Do You Believe In (Market) Magic

Authored by David Robertson via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Like so many things, magic can have different meanings. Many times, it is regarded as something special that defies easy explanation. Sometimes it also includes elements of nostalgia as in the Lovin’ Spoonful’s “It makes you feel happy like an old-time movie.” Positive, serendipitous experiences are often described as mystical, remarkable, or “magical”.

But magic can also have negative connotations. Common phrases such as “sleight of hand” and “smoke and mirrors” emphasize the misdirection of our attention, often for the purpose of gaining advantage. Increasingly, these types of “magic” infest investment analyses and financial statements and in doing so, belie underlying fundamentals. Just as hope is not a strategy, belief is not an investment plan.

One of the great lessons of history is that it is not so much periodic downturns that can cause problems for long term investment plans so much as it is specious beliefs about supporting fundamentals that can really wreak havoc. Often, we have decent information in front of us but we get distracted and focus on, and believe, something else.

In the tech bust of 2000, for example, investors learned that some companies inflated revenues through vendor financing. Some backdated options to retain high levels of compensation for key staff. Many used alternative metrics such as growth in “eyeballs” to embellish visions of growth while de-emphasizing real progress and costs.

Similar phenomena existed in the financial crisis of 2008. Exceptionally low interest rates boosted mortgage originations above sustainable levels. “No income, no assets” (NINA) mortgages allowed a large number of people to take out mortgages who were wholly unqualified to do so. Structured credit products boosted growth by creating a perception of manageable risk.

In both cases, there was a period of time during which people thought they were wealthier than they actually were, because they had not yet learned of the deceptions. Renown economist John Kenneth Galbraith thought enough of this phenomenon to develop a theory about it. John Kay describes it [here]: “Embezzlement, Galbraith observed, has the property that ‘weeks, months, or years elapse between the commission of the crime and its discovery. This is the period, incidentally, when the embezzler has his gain and the man who has been embezzled feels no loss. There is a net increase in psychic wealth.’ Galbraith described that increase in wealth as ‘the bezzle’.”

Charlie Munger went on to expand and generalize the theory:

“This psychic wealth can be created without illegality: mistake or self-delusion is enough.”

Kay notes that “Munger coined the term ‘febezzle,’ or ‘functionally equivalent bezzle,’ to describe the wealth that exists in the interval between the creation and the destruction of the illusion.”

As any magician knows, there are lots of ways to create illusions. For better and worse, the current investment landscape is riddled with them. One of the most common is to create a story about a stock or an industry. Investment “stories” are nothing new. In the late 1990s and early 2000s the story was that the internet was going to transform our lives and create enormous growth. In the financial crisis of 2008 the story was that low rates and low inflation created a “goldilocks” environment for global growth. Both stories, shall we say, overlooked some relevant factors.

New stories are popping up almost as reliably as weeds after summer rains. Zerohedge highlighted [here], “Back in December 2017 it was ‘blockchain.’ Now, the shortcut to market cap riches, and a flurry of speculative buying, is simply mentioning one word: ‘cannabis’.” If you are curious what a story stock looks like, take a look at the price action of cannabis company TLRY over the last month. After you do, try formulating an argument that the market prices reflect only fundamental information and no illusion.

Daniel Davies, author of Lying for Money, points out one overlooked, but highly relevant aspect of the cannabis story [here]: “Despite the “bright future of legalized pot”, he says, “The US Securities and Exchange Commission has already prosecuted several companies which appeared to be less interested in selling weed to the public and more interested in selling stock owned by the founders for cash.” As is often the case, the whole story is often more complicated and less alluring.

Stories are conjured about more than just exciting new stocks and industries, however. Sometimes they define a narrative about the economy or the market as a whole. One such story describes the economy as finally getting back on track and resuming its historical growth trajectory of 3 – 4%. It’s a nice, appealing story with significant tones of nostalgia.

It is also a story that is less than entirely realistic, however. The FT cites JPMorgan analysis [here]: “Jacked up on tax cuts, a $1.3tn spending bill, easy monetary policy and a weakening dollar, Wall Street and the US economy have enjoyed their own version of a ‘sugar high’.”

John Hussman describes how the discrepancy between real growth and perceived growth arises [here]:

 “The reason investors imagine that growth is running so much higher than 2-3% annually is that Wall Street and financial news gurgles about quarterly figures and year-over-year comparisons without placing them into a longer-term perspective.”

He explains, “The way to ‘reconcile’ the likely 1.4% structural growth rate of GDP with the 4% second quarter growth rate of real GDP is to observe that one is an expected multi-year average and the other is the annualized figure for a single quarter, where a good portion of that figure was driven by soybean exports in anticipation of tariffs.”

Further, he reveals that fundamental drivers have actually languished during the huge run-up in the market: “[W]hen we measure peak-to-peak across economic cycles, annual S&P 500 earnings growth has averaged less than 3% annually since 2007, while S&P 500 revenue growth has averaged less than 2% annually.”

Tax cuts provide an especially interesting component of the investment landscape. Not only did the cuts in corporate tax rates quickly and substantially increase earnings estimates in financial models, they also provided a powerful signal to many investors that finally there is a business-friendly administration in the White House.

The reality, again, is more complicated and less sanguine, however. For one, the tax cuts came along with higher fiscal deficits, the cost of which will be borne in the future. Secondly, and importantly, the tax cuts did not come as a singular benefit but rather as part of a “package” of public policy.

