Macquarie Asks “Can One Make Any Sense Of These Erratic Markets? Our Answer Is No”

Some observations from Macquarie on the sad state of constant confusion plaguing investors around the globe, presented without comment.

* * *

Twilight between Ignorance & Confusion

“In the middle of the journey of our life I found myself within a dark woods where the straight-way was lost” Dante Alighieri;

“There is a fifth dimension beyond which is known to man…is the middle ground between the pit of man’s fears and the summit of his knowledge”, Twilight Zone

The last several weeks were exceptionally interesting.

Following Brexit, virtual implosion of the Italian and Portuguese banking sectors and poor May payrolls, investors witnessed a jump in June payrolls as well as full panic mode by the central banks and public authorities, including: (a) expected BoE easing; (b) potential Japanese “helicopter money”; (c) growing calls for public/taxpayer re-capitalization of the Eurozone banking sector; (d) expectations of further easing in a plethora of countries including Korea and Singapore; India and Australia; and (e) acceptance that the Fed cannot tighten.

The result was that correlation between asset classes jumped, with both risk-on and risk-off assets delivering strong returns:

  1. Equities recaptured pre-Brexit highs, driven by the perception that central banks and public instrumentalities would panic sufficiently not to worry about asset bubbles, and hence so long as corporates can squeeze-out even tiny EPS growth rates, the stage is set for a further equity rally;
  2. Global Bonds delivered some of the strongest gains ever, as yields collapsed across the entire term structure for both DM and most EMs. Guyen that over US$12 trillion of sovereign bonds are now trading at negative yields, the chase for yields has been exerting massive gravitational pull. At the same time, term premium has collapsed (in the case of the US into deeply negative territory) as investors accepted that risks of CBs tightening is virtually non¬existent whilst at the same time investors do not currently see any signs of inflationary surprises (refer discussion below);
  3. Gold has also delivered strong retums, driven by investor understanding that the current policies would ultimately result in either deflation or stagflation or hyperinflation (all good outcomes for gold).

Can one make any sense of these erratic changes? Our answer is no.

* * *

So, just BTFD then.

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Meanwhile, Outside The Republican National Convention…

While the Republican National Convention warms up inside ahead of tonight’s ‘main event’, the action outside is getting interesting as a large anti-trump protest is moving slowly towards the Quicken Loans Arena.

We will provide a full preview and live feed of the convention later but for now the excitement seems more external…

Live Feed:

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Man Dies After Being Shot In The Head At “Stop The Violence” Rally In Ohio

At around 9pm last night a 19-year-old man was shot in the head during at a "Stop the Violence Beach Party" in Euclid, Ohio. As KMOV reports, this shooting followed an earlier shooting which killed one man (and wounded a 12 year old boy) at the rally with around 250 people present. Sadly, and darkly ironic, the 3rd victim has now died.

KMOV.com

The fatal shooting occurred yesterday at Sims Park Beach in Euclid (23131 Lakeshore Blvd). As Breaking 911 reports,

The shooting occurred during an impromptu, resident-organized “Stop the Violence Beach Party.” There were approximately 200-300 in attendance at the party.

 

A crowd had gathered on the beach. Shortly after 8pm, unknown suspects fired shots and then fled on foot. Although the intended target is unknown, a nineteen year old Euclid man was struck in the head and killed by the gunfire. A twelve-year old Euclid boy was struck in the back by the gunfire and was hospitalized for treatment. His condition is currently unknown.

 

Later the same evening, shortly after 9pm, an eighteen year old Euclid man was walking nearby in the area of 24000 Lakeshore Blvd. An unknown suspect fired multiple gunshots at the victim from across the street, striking the victim in the shoulder. The victim was hospitalized for treatment and his condition is unknown.

 

No other injuries were reported in either incident and no arrests have been made. Police are investigating the possibility that the two incidents are related.

Perhaps what we need is more Hillbama calls for 'civility'.

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Largest US Pension Fund Suffers Worst Annual Return Since Financial Crisis Due To Heavy Stock Losses

While we have often documented the dramatic underperformance by the hedge fund industry over the past decade courtesy of a centrally-planned market in which it no longer pays to “hedge”, culminating with countless hedge fund closures and substantial redemptions (mostly by now redundant Fund of Funds managers), today we learn that “vanilla” asset managers were also hurt over the past year in which the S&P went nowhere, and not just in Japan where the gargantuan, $1.4 trillion GPIF recently suffered major losses, but in the US as well.

