Kolanovic: There Is A “Profound” Danger To The Dollar’s Reserve Status

In his latest note released this morning, JPM’s head quant, Marko Kolanovic, reiterates his recent tactical call that the “unprecedented outperformance” of US equities vs. the rest of the world is over, and again recommends “gradually tilting towards Emerging Markets”, a trade which in recent weeks has generated profits as beaten down EM have found a floor and have indeed outperformed the developed world (whether or not this trend continues will depend on the Fed, the trade war with China, and various other intangibles).

For now, Marko is sticking to his conviction, and writes that “markets are likely sensing that the tide may be turning in the trade war” and “the tables are turning as a stronger USD, higher yields, and trade tariffs start impacting US profit growth, and YoY earnings comparisons soften.” Echoing his latest note from late August, Kolanovic says that “while we think that US equities will drift higher, the days of rampant outperformance vs. the RoW are likely over.”

Whether Kolanovic’s attempt to bottom tick the EM/DM trade will be successful will be revealed in due course.

What we found far more intriguing, however, was the second part of Kolanovic’s report, in which the JPM strategist shares his thoughts on a topic that has fascinated many, not to mention politicians in both the EU, Iran and the US, namely Europe’s ongoing desire to circumvent SWIFT – and Trump’s ability to “weaponize” the dollar – in order to maintain commerce with Iran in a narrow sense, but more broadly, to bypass Washington’s “veto” on global commerce and dollar transactions. As a reminder, yesterday we noted that Europe has unveiled a “Special Purpose Vehicle” to do just that, which not only would bypass SWIFT, but potentially jeopardize the dollar’s reserve status.

As we wrote, “Given U.S. law enforcement’s wide reach, there would still be a risk involved, and European governments may not be able to protect the companies from it. Some firms will be tempted to try the new infrastructure, however, and the public isn’t likely to find out if they do.  In any case, in response to Trump’s aggressive foreign policies and “weaponization” of the dollar, it is worthwhile for Europe, Russia and China to experiment with dollar-free business.”

We concluded:

This brings up the bigger point: no currency’s international dominance has lasted forever, and there’s no reason for the U.S. dollar to be the exception to this rule.

Trump’s confidence in his ability to weaponize the dollar against adversaries and stubborn allies alike could eventually backfire for the U.S. as efforts to push the dollar off its pedestal grow ever more serious.

Today, Kolanovic picks up on this theme and begins with a generic analysis of fund flows – specifically in the context of the most successful US “export” – he writes that one can look at the US Trade deficit “as a trade surplus in which the US is acquiring goods in exchange for USD bills.” He explains that this “exchange of natural resources and labor for inherently worthless fiat currency, as well as broad USD ownership has many benefits for the US” such as the following:

USD acquired in trade is often deposited in reserves (e.g., treasuries or other US assets) thus reducing the cost of capital for the US government and businesses. In this way, global trade and related ownership of USD keeps domestic inflation low, and is helping finance the US government (e.g., military, foreign policy, etc.).

Hardly news, Kolanovic reminds us that this “exorbitant privilege” was recognized a long time ago by geopolitical rivals – such as China and Russia – that don’t enjoy this benefit. It was also summarized by former NATO secretary general, Javier Solana, who said that “The power of the U.S. today is not military, it’s the dollar.”

And, as Kolanovic rhetorically asks, with the current US administration policies of unilateralism, trade wars, and sanctions increasingly affecting both friends and foes, “the question arises whether the rest of the world should diversify away from the risks of the USD and USD-centric finance?

Clearly recent events have shown that in the case of Europe, this is increasingly the case, and as Kolanovic expands, “recently, there are developments that suggest such a diversification could take place, and is being catalyzed by policies of the current US administration.”

Here, the JPM strategist brings up the story we discussed yesterday, in which the EU foreign affairs chief announced the creation of a ‘special vehicle’ for trade despite US sanctions, while noting that a similar idea were promoted last month by Germany’s foreign minister, Heiko Maas. To Kolanovic, it is the risk of Trump’s “unilateral policies” that are the biggest risk of bringing major powers of China, Europe and Russia closer, according to Kolanovic who warns that “such an alliance could profoundly impact the USD-centric financial system.

