCRAMBLING FOR),
(GOOG), (FB), (AMZN), MSFT), (BABA), (BIDU),
(TENCENT), (TSLA), (NVDA), (AMD), (MU), (LRCX)
Global Market Comments
October 8, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(IF BONDS CAN’T GO DOWN, STOCKS CAN’T EITHER),
($NIKK), (TLT), (TBT), ($TNX)
(TESTIMONIAL)
The U.S. Treasury bond market has suddenly ground to a halt, puzzling traders, investors, and hedge fund managers alike.
Today, the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond (TLT), (TBT) traded as low as 0.77%.
This is despite the U.S. economy delivering a horrific negative GDP growth during Q2. Growth is expected to rebound to 2-5% in Q3, depending on if there is another stimulus package from Washington, or not. 2021 could bring economic growth as high as an astronomical 10%.
If I blindfolded any professional money manager, told him the above and asked him where the 10-year Treasury yield should be, most would come in at around the 5% level.
So what gives?
I have put a great deal of thought into this and the answer can be distilled down to two letters: QE.
Global quantitative easing has created about $30 trillion in new money over the past 10 years. It has not been spent, it hasn’t disappeared, nor has it gone to money heaven. It is still around.
The U.S. Federal Reserve, the first to start QE in November 2008 during the Great Recession, ended it in October 2014. From start to finish, it created $4.5 trillion in new money. Over the past five years was wound down to $3.8 trillion by letting debt on its balance sheet mature.
Enter the pandemic. The expectation is that the new round of QE could exceed another $10 trillion or more.
Japan actually began its QE program in 2001, long before anyone else, to deal with the aftermath of the 1990 Japanese stock market crash and a massive demographic headwind (they’re not making Japanese anymore).
Some 20 years later, the Japanese government now owns virtually all of the debt in the country. When you hear about Japan’s prodigious 240% debt to GDP ratio, it’s all nonsense. Net out government holdings and there is no national debt in Japan at all. That’s why the Japanese yen is consistently strong.
After the 2008 crash, the Japanese government expended its QE to include equities as well. As a result, the government is now the largest single buyer of stocks in the Land of the Rising Sun. The Nikkei Average has risen by 234% since the 2009 bottom despite a miserable economic performance, and the yield on 10-year JGBs stand at a lowly 0.03%.
The European Central Bank got into the QE game very late, not until 2015, and its program continues anew, although at half its peak rate. The ECB has just renewed its plan to print a ton of new money.
Part of the problem is that the ECB is running out of bonds to buy, as it already owns most of the paper issued by European entities. That’s why 10-year German bunds are yielding a paltry -0.50%.
As a result, there is excess liquidity everywhere and this has broad implications for your investment or retirement portfolio. It could take as long as a decade before all of this artificial cash is removed from the global financial system.
For a start, bonds may not fall much from here, even if the Fed continues its near-zero interest rate policy for three more years, as promised.
Stocks can’t fall either with this much cash underpinning the market, at least not for a while and not by much. While company share buybacks have virtually disappeared this year, foreign investors have stepped in to pick up the slack.
It also means you can’t have a global contagion leading to a financial crisis. There is ample money available to refinance your way out of any problem when 70% of the world’s debt is still yielding close to zero.
The bottom line here is that global excess liquidity can cover up a multitude of sins. It means the price of everything has to go up, or at least stay level until that liquidity runs out. That includes stocks, bonds, your home, classic cars, and even that rare coin collection of yours gathering dust in a safe deposit box somewhere.
Yes, when the excess free cash runs out in a decade, there will be hell to pay. Until then, make hay while the sun shines.
Don't worry, John.
Your posts are probably the least boring of any mentor(s) out there. Please keep up the good work.
By the way, I may have flown in that Tiger Moth back in the early 70s. My dad learned to fly on Tiger Moths right after the war in south England and we used to visit his home turf when I was a boy.
At Red Hill, we used to fly G-ACDC mostly, but I also had the privilege to ride in the Fox Moth and DH.60 Gipsy Moth. Small world. :)
Best wishes,
Stephen
Dallas, TX
“October is one of the most peculiarly dangerous months to trade in stocks. The other are July, January, April, November, May, March, June, December, August, and February,” said American writer and humorist Mark Twain.
Global Market Comments
October 7, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(THE ROARING TWENTIES HAVE JUST BEGUN),
(SPY), (TLT), (TBT), (VIX)
I just about fell out of my chair when the national election poll numbers were released over the weekend.
After remaining stuck at a 49% to 41% lead for the past year, Joe Biden picked up 5% to reach a commanding 54% to 39% lead. These are the most decisive polling numbers since the 1972 Nixon-McGovern contest, when the former carried 49 states in the Electoral College.
