The Negative Mortgage Rate Program

Submitted by Ramsey Su via Acting-Man.com,

Something Needs to be Done – A Glimpse of the Future

In the summer of 2016, US and global economic growth rates are nowhere close to estimates.  In fact, a global recession, or worse, is imminent.  At home, student loan defaults are now close to 100%.  The unemployment rate is climbing, as minimum wage workers finally realize that the financial pain of working or not working is identical.  In Euro-land, as the weather warms up, the never-ending flotillas from Northern Africa resume swamping the Southern shores.

 

NIRP

A black hole opens up in the world of centrally planned money

 

By now, the Treasury has long given up on the idea of privatizing the agencies.  Freddie and Fannie will soon be part of HUD, surviving for the sole purpose of providing affordable housing for all – whatever that is supposed to mean.  Policymakers have determined that the real estate market is stalling.  Desperate times require desperate measures.  Something needs to be done.

After an intense pow-wow between the administration, Congressional leaders and the Federal Reserve, the Negative Mortgage Rate Program (NMRP) is born. The program is simple.  Homeowners will be paid to borrow.  The Federal Reserve declares that the NMRP is a brilliant extension of NIRP (negative interest rate policy), because it will benefit everyone, not just the 1%ers.

 

fannie-mae-cartoon

A good reason to break into song…

 

Here is how it works:

No downpayment needed.  100% financing.

 

No payments needed.  This is the reverse of the negative amortization loans during the subprime era.  In other words, it is a negative negative amortization, or neg-neg-am loan.  The loan balance will decrease instead of increase.

 

No need for mortgage insurance since, with no payments, there can be no defaults.

 

No qualifying needed, hence removing the entire cumbersome loan application process.

Say you borrow $100,000 at -1% interest.  Here is the math:

Your interest cost will be -$1,000 per year.  In other words, your loan balance will be $99,000, if you make no payments at all.

Using a commonly accepted 30 year term, the loan balance at the end of 30 years would be around $50,000, all without the borrower having to pay a dime in mortgage expense.

 

In fact, instead of charging around 4% for a mortgage, reverse that to -4% interest.  In 30 years, the mortgage will be totally extinguished.

Freddie and Fannie will originate these loans, package them as neg-neg-am-MBS and sell them all to the Federal Reserve.  Housing recovers overnight and the Feds declare “mission accomplished.”

 

location

What can possibly go wrong? It’s free money!

 

Get Out the Straight Jackets

Before you call me nuts, this is actually already reality.  The governments of Germany, Switzerland, Japan and others are charging savers for the privilege of lending them money.  Why stop there?  Let the people enjoy negative interest rates when they buy a house, or a car, or borrow for a college education.  In fact, why bother with taxes.  Just let the government borrow to operate.  The more it borrows, the more it makes.

 

Germany, 2 year yield

Germany’s 2-year note yield has been negative since the summer of 2014 – currently it is at a new low of minus 50 basis points – click to enlarge.

 

Watching Ms. Yellen answer questions during the “Humphrey-Hawkins” testimony the last two days was painful.  It is time to put the central bankers of the world in straight jackets and throw them into the cuckoo’s nest where they belong.

 

Draghi Holder

Get Out the Straight Jackets – This heavy duty model might even hold Draghi!


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A Bubble Induced Economy & The Wage Gap

Submitted by Leonard Brecken via OilPrice.com,

During the 1990s, developing nations including Mexico and many in Asia became very competitive manufacturing bases due to lower wage structures. This, I believe, was the root cause of the use of failed fiscal and monetary policy to “close the gap” with the competitiveness of low-cost wage structures around the world, which has played out for three decades. The result has been three bubbles and a worsening systemic problem of wage and taxation disparity between the U.S. and developing nations.

In addition, an immigration explosion has occurred in part tied to big business’ desire to use foreign-born lower wage earners to fill the so called “wage gap”. Then policy followed to accommodate this desire. U.S. corporations in the 1990s accelerated outsourcing manufacturing to nations such as China and Mexico to temporarily solve the wage dilemma.

The chart below shows that wages, adjusted for inflation, have been steadily declining for decades. This illustrates the systemic problem we have as a nation. Wages have increased and decreased along with the vagaries of economic cycles, but they have steadily made lower highs and lower lows. Instead of responding with traditional methods of lower taxation to compete in the global marketplace, the government has chosen to keep taxation high relative to other countries, even while other countries lowered taxation. That made the wage disparity problem, and U.S. economic competitiveness, worse.

Source: Zerohedge

The labor participation rate turned down almost exactly when wages peaked in the late 1980s. This reinforces the fact that the labor problem was growing at the same time that immigration accelerated. Yes, baby boomers have impacted the rate as they aged and left labor force, but it’s no coincidence that the rate peaked coincidentally with wages. Many left the workforce simply as result of not being able to find a high-wage job, concluding that it is not worth it.