The FT reported [here]:

“At a meeting in Beijing late last year, US business executives tried to explain their concerns about imposing tariffs on Chinese exports to a group of visiting Trump administration officials.” It continued, “The meeting was held after President Donald Trump’s state visit to Beijing and the congressional passage of a large tax cut for corporate America. The executives, who had expected a polite exchange of views, were shocked by the officials’ robust response. One of the attendees reported that they were told, “your companies just got a big tax cut and things are going to get a lot tougher with China — fall in line”.

The attendee summarized, “The message we are getting from DC is ‘you’re just going to have to buck up and deal with it’.” Lest this be perceived as a one-off misunderstanding, it is completely consistent with Steve Bannon’s analysis of the situation reported [here], “Donald Trump may be flexible on so much stuff, but the hill he’s willing to die on is China.”

While “story stocks” and “tax cuts” and record growth” tend to steal headlines, they aren’t the only things that can engender perceptions that differ from reality. Sometimes the most powerful sources of misunderstanding are also the most mundane — because they garner so little attention.

While accounting in general is often overlooked because the subject is dry and technical, it also provides the measures and rules of the game by which financial endeavors are evaluated. But those rules, their enforcement, and the economic landscape have changed considerably over the years.

One big issue is the increasing use of non-GAAP metrics in earnings presentations. As I discussed in a blog post [here], the vast majority of S&P 500 firms present non-GAAP metrics in their earnings releases. Further, as the FTreported, “Most of those non-GAAP numbers make the company look better. Last year a FactSet study found that the average difference between non-GAAP and GAAP profits reported by companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 31 per cent, up from 12 per cent in 2014.” A key takeaway, I noted, is that “non-GAAP financial presentations can play a significant role in cleaving perception from underlying investment reality.”

Another issue is that intellectual capital presents special accounting challenges and is far more important to the economy today than it used to be. The Economist reports [here]: “Total goodwill for all listed firms world-wide is $8tn, according to Bloomberg. That compares to $14tn of physical assets. Dry? Yes. Irrelevant? Far from it.” Further, one-half of the top 500 European and top 500 American firms by market value “have a third or more of their book equity tied up in goodwill.”

The Economist also reports, “Just as the stock of goodwill sitting on balance-sheets has become vast, so have the write-downs. For the top 500 European and top 500 American firms by market value, cumulative goodwill write-offs over the past ten years amount to $690bn. There is a clear pattern of bosses blowing the bank at the top of the business cycle and then admitting their sins later.” Because “the process of impairment is horrendously subjective,” the numbers for reported assets have become less defensible.

In addition, investors need to be on the watch for even more than clever numbers games and accounting obfuscation. The reliability of corporate audits has also been declining for a variety of reasons — which should reduce investors’ confidence in them.

As the FT reports [here], the original purpose of audited numbers was “to assure investors that companies’ capital was not being abused by overoptimistic or fraudulent managers.” However, Sharon Bowles, former chair of the European Parliament’s economic and monetary affairs committee, assesses, “But the un-anchoring of auditing from verifiable fact has become endemic.”

An important part of the “un-anchoring” process involves the increasing acceptance of fair value accounting, which was implemented (ostensibly) to provide more useful information to investors: “From the 1990s, fair values started to supplant historical cost numbers in the balance sheet, first in the US and then, with the advent of IFRS accounting standards in 2005, across the EU. Banking assets held for trading started to be reassessed regularly at market valuations. Contracts were increasingly valued as discounted streams of income, stretching seamlessly into the future.” “The problem with fair value accounting,” according to one audit professional, “is that it’s very hard to differentiate between mark-to-market, mark-to-model and mark-to-myth.” Yet another case of diminished verifiability.

At the same time as the reliability of audited numbers was decreasing, so too was the accountability for the audits. “[A]uditing firms have used their lobbying power to erase ever more of the discretion and judgment involved in what they do. Hence the explosion of ‘tick box’ rules designed to achieve mechanistic ‘neutral’ outcomes.” Professor Karthik Ramanna calls it a process “that is tantamount to a stealthy ‘socialisation or collectivisation of the risks of audit’.” In other words, don’t expect auditing firms to pay when their work fails, expect investors to pay.

To make matters worse, “There is also the perception that the dominant Big Four, which are now profit-hungry professional services conglomerates, are not that worried about audit quality anyway.” Erik Gordon, a professor at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business, highlights, “They have been able to do better with low quality than with high quality work.”

Jean-Marie Eveillaird, who accumulated an impressive record as an investment professional, summarized the effects of accounting changes in a RealVisionTV interview [here]: “[M]ost accounting numbers are estimates. And indeed, what happened in the ’90s, where there are a number … of chief financial officers decided that- with the help of some shop lawyers- decided that you could observe the letter of the regulations, and at the same time betray the spirit of the regulations, and you wouldn’t go to jail for that.”

In sum, there are a lot of different ways in which illusions about financial performance can be created and many have been getting progressively worse. Notably, they don’t even include the examples of intentional wrongdoing such as the Enron or Madoff frauds. Munger is right, “psychic wealth can be created without illegality: mistake or self-delusion is enough.”

The one thing all these examples have in common is that they are all essentially category errors. As Ben Hunt tells us [here]: “What’s a category error? It’s calling something by the wrong name.” In particular, a Type 1 category error is also called a false positive.

One opportunity for investors is pretty straightforward: Just don’t carelessly and uncritically accept a story as real fundamental information. Don’t call a narrative a fact. Don’t assign 100% value to numbers enshrouded with uncertainty. As Davies highlighted in regard to cannabis investors, “What they are not doing is asking the basic questions of securities analysts.” So ask the basic questions.

