Soros Now 3rd Largest Holder Of Overstock, Buffett Gets Into Teva As Hedge Funds Dump Google & Facebook

Amid a flurry of Q4 13F filings, a few notable observations have emerged.

First, after unwinding his modest Amazon stake in the quarter ended December 31, George Soros’s family office, Soros Fund Management, added 2.47 million shares of Overstock worth $158MM, making him the third largest holder of the innovative online retailer. One wonders if Soros is becoming a believer in blockchain and bitcoin-supporting online vendors?

That aside, Soros was busy in Q4: in the quarter, in addition to his new position in OSTK, Soros started new positions in the following companies: KW, TGT, FG, GPS, PLAY, HAL, ZAYO. At the same time, Soros exited the recently hammered TEVA as well as RLGY, CPN, EQT, S, CIEIQ, LOXO, HUN. The family office boosted its stakes NXPI, CZR, HZNP, MON, COL, KMDA, TWX while cutting its positions in MNK, AGN, SGYP, DISH, TMUS, VST, SHPG, XCRA.

A snapshot of Soros’ Top 25 positions and changes over the quarter is shown below, with new positions shaded in green.

Yet while Soros was exiting his Teva stake, none other than Warren Buffett was buying.

According to Berkshire’s 13F, Buffett dumped most of his IBM shares, holding only 2 million shares at the end of 2017, down 90% from the end of Q3. At the same time he added to Apple, and on Dec. 31, 2017, Berkshire boosted its stake in Apple to 165 million shares, a 23% increase in the quarter, and equivalent to about $28 billion. The purchase cements Buffett as Apple’s 4th largest shareholer, behind State Street with 206 million shares.

But the one position that has caught the media’s attention is Berkshire’s new investment in generic drugmaker Teva, which has been battered in recent months, and whose shares soared over 8% after hours on the news of Buffett’s investment.

As a reminder, last month Berkshire, along with JPM and Amazon, said that it was planning to start a health-care company. The effort is still in its early stages and few details have emerged, but the three companies have said the new venture will be “free from profit-making incentives and constraints.” The initial focus will be to use technology to improve coverage and reduce costs for their hundreds of thousands of employees. News of the effort sent health-care stocks plunging. It is unclear if Teva will play any role in this strategic vision.

Meanwhile, as Bloomberg highlights, many prominent hedge funds exited some key FAANG stocks in Q4 before the stocks saw some weakness in the last months of the year.

Some details from Bloomberg:

  • Philippe Laffont’s Coatue Management, which rode the FAANG wave last year, sold 2.84 million shares of Apple Inc., bringing the value of its holding to $730 million as of Dec. 31. In September, Laffont called the new iPhone X “groundbreaking” but its sales have since disappointed. The firm also reduced its Facebook Inc. position by 1.71 million shares, according to regulatory filings Wednesday.
  • Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global Management dumped 1.3 million shares of Netflix Inc., leaving it with a stake worth $337 million, and trimmed its Amazon.com Inc. position.
  • Maverick Capital, run by Lee Ainslie, trimmed its Facebook and Alphabet stakes.

Not everyone was selling their FAANGs however, and the following funds were busy adding to their positions:

  • Louis Bacon’s Moore Capital Management added 900,000 shares of Apple, boosting its holding to about $200 million, according to filings.
  • Tiger Global pumped up its position in Facebook.
  • David Tepper’s Appaloosa more than tripled its share stake in Apple to 4.6 million shares from 1.36 million shares at the end of Q3.

In 2018, Apple is the only FAANG stock that’s down, while Amazon and Netflix have soared.

We will have a more detailed summary of the Q4 13-F season shortly.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2Cmf0PM Tyler Durden

“It’s Millennial Gold” – Selloff Hasn’t Shaken True Believers’ Faith In Bitcoin

Bitcoin is struggling to retake the $9,000 level after its spectacular implosion last month – its worst since the very early days of bitcoin when the price of a single token was much, much lower – but the selloff that left millions of marginal investors around the world holding the bag hasn’t dampened the enthusiasm of the virtual currencies most dedicated evangelists.

During a trip to David Park’s bitcoin meeting – the largest of its kind in New York City – the Daily Beast showed that there are still hundreds of people who have seemingly dedicated their future to bitcoin and other blockchain-related ventures.

The price of bitcoin plummeted 50% the day before the meetup. And how did its organizers respond? By lowering the price of admission for the event – which featured an open bar – to $10 and promising to donate all their proceeds to charity (because if anybody is in need of charity, it’s crypto investors).  