It’s not just Trump, however:

while the current US administration may be a catalyst for long-term de-dollarization, such diversification may be prudent even if Washington policies change. For instance, currency/rate diversification might be in the best interest of Emerging Market economies, time and time again left at mercy of US Federal Reserve rate cycles.

If indeed the US Dollar finds itself at a “tipping point” with a growing risk for a USD-centric system, how should investors protect themselves? To Kolanovic, one possible hedge against the secular risk of de-dollarization is “by shifting into non US
assets (e.g., RoW stocks and bonds)”

But his preferred trade appears to be going long gold, not only for strategic but due to tactical reasons as “the current positioning in gold is extremely short.”

Figure 2 shows aggregated investment in gold ETFs and futures as fraction of  the S&P 500 price. It is currently near the lowest point in a decade, and there were only two historical instances this low level was reached. One was shortly before the market crash in 2008, and the other shortly before the market rally in early 2016 (led by Emerging Market stocks and Value). Being long gold worked well in these entirely different scenarios (one being risk off, and another risk on).

Whether or not buying gold would truly hedge the collapse the US-centric world, a process which would entail the ascent of either the Euro or the Yuan to the status of global reserve currency, and one which the US would not allow to happen without a major war, is debatable. However, what is most remarkable is that we now have reputable bankers in the face of none other than Marko Kolanovic, one of the most respected strategists at JPMorgan, contemplating a world in which the US Dollar is no longer the reserve currency, a “thought experiment” which until recently was relegated to the fringes of financial commentary. That this line of thinking is becoming increasingly more mainstream – and accepted – is perhaps the most troubling observation from Kolanovic’s latest note…

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Working for TSA Is Only Thing Worse Than Being Searched by TSA, Report Finds

Millions of travelers hate the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), thanks to its invasive body scans, its pat-downs that border on molestation, and its general ineffectiveness when it comes to evaluating threats.

But it’s not just fliers who are treated terribly. The TSA is also plagued by a “toxic” workplace culture where senior officials’ misconduct goes unpunished and those who threaten to speak out face retaliation, according to a report from Republicans on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

The committee says its probe started in 2015, when it started receiving “credible allegations” of wrongdoing. The investigators found a host of problems, which the committee believes are directly related to low employee morale. The report, released yesterday, says:

The toxic combination of unchecked misconduct by senior officials and retaliation against rank-and-file whistleblowers undermined employee morale, reflected in the agency’s astronomical attrition rates (as high as 20 percent in some segments of the workforce during the period in question) and abysmal ranking in a government-wide job satisfaction survey (336 out of 339 agencies and components in 2017).

The first part of the committee’s report dealt with alleged misconduct from agency administrators. One official, for example, is accused of sexually harassing more than one worker. Mark Livingston, who supervised one of those employees, says he was threatened when he confronted the alleged harasser. “[H]e told me if I didn’t lie for him that I was going to be on his ‘S’ list,” Livingston told the investigators. “And then when I told him that I would not lie after he sexually harassed her, he told me that if I didn’t, him and the others couldn’t work with me.”

A source tells ABC News that the alleged harasser is Joseph Salvator, who still works at the agency as deputy director of security operations. In 2016, Salvator was accused of harassment in The Washington Post by Alyssa Bermudez, a former TSA worker.

Salvator wasn’t alone, the reports says. In 2015, for instance, a TSA official was arrested for driving while intoxicated. She blamed another TSA employee, who she claimed had driven the car before abandoning her. The official eventually confessed to the DWI, and the TSA’s Office of Professional Responsibility recommended she be fired. Instead she got a two-week suspension.

In another case, the report says a senior TSA official at a midwestern airport called Muslims “stupid ragheads” and made “mooing sounds” at a pregnant worker. Despite “numerous” complaints from employees, the official “was allowed to engage in inappropriate behavior for at least seven years,” the report says.