Source: Zerohedge

With a shortage of high-wage jobs, many are substituting lower-paying jobs, as well as the chart below clearly depicts:

Moreover, to artificially boost GDP, the U.S. turned to debt (public and private) and easy monetary policy (which enabled more debt), but as the chart above shows it failed to address Americas wage competitiveness. 

Source: Federal Reserve

(Click to enlarge)

Even after decades of low interest rates that has encouraged mountains of debt, the end result will likely be a deep recession unless structural changes in taxation and regulation occur. The use of both debt and artificially low interest rates only temporarily fills the gap.

Furthermore, both have consequences eventually when the debt comes due, as growth can no longer support it. Asset bubbles are the other consequence, or in economic terms, “mis-allocation of capital.”

However, lowering taxes permanently could help alter the long-term structural problems. As U.S. government debt eclipses $19 trillion, it is clear that its use of debt to artificially prop up the U.S. economy has not solved anything.

Source: Gov’t Data

Debt is a temporary stop gap measure for politicians to kick the problem to a new generation. As the chart on wages show, all the new debt has done very little to rescue three decades of falling wages.

We are bumping up against the limits of both fiscal and monetary policy. And financial markets are just now realizing this. Easy money is only enabling the debt binge as the problem has only grown since the last crisis of 2008-2009, as yet another crisis may be beginning.

Lastly, many investors are finding market volatility extreme driving many from participating. If one was to measure investor participation rates like labor you would find a steadily declining one as algorithm driven trading grows. This is not a healthy trend either. Would you go to a casino & lay bets knowing the house has unlimited chips to out bet you? That is exactly what’s going on with stock market, systemic to easy money fed policy. Price swings as a result of algorithm trading in order to "stop" investors are not tied to fundamentals but unlimited capital & headlines. The investment field is changing forever like the economy and it isn’t good for the all but the very large investor.


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Antonin Scalia vs. Donald Trump

Antonin Scalia, the conservative legal giant who died on Saturday at age 79, will be remembered for his outspoken views on legal issues ranging from abortion to gun control. Scalia’s fierce opposition to eminent domain abuse is also worth remembering.

In 2005 the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Kelo v. City of New London. At issue was that Connecticut municipality’s desire to bulldoze a working-class neighborhood and hand the razed land over to a private developer working in cahoots with the Pfizer corporation. The idea underlying the city’s scheme was that if people were forced out of their homes, their vacant properties could be put to more profitable purposes, thereby swelling the city’s tax coffers.

The problem with this approach is that it violates the original meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which says that the government may only take private property for a public use (and it must pay just compensation when it does). Taking property from one private party and handing it over to another private party, by contrast, is plainly inconsistent with all traditional notions of public use, a reality the Supreme Court itself acknowledged back in 1954, when it upheld an eminent domain “urban renewal” taking on the grounds that it served a “public purpose,” a far more permissive, and therefore government friendly, concept than public use.

During the February 2005 oral argument in the Kelo case, the lawyer for New London urged the justices to give government officials the broadest leeway possible in eminent domain disputes.

But Justice Scalia was not feeling so generous. Under your theory, Scalia asked the lawyer, “you could take [private property] from A and give it to B if B is richer, and would pay higher municipal taxes, couldn’t you?”

“Yes, Your Honor,” the lawyer conceded.

“For example,” interjected Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, “Motel 6 and the city thinks, well, if we had a Ritz-Carlton, we would have higher taxes. Now, is that okay?”

“Yes, Your Honor, that would be okay,” the lawyer conceded again. In other words, because private property can almost always be put to a more profitable purpose, the government can effectively take any private property it wants for any “development” scheme it happens to cook up. So much for the text of the Fifth Amendment.

In the end, of course, Scalia and O’Connor were outvoted. Liberal Justice John Paul Stevens, joined by Justices Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer, gave the government all the leeway it needed to kick people out of their homes and wipe their neighborhoods off the map. “The disposition of this case,” Stevens announced, “turns on the question of whether the City’s development plan serves a ‘public purpose.’ Without exception, our cases have defined that concept broadly, reflecting our longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments in this field.”

The Kelo case has been in the news again recently thanks to the presidential campaign of Republican Donald Trump. In Trump’s oft-stated view, Kelo is a “wonderful” decision that should be respected and emulated. Trump is also known for trying to personally profit from Kelo-style land grab.

Trump’s position is of course totally anathema to the position of Justice Scalia, who once went so far as to compare Kelo to Dred Scott. Perhaps when the next Republican presidential debate rolls around, one of the moderators will consider asking Trump why it is that he prefers the legal views of John Paul Stevens over those of Antonin Scalia on this matter.

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The Global Fixed-Income “Blood Map” Of 2016

For credit investors, 2015 was bad a year (for energy bonds it may have been the worst on record) culminating with the gating and liquidation of several credit-focused mutual and hedge funds.