Case in point: Calpers, the largest U.S. public pension fund which as the WSJ reports posted its lowest annual gain since the last financial crisis due to heavy losses in stocks.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, or Calpers, said it earned 0.6% on its investments for the fiscal year ended June 30, according to a Monday news release, barely turning a profit fro the full year. The last time Calpers lost money was during fiscal 2009 when the fund’s holdings fell 24.8%.

It was the second straight year Calpers failed to hit its internal investment target of 7.5%. In 2015, Calpers earned only 2.4%, which suggests that as a result of the dramatic two-year underperformance relative to the funds’ own internal target returns, public pensions in California are not only significantly underfunded as of this moment, and getting worse.

Calpers oversees retirement benefits for 1.7 million public-sector workers.

As the WSJ notes, “workers or local governments often must contribute more when pension funds fail to generate expected returns.” The problem is when either workers nor local governments can, or want to, contribute more.

Unlike scores of underperforming hedge funds whose primary investors are already wealthy individuals who can weather a down year (or more, in the case of Pershing Square), Calpers’ annual results are watched closely in the investment world. It is considered a bellwether for U.S. public pensions because of its size and investment approach. Many pensions currently are struggling because of a sustained period of low interest rates.

“This is a challenging time to invest,” Ted Eliopoulos, Calpers’ chief investment officer, said in the release. Which is odd, because one look at the ticker shows the S&P trading at all time highs.

The giant California plan ended 2016 with roughly $295 billion in assets, and more than half of those funds are invested with publicly traded stocks. Those investments declined 3.4%, though the performance beat internal targets.

Fixed income produced the largest returns at 9.3%, though the results under performed Calpers’ benchmark. The California retirement giant’s private-equity portfolio posted returns of 1.7%.

Real estate holdings returned 7.1%, but that was below Calpers’ internal target by more than 5.6 percentage points.

Which brings us to a post from two weeks ago, namely BofA’s take why bond yields are set to hit record lows after the current hiccup: it has to do with pension fund capital reallocation and disenchantment with the equity asset class, which absent PE multiples soaring to 30x or more, will hardly generate substantial returns from this moment on. As BofA wrote, “treasuries make up nearly 50% of the positive-yielding DM sovereign bonds; curves are 100bp flatter; and there is a greater likelihood that 10y yields probably won’t go back to even 2.5%. We would expect a bigger capitulation by pension managers in the coming months/years.

Ironically, if more of Calpers’ assets were invested in Treasuries, it would had an absolutely stellar return courtesy of a record YTD profit generated by longer maturity bonds, especially the 10 and 30Y as everyone rushes to capture whatever yields they can.

The full breakdown of Calpers’ returns per its press release, is shown below, where only inflation-linked assets underperformed stocks.

We dread to imagine what will happen to Calpers returns when the S&P actually declines from its all time highs, or when the market is no longer propped up by every single central bank.

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The ‘BLM’ Paradox – Black Accountability Matters

Submitted by Salil Mehta via Statistical Ideas blog,

Given recent distressing killings between Blacks and police -in the past week – it is worth poring into the broad statistics that underlie homicides in this country, by race.  The subject here has become far more emotional of late due to three reasons:
  • (A) a lack of recent official national data covering homicides by race and by the police,
  • (B) activists have somewhat diverted our attention away from the broader statistics and instead focused us on a few edited videos of murders under the premise that this is what all Whites are about, and
  • (C) we have an election season where both sides of the aisle want a voice on this topic as it comports with their "broader" socioeconomic policies.
It is as important to get the truth out there in terms of where the threat lies, as it is to be compassionate to the many thousands of murdered innocent Americans (of all stripes) each year but that happen disproportionately by one race.  It is also worth reminding that the vast majority of initial deplorable headlines, about Blacks killed by police, have never later led to convictions by a balanced jury of peers who saw more concerning evidence than the (social) media showed you.  Clearly there are some false positives, though there are far many more false negatives.
 
