Here Are The “Costanza Trades” Of 2019

After a wild 2018, Mark Orsley – Head of Macro Strategy for Prism (and formerly with RBC), is out with a review of his 2018 “Costanza Trades,” while offering his comprehensive thoughts for next year.

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It’s that time of year again. Stockings, dreidels, Festivus poles, and, of course, the inevitable truckload of bank “2019 Year Ahead” pieces cluttering your inboxes which are about as attractive as getting coal in your stockings.  However, these pieces are useful in some regards, as they are very good at nailing the consensus themes and are excellent counter-indicators.  Long time readers will know that The Macro Scan takes another twist at year end, to present next year’s top “Costanza Trades.”

For those of you not familiar with George Costanza, his character on the sitcom Seinfeld could do no right when it came to employment, dating, or life in general.  In one episode, George realizes over lunch at the diner with Jerry that if every instinct he has is wrong, then doing the opposite must be right.  George resolves to start doing the complete opposite of what he would do normally.  He orders the opposite of his normal lunch, and he introduces himself to a beautiful woman that he normally would never have the nerve to talk to. “My name is George,” he says, “I’m unemployed, and I live with my parents.” To his surprise, she is impressed with his honesty and agrees to date him! 

I find employing the Costanza method to trading an interesting exercise.  Ask yourself this: what are the trades that make complete sense and all your instincts say are right? Now consider the opposite.  Basically what you end up constructing is an out of consensus portfolio.

Employing the Costanza method can identify interesting, non-consensus trade ideas that could kick in alpha. Last year’s top 7 Costanza trades netted 5 of 7 WINNERS (some with huge gains), and past years have all been successful: 2017 had 5 of 6 winners (and 1 tie), 2016 had 7 of 10 winners, and 2015 had 7 of 10 winners.  Let’s quickly review last year’s trades…

2018 Costanza Trades:

  1. Long UST 10yrs = trying to work now but a loser as yields were 35bps higher
  2. Long Bunds = winner as yields were 18bps lower
  3. Long EUR/USD = worked early in the year but turned loser, -5%
  4. Short EEM = huge winner, EM crushed 19%
  5. Long IG protection (IG spread wideners)/Short LQD = another huge winner, IG CDX 44bps wider (doubled)
  6. Short Euro Stoxx and Nikkei = both big winners; each index was down 15%
  7. Short Bitcoin vol = worked well all year but has risen recently, still 50-day is 22 vols lower

Bonus: Long active/short passive = going to put this as a tie.  Passive won out most of the year, but is currently getting crushed/about to get absolutely rinsed.  Also, in a classic bottom signal, active Hedge Funds/PM’s were shuttered around the street in Q4 at the absolute worse time.  Active is now starting to have its day, and the passive tsunami is receding.   

Last year’s list was one of the most difficult to develop.  Going into 2018, the market was divided between those who thought risk assets had gone too far and were due for a correction, and those who believed the economy is booming so let the good times roll.  To be fair, both turned out to be true at different points throughout the year. 

This year is a piece of cake, as sentiment for risk assets have wildly shifted (for good reason) bearish.  With that, I give you the 2019 Costanza trades in no particular order – or in other words, the trades that you absolutely feel pained to do right now:

2019 Costanza Trades:

  1. Long FANGs
  2. Receive credit protection in IG and HY (aka long LQD and HYG)
  3. Long Eurodollar spreads (EDZ9/EDZ0)
  4. Long Bunds
  5. Short Gold
  6. Long WTI crude
  7. Long AUD/USD
  8. Short EM
  9. Long Bitcoin 
  10. Bonus: Long Trump

Let’s go through each and assess the probabilities of Costanza being profitable (probabilities are purely off the cuff estimates for arguments sake)…

1) Long FAANGs 

Everyone loved them on the way up in 2018 and you had to own them to keep up with the market but now the FAANG’s, and tech broadly, are contaminated.  

Although street research is once again roundly predicting higher equity indices in 2019 (as they always do – insert rolling eyes emoji), market consensus among those that take actual risk has shifted extremely bearish.  Funds have grossed down or liquidated, RSIs are oversold, and DSIs are near 0.  

However, the next shoe to drop is the retail investor exodus (it has partially started) that could lead to the mother of all passive unwinds.  Imagine the horror on the face of the average investor as they open their Q4/year-end statement in a few weeks and sees the wealth destruction that has taken place in Q4.  The natural investment psyche of the retail investor will be to sell and I think it’s hard for all of us to fathom just how widely owned FAANG’s are within index ETF’s.  Therefore, I would have to imagine this trade will not work for Costanza right away, and there is severe risk that a deeper correction could continue into 2019.  

What is the major headwind for Costanza with regards to his FAANG long and tech names more generally?  Government regulation.  Higher rates and wages have been a thorn in the side for margins but more than anything; it is the government’s involvement in Silicon Valley’s business model that has and will continue to be a major hindrance for tech multiple expansion.  There is not much Congress agrees on these days, but Tech regulation, especially with regards to privacy laws, is the one thing.  Ditto in Europe, where the governments are actually playing even rougher.  Some recent data points: 

  • Google CEO Sundar Pichai, who boycotted a Congressional hearing this summer, is now playing ball with Congress saying he supports regulation legislation.
  • The Federal Trade Commission still has an open investigation into whether Facebook’s conduct violated a previous settlement with the agency.
  • DC’s Attorney General is suing Facebook for “allegedly letting outside companies improperly access user data and for failing to properly disclose that fact.”
  • Europe’s new far-reaching privacy laws and anti-trust investigations on tech companies.
  • Uber being sued for anti-competitive practices.
  • President Trump has said his administration is seriously looking into monopolistic behavior of Facebook, Google and Amazon. 