How were TSA officials able to get away such misconduct? According to the report, whistleblowers and other “disfavored employees” were punished with “involuntary directed reassignments,” meaning they often had to move hundreds of miles away. The TSA has since changed its directed reassignment policy the committee says, but was still forced to pay out at least $1 million in settlements to affected workers.

Finally, the report says the agency “obstructed investigations into TSA misconduct and retaliation.” When the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Special Counsel investigated many of the allegations, the TSA either wouldn’t release relevant documents or “produced heavily redacted documents,” the report says.

These accusations are not terribly surprising. Whether it’s the surveillance, the stalking, or the fondling, this isn’t an agency with a great track record when it comes to treating people well. It’s not exactly a shock that it doesn’t respect its employees any more than it respects American fliers.

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Cop Kicks Teen Who Had Already Been Pepper-Sprayed

A fight broke out among a group of teens at a Washington state fair over the weekend. When some officers of the Yakima Police Department arrived, the teens quickly scattered. Those who remained in the area got pepper-sprayed by the police. While one 17-year-old boy held his eyes, presumably in response to the pepper spray, Officer Ian Cole kicked him in the back, causing him to stumble to the ground.

The end of the fight and the subsequent police response were captured on video, and the clip went viral after it was posted to Facebook. The video shows Cole kicking the teen to the ground clear as day:

On Monday, Interim Police Chief Gary Jones released a statement saying that his department had been “made aware” of the video and that an investigation would review Cole’s use of force. Cole has been placed on desk duty in the meantime.

Attorney Bill Pickett, who is representing the teen in a claim against the city, thinks an independent group should do the investigation. “What they need is a citizen review panel put together in this community and hold these people accountable when there’s misconduct instead of the police saying ‘We’ll investigate it ourselves,'” he tells the Yakima Herald.

Jones disagrees, telling the paper that “third-party oversight of every use of force investigation would be problematic.” He does, however, tout a review team “composed of components outside the department.”

On Tuesday, the department tweeted this invitation to apply to work for the department:

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Avenatti Details Alleged Kavanaugh “Gang Rape” Scheme Involving Spiked Punch

Attorney Michael Avenatti has levied new allegations of sexual misconduct against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. Avenatti’s client, Julie Swetnick, claims that Kavanaugh and his friend Mark Judge made efforts to cause girls “to become inebriated and disoriented so they could then be “gang raped” in a side room or bedroom by a “train” of numerous boys.” 

“During the years 1981-1982, I became aware of efforts by Mark Judge, Brett Kavanaugh and others to “spike” the “punch” at house parties I attended with drugs and/or grain alcohol so as to cause girls to lose their inhibitions and their ability to say “No.” This caused me to make an effort to purposely avoid the “punch” at these parties,” reads Swetnick’s declaration.  

I have a firm recollection of seeing boys lined up outside rooms at many of these parties waiting for their ‘turn’ with a girl inside the room,” Washington resident Julie Swetnick said in a sworn affidavit released by attorney Michael Avenatti. “These boys included Mark Judge and Brett Kavanaugh,” she added. Judge was a high school classmate of Kavanaugh. -Bloomberg

Developing…

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Kavanaugh’s Confirmation Odds Are Suddenly Surging On Prediction Markets

The odds that Brett Kavanaugh will be confirmed to the Supreme Court are suddenly surging, one day ahead of a much anticipated hearing in which Washington, Wall Street and just about everyone else will tune in to hear the SCOTUS candidate and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

After tumbling on Sunday to as low as 26 cents, shortly after the New Yorker reported that a second woman had stepped forward with an accusation of sexual misconduct, this time during his college years at Yale University, a “yes” contract now costs as much as 63 cents compared to 39 cents for a “no” bet as of 9 a.m. in New York.

What may have prompted the turnaround?

As we reported yesterday, the fate of Kavanaugh’s nomination may rest on the decision made by Maine Senator Susan Collins who is seen as the key swing vote in the nomination process. Then overnight, Bloomberg reported that Collins doesn’t think President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee would overturn the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion because he said he respects precedent. Vanity Fair echoed this and said that “Susan Collins will bite the bullet and support Kavanaugh.”