Millennials

Park is something of a latecomer to crypto; he first became interested in bitcoin early last year, when he founded his meetup because he couldn’t get off the waitlist at any of the other myriad crypto meetups that had sprung up around New York City.

Of course, back before bitcoin became seemingly the only thing CNBC wanted to talk about, Park says his friends couldn’t tolerate his incessant evangelizing about bitcoin, so he started the meetup…

The event became a monthly occurrence beginning last August and slowly ballooned from only about 30 attendees to over 2,000 RSVPs.

“At the time, my friends were getting really annoyed at me talking about crypto,” Park said. “It would be a Wednesday night out, but all I would want to talk about was crypto. I thought, if I start my own meetup I could have people to talk to about crypto.”

In 2018 it feels like everyone knows at least one bitcoin evangelist. Nearly every type of believer was in the crowd on Thursday night.

One attendee emphasized that bitcoin is “millennial gold” and that the most recent bout of volatility is immaterial. Of course, he then asked the reporter to refer to him as “the Korean rainmaker”…

Sammy, who described himself as a “45-year-old millennial trapped in the body of a former Samsung executive” and asked me to refer to him as “The Korean Rainmaker,” said that he got involved in the crypto world a year and a half ago and hasn’t looked back.

“Crypto is millennial gold,” he said. “To baby boomers, gold was gold. That was the thing to go to. Now crypto is the new gold and it’s going to be the same way. History has a tendency to repeat itself. From gold to virtual gold.”

Crypto, and bitcoin in particular, has been on a wild ride over the past year. After being largely ignored by the general public for most of its existence, bitcoin’s value shot to over $16,000 per coin in December, minting a new breed of overnight millionaires.

Indeed, many at the event believe the boom is just beginning – but that there will almost certainly be more volatility along the way.

And in one of the most trite comparisons that has been applied to bitcoin, one attendee said bitcoin is basically just like the Internet during the 1980s.

“I’ve seen this dance before. It’s just like the internet in 1986 before the web came out,” explained Dave, a man in an oversized black and gold bitcoin tee shirt. “This is just the beginning. The volatility is like little bumps in the road. Five years from now, every small change will hardly be visible.”

But in the most baffling view echoed by the attendees, many said those who lost money on crypto are solely to blame for their fate. They sold too early. Some attendees even said they’d deleted crypto price apps, opting to ignore the daily fluctuations entirely (presumably until the day their tokens become worthless).

After all, for the attendees who have been invested for longer than the last 12 months, every dip – even multi-year bear markets – has eventually been bought.

“I used to be very nervous at the beginning,” said a man named Antoine. “But so far I’ve seen like six or seven crashes, and we always recover.”

So why worry?

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2CkI5LM Tyler Durden

Students Sign Petition To Ban “Offensive” Valentine’s Day

Authored by Cabot Phillips via Campus Reform,.

This year, Campus Reform has reported how college campuses around the country have been forced to modify various holiday celebrations due to concerns over political correctness.

Whether it was warning students of cultural appropriation on Halloween, or restricting Christmas celebrations for fear of offending non-Christians on campus, universities have become increasingly fearful of allowing “offensive” holiday celebrations.

But what about a seemingly harmless, non- (or at best quasi-) religious holiday like Valentine’s Day? While most universities have yet to take action against the day, would students be willing to outlaw it if they felt their peers were offended by the celebration?

To find out, Campus Reform went undercover at Cornell University, armed with a fictitious petition to ban Valentine’s Day, on the grounds that it was simply too offensive to students without a romantic partner.

It quickly became clear that students at Cornell were more than willing to go along with any measure that would supposedly make campus a more inclusive space.

“That’s a really nice petition,” said one student, while another admitted “I’m in a relationship, but I totally understand.”

One student condemned the school’s handling of the holiday in the past, saying

“I would also point out the administration is really heteronormative about [Valentine’s Day] which is kinda f***** up.”

One student went so far as to ask for our contact information, so they could share the fabricated petition online to gain more supporters.

What else did they have to say about the idea of outlawing Valentine’s Day? Watch the full video to find out:

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2szCcuC Tyler Durden

Porn Star: “Trump Broke The NDA, I Can Now Tell My Story”

On Tuesday evening President, Trump’s personal attorney Michael D. Cohen, told the New York Times  that he paid $130,000 to porn star Stephanie Clifford (a.k.a. “Stormy Daniels) out of his own pocket, and that neither the Trump Organization or the Trump Campaign had anything to do with the 2016 transaction.