However, judging by these heatmaps, 2016 is shaping up to be even worse.

The first chart below from Bank of America shows a YTD performance heatmap of all Global fixed-income performance. The variation in performance remains vast, but with plenty of areas still of “credit stress.”  The one sector that is clearly working – for now –  is  sovereigns on the back of even more NIRP around the globe and $6 trillion in govvies trading with negative rates.

 

Unfortunately, for most other credit investors it has already been an miserable year, as the following Citi heatmap of YTD junk bond prices demonstrates.

 

But while junk is clearly a sea of red, what is most surprising is that in 2016 the worst performing sector on a relative basis is not high yield but US and European investment grade, as the contagion from HY spills over ever higher in the capital structure.

Behold: the US & Europe investment grade CDS blood map.

 

And here is the same for the entire world’s IG CDS:

 

This is what Bank of America’s Barnaby Martin says about this spillover:

We argued in late Jan that “stressed” high-grade names were trading very wide relative to the rest of the pack, and that this would make low-beta credits appear overvalued, leaving them at risk of repricing wider – in a kind of domino effect. We still see this as a big risk in IG and urge caution on low-beta credits.

For some IG investors it may already be too late. But before you dump those investment grade bonds and rush in junk on hopes the revulsion is over, read the following from another BofA analyst, Michael Contopoulos.

Couple a declining services sector with a manufacturing sector that is already in a recession and a declining global economy, and we continue to think high yield markets have substantially more downside ahead of them; particularly as non-commodity defaults pickup later this year.

 

Perhaps our greatest concern is that if we are correct on the fate of the high yield market and the broader US economy, the Fed has very little effective tools to combat such a scenario. With the fed funds rate at only 25bps and the Fed unsure if they are even allowed to implement negative rates from a legal standpoint, the only other tested instrument is a 4th round of quantitative easing. Except as we have seen in past QE rounds, the effects of repeated monetary stimulus have diminishing returns. Since Draghi applied the latest round of easing in Europe, volatility has actually increased. To this end we believe the path the Fed ultimately pursues is irrelevant to the credit market. In fact, we believe further stimulus would not calm the volatility in risk assets and may actually add to it as an acknowledgement of a worsening macro environment likely causes risk managers to dictate a dumping of securities and a hoarding of cash.

Yikes.

Source: Citi, Bank of America


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Why Yellen’s Testimony Screamed Danger

Authored by Mark St.Cyr,

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen gave her bi-annual Humphrey-Hawkins testimony before congress this past week. Although the prepared remarks were much the same as expected with any monetary policy review. What really made “news” to anyone paying attention was the Q&A. Yes, may times Ms. Yellen seemed to give the usual rebuttals of “We would consider this if that …” and so forth.

Yet, in response to questions that took issue with the Fed. paying banks on excess reserves The Chair seemed not only defensive, but rather perplexed, as to why they were even questioning it to begin with. This line of questioning in my view opened up, and brought to light, the Pandora’s box of Keynesian insight and thought processes now emanating from the Fed. In fact, I’m quite sure Ms. Yellen herself didn’t realize just how far she threw the lid open.

However, there was one exchange where not only the answer was revealing. It was the tenor and tone that was not only jaw dropping, rather, it sent shivers. Forget about the old “behind the curtain” analogies. This one is far more troubling not only to business and free markets, but rather: the very fabric of what free enterprise is, and possibly capitalism itself.

Yes, I’m well aware it’s conjecture bordering on fire and brimstone. However, if you make/made your living based on your ability to both ascertain information, as well as, understand its implications by what someone is saying and/or doing, along with the manner in which they are being done, you can’t help but to see things others miss. (e.g., as I’m quoted to say: “You grow in business when your knowledge of product gets replaced by your knowledge of people.”)

From what I’ve garnered having read, watched, or heard from the financial press as of this writing. It seems few caught, or understood, its implication. So what is this exchange or statement that sent me into “The end is nigh!” bewilderment? Fair enough…

In response to push-back as it pertained to paying banks interest on reserves and it efficacy, as well as whether or not there may also be some unfair advantages vis-à-vis where banks are receiving slightly more of a payment than the stated interest rate implies. The Chair argued from what I construed as a far more defensive argument and posture to the program, rather – than merits based. It’s not a distinction without a difference.

And what clinched this assumption to the affirmative, in my opinion, was another part of her defense as to warrant its efficacy. That defense? I’m paraphrasing: “The Federal Reserve has gone from remitting to the Treasury a few $Billion dollars a year to now over $100 BILLION which helps fund the government itself.” i.e., You want to blow a hole in your budget of $100 Billion? Are you hearing me? Hello?!

I strongly suggest one would be prudent to find that Q&A on their platform of choice and view, read, or listen too it for themselves, rather, than just take my word for it. I feel it’s that important.