Those are just a few of many.  The days of uninterrupted, carte blanche for Tech are a thing of the past, and thus a major regime change is happening.  The only question is: is it all priced or not?  The technicals indicate not.  

FANG index formed classic head and shoulder top.  The neckline is broken and the formation targets ~1500 which is still 30% lower form here…

Source: Bloomberg
  • Instinct: margin compression from higher yields/wages, global government scrutiny, and retail investor unwind will lead to a much deeper correction.
  • Costanza: funds have already purged these names, sentiment is at extreme lows, valuations more reasonable, and Tech is still the wave of the future. 

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 25%.  The days of tech rising unadulterated are over.  I think we can say that conservatively.  In my opinion, the government’s involvement in their business puts a top in tech for quite some time, at least in regards to tech names that have thrived on the collection of consumer data and/or don’t pay enough tax/postage.  If the chart above is proven right, that 30% hole will be tough to climb out of by year-end 2019.  I would rather buy THAT dip than this current dip.  Costanza is a braver man than I.

This also means broad US equity indices will struggle, albeit S&Ps not as much due to the “safe haven” names embedded within that index.  However, since 2001 with similar extreme levels of being oversold, the market has been higher 100% of the time 1-year later, with an average return of 23%.  So Costanza has hope given the magnitude of the selloff and poor sentiment; I just find it unlikely he will be happy in the first half of the year with his FAANG long.  

2) Receive credit protection in IG and HY (aka long LQD andHYG)

A similar call to the above long equities, since correlations run high with credit.  However, there are other issues with credit besides general risk sentiment, namely the massive amount of outstanding corporate debt, the large percentage of that debt that will need to be rolled, and the potential for credit downgrades should the economy enter a recession (which is what the front end rates market is pricing). 

The amount of non-financial corporate debt-to-GDP has never been higher… 

The US corporate refi tsunami is upon us… 

Source: Holger Zschaepitz

This “maturity wall” which spikes next year and will likely need to be rolled comes at the inopportune time of the collapse in crude oil prices.  The energy sector is a big user of the US credit market.  Thus the risk for 2019 is the US credit market seizes up in the face of the refi wave into a recession.  A toxic combination and we can add in the fact that the European credit market will have less support going forward with the ECB stepping back next year.   

ITRAXX Xover Total Return Index is rolling over…

Source: Bloomberg
  • Instinct: the US economy is saturated with corporate debt and it is time to pay the piper with the coming refi wave.  Everything gets exasperated if the US economy slips into a recession which will lead to higher default rates.    
  • Costanza: the worst is priced in, GE credit widening is a one off non-systemic issue, and the economy will regain traction especially if Trade Wars are settled in 2019 

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 35%.  I will assign this a little higher probability of working than tech longs.  I am definitely concerned about the “maturity wall” and the trajectory of the US economy in 2019.  For IG to widen out from here, you have to really believe the economy is falling off a cliff in such a way that defaults will finally rise, which then leads to even higher spreads and more defaults.  It is not unrealistic, thus why I believe it is more likely that credit tightening won’t work.   
 
The one major point the credit market has going for it is the technical chart, which says that most of the move is played out.  As opposed to tech charts, IG has reached its spread widener target.  Thus Costanza could argue during his “airing of grievances” that all the bad news is priced.

IG CDX reached the 94bps target on its inverse head and shoulder pattern… 

Source: Bloomberg

3) Long Eurodollar spreads (EDZ9/EDZ0) 

What a difference a year makes.  Last year at this time, I was pounding the table on the coming resurgence of inflation and how the market was underpricing Fed hiking risk.  That successfully played out, but now post-stock market carnage, oil collapse, and peak economic data; Eurodollar spreads are pricing in a recession and rate cuts!  Oh my.  So this again continues the theme we have seen in the first two Costanza trades, revealing a market that is very worried about the trajectory of risk assets and the US economy as a whole. 
 
When you look at Fed Fund futures pricing for 2019 (using FFF9/FFF0 spread as my guide), you have 1bps of cuts priced into futures, versus an FOMC dot plot that is projecting 50bps of hikes (past ’19 you will discover even more rate cuts are priced in).  So there is quite a gap that will need to be reconciled.  Will the equity market collapse help to slow an already fizzling economy or is there a possibility the economy recovers (China deal?) and the Fed continues on its course to normalize policy?   

Using Prism’s PAM charting tool, we can see the constant maturity equivalent of EDH9/EDH0 has only gone negative 2x in the past 15 years.  In 2006, it continued to flatten hard, but in 2011 it was a false breakdown and recovered higher…

Costanza’s “feat of strength” is taking the other side of the conventional wisdom that the housing, auto, and coming PMI slowdown due to the oil collapse either won’t alter Powell’s mission or will prove to be a head fake like in 2011.  The slowdown in the data this year was likely caused by a front loading of activity pre-tariffs/trade wars (i.e. buy everything Q2 and then sit tight the rest of the year), so there is a chance that the higher economic trend reemerges, especially if the trade talks with China go well early next year (something Trump warned about this weekend).  Costanza could be laughing at the thought he was able to buy ED spreads negative.  