Davies also provides some useful clues as to when investors should be on special alert: “The way to identify a story-stock craze — overblown enthusiasm for a sector where there is a good tale to tell about its future — is if the justification for buying into the new hot venture is big on vision and short on detail.” For example, is the earnings presentation dominated by bullet points describing qualitative achievements or by revenue and earnings numbers accompanied by substantive explanations? If you are going to get involved with a story, a useful rule of thumb is: “the time to buy is either when very few people have heard the story, or when everyone has heard it and everyone hates it.”

In addition, the concept of the febezzle presents a fairly useful model for thinking about investment risk. Asset valuations can be thought of as being comprised of two separate components: One is based on fundamentals and reflects intrinsic value while the other is based on the febezzle and reflects illusory, or psychic, wealth. An important consequence of this is that when the illusion is shattered, the febezzle element vanishes and there is virtually nothing to prevent a quick adjustment to intrinsic value. In other words, the febezzle is much more of a binary (either/or) function than a linear one.

This matters for long term investors who are most concerned about creating a very high probability of achieving their long-term investment goals. Not only does the febezzle component subject their portfolios to sudden, substantial, and effectively permanent drawdowns, but it also defies conventional investment analysis. It is exceptionally hard to confirm that a popular illusion is being shattered, especially before everyone else does.

One signal of change, however, is volatility. Using language that closely parallels “destruction of the illusion,” Chris Cole, from Artemis Capital Management, explains [here], “Volatility is always the failure of medium… the crumpling of a reality we thought we knew to a new truth.” In this context, the absurdly low volatility of 2017 was ripe breeding ground for illusions. Investors believed. Higher volatility in 2018, however, suggests that some of those beliefs are becoming increasingly fragile.

Perhaps the greatest illusion of all is the belief that continued market strength confirms strongly improving fundamentals. While recent economic performance has been good, Cole rejects this view and offers an alternative explanation: “When the market is dominated by passive players prices are driven by flows rather than fundamentals.” In other words, strong market performance mainly means that more people are piling into passive funds. By doing so, they have the dangerously intoxicating effect of propagating the illusion of commensurate fundamental strength.

None of this is to suggest that stock fundamentals are strong or weak, per se. Rather, it is to suggest that, for several reasons, stock prices do not comport well with the reality of underlying fundamentals; there is less than meets the eye. As Ben Hunt warns, “It’s the Type 1 [false positive] errors that are most likely to kill you. Both in life and in investing.” If calling something real when it is not can kill you, it is hard to understand why so many people are so tolerant of mistakes and self-delusion when it comes to their investments.

The question is simple: Can you handle the truth, or do you believe in magic?

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Tilray Tumbles After Announcing Convertible Note Offering

While hardly as exciting as Tilray’s wilde swings from last month when the stock hit $300 then crashed to $100 just a few days later, before rebounding once more, moments ago the company which many had expected would use its soaring stock price as a currency to raise new capital did just that when it announced it intends to sell $400 million in convertible senior notes due 2023, with a $60 million green shoe, under a 144A private placement.

According to the press release, the notes will be convertible into cash, shares of Tilray’s Class 2 common stock or a combination of cash and shares of Tilray’s Class 2 common stock, at Tilray’s election. The interest rate, initial conversion rate, repurchase or redemption rights and other terms of the notes will be determined at the time of pricing of the offering.

In terms of use of proceeds, the Canadian pot company intends to use the net proceeds from this offering for working capital, future acquisitions and general corporate purposes, and to repay the approximately $9.1 million existing mortgage related to its facility in Nanaimo, British Columbia.

Why sell notes and not stock? Because that way, the company avoids immediate dilution while paying a token interest rate. Meanwhile, buyers of the converts benefit from the volatility in the stock, which has been – for lack of a better word – phantasmagoric ever since the company went public in July at $17/share.

Additionally, in its 8-K, the company made the following financial disclosures:

Tilray’s revenue for the three months ended September 30, 2018 is expected to be between $10.0 million and $10.5 million, compared to $5.5 million for the three months ended September 30, 2017.

In addition, as of September 30, 2018, Tilray’s cash and cash equivalents were between $117.5 million and $118.0 million, and our long-term debt (including current portion of long-term debt) was between $9.0 million and $9.5 million.

In kneejerk reaction to the news, the stock dropped as much as 10% before stabilizing 6% lower in after hours trading.

 

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New Low: Beto O’Rourke Apologizes for Denouncing T&A in College Theater Review

I have no dog in the Texas senate race (if I lived there, I guess I’d vote for the Libertarian candidate, Neal Dikeman), but the latest turn between Democrat Beto O’Rourke and incumbent Republican Ted Cruz is truly nauseating. This, folks, is why libertarians want politics to matter as little as possible in everyday life.

Tipped off by the Cruz campaign, Politico dug up a 1991 theater review that O’Rourke penned on The Will Rogers Follies while he was a student at Columbia University. It was a popular show back in the day, built around the folksy antics of the title character, but young O’Rourke was moved to “disgust,” writing that

one cannot help feeling disgusted throughout the show. Keith Carradine in the lead role is surrounded by perma-smile actresses whose only qualifications seem to be their phenomenally large breasts and tight buttocks.

Note to O’Rourke: It’s called a chorus. Anyway, at the close of his pan, O’Rourke notes that he “was the youngest person in the crowd by about 60 years. Though I found it revolting, most people from that long-ago, faraway generation really enjoyed the show, and were very pleased by the performances.”

So what did O’Rourke do when the Cruz campaign pushed his politically correct, ultra-sensitive review into the light?