So what’s so wrong with that one might ask, “The Fed. is paying the Treasury money it’s making from all the bonds and sorts they have on their books. What’s wrong with that?” From my viewpoint: everything. Here’s why…

Regardless of what any so-called “smart crowd” financial aficionado will state. There is one – and only one – construct that keeps what the world deems “monetary policy” afloat: The belief in confidence. Only “the belief” part is what keeps it all together. i.e., What you or I believe to be money, and what its worth today. Period.

Today the world is awash in fiat based currencies. Debt, is priced in fiat based currencies. And, political wealth and power is also based on it. Change “belief” into “assumption” even ever so slightly – and everything you once thought of on how the world works is thrown into the trash pile along side most, if not all, fiat anything. Believe me.

This is the “fire” the Fed. is playing with. For it’s not lost on anyone (“anyone” also includes other governments) who understands business and free markets that the $100 Billion remitted to the Treasury was made possible by the Fed. creating that money ex nihilo. Arguing or using it as a shield to deflect criticism, as well as, implying the benefit for such actions opens the Pandora’s box of just how far off the ranch of sound monetary policy we’ve now come. (“we’ve” meaning the U.S. once considered the “gold” standard of monetary prudence.)

To use the term uber-Keynesian as to describe this rationale is an understatement. Now, not only does the Fed. seem open to, but also, apparently willing and/or eager to pursue going “Full-Krugman” as to facilitate – a negative interest rate policy agenda. Even if, “Currently they’re not sure if they have the authority.” But, (and it’s a very big but) “don’t know of any restriction as to why they can’t.” i.e., Again, if one reads between the lines one may prudently infer: They’ll seek forgiveness, as opposed to seeking permission, first.

So why is this so dangerous? Well, let’s look at the big picture and rationale as I see it for context…

As for the efficacy, as well as, the defending of those increases in payments to the Treasury. One has to argue (or assume) that this is not some form of a “tax” on the economy as a whole.

The reasoning is this: If the banks don’t (or won’t) lend it out for whatever the reasons, that’s money being rewarded (reward meaning it’s making money through interest payments via the Fed.) for sitting on balance sheets rather than working its way into the general economy via loans and such where the multiplier, as well velocity effects, can take shape.

In effect the Fed. is “taxing” the overall economy by making that money “safer” on a banks balance sheet as opposed to moving the banks back into the risk business (e.g. loan making business) where they say they want the banks to be in the first place. And when you’re talking about $Trillions deposited on the Fed’s books. Suddenly that tiny accrued interest payment adds up to truly big bucks.

One could further argue (and I’m of this mindset) that this, along with, the exploded $4 TRILLION balance sheet of the Fed is a fair representation of comparative cumulative figures on just how much potential productive capital the Fed. has unwittingly siphoned out from the economy today. And, in conjunction, pulled forward from future potential of the overall economy. That’s how (or why) I argue the “tax” argument as opposed to the “rewarding” type view-point the Fed. seems to be embracing.

Remember, most (if not all) of the Fed’s balance sheet is made up of bonds. (this is the key point) So, as the Fed. bought and continues to “re-invest” they alleviate the needed fiscal pressure away from lawmakers to make needed policy changes whether it be taxation, or other business incentivizing laws. All while the Fed. itself argues “The Fed. can’t do it all.”

This process no matter how it’s argued as “beneficial” fosters and facilitates negative affects into the business mindset where examples of crony capitalism, as well as, other economic disabilities and/or hindrances manifest in ways far too numerous to list here.

Currently, many (including the Fed.) are arguing current monetary policy and economic malaise as some chicken and egg quandary. This arguing of such a quandary I’d like to point out is not only manufactured, but rather, is now running in near perpetuity – by the Fed. itself. A quandary I’ll again remind those arguing such nonsense only a few years ago was argued by the very same as “preposterous” to even consider. (e.g., monetizing the debt argument) Now it’s morphed into, “Look how much money you’re making with it!.” This chicken and egg quandary takes monetary gene splicing to a whole new level in my opinion.

Understanding this one point is a lesson in uber-Keynesian (or Full-Krugman) economics 101. And, it tells you almost everything you need to know about what’s wrong with the economy in general and why more tinkering won’t help. But wait, I’m sorry too say – it gets worse.

As bad as the above sounds, the reason why it gets worse is this: All of the above is made manifest via the Fed. with money created ex nihilo. Why does that matter you ask? Simple…

Just as I made the argument where the “preposterous” has now morphed into “prudent monetary policy.” So too is that other “Full-Krugman” idea which is not only being contemplated as possible, but now, seems near inevitable: Negative Interest Rates. e.g. NIRP – the ultimate tool in Pandora’s box of monetary policy.