  • Instinct: the US economy has peaked, the fiscal impulse dissipates early next year, QT increases, and regional surveys are already showing a coming slowdown.  This will lead to a Fed pause now and possible cuts by end of 2019. 
  • Costanza: Powell is still indicating rate hikes and the economy is projected to grow 2.2% with CPI remaining around the 2% target.  The kicker will come if Trump, feeling pressured by lower equity markets, makes a trade deal with China.  The market will be caught wrong footed as the Fed continues to tighten as activity picks up again.    

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 55%.  Will give a slightly higher nod towards Costanza being right.  Remember, he doesn’t need hikes to win, just no cuts which is a plausible scenario if Trump delivers a market friendly trade deal with China.

4) Long Bunds 

There is no possible way Bund yields could go any lower in the face of the ECB ending its asset purchase program, right??  Costanza is saying “easy big fella” (side note: can you name that episode?).  There are plenty of indicators that the Eurozone is careening towards major economic issues.  I want to give a nod to Danielle DiMartino Booth, who is doing excellent, non-consensus economic research over at Quill Intelligence. She points out that the chemicals sector is “arguably the most hyper-cyclical leading indicator,” and using BASF stock as her guide, suggests the Eurozone economy is “poised to hit the skids.”  In fact, she declares Germany to be the “most underpriced recession risk in 2019.”

Interestingly, if you graph BASF stock in Germany (black line) versus Bund yields lagged 100 days (orange line), it would suggest potential financial crisis in the Eurozone which will lead to Bund yields going negative again…

Source: Bloomberg
  • Instinct: ECB, while still reinvesting, ended its APP, Draghi will want to get one hike off before his reign ends towards the end of 2019, the ECB desperately needs to get out of negative rates, Draghi will likely be replaced by someone more hawkish or at least less dovish, and fiscal stimulus to counter the populist movement will all lead to higher rates.    
  • Costanza: growth has already fallen off sharply, forward indicators suggest potential economic crisis, the ECB is already noting risks shifting to the downside, and there are major political hurdles next year with EU elections 

 
Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 60%.  If there was ever a Costanza trade it is this one.  I am not sure there are many Bund bulls out there at 24bps so this is ripe for Costanza to be right.  The chart is saying he will nail this one.

German 10yr yields have formed a head and shoulder pattern that targets -40bps if the 15bps neckline gets taken out to the downside…

Source: Bloomberg

Quick side note…

Idea #3 (long Eurodollar steepeners) and #4 (long Bunds) are basically implying that the US/German yield spread will widen once again in 2019 (assuming the ED steepeners are akin to higher US rates which has been the correlation).  I would surely say that even combined, that idea is a Costanza trade.  Most expect a narrowing of the US/German 10yr spread going forward.  
 
Since I hit on the Bund side of the US/German 10yr spread, what could drive US rates unexpectedly higher in 2019 and thus help to widen the US/GE spread? 
 

  • Increasing deficits leading to increasing supply  
  • That increasing supply has already led to sloppy UST auctions
  • At a time the rate of change on foreign demand of UST has moved lower
  • With wages still remaining firm
  • All equal the need for higher term premium in the US 

 
Now back to the list…. 

5) Short Gold 

This has been an interesting correlation shift.  For most of the year, Gold has been a pure Dollar play (especially vs CNH), but more recently Gold has picked up risk aversion, namely HY credit according to the Quant Insight macro PCA model.

Gold correlation to DXY (blue) and USD/CNH (green) has gone from negative to zero…

Source: Quant Insight

Now Gold is most correlated to VIX and HY credit…

Therefore, Costanza shorting Gold is another bet that risk assets will stabilize and the Gold bulls will be told “NO SOUP FOR YOU!”    
 

  • Instinct: risk assets continue to trade poorly and Gold offers portfolio protection for the apocalypse.   
  • Costanza: gold is losing its luster as a safe haven asset and, if the markets turn 2008-style ugly, it will get liquidated as well.    

 
Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 51%.  No strong conviction here but Costanza is right more than wrong so a slight edge to risk assets stabilizing and Gold returning to its Dollar correlation. 

6) Long WTI

One of the most epic selloffs I have seen with a high-to-low collapse of 45% in just two months.  The market narrative is now back to “elevated US production,” and more importantly, the Saudis, post-Khashoggi murder, have increased supply to push prices down for President Trump.

Costanza would be quick to point out that spare capacity is low and the oil market suffers from chronic underinvestment.  That underinvestment only gets amplified with oil prices sub-$50, and we are already seeing Permian producers cut back on capex plans.  Additionally, the widening in credit markets only makes it harder to obtain capital for capex.  So you have the double whammy of lower prices and wider credit spreads, which will feed into the underinvestment theme.  The days of capital inflows are back to 2008 levels. 

By most analyst forecasts, even just a flat line of current production will cause a deficit in the supply/demand imbalance in 2019.  We don’t need to be oil experts to know that when oil prices fall as precipitously as they did; rig counts fall and production declines.  Now sprinkle in capex intentions being cut, along with credit issues, and that is Costanza’s recipe for higher oil prices.  And, oh yeah, let’s not forget about the coming IMO 2020 regulations (sulfur emission reduction in cargo ships which will require heavy crude to be drawn from supplies to comply). 