“I am ashamed of what I wrote and I apologize. There is no excuse for making disrespectful and demeaning comments about women.”

This is where we’re at, folks. There is no goddamn way this 1991 review is in any way newsworthy or offensive, and O’Rourke’s apology is completely unnecessary and pathetic. Does this make it a “win” for Ted Cruz and his campaign, then? No, it shows that in a political season which is historically awful, we’ve yet to reach bottom. I demand an investigation into Ted Cruz’s high-school stint as a mime! Can we be sure that Dianne Feinstein or Charles Grassley never stole a juicebox in kindergarten, if kindergarten or juiceboxes were even things back then?

Because history is rapidly becoming a rerun of The Apprentice from which we cannot awaken, I’ll leave you with a TV commercial featuring the second Mrs. Trump, Marla Maples, as one of those perma-smile actresses that so “disgusted” young Beto O’Rourke during his university days. Yes, she was in the chorus for a while.

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Stocks Pump’n’Dump After Bonds Biggest Bloodbath Since Trump’s Election

Fleshwound or Death blow for bonds?

Yields spiked by the most since Nov 2016 (the day of and following President Trump’s election).

NOTE – After 1430ET, bond were suddenly bid (and stocks sold off).

30Y yields spiked to the highest since Sept 2014…

10Y yields spiked to the highest since June 2011…

5Y yields spiked to the highest since Oct 2008…

The yield curve steepened dramatically…

All of which is fascinating given that Treasury Futures net speculative positioning is already at record shorts…

 

It appears bond yields were playing catch up with oil’s recent surge…

As Bloomberg’s Cameron Crise notes, this yield move is entering the “danger zone” for stocks. The 30bps spike in the last 5 weeks falls into the cohort where average and median equity performance has been negative over the following five weeks. Do with that information what you will, but realize that with this kind of price action the bond market is not the equity market’s friend.

The entire global developed sovereign bond market saw yields surge… (will be a bloodbath in Japan tonight)

 

Except, Italian bond yields tumbled 14bps on hopes that the made up projections with regard future growth and deficits was enough to satisfy Brussels…

And before we leave the bond market, we must note one potential additional factor of today’s ugliness as Comcast’s massive IG issue started trading and dominated the market – with a solid bid (were marginal TSY holders rotating into Comcast)…

Corporate bond trading volume is 35% above average today as the market swallows the Comcast bonds. All the top 10 most-traded bonds today are Comcast debt. It usually happens that new issues dominate the Trace volume data, but such was the size of yesterday’s deal that it’s boosting the whole market.

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Ok enough of that carnage…

Stocks rallied… with Small Caps outperforming… the S&P fell back into the red but bounced…

NOTE – Stocks stalled at precisely the moment that the Nationwide Alert went off – 1418ET

On the week, Nasdaq and Trannies managed to get green before fading back red, Small Caps remain worst and Dow best…

 

Small Caps were the best performer  soaring back towards their 100DMA before rolling over…

 

The Dow/Small Caps divergence closed modestly today…

Financials outperformed Tech again…

The dollar index soared today – along with bond yields – near its early September highs…

 

The Argentine Peso is up almost 10% in the last 3 days – its biggest 3-day gain ever…

 

But the Rand tumbled to 2-week lows…

 

Cryptos stumbled… again…

 

WTI rallied on the day but the dollar’s gains sent PMs and copper lower…

 

Crude inventories soared today and the initial drop in WTI made sense but then the algos ripped it dramatically higher…

 

Gold held just above $1200 but Silver tested and lost its 50DMA again…

 

Finally, we note that the last seven days have seen notable selling in the last 75 minutes of the day (obviously it hasn’t slowed the rally, but still notable)…

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This Is Why Bonds Are Crashing, According To Bill Gross

Late last week we highlighted the sudden spike in various dollar basis swaps (i.e. funding costs) amid what appeared to be a widespread, dollar shortage, and judging by the sharp spike in the dollar in the days after, there indeed may have been a scarcity of greenbacks in the market.

Specifically, we showed the cost to hedge FX risk moved sharply higher for foreign investors that hedge USD corporate bond holdings by rolling 3-month FX forwards. On an annualized basis the 3-month hedging cost jumped 47bps to 318bps for JPY/USD and 23bps to 323bps for EUR/USD. As shown in the chart below, the one-day move in the 3 month EUR swap was the biggest since the financial crisis:

The move was broadbased, affecting not just one pair, but virtually every FX pair, confirming that there had been a sharp repricing of dollar liquidity into year-end.

In a subsequent post, we also explained that the reason for these sudden increases was the fact that as of last Thursday, the three-month FX forward contract extended over the year-end for the first time this year. It spiked wider, i.e., became more expensive, because banks, and in particular foreign banks, make an effort to minimize their balance sheets on December 31st for regulatory reporting purposes. As a result, according to BofA these FX hedging costs will likely remain elevated for the remainder of 2018 and normalize on the first day of the new year – a pattern that repeats every year.

More importantly, we said that one consequence of this basis swap repricing is that USD-denominated treasuries suddenly became far more expensive to hedged foreign buyers to the tune of roughly one rate hike.

Which, all else equal, would mean that there is now that much less demand by international buyers for TSY paper on the long end.”

Rhetorically, we asked, “could this shift in supply-demand mechanics impact the yield on long-dated paper?” Judging by the dramatic steepening in the yield curve, and violent repricing higher in yields across the curve, the answer was yes.

Today, none other than Bill Gross echoed this sentiment, and on the day where yields on 10- and 30-year Treasuries surged to multi-year highs, Bill Gross explained the sharp drop in US paper as a result of dimming demand from foreign investors.”