Why is NIRP the equivalent of a Pandora’s box filled with fire and brimstone? It’s for this one simple difference that’s being lost on everyone who claims to be a member of the so-called “smart crowd.” NIRP doesn’t just effect the banks or is some obscure construct for efficacy within the world of economic theory. No, it sets a much more meaningful, as well as, dangerous precedent. Here’s how I see and sum it up. To wit:

Via an incontestable dictate or decree; It (e.g., The Federal Reserve) will directly impose a “tax” and implement the collection of that “tax” on money held directly by the U.S. citizenry without their consent or approval by means of an un-elected supposedly “non government” independent agency. In other words: unless you put it under your mattress or spend it – you’ll be fined a “tax” anywhere throughout the banking system. Period.

Does anyone else but me see the inherent dangerous consequences just lying within this “Negative rates might be just the thing we now need here in the U.S.!” based argument? I’ll contend it may just be the thing to make even Pandora herself more nervous.

Unlike the overall assumptions when talking about Fed. fund rates, or balance sheet and interest payments. Those arguments reside in some monetary construct which is foreign to most people. i.e., “That all effects someone else like banks and businesses – not me” type of mindset.

NIRP in the United States is a-whole-nother matter entirely.

This is because NIRP directly touches the money markets. Yes, those very same money markets that hold many a 401K holders cash, certain checking accounts, savings, and a whole lot more. Not to mention what they hold in lines of readily needed access capital for many a businesses daily operational funding.

I can not stress the implications for the disruption of mindset of not only people in general, but rather, businesses of all sizes and stripes if money can be penalized – for just being. (i.e., you’ll be not only charged but it will automatically be deducted from your balances)

You think this is just some “Hey sounds like we should try that NIRP thing here!” no-brainer that should be enacted willy-nilly as “just another tool in the monetary policy box” based argument when thought through more clearly as to the implications or ramifications in the U.S.?

However, if one listens for such warnings – the silence has been breathtaking. And the Keynesian’s of the world are acting and arguing as if there should be “no big concern.” After all, the question is framed as “Plus 25 basis points or minus (e.g. negative) 25. What’s the big deal?”

Well, here’s what “The big deal” is: One policy (e.g., paying on reserves) is what could be described as a “closed” loop. (i.e., just affects the banks) Whether good or bad is a different argument. However: touch the money markets in an adverse way such as “taxing” it as proposed via NIRP? Excuse me – Is that Pandora I see? And what is that box she’s carrying with the lid open? Is she bringing a gift?

Again, people will point to the EU and say “Look they’re doing it there what’s the big deal?” Yet, they fail to look (or comprehend) at just how quickly everything about the EU is now coming unglued. The current policies of the ECB along with Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” initiatives are failing almost as fast as they are being tested. And, if anyone thinks the EU along with current ECB policies are doing “just swell?” I have some wonderful oceanfront property in Kentucky you can turn your dollars into hard assents before the crash. Trust me, the price will be right!

If the Fed. does indeed consider, then implement, a NIRP policy – the backlash and fallout will be devastating to not only businesses that need a well-functioning money market and payment clearing system. But rather, to the citizenry as a whole that relies on those business not just for gadgets and trinkets. But; for the very sustenance of everyday essentials like food at the market, gas at the stations, heating fuels for the home, and a whole lot more.

What has been lost (and not fully understood by many more) is the real crisis that occurred when everything was about to come off the rails during the financial crisis in ’08. It was when the money markets “broke the buck.” Until then the crisis was much more of a financial spectacle on Wall Street for the average person. However, when the money markets came under pressure and showed signs of melt down? That’s when “all bets were off” type arguments and reasoning became manifest.

And, this onslaught of panic was just as intense throughout the business community when payments that were always assumed and needed to clear the banks were anything but. Remember: If the farmer/rancher can’t trust the packing house checks to clear – they’ll be no food going to market. A disruption of only a week can send a rippling effect many have little understanding of.

If businesses suddenly infer that they can not get paid accordingly or properly – it grinds to an absolute halt, where disruptions of supplies and far more can cause not only panic, but also, a complete breakdown in society. Think I’m off base?

Watch how fast any metropolis or big city morphs into Mad Max styled overtones if the food supply chain that supplies grocery stores breaks down or grinds to a halt. Having spent my early career in the food business I can state with confidence the much touted “3 days supply within any supermarket” is not only accurate, it’s a best case scenario when folded over any potential “normal” emergency many have experienced such as a blizzard or blackout. Then your lucky if essentials last 24hrs.

And here we are only 8 years since and one can’t help but think not only does Wall Street and others have a short memory, but rather – the Fed. itself.

If you want clues on just how awry, as well as quickly, things have the potential for unraveling just look to Japan today, and what’s taken place over the last 2 weeks since in the wisdom of the Bank of Japan’s governor Haruhiko Kuroda unleashed NIRP to a stunned market only weeks after saying such a move – was not even being considered.