  • Instinct: US is oversupplying the market with its light crude, and the Saudis are more than making up for Iran sanctions to appease President Trump in light of the Khashoggi killing. 
  • Costanza: low spare capacity will eventually catch up to the Saudis, and lower prices, lower capex, and a credit crunch will cause US production to flat line at a time when it needs to be increased (plus, the light API grade the US produces is not sought after). 

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 70%.  I think much of the oil decline was technical fund liquidations (most likely large Risk Parity types that were long WTI as their inflation hedge), and all the forward looking supply issues not only remain, but are amplified with lower prices and wider credit.  Costanza is usually right and I think this one is a layup.  Oil prices will be higher than $45 come this time next year.

Use WTI time spreads as your signal when to get long.  As we saw in the fall, time spreads (candles) led spot prices (green line) by about a week.  Thus, if time spreads can break the downtrend, that will be your “tell” to get long WTI like Costanza…

Source: Bloomberg

7) Long Aussie$ 

A slowing Chinese economy and therefore slowing commodity demand, trade wars, and a decelerating domestic housing market have all led to a steady decline in the Oz in 2018.

Will keep this one short and sweet, as it is really the same idea as the other long risk asset trades. The AUD will really benefit from anything positive around the China/Trade War negotiations.  Some sort of deal and the Aussie$ will scream higher.  It’s that simple.

There is one micro issue Costanza should be concerned about and that is the Interest Only (IO) refi wave which will convert those IO mortgages into principle + interest loans.  The reset wave started in 2018 and will increase in intensity in 2019.  This will cause the average borrower to pay about $7,000 more per year in additional payments.  That is a major hit to the housing market via delinquencies, and may be a crushing blow to consumers’ discretionary spending.

The one saving grace for Australia has been the RBA remaining on hold for (jokingly) 37,000 consecutive meetings.  As the below chart shows, at this level of housing collapse, the RBA tends to cut.

Source: AMP
  • Instinct: Australia has felt the effects of the China slowdown and trade wars, along with its own domestic issues.  The currency will need to continue to depreciate to offset that pain.     
  • Costanza: the equity market weakness will force Trump to play ball with the Chinese which will reverse the AUD higher.  Additionally, the new economic weakness in the US and a Fed that could move to cut rates should weaken the USD.

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 55%.  Basically a better long than FANGs and credit, as being long AUD$ could also benefit if the Fed moves to an outright easing bias (which will depreciate the USD vs. the AUD).  Apparently, long USD is now the most crowded trade in the market (according to a BAML survey).   A housing crisis in Australia will be the major headwind for the Costanza long.

8) Short EM 

This would be Costanza’s hedge against all the long risk asset bets above.  So why is being short EM anti-consensus at a time risk assets are getting rinsed and everyone has turned bearish?  Through conversations with street analysts and clients, there is, for whatever reason, an insatiable demand to buy the EM dip.  After all, EM has been selling off since January so it should be the first to bounce, right?  That thought is “making George angry” and why he is going to take the other side of that.

In a world where the China Manufacturing PMI just went into a contraction, European data is falling off a cliff, and US regional surveys are all pointing to a coming slowdown; is EM growth going to be booming and the place to allocate risk?  I understand that it is a short dollar play, but 2019 could be marked by a major global growth slowdown and balance sheet recessions.  That is not the ideal environment for EM.

The technicals say the selloff is not yet complete, as a bearish head and shoulder pattern has formed targeting an additional 6% lower…

Source: Bloomberg
  • Instinct: EM has already taken its pain, Trump/China deal likely in 2019. 
  • Costanza: global growth slowdown will hurt EM the most, especially if USD funding issues reemerge.  EM has never been a safe haven during growth scares and recessions.  

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 55%.  All signs point to a poor global growth trajectory in 2019.

9)  Long Bitcoin

That potential bottom has formed a bullish inverse head and shoulder pattern that sets up for a retest of the 1-year downtrend…

The selloff in bitcoin in 2018 was an once-in-a-lifetime move.  From the highs just after New Year’s, Bitcoin spiraled 85% lower to take over as the largest historic bust since the Tulip crisis.  The crypto naysayers had a field day this year.

Costanza would hypothesize that if you believe the US Dollar is losing its hegemony, the US government debt issue is ballooning to unsustainable levels, Europe is in the midst of a populist meltdown, and China is on the verge of a hard landing; why aren’t crypto currencies like Bitcoin as viable a store of value as a yellow rock?

Interestingly, Bitcoin has started to potentially bottom during the December equity meltdown, lending some credence to the theory that investors are becoming concerned with the global environment and searching for new stores of wealth.

That potential bottom has formed a bullish inverse head and shoulder pattern that sets up for a retest of the 1-year downtrend…. 

Source: Bloomberg
  • Instinct: crypto currencies have no use and are on their way to near worthlessness.  
  • Costanza: Bitcoin is starting to rediscover its use as an alternative to traditional stores of value.

Estimated probability of Costanza being right: 50%.  No clue and no edge here.  However, it is hitting support levels, it has a bullish formation, and there is extreme bearish sentiment which all reek of a Costanza trade.