Michael D. Cohen, “Stormy Daniels”

“Neither the Trump Organization nor the Trump campaign was a party to the transaction with Ms. Clifford, and neither reimbursed me for the payment, either directly or indirectly,” Cohen told The New York Times. “The payment to Ms. Clifford was lawful, and was not a campaign contribution or a campaign expenditure by anyone.”

The statement was prompted by the ongoing media allegations that Trump misused campaign funds to keep the porn star’s mouth shut: campaign finance advocacy group, Common Cause, had complained about the payment to the Federal Election Commission, which was investigating. As such Cohen was simply “taking one for the team.”

Unfortunately for Trump, Cohen’s intervention appears to have had precisely the opposite effect of what was intended as Daniels, the porn star at the center of the scandal, believes she is now free to discuss her alleged sexual encounter with Trump, her manager told The Associated Press Wednesday.

According to her manager, Gina Rodriguez, the porn star “believes that Trump attorney Michael Cohen invalidated a non-disclosure agreement after two news stories were published Tuesday: One, in which Cohen told The New York Times that he made the six-figure payment with his personal funds, and another in the Daily Beast, which reported that Cohen was shopping a book proposal that would touch on Daniels’ story”, said the manager,

“Everything is off now, and Stormy is going to tell her story,” the manager said.

At issue is what transpired inside a Lake Tahoe, Nevada, hotel room in 2006 between the actress and Trump the year after his marriage to his third wife, Melania.

A lawyer for Daniels, Keith Davidson, has previously distributed statements on Daniels’ behalf denying there was any affair. But in a 2011 interview with the gossip magazine In Touch Weekly, the actress — who the magazine said passed a polygraph exam — said the two had sex and she described a subsequent yearslong relationship. The AP previously reported that In Touch held off on publishing her account after Cohen threatened to sue the publication. It published the interview last month.

In the 2011 In Touch interview, Daniels first detailed her consensual affair which happened in 2006, which she claims happened shortly after Trump’s youngest son, Barron, was born. 

Stormy (given name: Stephanie Clifford) confirms in her own words that she had sex with Donald Trump in his Lake Tahoe, NV, hotel suite in 2006 — a story that was corroborated to In Touch in 2011 by her good friend Randy Spears and supported by her ex-husband Mike Moz. Stormy also took and passed a polygraph test at the time of the interview.

Stormy told In Touch, “[The sex] was textbook generic,” while discussing the fling they had less than four months after Donald’s wife, Melania, gave birth to their son, Barron. “I actually don’t even know why I did it, but I do remember while we were having sex, I was like, ‘Please, don’t try to pay me.’” In Touch

The website then removed the material under the threat of a lawsuit, according to the site’s founder, Nik Richie.

Daniel’s story then went dormant and largely out of public view until a month before the 2016 presidential election, when the website The Smoking Gun published an account that went mostly unnoticed by major news organizations.

In January, The Wall Street Journal reported that a limited liability company in Delaware formed by Cohen made the six-figure payment to Daniels to keep her from discussing the affair during the presidential campaign. Then yesterday, Cohen said the payment was made with his own money, and that Trump was neither aware of it, nor reimbursed it.

In recent weeks the actress has played coy, declining to elaborate when pressed on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”

And now that Cohen has infuriated Daniels with his latest disclosure, and reportedly broken the NDA, it is only a matter of time before this particular Trump scandal becomes the media’s latest obsession.

Rodriguez said her client will soon announce how and when she will tell her story publicly although some have suggested that she will first entertain one (or more) cash “offers” from Michael Cohen to keep her mouth shut, again… without Trump’s knowledge of course.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2svdAD5 Tyler Durden

The Ghosts Of 1968

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

The hope of 1968 that public demonstrations can actually change the power structure has been lost.

1968 was a tumultuous year globally and domestically. The Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia–a very mild form of political and cultural liberalization within the Soviet bloc–was brutally crushed by the military forces of the Soviet Union.

The general strikes and student protests of May 1968 brought France to a standstill as demands for social and political change called the entire status quo into question.

On the other side of the planet, the Cultural Revolution was remaking China’s still-youthful revolution, to the detriment of the political status quo, the intelligentsia and the common people.