Collins, a Maine Republican who supports abortion rights, said her discussions with Kavanaugh persuaded her that he believes “the concept of precedent is rooted in Article III of the Constitution, and he clearly reveres our Constitution.”

Still, Collins said she hasn’t decided whether she’ll vote in favor of confirming Kavanaugh to the court. She’s waiting to make a decision until after hearing testimony at a Thursday Senate Judiciary Committee hearing from a woman who accuses Kavanaugh of sexual assault during high school.

For now, however, at least the online betting market is confident that she will go with “yes”, although we still have to see what surprise attorney Michael Avenatti will pull out of his hat, and whether that will meaningfully shift the nomination odds.

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15 Bullish Assumptions

Authored by Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

If all goes well for nine more months, the post-financial crisis economic expansion will become the longest economic expansion in recent U.S. history. The U.S. stock markets are also on a tear, having just become the longest bull market since World War II. Regardless of your views about these trends continuing, the fact of the matter is that they are both much closer to ending than a beginning. Ray Dalio recently quantified this continuum, declaring that the economy is in the 7th inning, implying another one to three years of continuation.

While the markets can certainly keep motoring ahead, as Dalio and many others expect, there are some factors supporting the bullish case that investors should contemplate.

While this list is not by any means exhaustive, it does offer many of the most important assumptions supporting the market and some details to provide context and clarity.

1. Corporate managers have become so adept at their jobs that profit margins and equity valuations will remain at, or rise from current nearly unprecedented levels.

  • Market Cap : GDP – 99% historical percentile according to Goldman Sachs Investment Research (GS)

  • Enterprise Value-to-Sales – 97% historical percentile (GS)

  • Shiller’s CAPE 10 – 90% historical percentile (GS)

  • Price-to-Book Value – 89% historical percentile (GS)

  • John Hussman’s margin-adjusted CAPE – Record high including 1929 and 1999.

  • Expected 10 year S&P 500 return as depicted in our article Allocating on Blind Faith is negative

  • GMO 7-Year real return forecast -4.90% for U.S. large cap, -2.30% for U.S. small cap and -3.80% for U.S. high quality

  • Doug Short’s (Advisor Perspectives) Average of the Four Valuation Indicators is 117% overvalued as shown below and nearly 3 standard deviations from the mean

2. Bond yields will remain historically low and the 30-year downward trend will not reverse

  • The 10-year U.S Treasury yield is slightly above a key 30-year resistance line at 3.11%

  • The 30- and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields are testing multi-year highs of 3.23% and 3.12% respectively

  • Since the lows of 0.70% in November 2016, the 2-year U.S. Treasury yield has risen 300% to 2.80%

  • 3-month LIBOR, a key global interest rate for floating rate financing, has risen 282% from 0.62% in June 2016 to the current level of 2.37%

  • Implied volatility on Treasury note futures is at historically low levels indicating extreme complacency

  • GMO’s 7-Year real return forecast is -0.20% for US bonds

3. Future Fed rate hikes and possible yield curve inversion will not cause economic contraction

  • The Federal Reserve (Fed) currently expects to hike rates an additional 1.50% bringing the Fed Funds rate to 3.50%, by the end of 2019

  • The 2s/10s U.S. Treasury yield curve stands at 26 basis points and has flattened 110 bps since December 2016

  • The Fed appears increasingly comfortable with inverting the yield curve “Over the next year or two, barring unexpected developments, continued gradual increases in the federal funds rate are likely to be appropriate to sustain full employment and inflation near its objective.” – Lael Brainard – Fed Governor

  • The last five recessions going back to 1976 were all preceded by a 2s/10s yield curve inversion

  • All six recessions going back to 1971 were preceded by Fed interest rate hikes. Two exceptions where rates hike did not lead to recession were in 1983-84 and 1994-95

4. Weakness in interest rate sensitive sectors will not have a dampening effect on the economy or markets

  • Total automotive vehicle sales have declined 7.8% since the Fed started raising rates