Bonus: Long Donald Trump

I cautiously put this in here hoping to avoid all political conversations and opinions, but I think this is an interesting nonmarket, yet market relevant idea.

I don’t think many expect much from POTUS next year, given the House swung to the Democrats and many folks (mostly on the liberal side, to be fair) believe there is looming tail risk that Mueller has enough evidence of some sort of wrongdoing that Trump’s presidency could be in jeopardy.

One could argue whether less Trump or no Trump is good or bad for risk assets.  On the one hand, the more stable Pence could be welcomed by markets, and perhaps if Trump goes, trade war issues dissipate.  On the other, the market rallied on his election victory in 2016, his policies are mostly reflationary, and China has become a legitimate nonpartisan issue.  Therefore, even if Trump is ousted, trade wars likely continue unabated.

The surprise, non-consensus idea would be that Trump crosses the aisle to enact Infrastructure.  Couple that with an earlier than expected China deal, and that is how Costanza will be paid out on a lot of his risk-on calls.  Perhaps the market is underestimating Trump, and he ends up delivering a great deal vs. expectations of a lame duck presidency. 

Summary:

As opposed to last year, this year’s Costanza trades (non-consensus calls) have a simple theme.  Costanza is looking for a bounce in risk assets.  What are the realistic paths to get there versus a market that expects more pain?  At least one or more of these have to happen… 

  • Cessation of tariffs/trade wars, which leads to a bounce in Chinese growth and a resumption of the positive growth momentum in the US
  • A Fed that ends the rate hike cycle and Balance Sheet reduction **coupled with growth remaining ok** (if growth softens further, equities could actually still sell off)
  • Rebound in the energy complex
  • US Infrastructure + EU fiscal stimulus + Chinese stimulus (all being discussed currently)

What are the glaring issues that will prove Costanza wrong for the first time in the history of this piece?  To name a few… 

  • US Fiscal Impulse dies out in early ’19 + global QT picks up in intensity
  • Government intervention in Silicon Valley
  • Passive unwind into a resumption of the explicit and implicit short vol unwind
  • The potential for a corporate credit blowup in the US and Europe
  • Housing busts in Australia, Canada, the US, and Asia  

There is a lot of be worried about in 2019, and I believe we are only in the beginning stages of a risk asset purge.  Costanza is much less worried. 

I want to wish everyone a Happy New Year!  I look forward to speaking with everyone again soon and telling you more about Prism’s exciting business model.

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1Y-2Y Treasury Yield Curve Inverts Most Since Financial Crisis

With the 10Y Treasury yield, fittingly enough, sliding to the lowest level since January, closing Friday trading at 2.6842%, some 55 bps below where it traded less than two months ago when it peaked at 3.2373% on November 8, a more interesting move in TSYs has been observed in the short end where the 1 Year (or 52 Week Bill) closed at 2.590%, up 1.81bps, while the 2Y yield, seen by many as the bond market’s estimation of what the Fed will do in 2019, has continued to slide, and on Friday closed 2.8bps lower at 2.4878%, the lowest since the start of June.

As a result, the 1s2s curve has inverted to a whopping -10.8bps.

What the reason is for this bizarre divergence in preference for 2Y paper over 1Y we are not sure, however we will point out that the last time the 1s2s traded almost this negative, when it touched -10.2bps, was in October 2008, just after the government announced  it had bailed out AIG.

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House Dems’ Plan to Reopen the Government Probably Won’t Work. Thank Trump.

House Democrats have a plan that would end the partial government shutdown soon after the new Congress is seated this week. But it won’t matter unless President Donald Trump budges on his demand for $5 billion to start building a wall on the U.S.–Mexico border.

In case you’ve been asleep for the past few weeks: Trump and congressional Democrats are at an impasse regarding funds for his wall. Trump wants it, but Democrats won’t give it to him. As a result, parts of the federal government, including the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security (DHS), shut down when their funding expired on December 21. (Employees deemed “essential” are still going to work, so the “shutdown,” as usual, is not actually a full shutdown.)

The Democrats, who will retake control of the House on Thursday, have a plan to reopen the government. According to The Washington Post, the House will vote that day on two spending packages. One of those packages, which actually includes six spending bills, will fund all the federal departments affected by the shutdown, with the exception of the DHS, through September.

The other package funds the DHS, which is where Trump wants the border wall money to go, but only through February 8. And it does not include the $5 billion Trump has demanded, instead allocating $1.3 billion for border security and fencing. One assumes that if Trump were to sign the package into law, negotiations over wall funding would continue for the next month or so.

The proposal has yet to be publicly announced (though The New York Times, Politico, NBC, and USA Today have all reported on its existence). It likely won’t receive much support from House Republicans, but the Democrats may be able to get it through the House anyway.

The GOP-controlled Senate already passed similar legislation earlier this month. Unlike House Democrats’ current proposal, that spending package would only have funded all affected departments through February 8. But like the proposal now on the table, it did not meet Trump’s border-wall demands. It initially looked like Trump would back down and approve the legislation, but he soon changed course and rejected the proposal.

It’s unclear if the Senate will pass such a bill again. It really hinges on Trump. “It’s simple: The Senate is not going to send something to the president that he won’t sign,” Don Stewart, a spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R–Ky.), tells Politico.