Why is demand dimming? The same reason why noted above: a jump in hedging (or funding) costs.

“Euroland, Japanese previous buyers of 10yr Treasuries have been priced out of market due to changes in hedge costs,” Bill Gross tweeted Wednesday. “For insurance companies in Germany/Japan for instance, U.S. Treasuries yield only -.10%/-.01%.”

As we explained last week, Gross was referring to the falling cross-currency basis, which has driven U.S. 10-year equivalent, or hedged yields to -0.06% for European investors and 0.09% for Japanese buyers who hedge against currency fluctuations through swaps, as the following Bloomberg chart shows.

This means that net of hedges, US Treasuries yield less for Europeans and Japanese investors who instead can make 0.47% for 10-year German bunds and 0.13% for similarly dated Japanese government debt.

Here’s the math: for a euro-based buyer of Treasuries, the cost to hedge would mean paying the 3M USD LIBOR (currently about 2.41%), receiving local € Libor (-0.35%) and the basis (0.39%). As the three-month cross-currency basis blows out, largely driven by the rising Fed Funds rates and positions through year-end, that hedge becomes more expensive.

And, according to Gross, the carnage may not end here: “Lack of foreign buying at these levels likely leading to lower Treasury prices,” echoing what we said last week. And as foreign investors pull back from US paper, look for even higher yields, and an even higher dollar, which in turn risks re-inflaming the EM crisis that had mercifully quieted down in recent weeks.

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Pensions Now Depend On Bubbles Never Popping (But All Bubbles Pop)

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

We’re living in a fantasy, folks. Bubbles pop, period.

The nice thing about the “wealth” generated by bubbles is it’s so easy: no need to earn wealth the hard way, by scrimping and saving capital and investing it wisely. Just sit back and let central bank stimulus push assets higher.

The problem with bubble “wealth” is it’s like an addictive narcotic: now our entire pension system, public and private, is dependent on the current bubbles in stocks, real estate, junk bonds and other risk assets never popping.

But a funny thing eventually happens to financial bubbles: they all pop. And when the current bubbles pop, they will gut pension reserves, projections and promises.

Take a look at the chart below of taxpayer contributions to Calpers, the California public pension fund. Note that in the heady days of Bubble #1, the dot-com era, enormous gains in Calpers’ stock holdings meant taxpayers’ contributions were a modest $159 million annually.

Based on bubbles never popping and monumental annual gains continuing forever, Calpers projected taxpayer contributions in 2010 of $6.6 billion. But since Bubble #2 had popped in 2008-09, stock market gains had cratered and as a consequence taxpayers had to pay almost four times the Calpers projection: $24.6 trillion.

In a few short years, taxpayer contributions have nearly doubled, despite the outsized returns generated by Bubble #3, the largest of them all. By 2015, taxpayer contributions to Calpers totaled $45 billion, even as Calpers reaped huge gains in its stock portfolio.

So what happens to taxpayer contributions when all the asset bubbles pop?They go through the roof right when taxpayers are themselves facing staggering declines in their own personal wealth and the inevitable declines in income that accompany recessions. (What’s a recession? I thought the Fed banned those.)

Here’s a chart of the three stock market bubbles. Note the current bubble is the most extreme bubble.

Stock bubbles inflate on the euphoric belief that corporate profits will soar ever higher, forever and ever. But history suggests corporate profits tend to crash in global recessions and financial crises.

Meanwhile, household net worth and asset valuations have disconnected from the real world. GDP has risen modestly while assets have skyrocketed.

Private retirement assets (401Ks and IRAs) have bubbled higher, creating the temporary illusion of a “safe, secure” retirement because hey, past bubbles popped but the current bubble will never pop because the Fed won’t let it pop.

We’re living in a fantasy, folks. Bubbles pop, period. The Dow and SPX rose week after week and month after month in the 1999-2000 bubble, and again in the 2007 bubble, and so did junk bonds and housing. Everything rose in lockstep, lending support to the magical-thinking belief that this bubble will never pop because (insert excuse of the moment): housing never drops, the Fed has our back, etc.

Bubbles pop. To avoid this reality, commentators claim this is not a bubble. Since it’s not a bubble, it won’t pop. But calling a bubble not-a-bubble doesn’t mean it’s not a bubble. Wordplay doesn’t change reality.

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Libertarians Cover the Polling Spread in 4 Senate Races

It’s five weeks before election day, and we have no idea which political party will control the U.S. Senate come January. FiveThirtyEight reckons that the two likeliest scenarios are for Republicans to maintain their razor-thin 51-49 margin, or for there to be a 50–50 split, with Vice President Mike Pence ready to break all ties.

A safer bet, though it’s one few political analysts are currently talking about, is that candidates from America’s perennial bronze medalist, the Libertarian Party, will receive more votes in multiple Senate races than the distance between Republicans and Democrats.

Seventeen Libertarians are running for Senate. They’re running in three of the five most “toss-up” states (Nevada, Indiana, and Missouri), and they’re running in three other races that at least one forecaster has rated a coinflip (Texas, Montana, and New Jersey). With the stakes of Senate control so high—Supreme Court confirmations! impeachment trials!—the opportunities to scream “SPOILER!” may soon abound.

And yet even strong Libertarian candidates in close races are routinely not being polled. Just this morning saw the release of two close polls between embattled New Jersey Democratic incumbent Robert Menendez and Republican challenger Bob Hugin that did not include the Ron Paul–endorsed Libertarian, Murray Sabrin. In the only nonpartisan survey that all three candidates appeared in, Sabrin’s 3 percent cleared the distance between Menendez’s 45 and Hugin’s 43.