  • New and existing home sale have steadily declined since November 2017 as mortgage rates risen by over 0.50% over the this period

5. Wage growth will not accelerate further thus stoking inflationary pressures

  • Employees gaining leverage over employers as jobless claims and the unemployment rate both stand near 50-year lows

  • Wage growth is at a 9-year high

  • Spike in the “quit rate” to 18-year high suggests more wage growth pressure coming

6. Annual fiscal deficits over $1 trillion will power economic growth with no consequences

  • Current deficit equals 4.4% of GDP and is projected to rise to 5.5% in 2019 ($1.2T)

  • Recent projections of budget deficits have been revised aggressively higher

  • Interest expense rose 10% this past fiscal year and now accounts for $500 billion spending. To put that in context, the defense budget for 2019 is $717 billion.

7. Domestic political turmoil will not roil markets or inhibit consumer and corporate spending habits

  • Mueller’s findings

  • Mid-term elections

  • The potential for the Democrats to take a majority in the House and/or Senate and advance calls for Trump impeachment as well as impede further tax reform and possibly other corporate-friendly legislation

8. Possible additional U.S. dollar appreciation and the resulting financial crises engulfing many emerging markets will not cause financial contagion or economic slowdown to spread to developed nations or to the world’s largest banks 

9. Geopolitical turmoil will not roil markets or stunt global growth and trade

  • Brexit

  • Italy

  • Iran

  • Russia

  • Syria

  • Turkey

  • Brazil

  • Argentina

  • Venezuela

  • South Africa

10. The performance of U.S. stocks can diverge from the rest of the world

  • The following developed markets are all negative year to date and have a 50-day moving average below its 200-day moving average

    • United Kingdom -5%

    • Japan -3%

    • Hong Kong -9%

    • South Korea -6%

    • Germany -6%

  • World Index EFA (blue) vs. S&P 500 (orange) (Graph below courtesy Stockcharts.com)

11. Trade wars and increasing tariffs benefit the economy and global markets

  • China

  • Canada

  • Mexico

  • Europe

  • Japan

12. Corporations, via stock buybacks, will continue to be the predominant purchaser of U.S. stocks

  • Buybacks will reach a record high in 2018 (Graph below courtesy Trim Tabs)

  • Corporate debt can continue to rise to fund buybacks despite rising interest rates and risk of credit downgrades

  • Corporate debt as a percentage of GDP is now the highest on record 

13. Liquidity in the markets will remain plentiful

 

14. Central Banks can permanently prop up asset prices if they are to fall

 

And…The most important factor long-term bulls must assume to be true:

15. This time is different

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WTI Algos Confused Despite Surprise Crude, Gasoline Builds

Yet another surprise crude build reported by API sent WTI lower overnight, and held below $72 ahead of DOE data (which was expected to show a build).

“Exports are up and I don’t think production is going anywhere – it’s going to be pretty locked-in at 11 million barrels a day,” which would likely lead to a crude draw, says Thomas Finlon, director of Energy Analytics Group.

Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Energy Analyst Vince Piazza notes that a generous dollop of bad news is good news for the crude market. U.S. sanctions on Iran, Venezuela’s deteriorating economy and other potential geopolitical disruptions will limit supply. On the other hand, the trade spat between Washington and Beijing could slow economic growth and reduce demand, which joins robust domestic production and U.S. refinery maintenance season in providing ammunition for a more skeptical view on oil prices.

API

  • Crude +2.903mm (-1.5mm exp)

  • Cushing +260k (-150k exp)

  • Gasoline +949k

  • Distillates -944k

DOE

  • Crude +1.85mm (-1.5mm exp)

  • Cushing +461k (-150k exp)

  • Gasoline +1.53mm (+700k exp)

  • Distillates -2.24mm

However, confirming API, DOE reported a surprise 1.85mm barrel build (the first in six weeks) along with unexpectedly large inventory increases at Cushing and in Gasoline.