Now, even if Senate Republicans support the House proposal, a Trump veto would make their approval a moot point. As CNBC notes, at least 55 House Republicans and 67 total senators would be needed to override a presidential veto. That seems highly unlikely.

Which means—not to beat a dead horse—that it all comes down to Trump. And while it’s impossible to predict what the president will do, don’t put money on him folding, or at least not completely. Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney did say last week that “we’ve moved off of the” $5 billion number “and we hope [Democrats] move up from their” $1.3 billion proposal. But House Democrats’ current proposal suggests that they have not, in fact, moved up from $1.3 billion.

That, in turn, means Trump likely won’t budge. (For proof, look no further than his most recent tweets.) The Democrats don’t seem to have any intention of giving him anything close to $5 billion for the wall. So here we are, back at square one.

And why would Trump fold? His wall might be stupid and pointless, but his conservative base loves it. And after all, it was criticism from that base that made him shift course after the White House appeared ready to give in.

So no, the Democrats’ plan to reopen the government probably won’t work. And they can thank Trump (and his most ardent supporters) for that.

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Hedge Funds On Track For Worst Month Since 2011, As Systematics Throw In The Towel

Despite last week’s dramatic pension-fund rebalancing, which salvaged December from being the worst month since the Great Depression, hedge funds are still looking at a dismal performance for both the month and the year. As Deutsche Bank notes, long/short equity Hedge Funds are on track for worst month since 2011, with equity hedged strategies down -5% MTD, on track for the worst monthly performance since August 2011.

The ongoing rout has forced hedge fund managers to hunker down, resulting in multi-year low gross leverage even as net exposure has been relatively stable as the market sold off.

Last week we showed a detailed breakdown of the best and worst performing hedge funds according to HSBC, with Odey proudly leading the pack, while a variety of systematic hedge funds (and Greenlight) on the tailing end.

We also showed  the performance of some of the most recognizable hedge fund names. It is clear that almost none of the “hedge” funds was hedged for the events that took place in Q4.

Meanwhile, the recent surge in volatility both – implied and realized – has spooked the other major marginal investor, systematic funds, who have officially thrown in the towel on 2018. VIX spiked above 35, and 1M realized volatility is now above 30, with the resulting jump in realized volatility triggering additional selling by vol control funds.

According to Deutsche Bank, vol control funds sold an additional $25bn in equities on the volatility spike. The higher volatility also prompted risk parity funds to further trim equity allocations, which is approaching 5 year lows.

Meanwhile, as we noted last week, CTAs remain net short S&P 500, which however prompts risks of a short squeeze.

Not surprisingly, the market turmoil led to renewed outflows from equity funds, led by the US. Outflows from equity funds totaled -$9bn last week with -$6.5bn from US. Japan (+$3.6bn) and EM (+0.1bn) continue to see inflows amid outflows from other regions.

Curiously, equity ETFs saw outflows on Thursday after strong inflows during most of December, even as the Dow had just enjoyed its biggest point gain ever.

Meanwhile, outflows continue from Credit and Bank Loan funds, while Government bonds see inflows. Outflows from bond funds slowed this week (-$5bn), with Europe bond funds seeing a small inflow. Outflows were led by Corp HY (-$4.5bn), Bank Loans (-$3.4bn), Corp HG (-$2bn), and EM bonds (-$1.5bn) while inflows to Govt bonds picked up (+$6.4bn).

Finally, ETF and futures volumes were normal, stock volumes were light. Daily futures and ETF volumes were normal despite the holiday week, however stock volumes were quite light. Because of the light stock volumes, ETFs were a near record 43% of total cash volumes throughout the week.

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In ‘Post-Brexit Expansion’, UK Plans Military Bases On China’s Doorstep And In Caribbean

UK Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson has evoked controversy by suggesting Britain take aggressive steps toward a post-Brexit expansion as a “global player” all the while waxing nostalgic about the glory days of the world-wide British Empire during a weekend interview with the Sunday Telegraph. This included floating the idea of establishing UK bases in the Caribbean and Asia, and vowing to build at least two foreign bases “in a couple of years.”

“This is our biggest moment as a nation since the end of the Second World War, when we can recast ourselves in a different way, we can actually play the role on the world stage that the world expects us to play,” the British Conservative MP and Secretary of State for Defence said. “For so long  literally for decades  so much of our national view point has actually been colored by a discussion about the European Union.

UK Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson during a prior visit to the Imperial War Museum at its main site in Lambeth, London. via the office of Michael Ellis MP

And while discussing future military bases abroad, he said:

This is our moment to be that true global player once more – and I think the Armed Forces play a really important role as part of that.

The 42-year old Williamson, in his second year as Defence Secretary, added of the post-Brexit future that, “We have got to be so much more optimistic about our future as we exit the European Union.”

Suggesting a reversal of policies active during the final decades of the decline of the British Empire, he said under his watch the 1960s policy of pulling back from areas “east of Suez” has been scrapped and expressed a desire to “recast” the UK’s role and leadership in the world

On this point, Williamson hearkened back to the empire, saying “the rest of the world saw Britain standing 10 feet tall –when actually we stood six feet tall– Britons saw us standing five feet tall, not the six, and certainly not the 10.” He said further, evoking British settlement in Canada, New Zealand, and “nations right across Africa” – that they “look to us to provide the moral leadership, the military leadership and the global leadership.”