A blue wave is now a certainty, where the democratic party gains control of the White House and Congress for at least the next two years.
The enormous swing is no doubt a response to the president’s performance at last week’s debate, which most viewers found wanting. We now know that he was infected with Covid-19 at the time, which among its many symptoms include delusion and poor decision-making.
We don’t know Trump’s academic record because he has sued his alma mater to prevent their release. However, it is safe to say he failed his debate class. You never attack the moderator.
The change in the election outlook has enormous implications for investors. It puts to rest and chance of a Trump win or a contested election. Biden’s lead is now so enormous that it is impossible to overturn through legal challenges, widespread voter suppression, or disabling of the US Post Office.
Differences in vote counts in the hundreds, as we saw in Florida in 2000, are fertile ground for challenges, extended outcomes, and uncertainty. Differences in the tens or hundreds of thousands aren’t.
Don’t take my word for it, listen to Mr. Market. The near three-point plunge in the bond market (TLT) yesterday tells us that good times are coming, demand for new funds will be unprecedented, and interest rates will rise. 2021 could see an unprecedented 10% US GDP growth rate.
As a result, the stock market now has before it the task of backing out a lot of fear and uncertainty that was priced in. Translation: stocks go up.
Horrendous multi thousand-point plunges are now a thing of the past. It is now unlikely that the S&P 500 (SPY) will even fall back to the 200-day moving average at $308, a near certainty only a week ago.
It’s time for you to step up your aggressiveness in returning to risk in general and the stock market specifically. We are about to see another tidal wave of cash to move into technology stocks. Rapid rotation into domestic recovery stocks, banks, and small caps will also ensue.
Your next entry point on the long side will be next Monday after Trump returns to the hospital as his Covid-19 peaks. That is supposed to be what happens 7-10 days after an initial infection. That should be worth 500 or a thousand points of downside.
The Roaring Twenties have just begun, if they hadn’t already last March. My forecast of another 400% gain over the next decade on top of the existing one just received another dollop of credibility.
Oh yes, and don’t forget to vote.
“Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet,” said General James Mattis, former US secretary of defense.
Global Market Comments
October 6, 2020
Fiat Lux
Featured Trade:
(HOW THE RISK PARITY TRADERS ARE RUINING EVERYTHING!),
(VIX), (SPY), (TLT),
(TESTIMONIAL)
I received a call from a hedge fund manager on Friday warning me of what was about to hit the market.
So much money had poured into "risk parity” strategies that it was starting a long-term secular trend up in market volatility (VIX). It was a classic case of too many people bunching up at one end of the canoe.
Witness last week’s failure of stimulus talks on every front. Even though stocks kept going up, the Volatility Index did, too. That is never a good sign.
Investment advisors everywhere are bemoaning the shenanigans of high-frequency traders, offshore hedge funds, and congress for the recent volatility of the market that has been scaring the living daylights out of their clients.
But they have a new enemy that few outside the trading community are aware of: "Risk Parity" managers.
Risk parity is being blamed for the September explosion of volatility that took it from 22% to 36% in a matter of days.
The industry is thought to have $400 billion to $600 billion in assets under management now, with hedge funds Bridgewater and AQR in the lead.
Potentially, they could unload as much as $100 billion worth of stocks in days.
What's more, the fun and games aren't confined to just equities. Risk parity strategies have spread like a pandemic virus to bonds (TLT), foreign exchanges, commodities, and even precious metals.
Risk Parity is an esoteric new investment strategy that targets a specific volatility level, rather than a return relative to a convention benchmark such as Treasury bonds or the S&P 500 (SPY).
When volatility (VIX) is low, they add risk, hoping to beat the returns of competitors. When volatility is high, they cut back positions, hoping they miss the losses of others.
The goal is to come out on top of the money manager league tables, sucking in tons of new assets and countless riches in management fees.
You can see right now where this is going.
In rising markets, they increase buying, and in falling ones, they greatly step up selling.
I'm sure there was a day several years ago when this approach made money hand over fist.
That was probably back when only its inventor was implementing it alone in a back room using an undisclosed hedge fund with a tiny amount of capital.
The problem with risk parity and all other strategies of its ilk is that they become victims of their own success. New capital pours in, returns fall until they inevitably dive into negative numbers.
I have seen this occur time and again, from the portfolio insurance of the 1980s (think October 1987 when the Dow plunged 20% in a single day), to Japanese warrant arbitrage, to high-frequency trading and the flash crashes.
The proof is in the pudding.
An index of 17 risk parity funds tracked by JP Morgan has fallen by 8.2% since the beginning of May. More losses are to come. It sounds like the great unwind of risk parity assets has already started.
Like all investment fads that promise great, risk-free returns, this one will come and go.
In the meantime, fasten your seat belt.
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