Suddenly Japan’s stock market is looking and acting in reminiscent fashion mirroring 2008. In a matter of weeks the Nikkei™ is down from just above 20,000 to now 15K and change while briefly breaking that level to test one with a 14 handle. One doesn’t need advanced math skills to comprehend shedding some 25% of its value at any given time (let alone weeks) does not bode well for an economy. Especially when that NIRP policy directly affects the number one carry trade currency in the world. (And I haven’t even mentioned China)

Yet, we’re told cavalierly there’s really “no reason for concern” here. After all, we’re only talking about the impacts that could arise in the worlds most dominant, as well as, bench-marked currency in the world: The $Dollar. Besides, (we’re told) we should take the utmost comfort in the fact the Fed. knows exactly what it’s doing.

If that’s all true I just have one thing to ask:

You mean just like they were some 30 days ago when Ms. Yellen all but touted a banner stating “Mission Accomplished” at the last FOMC presser where she delightedly stated they were finally raising interest rates after so many years, for the economy had improved to such levels where it proved receptive to it? Only to be surprised weeks later amidst a maelstrom of global financial selloffs and upheavals in stunning speeds to now move Wall Street consensus as to cut all expectations of any future rate hike this year, where describing what was only weeks ago as “baked in” (i.e., 4 more hikes)  as now  “ludicrous?” All the while breathlessly needing to explain (or plead) in great detail why the Fed. is (or should) currently explore options  of not only reversing, but rather, going below the zero bound – and into negative territory.

All that comes to mind is that famous quote from Alfred E. Neuman…

“What, Me Worry?”

I wish I were trying to be funny.


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Don’t Blame China For Market Insanity… Says China

When it comes to geopolitics, all anyone wants to talk about is Syria. And understandably so.

When it comes to financial markets, all anyone wants to talk about is China – an equally understandable fixation.

To be sure, China was already a big driver of risk on/ risk off sentiment going into August of 2015. The “is it a hard landing or is it not” question very often dominated global macro discussions among those who enjoy debating such things.

But when Beijing moved to a new FX regime on August 11, China was thrust into the spotlight. The “surprise” devaluation of the yuan plunged global markets into chaos, triggering “Black Monday” on August 24th and precipitating a massive drawdown of the country’s FX reserves which accelerated the global trend towards “quantitative tightening” (to quote Deutsche Bank).

In the new year, developments in China are unquestionably driving markets. A comically absurd attempt to implement a stock market circuit breaker triggered a series of harrowing declines early last month that set the tone for what turned out to be one of the worst Januarys in market history.

Meanwhile, nearly everyone suspects that a much larger yuan devaluation is in the cards. Kyle Bass, for instance, sees the RMB depreciating by 30-40% as Beijing struggles to recap a banking sector that’s soon to find itseld beset with NPLs. 

George Soros shares this view. At Davos, the aging billionaire said his money is on a Chinese hard landing and as such, he’s betting against Asian currencies.

That declaration set off a wave of hilariously absurd Op-Ed’s from the captive Chinese media which the Politburo uses to deflect criticism and lambast foreign “speculators.”

On Sunday, we got the latest “opinion” piece out of China, this time from Xinhua which wants you to know that when it comes to finding a scapegoat for market turmoil, you shouldn’t look east.

Also, about Beijing’s FX reserves – which are of course the single most important number for markets and are a proxy for how much money is fleeing the country- “capital flight” is not the preferred nomenclature. “Outflows” please.

*  *  *

From Xinhua

The global financial markets have suffered sharp declines lately, with stocks plunging across Europe, Japan and the United States last week.

Some players once again tried to link the global rout with China. However, such claims are unwarranted and playing the blame game in the face of challenges is useless.

U.S. Fed Chair Janet Yellen said Wednesday that uncertainties from China, such as the economic growth slowdown and the yuan depreciation, have “led to increased volatility in global financial markets and … exacerbated concerns about the outlook for global growth.”

But as the Chinese equity market was closed for a week during the Chinese New Year, there has been no fresh news from China. Neither did China release any economic data or announce new policies that could move the markets during this period.

Some of the media outlets in the United States carried reports this week on what they described as a “capital flight” from China, despite that the yuan has stabilized against the U.S. dollar recently.

“Once again, financial markets are painting an oversimplified picture of a very complex story,” said Stephen Roach, senior fellow at Yale University’s Jackson Institute of Global Affairs.

Experts have attributed recent market jitters to factors such as the futility of the negative interest rates adopted by Japan, crude oil prices hitting 12-year lows, concerns over the financial strength of European banks and uncertainties over the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary policy.

Since the Fed decided to raise interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade last December, worries have been mounting about whether global economic growth has been sound enough to withstand the impact of the initiation of a cycle of monetary tightening.