Because of the paucity of polling data, as well as the usual third-party fade on election day, plus some wildly divergent partisan numbers in states like Gary Johnson’s New Mexico (where a recent campaign-affiliated poll looked considerably more promising than the last straight survey), the following list should not be mistaken for anything like a prediction. Consider it rather a Polaroid-quality snapshot of the potential for Libertarians to be yelled at come November 7.

A note about the numbers below: Where given the opportunity, I choose “likely voters” over “registered voters,” and with the noted exceptions of Montana and Nebraska, I exclude from consideration surveys paid for by campaigns or political parties.

With that said, here are the 17 Libertarian candidacies for U.S. Senate, ranked in order of how much they clear (or get close to) the polling point spread between Democrats and Republicans.

Heeeeere's Lucy! ||| Lucy Brenton1) Indiana, +5.0.

D Joe Donnelly (incumbent) 43.5 percent, R Mike Braun 43 percent, L Lucy Brenton 5.5 percent (2 polls)

Race forecast: “toss-up,” according to 9 out of the 10 prognosticators aggregated by Wikipedia’s 2018 U.S. Senate elections page

Brenton, who received 5.5 percent as a Senate candidate in 2016, will be participating in televised debates this month. In the one poll that asked both with and without her name, her inclusion cut three percentage points off Donnelly’s lead.

2) Montana, +4.0.

D Jon Tester (I) 44 percent, R Matt Rosendale 44 percent, L Rick Breckenridge 4 percent (1 GOP poll)

Race forecast: 6/10 lean Ds, 2 toss-ups

As mentioned, I exclude partisan polls in the rest of this exercise. So why include it here? Because this Axis Research survey from two weeks ago is the only damn poll to include the Libertarian. Montana’s a pretty Libertarian-friendly state: Dan Cox got 6.6 percent of the vote for this seat in 2012, and Gary Johnson received 5.6 percent for president in 2016, his fifth-best result. If I was betting against the spread, I’d take the over.

3) Nevada, +1.4.

D Jacky Rosen 43 percent, R Dean Heller (I) 41.7 percent, L Tim Hagan 2.7 percent (3 polls)

Race forecast: the only unanimous toss-up contest in the country

Hagan has run for elected office nine times, never once receiving less than 3 percent of the vote.

4) New Jersey, +1.0

D Robert Menendez (I) 45 percent, R Bob Hugin 43 percent, L Murray Sabrin 3 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: “likely D” 7/10, toss-up 1

This race is only competitive in this heavily Democratic state because Menendez is widely seen as skeevy and corrupt. Sabrin got 4.7 percent of the vote for New Jersey governor in 1997, and he got 19.4 percent in the GOP primary for Senate in 2014.

5) Missouri, -0.3.

D Claire McCaskill (I) 45 percent, R Josh Hawley 41.7 percent, L Japheth Campbell 3 percent (3 polls)

Race forecast: 9/10 toss-up

In the two polls that ask both with and without Japheth Campbell, the race goes from tied (without) to a 3.5-point lead for McCaskill.

Yes, there is Another. ||| The Amarillo Pioneer6) Texas, -2.0.

R Ted Cruz (I) 42.7 percent, D Beto O’Rourke 39 percent, L Neal Dikeman 1.7 percent (3 polls)

Race forecast: lean R 6/10, toss-up 3

Libertarian John Jay Myers won 2.1 percent of the vote last time this seat came up. Rebecca Paddock got 2.9 percent for Senate in 2014. “It will be the Libertarian voters who win this race,” Dikeman recently told the Texas Tribune.

7) West Virginia, -5.0.

D Joe Manchin (I) 46 percent, R Patrick Morrissey 38 percent, L Rusty Hollen 3 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: lean D 8/10

Rusty Hollen has also appeared in two partisan polls, one Democrat and one Republican, and the average there is very similar: 48.5 percent to 40 percent to 3 percent.

Never forget! ||| Matt Welch8) New Mexico, -6.0.

D Martin Heinrich (I) 43 percent, L Gary Johnson 18.5 percent, R Mick Rich 18.5 percent (2 polls)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe D

Hold on a galdarned minute, wasn’t this race closer? Well, it depends. There have only been two nonpartisan polls since the 2012/2016 former L.P. presidential candidate (and two-time former New Mexico governor) jumped in the race, and they differ wildly about Johnson and Rich: 21 percent to 11 percent in the first, 16 percent to 26 percent in the second. Meanwhile, polls sponsored by Democrats and Republicans average out to 45.5–29.5–21 for Heinrich-Rich-Johnson, and three polls taken by Johnson confidant Ron Nielson, including one released last week, show Rich lagging in third: 37.3–26.3–16, on average. If the latter numbers were mirrored by nonpartisan polling outfits, Johnson would be tied for first on this list.

9) Ohio, -11.0.

D Sherrod Brown (I) 49 percent, R Jim Renacci 35 percent, L Bruce Jaynes 4 percent, G Philena Farley 2 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: 6/10 likely D

Ohio has been among the toughest states for the Libertarian Party, largely because of major-party ballot-access stiff-arming led by Republican Gov. John Kasich.

10) Virginia, -14.0.

D Tim Kaine (I) 50.7 percent, R Corey Stewart 32 percent, L Matt Waters 4.7 percent (3 polls)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe D

Corey Stewart, you may recall, is the super-Trumpy fellow who croaked liberty-movement Republican Nick Freitas in the GOP primary. Waters, who comes across as a libertarian-leaning conservative Normal, is the Libertarian candidate I predict is most likely to top his poll numbers on election day.