 

US Crude Production rose to a new record high…

 

WTI broke below $72 after API, and held below it heading into DOE, but the unexpected crude build sparked algo chaos as the machines just could not make their minds up…

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Elizabeth Warren’s New Bill Would Spend $500 Billion on Housing

Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) wants to build America out of its housing woes with a huge infusion of federal dollars.

On Tuesday, Warren introduced the American Housing and Economic Mobility Act, which would spend roughly $500 billion over the next 10 years on a variety of new and existing federal housing programs. It would give an extra $45 billion a year to the Housing Trust Fund—a big increase from the $219 million allotted to that program in 2017. And additional $2.5 billion would be spent annually on the Capital Magnet Fund, used to leverage private funds for affordable housing funding. Another $2.5 billion would go each year toward housing in rural and tribal areas. The funds would come mostly from hiking the estate tax.

All told, this is a giant increase in federal housing spending, more than doubling the current annual Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) budget of $50 billion. In return, this spending will—according to an analysis by Moody’s Analytics—produce 3 million housing units by 2028, shaving a whole percent off per-year rent increases and lowing rents for below-market units by about 10 percent. (Moody’s analysis assumes that each new unit will cost the federal government $175,000 to produce. That’s close to the average per-unit cost of new, federally-funded affordable housing, but it’s well below the $326,000 average cost of new affordable housing in a pricey state like California.)

The bill’s spending measures makes standard progressive fare, similar to proposals from Sens. Kamala Harris (D–Calif.) and Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.). Harris introduced her own housing bill in July that would offer a refundable tax credit to renters spending more than 30 percent of their income on rent. Sanders called for “significantly expanding” the Housing Trust Fund in June.

Unlike either Sanders’ or Harris’ ideas, Warren’s legislation calls out restrictive zoning laws for the upward pressure they put on housing costs. “Instead of supporting development and promoting competition, state and local governments have imposed needless rules that substantially raise the cost of buying or renting a home,” reads the summary of Warren’s bill.

To counteract these policies, Warren proposes a new grant program that would make $10 billion in infrastructure funding contingent on localities loosening their zoning rules.

It’s welcome to see the senator addressing the issue of zoning at all, given the outsized impact it has on housing costs. But her solution is unlikely to fix the problem. Those cities and neighborhoods that have the most restrictive zoning laws tend to be wealthier communities that are less dependent on federal funds in the first place, so they’re less likely to be swayed by promises of more cash.

More federal money for a new park or elementary school also seems unlikely to placate the concerns of most NIMBYs, whose opposition to new development usually can be reduced to narrow fears about unwanted construction noise, unwanted traffic, and unwanted neighbors (be they low-income tenants or gentrifying yuppies).

And while Warren’s bill aims to reduce regulation with one hand, it would creates a lot more regulations with the other. The legislation would impose prevailing wage requirements on projects, expand the Community Reinvestment Act’s requirements to more types of financial institutions, and broaden the Fair Housing Act’s anti-discrimination measures to include sexual orientation and gender identity. So despite the encouraging language about zoning, the meat of Warren’s proposal is more federal spending and more federal regulation.

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Nomura: “This Is Telling Us Something Powerful About The Market’s Sentiment”

Yesterday, one day ahead of the Fed’s rate hike decision (and first Clarida dot, and first 2021 forecast, and potential revision of the “remains accommodative” language), we highlighted something that had generally fallen through the cracks of market punditry: namely, not only do traders now fully price in two rate hikes in 2019 (if still below the Fed’s three), they have once again shifted to expect that the Fed could extend the rate cycle through 2020. One can see this by observing that the spread between euro-dollar futures in December 2019 and 2020 is no longer inverted.

Admittedly, the spread is only 4bps for now, which translates to a mere 16% chance for a single 25bps rate-hike but it represents another key recent reversal in how the market is approaching the Fed’s thinking, and potentially a sign that the widely discussed “Recession of 2020” has been put on ice. Furthermore, it gives The Fed some runway in its belief that it can raise rates without having to worrying about cutting the expansion short.