The U.S.was convulsed with assassinations, civil unrest and mass demonstrations against the war in Vietnam and the political status quo (the Democratic Party convention in Chicago).

Ironically, much of the world was benefiting from two decades of rising prosperity and the demise of colonialism. When expectations exceed actual opportunities, discontent is the result. When the power structure is deaf to the discontent, a cycle of repression and disorder feed on each other.

Fifty years on, the ghosts of 1968 are still with us. With the advantage of hindsight, 1968 was the culmination of the belief that it was still possible for the common people to change the political and social order in a positive fashion– to remake the status quo power structure into something more humane, accessible, just and fair.

The Western status quo bent but did not break. Nothing in the developed-world power structures actually changed. The status quo did break down in China, but the breakdown was not liberating; it was a catastrophe of injustice and destruction without precedent.

A new winter of discontent is chilling the air. Though the current state of affairs seems quite different from that of 1968, the basic context is eerily similar: decades of economic growth have ushered in widespread prosperity, but the benefits and power have gone disproportionately to the few at the top of the wealth-power pyramid.

The status quo power structures are deaf to the discontent of the common people, and respond with blandishments (Universal Basic Income, etc.), propaganda and a spectrum of repression.

In the context of 1968+50=2018, Chris Hedge’s incisive essay from 2010 bears re-reading. 2011: A Brave New Dystopia (truthdig):

The two greatest visions of a future dystopia were George Orwell’s ‘1984’ and Aldous Huxley’s ‘Brave New World.’ The debate, between those who watched our descent towards corporate totalitarianism, was who was right. Would we be, as Orwell wrote, dominated by a repressive surveillance and security state that used crude and violent forms of control? Or would we be, as Huxley envisioned, entranced by entertainment and spectacle, captivated by technology and seduced by profligate consumption to embrace our own oppression? It turns out Orwell and Huxley were both right. Huxley saw the first stage of our enslavement. Orwell saw the second.

We have been gradually disempowered by a corporate state that, as Huxley foresaw, seduced and manipulated us through sensual gratification, cheap mass-produced goods, boundless credit, political theater and amusement. While we were entertained, the regulations that once kept predatory corporate power in check were dismantled, the laws that once protected us were rewritten and we were impoverished. The state, crippled by massive deficits, endless war and corporate malfeasance, is sliding toward bankruptcy. We are moving from a society where we are skillfully manipulated by lies and illusions to one where we are overtly controlled.

It’s also worth re-reading Mario Savio’s extemporaneous speech to the Free Speech Movement’s sit-in on December 3, 1964, on the campus of the University of California at Berkeley. Though the speech predates the Prague Spring and the Paris general strike by four years, it embodies the core dynamic of those social uprisings: the system itself is fundamentally flawed, and we are the raw material and product that keep the system operating.

There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part; you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all!

The hope of 1968 that public demonstrations can actually change the power structure has been lost. The ghosts of 1968 inform us that there is no reforming the status quo power structure, there are only simulacrum reforms that fulfill the PR requirements of being seen as effecting reform. But people are losing faith in do-nothing policy tweaks; those tossed aside as detritus by the winner-take-most status quo realize the system is failing not just those on the margins but the entire citizenry. Those who look at the stripmined seas, polluted air, depleted soils and aquifers know the system is also failing the planet.

The system needs us as raw material, as “product,” as consumers of the output of the machine. That we are consumed by the process–that awareness has faded into the shadows inhabited by the ghosts of 1968.

*  *  *

My new book Money and Work Unchained is $9.95 for the Kindle ebook and $20 for the print edition.Read the first section for free in PDF format. If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2o1s8pn Tyler Durden

Zuma Resigns As President of South Africa

In a nearly hour-long televised address, Jacob Zuma – the beleaguered president of South Africa who was facing a coup by his own party, the African National Congress – announced he is resigning, putting an end to the debate whether he will comply with yesterday’s recall vote which effectively removed him from power.

  • ZUMA RESIGNS AS SOUTH AFRICA PRESIDENT WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT
  • ZUMA SAYS HE DISAGREES WITH DECISION OF ANC LEADERSHIP
  • ZUMA THANKS MEMBERS OF CABINET, MINISTERS, GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS

USDZAR ticked higher as President Zuma first addressed the nation, after early comments suggested that he would go forward with Thursday’s confidence vote indicating that he would fight the decision to remove him. However, his resignation announcement should put an end to any speculation over his fate, and also clear the path for the pro-business Cyril Ramaphosa to replace Zuma.