11) Pennsylvania, -16.7.

D Bob Casey, Jr. (I) 49.7 percent, R Lou Barletta 31.3 percent, L Dale Kerns 1.7 percent, G Neal Gale 1.3 percent (3 polls)

Race forecast: 7/10 likely D

Pennsylvania is one of eight states left to have the straight-ticket ballot option, which tends to be deadly for third parties.

12) Mississippi, -20.0.

R Roger Wicker (I) 53 percent, D David Baria 32 percent, Ref. Shawn O’Hara 2 percent, L Danny Bedwell 1 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe R

Danny Bedwell ran for Congress twice, receiving 1.2 percent in 2012 and 2.5 percent in 2014.

13) Nebraska, -20ish?

R Deb Fischer (I) 52 percent, D Jane Raybould 31 percent, L Jim Schultz unpolled (3 polls, all partisan)

Race forecast: 8/10 safe R

What a godawful disgrace polling in the state of Nebraska is. The Libertarian Party hasn’t had many Senate candidates here of late, but Gary Johnson won 4.6 percent of the vote in 2016, and State Sen. Laura Ebke, after switching from the GOP to the L.P. in 2016, is fighting off a Republican in her re-election bid. Articles about Jim Schultz have headlines like “There is a third choice for Senate on the November ballot.”

14) Connecticut, -22ish?

D Chris Murphy (I) 56.5 percent, R Matthew Corey 34 percent, L Richard Lion unpolled (2 polls)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe D

Besides Richard Lion, two other candidates on the ballot are not being polled: the Green Party’s Jeff Russell and Socialist Action’s Fred “Mitch” Linck. Lion received 1.1 percent of the vote for U.S. Senate in 2016.

15) Utah, -30.5.

R Mitt Romney 57 percent, D Jenny Wilson 24 percent, C Tim Aalders 3 percent, L Craig Bowden 2.5 percent, IA Reed McCandless 2.5 percent (2 polls)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe R

Craig Bowden received 5.9 percent of the vote for the House of Representatives in 2016.

16) Delaware, -34.0.

D Tom Carper (I) 61 percent, R Rob Arlett 24 percent, L Nadine Frost 3 percent, G Demetri Theodoropoulos 3 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe D

“I am running because I love my grandchildren and I want them to have a better future,” Nadine Frost says.

17) Maryland, -38.0.

D Ben Cardin (I) 56 percent, R Tony Campbell 17 percent, I Neal Simon 8 percent, L Arvin Vohra 1 percent (1 poll)

Race forecast: 9/10 safe D

This is the only of the Libertarian Party’s 17 races for U.S. Senate in which the Libertarian is not within one percentage point of third place in the polls. Vohra, the party’s most controversial figure over the past two years, was voted out of office as national vice chair three months ago and is an announced candidate for the 2020 presidential nomination.

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Nationwide ‘Presidential Alert’ Texts: Not the Best Idea

Hundreds of millions of Americans received a “Presidential Alert” on their cell phone today. Specifying that “no action is needed,” the message explained that the alert was “A TEST of the National Emergency Alert System.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and Federal Communications Commission originally scheduled the test for September, but they pushed it back due to Hurricane Florence.

So what was the point? The message you likely received (unless you turned your phone off) was the first ever nationwide test of the Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) system. It’s the same system that sends out Amber Alerts (for missing children) and weather warnings. While those can be turned off, the 2006 Warning, Alert and Response Network Act stipulates that the “Presidential Alert” cannot.

FEMA didn’t force wireless carriers to participate, but as NBC News notes, most of them did anyway.

The test seemed to go off without a hitch. But that doesn’t mean it was a good idea.

No, President Donald Trump is probably not going to use the alert to launch into crazed rants like he does on Twitter. And this isn’t as new as it may seem: The technology has been around since 2012. Still, it’s a bit unsettling to know that the federal government can reach you whenever it wants—and perfectly reasonable to wonder whether in 30 years we’ll be getting texts from the government about more than just national emergencies.

It’s also worth noting that such emergency alert systems are not infallible. In January, the Hawaiian islands were thrown into a state of panic when a worker accidentally sent out a statewide ballistic missile warning.

Finally, FEMA doesn’t exactly have a great track record when it comes to, well, anything. Maybe, just maybe, putting the oft-maligned federal agency in charge of a nationwide emergency alert system isn’t the best idea.

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Shiller Fears 1929 Redux, Warns “Risk-Taker”-In-Chief Has Enabled Most-Expensive Stock Market Ever

The S&P 500 hit its market bottom in March 2009. Since those lows, the S&P 500 has rallied 334 percent in the longest stretch on record since World War II without dipping into a bear market… and that is worrying Robert Shiller.

As CNBC reports, the professor of economics at Yale University and Nobel laureate says the steep run-up in this market rally is similar to the excesses of the 1920s before the October 1929 market crash and Great Depression.

As a reminder, from the beginning of 1928 to Black Thursday on Oct. 24, 1929, the S&P 500 surged nearly 50 percent. Over the next five days, the index plummeted 23 percent. It had reached an all-time high just a month before the crash.

“The 1920s is quite a legend that people are often thinking about,” Shiller said Friday on CNBC’s “Trading Nation.”

I look at 1929 particularly as the end of the roaring ’20s and it ended in a bout of speculation. Between May and September of ’29 the stock market went up over 30 percent in just a few months.”