“They realize that we are good partners and actually the values that we stand for, of tolerance, democracy and justice, these are the values that they hold dear to their hearts,” said Williamson.

Concerning military bases, perhaps to more controversial part his interview, he proposed Singapore or Brunei in the Pacific – deep in what China consider’s its sphere of influence – as potential sites for a base, asserting that “if we have economic interests there, we should have a military interest there.” He also mentioned a potential base in the small South American country of Guyana, or on Montserrat in the Caribbean islands.

But many populations across the globe might be confused on the basic assumption that Britain is currently not imperial, given that merely within the past two decades it has joined allies like the United States in military adventurism and occupation in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, and Kosovo, and while increasingly sailing near China, testing Beijing’s resolve to defend its claims in the South China Sea. 

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Legalizing Thousands of Immigrants in Exchange for Half a Wall Is a Good Deal: New at Reason

ICE ArrestLindsey Graham, who weeks ago was carrying water for President Donald Trump by tweeting “no wall, no deal” (which was after last year when he was harrumphing that the way to Make America Great Again was by telling Trump “to go to hell“), is now declaring that there may be a possibility for Democrats to trade $5 billion in exchange for legalizing the DREAMers and doing something about those whose Temporary Protected Status Trump has scrapped.

Cynics could be forgiven for laughing at the messenger. But Graham’s message is exactly what Reason Foundation Senior Analyst Shikha Dalmia has also delivered to Democrats.

A wall that’ll never be completed may be a waste of taxpayer money, Dalmia writes, but in a $4 trillion budget it is a small ransom to pay for preventing mass deportations of people who have lived and contributed to America. So unless Democrats have a better way of legalizing these folks, they should consider it.

View this article.

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President Xi Defends China’s Economy As Growth Collapses

Shortly after the release of the latest round of disappointing economic data which confirmed that China’s economy likely continued to slow in December, President Xi Jinping delivered a speech to the nation where he defended his economic policies, saying China’s economy expanded “within a reasonable range” during 2018, despite the fact that its stock market was the worst performer among major economies and the rate of growth of its massive economy slowed for the first time in a decade.

On Monday, China’s official manufacturing PMI fell to 49.4 in December, from 50.0 in November, the lowest reading since February 2016, and the weakest reading for a December since 2008 (to be fair, some weakness in the December PMI is typical due to seasonal factors).

PMI

Factory orders and other economic indicators released so far this month suggest that China’s economy has slowed for the seventh straight month in December. This comes after China’s GDP grew 6.5% during the third quarter, the slowest rate since 2009.

December

With negotiations over the US-China trade truce expected to start shortly after the first of the year, Xi insisted that China would remain “resolute” in defending its sovereignty – a reference to China’s dominance of the South China Sea – and press ahead with its “One Belt, One Road” initiative.

“Looking at the world at large, we’re facing a period of major change never seen in a century. No matter what these changes bring, China will remain resolute and confident in its defence of its national sovereignty and security,” he said.

On the domestic front, Xi touted China’s success at lifting another 10 million people out of poverty this year, while praising its efforts to curb pollution in its air, water and soil.

“The improvement of the people’s well being speeded up and their living standards were steadily improved,” he said. “We have also made great strides in our poverty alleviation efforts in the past year. Another 125 poor counties and 10 million poverty-stricken rural residents were lifted out of poverty in 2018,” he said referring to progress to his pledge that China will eradicate poverty by 2020.

Xi’s remarks come after he confirmed that he had a constructive conversation with President Trump over the weekend about a trade war and urged the US to “meet China half way” when striking a trade deal.

Watch Xi’s address (with English subtitles) below:

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‘Happy’ New Year Jay Powell: Meet The Dreaded Full Frown

Authored by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

I’m going to break my personal convention and use the bulk of the colors in the eurodollar futures spectrum, not just the single EDM’s (June) contained within each. The current front month is January 2019, and its quoted price as I write this is 97.2475. The EDH (March) 2019 contract trades at 97.29 currently and it will drop off the board on March 18.

Three-month LIBOR was fixed yesterday at a fraction higher than 2.80%, meaning that if it stays around or above that level someone is losing money on it. The futures price isn’t directly translatable but back-of-the-envelope it works out to an expectation for 3-month LIBOR on that date in March to be less than what it is fixed now.

In other words, the market is seriously betting LIBOR is coming down not two years from now but in the short run. That expectation only grows the further out in time (down the curve).

Inversion, as noted earlier today, had been limited to more distant years centered around 2020. The eurodollar curve now sports inversion from the front month all the way out to September 2020.

This is not a curve, not a normal one anyway, it is a clear signal of trouble right in front of us.

In fact, almost the entire curve is currently below yesterday’s 3-month LIBOR. But strong economy or something. They really don’t know what they are doing.

Central banks are not central.

Happy New Year Jay Powell, the curve sarcastically frowns upon your ridiculously overoptimistic forecasts.

From here on, you are going to want to avoid taking any advice from Bill Dudley on the topic of eurodollar futures and inversions.

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Sanctuary Cities Aren’t to Blame for Killing of California Cop

Gustavo Perez ArriagaGustavo Perez Arriaga, 32, an immigrant from Mexico living illegally in California, has been charged with homicide for shooting and killing a police officer during a traffic stop. This has prompted yet more debate over the state’s sanctuary laws. But it’s increasingly clear that those sanctuary rules aren’t to blame.