We bring this dis-inversion up because it serves as the gist of the latest email to clients from Nomura’s Charlie McEligott who after laying out his latest thoughts on what the Fed will do later today (“we expect the long-term dots to move towards 3%; we believe the potential (hawkish) removal of “remains accommodative” language to be a story for the December meeting“), writes that:

“the larger rates talking-point for me over the past week or so hasn’t been about the Fed: following the Eurodollar futures roll and the market’s readjustment closer to the Fed’s 2019 dots over the past few weeks, the EDZ9EDZ0 spread is now no-longer inverted.”

We showed this yesterday as follows:

Why is this reversal in the inverted 2019-2020 Dec ED spread relevant? A few reasons:

First, McElligott writes that the inversion was something he had “previously highlighted since mid-Summer as very telling with regards to the market’s “building consensus” around the “2020 recession” narrative.

Obviously if the market now expects a rate hike – something the Fed would not do in a recession – the sentiment has shifted drastically, and now expects continued expansion at least into the early part of 2021.

McElligott agrees and says that “this matters meaningfully to me”, as “the former EDZ9EDZ0 inversion communicated that the market was pricing-in higher likelihood of a CUT than any further Fed hiking in 2020; NOW, with the spread again positive, the market has (very modestly) inflected towards the (smallish, but ‘there’) potential for another hike in 2020 on a re-gearing of U.S. economic bullishness.

Said another way, this is telling us something POWERFUL about the market’s accelerating +++ sentiment on U.S. economic growth trajectory—which is now viewed as “pushing-back” the ultimate “slow-down / recession” thesis timing.

The shift in sentiment would also revise McElligott’s own trajectory of trades heading into 2019, as it would “delay the potential sequencing of the move in the UST curve “from flatter to steeper,” which Charlie had been projecting as a mid-2019 event and “THE” story for thematic macro regime shift as the ultimate “risk-off” signal indicating that the market is “sniffing” the end of the cycle.

Then again, one can counter that until recently, consensus – in the Eurodollar market – was aligned with McElligott’s view, and that at least for rates traders, the “2020 recession” was largely priced in, and therefore would probably not have been a surprise to risk assets. However, now that the 2020 “event” has been delayed, is precisely when it would have a far greater impact if indeed the global economy downshifted – whether due to China or trade war – and the Fed was, in fact, forced to put an end to the rate hike cycle.

* * *

Finally, a few pure equity market observations from McElligott who adds that “the behavior of U.S. Equities on the index level this past week is that much more impressive being that it comes despite”:

  • U.S. Corporates largely having-entered their “buyback blackouts”
  • The post-serial expiration Gamma roll-off
  • The back-half of September negative seasonal
  • The month- and quarter- end Pension rebalancing “reversal flows” (selling Equities outperformance, adding Fixed-Income)
  • The SOMA balance sheet run-off phenomenon, the largest MBS unwind of 2018 having occurred yesterday

The last point, i.e. the correlation between the Fed’s balance sheet and risk assets, is notable because as of this moment, the MBS portion of the Fed balance sheet unwind “has shown the most NEGATIVE sensitivity to SPX behavior YTD,” with SPX on average -0.3% the 1w PRIOR to the roll-off event / VIX +8.0%, and SPX on average -0.2% / VIX +6.6% on the 1W AFTER period. This implies that for now at least, the shrinking of the Fed’s MBS holdings remains, perversely, bullish.

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New Home Sales Disappoint Despite Home Price Drop, Inventory Surge

Following existing home sales disappointment, hope was once again high for a bounce in new home sales in August but once again disappointed with a 629k print (up from a revised 608k), but missed expectations of 630k.

While the sales gain was the first in three months, the downward revisions to prior figures indicate that the market in recent months was slower than previously reported, adding to broader indications of cooler demand in residential real estate.

 

On the bright side New Home Sales rose YoY…

 

Median home prices dropped from 328.1K to 320.2K…

Notably, 318,000 new houses were on the market at the end of August, the most since February 2009.

KB Home is down in the pre-market…

But it’s not alone as US homebuilder stocks have been hammered, catching down to the ugly reality of US housing data as The Fed hikes rates and crushes affordability…

Perfect time to hike rates today.

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