It also sent the USDZAR tumbling, and the rand hit the strongest level against the dollar since March 2015, although it has since pared some of its gains as there are no more immediate upside catalysts.

 

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2BwFaD0 Tyler Durden

Hotflation Sparks Gold Surge, Dollar Purge, Stock Splurge

Before we start, let’s summarize what we learned today (courtesy of @Lee_Saks)

  • Yields: many many rate hikes

  • Dollar: no rate hikes

  • Stocks: mmm maybe some rate hikes

  • Gold: we blew up the fed. no rate hikes.

Anyone else feel like the financial system is doing this again…

 

Futures show today’s fun-and-games best…

Nasdaq futures were up 3% off the CPI-crash lows…

 

Nasdaq and Small Caps were up almost 2% today!!

 

S&P retook the 2700 level…

 

And The Dow closed above its 50% retracement of the losses… That is a 600-point swing from the lows to the highs today!

 

This is the 4th short-squeeze day in a row – and today’s squeeze was the biggest since Feb 2017…

Risk-Parity funds are not exactly rebounding from their losses…

 

VIX closed below 20 again (after topping 25 intraday)… yay!!!

 

The belly of the curve was hardest hit today with 5Y up 9bps and the short-and and long-end up around 6bps…

 

10Y broke out to its highest since Jan 2014…almost reaching 2.92% today…stocks now love higher rates?

 

Expectations for more rate-hikes in 2018 picked up notably…

 

The Dollar Index spiked on CPI but then collapsed…BBDXY is down 4 days in a row, today was worst day for USD since The Mnuchin Massacre

 

As USDJPY tumbled today, so Gold spiked…

 

Reverting back to its more normal highly negative correlation regime (after briefly going positive in the last two weeks)…

 

For a little context, since The Fed hiked rates in December, The Dow managed to get green again today, the long-bond is a bloodbath (down 6%) and gold has soared 9%…

 

Thanks to a weak dollar, commodities surged with crude spiking after inventory data (ignoring production data)…

 

 

Big day for Cryptos today, as South Korean backpedalling on bans sent most of the major surging…

 

Notably, as the dollar tumbled both gold and bitcoin were bid…

 

Finally, we noted that Atlanta Fed’s GDPNOW model has already plunged from a 5.4% estimate to 3.25% today… just as it always does…

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2o7RctZ Tyler Durden

NYT Axes Latest Editorial Board Addition Over Tweet Defending Nazis

In a rare and unexpected move, the New York Times has axed the latest addition to its widely maligned editorial board less than a day after announcing her hiring after leftist pundits exploded in outrage over questionable tweets from her past.

The tweets in question – which were published more than four years ago – suggested that the writer, Quinn Norton, was “friends with” some neo-nazis – but didn’t share their views.

As the New York Post reported, the NYT fired Norton, a tech writer, after the controversy – which also included her use of racial and homophobic slurs – erupted late Tuesday.

“Despite our review of Quinn Norton’s work and our conversations with her previous employers, this was new information to us,” read a statement from editorial page editor, James Bennet.

“Based on it, we’ve decided to go our separate ways.”

Yes, you read that correctly: A newsroom full of the world’s finest (purportedly) journalist completely forgot to double-check the ol’ TL.

Quinn

Quinn has since deleted her controversial tweets, but the NYP provided a brief description of their contents:

In a series of tweets, Norton admitted to being “friends with various neo-Nazis” although she claimed she “never agreed with them.”

In one conversation from 2013, Norton wrote “Here’s the deal, f—t. Free speech comes with responsibility. not legal, but human. grown up. you can do this.”

In another oddly prescient tweet from 2014, she said “Today I realized I’d probably make a lot more money being a racist for @nytimes.”

…It also pointed out that despite the early dismissal, Norton seemed to take the situation in stride during this staggeringly long twitter thread…

 

 

Of course, Quinn represents a complicated case for anybody who supports unbridled free speech: Should professional newspaper editorial writers be allowed to express a degree of sympathy for horrible people and their motives? Also, by firing Quinn and choosing to keep White House reporter Glenn Thrush on staff (albeit in a different role) is the Grey Lady committing an act of blatant sexism?

What do you think?

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2Gb3jOc Tyler Durden

Axel Merk On Volatility, Correlation: This Time Is Different. Really?!

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk,

Axel Merk at Merk Investments discusses volatility and the next thing likely to blow sky high: Correlation strategies.