“Central banks are starting to wean markets from the artificial support of years of unprecedented quantitative easing … that could prove far more problematic than another China scare,” Roach said.

After years of massive monetary easing, some adjustments are inevitable, so “everyone seems to want to find someone else to put the blame on,” China’s central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said in a recent interview with Chinese magazine Caixin.

Zhou said that there is no basis for the continual depreciation of the yuan and that “China would not let the market sentiment be dominated by these speculative forces.”

Meanwhile, it is important to differentiate between capital outflow and capital flight. The capital outflow may not be capital flight.

The market has had unrealistic expectation for the stability of the yuan as a result of its being “too stable over the years,” Zhou said.

In terms of the economy, China has been a vital stabilizing power, too. In 2008, when the financial crisis spread from the United States and Europe to the emerging economies, China not only kept its currency from depreciating, but also announced a 4-trillion-yuan stimulus package.

After decades of double-digit growth, China has embarked on a new stage with a relatively slower growth rate of around 7 percent. Experts believe this is a reflection of the structural shift in China from export- and investment-driven growth to more balanced consumption-driven growth.

Such reforms are set to benefit the world once they are completed. China has been an important source of global economic growth, contributing more than a quarter of global economic growth last year.

Difficult external factors have added to the challenges facing China as it tries to push through structural reforms.

Central banks and market regulators of all major economies, especially the developed economies, should focus on boosting investor confidence and supporting growth. They should also be more prudent in introducing major monetary policy changes with potential spillover effects.

*  *  *

“It really tied the room together”…


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USD JPY Currency Cross Analysis (Video)

By EconMatters

 

 

 

This year financial markets have been in Risk Off mode, and as a result the USD/JPY carry trade has reversed considerably in 2016. Just how low can we go in this reversal? At certain points a market is broken, and fair value considerations go out the window.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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“Killer Wave” Confirms Big Bear Market Looms

Excerpted from James Stack's InvesTech.com,

Technical Evidence: Confirming a bear market

 It’s been 26 years since we developed our Negative Leadership Composite (NLC) to help identify the best buying opportunities, as well as the highest risk markets. It’s pure common sense that broad upside leadership (and absence of downside or negative leadership) signifies or confirms a new bull market. It usually does the same for second or third bull market legs. This is shown when a bullish “SELLING VACUUM” [*1] appears in the NLC. Conversely, broad and increasing downside leadership –shown by “DISTRIBUTION” [shaded region *2]– will always confirm high risk early in a bear market by dropping to -100.

Our challenge, at times like this, is distinguishing whether “DISTRIBUTION” might be caused by temporary factors, which was the case three times in the current bull market – the Congressional showdown over the debt limit, the market’s Fed “taper tantrum,” and the oil price collapse over a year ago. Judging by the depth, duration, and broadening sector contribution to the “DISTRIBUTION” in leadership, we must conclude that Wall Street is currently in a bear market.

 

 

The run up in margin debt has also become an increasing concern in the past few years. This represents “hot money” borrowed to buy stocks on margin… that will likely panic as selling in a true bear market progresses.

 

Note that past peaks in margin debt have coincided with, or led, peaks in the stock market. That was also the case a year ago when margin debt peaked a month before the blue chip indexes. But as we’ve pointed out, the final peak cannot clearly be identified until margin debt falls enough to make new highs or peaks unlikely. Based on the volatile, high volume down days we’ve experienced since the start of this year, we anticipate margin debt may confirm a bear market when reported later this month by tumbling decisively through the support levels of the past 18 months.

Two (almost three) major U.S. indexes already qualify as bear markets…

Investors might be surprised to learn that most foreign stock markets –including London’s FTSE (Financial Times Stock Exchange) Index, the German DAX, and Tokyo Nikkei– are all off more than 20% from last year’s highs. China’s Shanghai Composite has tumbled 46% from its peak last June.

Globally, one of the safest places to be has been in solid blue chip stocks in the U.S. The S&P 500 Index and Dow Jones Industrial Average are approximately 13-14% off their peaks last May. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Index is within several percentage points of hitting the -20% threshold of qualifying as a bear market.

By comparison, the Dow Jones Transportation Average is already in bear market territory with a loss of -24%. And the premier small-cap Russell 2000 Index has tumbled over 25%.

In summary, the bear market damage to many investors’ portfolios has already proven significantly more severe than what is portrayed by the more resilient blue chip DJIA and S&P 500. Even within the S&P 500 Index, over 60% of component stocks are down 20% from their 12-month highs, while 37% are down more than 30%!

We also find little to cheer about in market breadth or participation. The Advance-Decline Line, which showed a bearish negative divergence with the S&P 500’s secondary peak in November, continues to weaken with –or ahead of– the blue chip indexes.

When the majority of “troops” are in retreat, it can become increasingly difficult for the “generals” to stand their ground. Without a measurable improvement in breadth, we believe this market will continue to struggle in the coming weeks and months.