At that time it seemed like it was a kind of gambling. The word gambling was used a lot to describe the market at that time so it became vulnerable. We’re not exactly in that circumstance but we do have the market that has surged since 2009 so there is something of that spirit today,” he said.

While markets briefly fell into a correction earlier this year, stocks quickly recovered to reach new heights as recently as late September. Shiller says this rebound is driven more by the bullish market narrative than hard data, and blames President Trump for creating the euphoria…

“It’s something about capitalism and the advancement of people willing to take risks. We have a role model in the White House who models that,” said Shiller.

Something like that has driven not just the stock market but the whole economy up in the United States and makes the United States the most expensive stock market in the world.”

Shiller reminisced of the roaring ’20s and dot-com mania of the 1990s as sharing in some of that bullish sentiment now…

“It was a similar story that was boosting the market but they don’t last forever and eventually the story starts to wilt,” he said.

“It’s animal spirits — people’s excitement about the stock market, bitcoin and other things.”

Of course, we suspect CNBC was quick to run a segment immediately after this one to explain why everyone and their pet rabbit should pile all of their 401(k) into AMZN calls…

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Companies Are Suddenly Slashing Profit Guidance At A Record Pace

One of the more peculiar features of the last financial crisis, is that it took place at such a breakneck pace, most corporations were unprepared for the carnage that would ensue, and few companies even had the time to cut profit guidance into the Lehman abyss.

This time, things are different.

As we reported last week, Factset found that after a spectacular Q1 and Q2 earnings season, which blew away expectations, corporations have turned decidedly sour on their own prospects, and as they head into the start of Q3 earnings season, 76% (74 out of 98) of companies have issued negative EPS guidance, which is not only above the five-year average of 71%, but if 76% is the final percentage for the quarter; it would also mark the highest percentage of S&P 500 companies issuing negative EPS guidance for a quarter since Q1 2016 (79%).

The Factset report promptly went viral across Wall Street desks, which after the earnings bonanza in the past 2 quarters have been especially sensitive to any suggestion that the dreaded “peak earnings” moment in the S&P500 is upon us.

To be sure, so far such worries have proven to be unfounded: In Q1, earnings soared 24% Y/Y; a number which was also repeated in the second quarter. And while most sellside estimates predict another blowout quarter in Q3, any time there is a major divergence between company guidance and analyst optimism, the market immediately pays attention… and in this case the divergence between company and analyst outlooks is remarkable.

And it’s not just Factset: according to Bloomberg, led by high-profile warnings from Netflix and Applied Materials, the number of S&P 500 companies saying profits will trail analyst estimates outnumbered those saying they’ll beat them by a ratio of 8-to-1 in the third quarter. That’s the most in Bloomberg data which goes back to 2010.

While several conclusions are possible, not all are concerning; one is them that analysts – who saw their predictions beat at record rates in the first half – got tired of being wrong and lifted estimates to unrealistic heights. Or, as Bloomberg notes, “it could be that companies, which hate merely to match estimates, are making room for the quarterly ritual in which they beat every forecast by a penny.”

However, while it possible that there is perfectly innocent explanation, for skeptics looking for evidence income growth is peaking, a more ominous take-away has emerged, and comes as a consequence of global trade at a time when everything from rising costs to weakening overseas demand threaten to damp growth, according to Citi’s equity strategist, Tobias Levkovich.

“Given ebullient investor sentiment, we do not think there is much room for companies to disappoint without taking a hefty toll on share prices. Notably stronger dollar and higher interest rates plus some softness in emerging economies all intimate the potential for misses.”

He’s right, because with companies expected to earn $42.11 a share in the third quarter – which would be a new quarterly record – and with valuations (especially for the median company) already at nosebleed levels, the margin of error is getting thin. Consider that among the 19 S&P 500 companies that have reported results early this season, all but two exceeded profit estimates: their stock dropped an average 2.8% in first-day reactions.

Meanwhile, there is another reason why everyone’s attention is focused on earnings: with everything else in the world on edge, amid growing fears over higher rates, populist politics, escalating geopolitcal conflicts and outright trade war, strong and rising US earnings have been the backbone behind the S&P’s record price. So any sign that this is changing is an especially acute threat. Miller Tabak’s Matt Maley explained it best:

“Strong earnings have been the most important factor that has enabled the stock market to ignore the headwinds it has faced this year. If the projection for future earnings suddenly become less bullish, it could/should be enough to upset the balance between the bullish & bearish macro factors that are facing the markets right now.”

What is troubling is that as sellside analyst projections have remained bubbly, management sentiment slumped in the second quarter according to UBS. Such negative guidance language is likely to accelerate during this reporting season given the uncertainty around trade talks between the U.S. and China, said Keith Parker, the firm’s head of U.S. equity strategy.

The question in such as a situation, as usual, is what do management teams know that analysts don’t (a rather simple answer is “everything”) and why are they turning so pessimistic (this should be self-explanatory). What didn’t help is that those analysts who were cautious on company earnings in Q2, ended up looking like fools. Bolstered by tax cuts and a strengthening economy, more than 80% of S&P 500 companies delivered better-than-expected profits during last reporting season, a record high rate. Q2 earnings were so strong that they topped forecasts by a whopping 5.2%.

However, that record pace of beats is unlikely to continue, said QMA chief investment strategist Ed Keon,

“You’re going to go to a slower trajectory. You’ll see the second quarter will turn out to be the peak in terms of growth rates.”

The ominous message sent by management teams who are slashing guidance at a near record pace, and which the market is so far ignoring, is that Keon is right.

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