This Time is Different. Really?!

By Axel Merk

“Don’t panic, buy the dip, who cares?” or “These are rumblings of an earthquake, people will be hurt like in 1929” – which one is it? I would call it a wake-up call. Let me explain:

In recent years, markets had appeared eerily “safe”. Central banks promised to do “whatever it takes”, provided “forward guidance” to keep rates low, even printed money to buy government debt, calling it “quantitative easing.” Sure enough, volatility has been low, valuations have risen. Now, just as the fellow from the cartoon above, many might have thought something isn’t quite right. As a result, many investors have been looking to buy some insurance, protection, just in case this goldilocks environment doesn’t last forever. For those who have looked for ways to protect against a decline, they likely noticed that it had been rather expensive. Indeed, we had come to the conclusion some time ago that it may be more prudent for many investors to hold more cash rather than hold risk assets on the one hand, but then, say, buy put options in addition. However, cash in a 0% interest rate environment is not sexy (and holding cash a recipe for professional investors to lose client assets), causing many investors to have come up with ever more creative ways to “diversify.” We put diversify in quotes because many investors may be fooling themselves: many of those alternatives are reaching for yield and may well be risk assets in disguise, meaning they may be similarly vulnerable in a risk off environment.

One way to buy “protection” is to buy derivatives or exchange traded products that rise when volatility rises. The most direct way is to buy futures on the volatility index VIX; retail investors bought an exchange traded note that invested in such contracts; note that the underlying derivatives periodically (monthly) expire, so there is a continuous rebalancing between the nearest contract and those further out. Anyone who has bet on a rise in volatility through these instruments knows that you continuously lose money, unless you get the timing right. That is, it costs you at times over 10% a month for the right to potentially benefit when volatility rises. I say “potentially” because it isn’t even assured you make money when you get the timing right because it isn’t enough for volatility to rise at any particular moment; to make money with these instruments, volatility needs to rise in the forward markets, i.e. the market has to price in higher volatility several weeks from now when the underlying derivative matures. Confused yet? I allege that many that have purchased these instruments do not fully understand them.

The hottest trade on Wall Street last year was to be “on the other side” of the fearful, that is to speculate volatility will remain low. Speculators could reap, and many did, over 10% a month, over 100% a year. What could possibly go wrong? Notably, the argument was that even if there was a surge in volatility, it would almost certainly be short-lived. So just as those buying protection were frustrated that the pricing of volatility in forward months didn’t move much, those selling volatility benefited from this stickiness. So what if you lose some money temporarily, you can surely take home riches over time?! Sure enough, ever more speculators followed the call of the sirens, piled into this must win trade. Except, of course, this wasn’t a must win trade. Instead, it was a disaster in the making. On February 5, in a 24-hour period, some exchange traded products lost over 90% in value. You make 100% in one year, then lose 90% in a day; for those that need a refresher how percentages work: if you start with $100, you temporarily have $200, but end up with $20, i.e. you lose 80%. Not. A. Good. Deal.

But what’s next?

Have all the “short vol” speculators been flushed out? Is there any contagion, meaning are there any larger institutions that bet big on this, then have to liquidate other assets to meet margin calls? Are there related investment ideas that have similarly imploded or are about to? Should you buy the dip? Should you sell volatility now that the craziness is gone?

Let me try to touch on some of these:

Risk Parity as a Source of Instability?

While the media has mostly focused on those crazy enough to trade volatility, the Wall Street Journal in a February 6, 2018, article, as well as a few others, have started to point the finger at so-called risk parity strategies as well. While risk parity strategies come in many incarnations, what they have in common is that they manage different buckets of generally uncorrelated assets, typically stocks and fixed income, so that each bucket contributes an equal amount of risk. Diversification is the one free lunch on Wall Street, so why not apply it in a risk parity setting. Indeed, if you google the topic, you’ll find an array of white papers. Some shops have gathered billions in assets promoting risk parity strategies. Indeed, the basic premise, I would agree, is sound and promising. However, just like any investment, there are risks associated with them, and too much of a good thing can be bad.

A common feature of many risk parity strategies is that they use substantial leverage in the fixed income allocation, as many types of fixed income investments are historically less volatile than equity investments.