Newman, California, Police Cpl. Ronil Singh pulled over Arriaga last Wednesday for suspicion of drunken driving. Arriaga is accused of shooting Singh and fleeing. He was arrested on Friday near Bakersfield following a statewide manhunt, apparently while attempting to flee back to Mexico. Seven others, including Arriaga’s brother, were arrested for allegedly attempting to help him evade the police.

As this story played out, critics immediately attempted to blame California’s status as a “sanctuary state,” where law enforcement agencies face restrictions in cooperating or passing along information to federal immigration officials about a person’s residency status. The sheriff of Stanislaus County, Adam Christianson, a Republican who embraces Donald Trump’s attitudes toward immigration, held a press conference to point the finger at the state’s sanctuary laws. Arriaga had previously been arrested for driving under the influence, and the implication where was that sanctuary laws somehow prevented police from communicating to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) that Arriaga was some sort of threat or danger.

But there are a lot of problems with that claim. First of all, SB 54, the legislation that made California a “sanctuary state,” passed in 2017 and was implemented only this year. Arriaga’s previous arrests happened in 2014 in Chowchilla in Madera County. Prior to the passage of SB 54, some California cities and counties had their own sanctuary rules restricting police from passing along information about a person’s immigration status except for serious crimes. But neither Madera County nor Chowchilla was among them. Indeed, Madera County officials have been accused of attempting to craft secret policies to cooperate with ICE to hand over illegal immigrants when they get detained. Not exactly what one would describe as a “sanctuary.”

What seems to have actually happened is that police never asked Arriaga about his immigration status when he was arrested and charged with those previous DUIs, according to Chowchilla Police Chief David Riviere. Officials from ICE confirmed over the weekend that they had never requested that Arriaga be held for possible deportation because they had never had any encounters with him.

Sanctuary cities had nothing to do with why Arriaga was still in the United States. The reality was that he was arrested for a common crime—drunken driving—that may be a problem but was not an indication that Arriaga was violent. Now the coverage is talking about his potential gang ties, but there’s still no sign of a violent history.

This attempt to make sanctuary cities the villains resembles President Trump’s recent advertisement attempting to blame Democratic immigration policies for a cop-killer named Luis Bracamontes. In that case, it turned out that it was the office of then–Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a notorious border hawk, in Maricopa County, Arizona, that released the guy from custody following a drug arrest in 1998.

That doesn’t mean Arpaio is responsible for Bracamontes’ killings any more than sanctuary cities are responsible for what Arriaga is charged with. But it does show that even when you look closely at the most extreme cases of illegal immigrants committing violent crimes, it’s difficult to find a policy silver bullet.

Sanctuary cities don’t foster crime. If anything, they create an environment where immigrants are more comfortable turning to law enforcement to talk to them about crimes. Immigrant communities, even those with people in the country here illegally, are not incubators of criminal activity.

Related: ReasonTV’s Zach Weissmueller explored what conservatives and restrictionists get wrong about immigration when it was a big campaign issue in the 2016 election. Watch below:

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America’s Insane Patchwork of Fireworks Regulations Can Crimp Your New Year’s Eve Celebrations

Millions of Americas will say goodbye to 2018 by setting off a few dozen of their favorite fireworks. What kind of fireworks they’ll be able to use, how old they had to be to buy them, and whether they had to smuggle them across state lines are all highly contingent on where they live.

Take age limits, which vary widely across the country. In “Live Free or Die” New Hampshire, you must be 21 before buying fireworks, while South Carolina law considers 16-year-olds capable of both buying and selling these mini-explosives.

When you can buy fireworks also varies. States like Oregon, Indiana, and Kentucky restrict firework sales to times around the most explosive holidays—Fourth of July and New Year’s—while others, such as Washington, let you buy them year-round.

And in Florida, fireworks are legal but only for pest control purposes.

“With all the stand-alone fireworks-only superstores in the state of Florida, there shouldn’t be a critter left alive,” Julie Heckman of the American Pyrotechnics Association told Reason back in August.

Fortunately the past few years have seen fireworks regulations get a little bit looser.

In May 2018, Delaware became the 49th state to legalize fireworks, leaving only Massachusetts with a blanket ban. Also this year, Ohio came tantalizingly close to getting rid of a law that—while allowing the sale of fireworks—required the purchaser to take them out of the state within 48 hours. The bill made it through the lower house of the state legislature, but stalled in the state Senate.

In 2017, Pennsylvania repealed a similar law that had restricted the sale of fireworks to those who could show an out-of-state driver’s license. Now all adult Pennsylvanians have the ability to buy and use the fireworks sold in their state.

And Delaware and Pennsylvania aren’t alone. Since 2011, places from West Virgina and Kentucky to New York and New Jersey have liberalized fireworks regulations in one way or another.

Despite the regulatory rollback, death and injuries related to the product remain rare. The average number of deaths from firework accidents is only seven per year, even though Americans consume more than 200 million pounds of the stuff annually. The injury rate has remained pretty flat over the past decade as well, hovering between 3 and 4 injuries per 100,000 people.

That these figures have stayed consistently low despite the twin trends of increasing consumption and looser laws suggests Americans can generally handle the responsibility of shooting off fireworks without also shooting off their fingers.

Hopefully 2019 will give them more freedom to do just that.

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