More bad news…

The Coppock Guide, which has been weakening for almost 2 years, is now confirming a bear market. That’s bad news for the market in the near-term, but has positive implications down the road. This important indicator was developed more than 50 years ago by Edwin S. Coppock and has often been described as “a barometer of the market’s emotional state.” As such, it methodically tracks the ebb and flow of equity markets, moving slowly from one emotional extreme to the other. By calculation, the Coppock Guide is the 10-month weighted moving total of a 14-month rate of change plus an 11-month rate of change of a market index. While that sounds complicated, it’s actually an oscillator that reverses direction when long-term momentum in the market peaks in one direction or the other.

Historically, the value of the Coppock Guide lies in signaling or confirming low risk buying opportunities that emerge once a bear market bottom is in place (black dotted lines on the graph below). And since market bottoms are typically sudden V-shaped reversals, it works amazingly well – as it did shortly after the bottom in 2009.

Unfortunately, the Coppock Guide is generally not as useful in identifying market peaks. One reason is that bull market tops are usually slow, rounding formations in which momentum –and the Coppock Guide– peak up to a year or more ahead of the market. Yet there are certain instances when it has proven invaluable at a market top…

In the late 1960s a technician named Don Hahn observed another phenomenon about the Coppock Guide. When a double top occurs without the graph falling to “0” –a phenomenon that Hahn referred to as a “Killer Wave”– it confirms an extended bull market where psychological excesses can reach extremes. In those situations, the appearance of a second peak generally means a bear market has just begun or is not far off (see red dashed lines). The late 1990s was an exception.

Killer Waves are rare, and they can be dangerous. This is only the 8th bull market in the past 95 years to see a double top in the Coppock. The table at right shows that in 5 of the previous cases the second peaks were associated with the start of the more notorious bear markets of the past century: 1929, 1969, 1973, 2000, and 2007.

The Coppock Guide is now projected to drop through “0” in February, which in the past carries over a 75% probability that a bear market has taken hold. Of course, that does not mean the bear market will soon end, and it would be foolish to attempt to second guess when or where the Coppock might bottom. But the more important message for defensive investors is this: Once the Coppock Guide does hit bottom and turns upward –by even 1 point– we will be presented with one of those historical buying opportunities that comes around only once or twice a decade. We can’t rush it… and we certainly can’t forecast it… but we can look forward to it and quickly recognize it when it does occur. So be patient, stay defensive, and remember that there is light at the end of the tunnel.


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In Unexpected Twist, Oil Exporters Are Buying Treasurys While They Liquidate Stocks

Long before the mainstream media caught on to the topic of SWF selling of stocks, we warned a month ago that as a result of the collapse in oil, and assuming oil remains priced at roughly $31 per barrel, the world’s largest SWFs showin the chart below…

… would be forced liquidate at least $75 billion in equities and the lower the price of oil goes, the more selling there would be.

Subsequently, we showed both the equity sector and region allocation of SWF equity exposure, noting that financial stocks located in Western Europe are most exposed, something both DB and CS have found out the hard way.

We also warned (ironically, courtesy of a Deutsche Bank analysis) to stay away from European stocks with high EM government ownership such as these:

 

Yet while the wholesale equity selling by SWFs has become manifest just as predicted, in recent months something unexpected emerged when looking at other asset classes in which SWFs are involved, most notably Treasurys.

” Unexpected”, because US Treasury paper was one of the asset classes many expected would feel the brunt of SWF selling, perhaps much more so than equities. Quite the opposite has not happened.

As Stone McCarthy writes, based on TIC data for Asian oil exporters, those countries have been more aggressively selling risk assets than Treasury securities since oil prices began to slide in mid 2014. The chart below shows the cumulative net purchases of U.S. securities since July of 2013, about a year before oil prices began their descent, for the “oil-exporter” group.

From SMRA:

Since oil prices began falling, oil exporters have been cumulative buyers of $12.5 billion in Treasury securities. Until November, cumulative purchases of Treasuries were continuing to trend higher. During the same period, oil exporters have been net sellers of $19.9 billion in U.S. equities, and $10.0 billion of corporate and agency debt, with corporate bonds accounting for almost all of the sales.

Will this trend of SWFs and oil exporters selling equities even as they buy TSYs change? The Treasury will release the latest December TIC data on Tuesday, February 16. Any notable changes will be promptly apparent, however based on the Fed’s weekly custody holdings data, there has been no notable changed in December, and only in January was there an accelerated decline of TSYs held in custody.

 

Which means that the liquidity preference of those most exposed to oil prices remains one of unwinding risky equity positions, while adding to Treasury holdings. We only mention this in case the record high spec net shorts in Treasury…

… are curious who keeps forcing them to add capital to fund those relentless margin calls.


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