In the preceding, I emphasized “uncorrelated” and “leverage.” It’s kind of obvious that any strategy that employs leverage can create issues when it is very widely adopted. But what about the other basic premise of the risk parity approach? It’s based on the notion that stocks and bonds are either uncorrelated or inversely correlated with one another. Intuitively, we all get that with regards to stocks versus bonds. Except it’s not always true. This notion of inverse relationship has been exacerbated due to the financial crisis because when there was a concern in the market (risk was off, equities plunged), the Fed would step in to buy the one thing it was allowed to buy (buy bonds, pushing bond prices higher). QE may well have exacerbated this perception, getting ever more investors to pile into this “proven” strategy. But have a look at the chart below that illustrates this relationship is far from stable; indeed, from the mid 1970s through the mid 1990s, there was a positive relationship between stocks and bonds (even if the correlation was often low):

Sure enough, on Friday, February 2, 2018, the business day before the 1000+ plunge in the Dow Jones index, both stocks and bonds plunged. According to our analysis, the week ending February 2, 2018 was the worst concerted selloff when stocks and Treasuries are considered together since 2009.

You may have heard business channels talking about “risk managers” are taking charge. That’s the professional’s version of selling when the market tumbles; when retail investors do it, they are ridiculed for letting emotions get in their way of investing, when professionals do it it’s prudent risk management. Go figure.

Relevant to the large selloff, however, is that risk parity strategies may well have contributed as portfolio managers scrambled to de-lever their portfolios.

Passive Investment Bubble?

In a February 6, 2018, CNBC interview, activist investor Carl Icahn took it a step further, arguing we are experiencing a passive investment bubble and that investors will be hurt like in 1929. He referred to recent events as rumblings ahead of an earthquake, calling the market a casino on steroids and that it had become a much more dangerous place. He added, however, that it is quite possible that we will be reaching new highs and that nobody could know when this would play out.

My take: I have referred to the recent surge in volatility as a wakeup call, urging investors to stress test their portfolios. I look at the markets in terms of risk scenarios. The scenario presented by Icahn, to me, is a very plausible one. Sufficiently plausible that I have, for years, been preparing myself to seek returns uncorrelated with risk assets. That’s easier said than done, as explained earlier: it’s not merely outright “insurance”, but many uncorrelated investments are expensive, that is, have “negative carry”, meaning it costs to hold them.

Is it Different This Time?

Sure enough, lots of pundits have come out encouraging investors to ‘buy the dip’. They point to the short selloffs after Brexit and the Trump election as to why this time should be no different. By all means, it is possible we will be reaching new highs before bigger problems unfold, but, absolutely, in my assessment, this time is different. What has been bizarre, irrational, unusual, you name it, is what I would call the period we had leading up recent events. By saying “this time is different”, I’m really only referring to those with a short attention span. In short, risk has come back, it’s come back with a vengeance, and, if I’m not mistaken, it is here to stay:

  • The short volatility trade has been killed, it’s not coming back. Issuers of exchange traded products are retiring their products, speculators have lost their shirts. Importantly, at least for the time being, the “short vol” trade is, as of this writing, no longer a “positive carry” trade. That is, this fantasy world of reaping 10% a month has turned into a steep loss-making proposition because of how the market is pricing forward expectations of volatility. The relevance? In my assessment, the short vol trade itself has been a contributor to low volatility in the markets in a case where derivatives have driven the real market. That absurdity has stopped, allowing markets to be more volatile.
  • Inflation expectations are rising. After all this technical talk, yes, the fundamentals are changing. The non-farm payroll report on February 2 suggested wage pressures are accelerating. This may well have been the trigger for bonds to sell off on Friday. Also keep in mind U.S. tax reform is generally considered stimulative; so is the more favorable regulatory environment; and, on top of it all, we might get increased infrastructure spending (it’s an election year, after all!). The relevance? Higher inflation down the road increases the odds of the Fed further stepping away from its accommodative policy. Just as the Fed has, in my assessment, been a major reason why volatility has been low, higher rates may well imply higher volatility on an ongoing basis.
  • The Fed balance sheet is declining. The European Central Bank (ECB) is expected to taper its QE. Same as above, these are forces that, in my view, will cause volatility to move higher.
  • The Fed was, in my assessment, unfazed by the selloff on February 5. So far, we have heard some regional Fed Presidents say just that, although adding that they will be gradual in removing accommodations. More relevant, though, is that our interpretation of market measures, notably those of future rate hikes and inflation expectations, were not shattered. This is consistent with our view of the Powell Fed, one that will be slow to react.

This doesn’t mean volatility will stay at the extreme levels we saw on February 5, but I consider it most unlikely that volatility will collapse yet again, with the VIX index staying below 10 for an extended period. I also believe this may cause havoc:

  • I allege many investors did not rebalance their portfolios in the run-up we have had. To the extent that they did, they may not have moved stocks into assets that provide proper diversification. Most notably, many investors may have replaced their fixed income allocation with investments that only provide the illusion of diversification. That’s because the moment investors reach for yield, odds are their investments are more closely correlated with equities given that junk bonds, in my assessment, historically have a high correlation with equities. As a result, as volatility persists, investors may realize they are over-exposed to risk assets, causing them to sell.
  • Complacency continues to be very high. Anecdotal evidence I have taken suggests to me that most who are only casually watching the markets have not been impressed. Of course, this doesn’t assure turmoil must happen. But in my experience, a period of greed is followed by a period of fear. Maybe those are just silly words of someone who has been around the markets for decades. You judge.
  • Institutional investors may be at a loss as correlations don’t work as expected. Portfolio managers at pension funds may be telling their boards about the pitfalls of risk parity investing, of their traditional asset allocation. But as any deviation from the index has caused investors to underperform in recent years, those board members don’t know any better. More broadly speaking, while passive investing has ruled the world of late, when volatility rises, the dispersion of risk may well go up, providing opportunities for active managers. I’m not sure whether Carl Icahn’s usage of the word “bubble” is the one I would use, but investors hugged to traditional “60/40” investing (60% indexed stocks, 40% indexed bonds) may no longer be the stars at cocktail parties and, to the extent they are board members of pension funds, they might want to brush up their resumes as their seats could be in jeopardy when their funds don’t meet targets. In the meantime, one of the largest fund management companies is telling advisors, they should really be only holding hands of investors and buying the index; I have a feeling, those advisors will need to do a lot of hand holding.

To dive into more depth, please register to join me at our Webinar on Thursday, February 15, at 4:15pm ET.

Axel Merk
President & CIO, Merk Investments

Mish Comments

The uncorrelated assets Axel Merk describes are currencies and/or gold.

This post is not a recommendation of any Merk strategy or offering, but from time to time I do have currency positions, and I certainly have a position in gold.

I disagree with points Merk made on wages , stimulation from tax reform, the importance of inflation expectations, and even inflation itself, all conveniently mentioned in a single bullet point.

His primary message is what’s important, and I agree with Merk that leveraged anti-correlation strategies are going to blow up.

Many hedge funds and pensions are using leverage in bonds because bonds do not move much. Others are in Junk bonds because they yield more.

And judging from record short positions in 10-year treasuries (with huge positions by both big and small speculators) it’s safe to say there is a powder keg of ammo ready to blow up if the inflation trade nearly everyone expects goes the other way, as I believe it will.

At a micro level cash is an option, but at a macro level it isn’t. Someone must hold every stock or bond to maturity.

Related Articles

  1. Tightening Two Ways: Plunge in Interbank Lending: The Straw that Broke the Fed’s Back

  2. Record Short Treasuries: No Bond Vigilantes: Just Record Short Futures Speculators

  3. Repatriation Boom Myth: Trapped Funds: Foreign Cash Repatriation Boom in Reverse

  4. Necessary Fantasy: White House Estimates 3% Growth For a Decade

  5. Wage Growth? Really?: Acceleration in Wage Growth is a Statistical Mirage

Given the near universal way analysts and investors bought the wage growth, Trump boom, inflation story, the inevitable unwind of that story, or parts of that story, will exacerbate the problems with the risk parity strategies that Merk describes.

When? I don’t know, nor does anyone else, but the boat is very heavily one-sided right now.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2CkvyIe Tyler Durden

Americans’ Comfort Soared To 17-Year High As Stocks Crashed

The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index surged in the week-ending Feb 9th (matching its biggest weekly jump in 9 years) to its highest since 2001… as the US equity market crashed…

As Bloomberg notes, consumers remain upbeat about the economy, their finances and the buying climate, representing a disconnect from volatility in the stock market that culminated in a 5.2 percent slump in the Dow Jones Industrial Average last week.

Comfort among married Americans reached its highest since January 2001, which at 64.8, is far higher than for singles.

Sentiment among political independents reached its strongest reading since February 2001.

Confidence among Republicans, while falling last week, remained higher than that of Democrats.

Comfort levels increased the most among Americans in the South and West.

via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/2Bu7xl2 Tyler Durden