Let’s start by dissecting some headlines recently by both Former Mayor Giuliani, and also blogger Nate Silver.  Both have made slightly different points, though both are factual in some sense, one is generally closer aligned to the broad statistics.
  • In the U.S. Blacks are killed at nearly 8x the rates of Whites. (based on this Silver is pointing to Rwanda, though brining this up in this past week only conflates and misdiagnosis the situation)
Now let’s dig into these deaths, by race:
  • If you are Black, then you were nearly 9x as likely to have been killed by another Black versus by the police.  And there was a very little chance at all that a White civilian killed you. (based on this Giuliani is wrong only in the accuracy of his stated probability, during a conversation about Black Lives Matter, but he is certainly close)
  • If you are instead White, then you were nearly 3x as likely to have been killed by another White versus by either the police or a Black civilian (this too would have supported Giuliani’s point, though he chose to never make it)
  • To drive home the point of where the threat is, something critical should be retold as we will below, that the 8x murder rate for Blacks versus Whites would rise to 8.5x if there were no police murders at all. (this reflects how much more impactful police killings are on White people then they truly have on Blacks)
Now in the past year of data there have been 5,556 homicides of Americans by members of their own race, or by police.  The Washington Post and The Guardian have unofficial estimates, and I averaged their databases together.  See the split of these murders, which are now precisely sized proportionally by the number of homicides in each of these four categories below.
We show this same information, charted chart two different ways so that the most crucial storyline can be reinforced.  First we should state that while there are nearly 5.5x as many Whites as Blacks in the U.S., it is disquieting that Blacks still kill their own almost as much as Whites do (using the left chart above: 45% for the left portion versus 55% for the right portion)!  Additionally, within the left-side’s number of Blacks killed, it’s actually a smaller portion are killed by police versus the similar comparison for Whites.  This is despite the fact that Whites are living in lower-crime neighborhoods (and yes they too are under economic duress just as Blacks are) to begin with.  If Whites are actually killing each other at a lower rate, it also must imply those neighborhood have less violent criminals!  For more information, recheck the bullets highlighted above describing Former Mayor Giuliani’s comments.
 
Now when looking at who is committing these dire murders, it is clearly more often than not being done by “everyday” neighborhood civilians, and not by the police.  We prove this by portioning the same 5,556 murders on the right chart above.  We see that the right portion of that ride-side’s chart shows that civilian murders are nearly equal (47% are Blacks versus 53% are Whites).  Yet the only 1 in 7 annual number of of all homicides are due to police (the left portion of the right-side’s chart) and not civilians.  When the police kill, 2/3 of the time it is Whites being killed!  We can ask where is the furor over that, when Whites don’t even account for >2/3 of the same-race civilian killings (as a reminder, it was only 53%)?
 
To be thorough, it is wistfully accurate that police too are victims of unnecessary murders by American civilians.  This type of murder happens at 8% the level of civilians killed by police, and 1% of the overall 5,556 level of annual killings in total we’re discussing here.  So this may appear to be a small number, but it is certainly not insignificant at all, to those we put to work in law enforcement.  Who’s killing these police?  We dejectedly note that an astonishing 4/5 of these police killed were done so by Black civilians (the same ones who are killing one another at 8x the national rate and paradoxically expecting law enforcement to stop that, but then shriek when the police do).  The Dallas sniper murders last week (and possibly the Baton Rouge killings today) have not done anyone favors, and numerically it will inexpugnably and instantaneously spike the number of police killed by Blacks, by ~15%!  None of this is to say that we advocate any Blacks being stalked and hunted anywhere, but the broad information we hear in the media doesn't offer proof that this is what is happening nor proof of economic discrimination.
 
An academic peer-reviewed paper, which I spent considerable time reviewing as the associate editor, was well-referenced earlier this year (for example written up in the Wall Street Journal). It explores threat factors associated with police who shoot at a scene (including critical insights such as Black officers are >3x more likely to shoot versus Whites when both confronted as a team within the same situation).  The author and The American Statistical Association journal were a vital probability and statistics citation for the recently viral Harvard University/National Bureau of Economic Research economics working draft on police aggression (and showing that shooting isn’t even the largest component of police aggression to begin with!)
 
Here is the topical research article we made free: http://ift.tt/2a3MWp0
 
To summarize, we have a tapestry of racial homicide information that demonstrates that within the U.S., Black lives are committing crimes at an awfully-high disproportionate rate (again we can isolate the Blacks-on-Blacks homicide numbers above).  Additionally, Black civilians account for 4/5 of all murders of police who care about Black lives and are trying to reduce violent crimes in Black neighborhoods.  And while police kill fewer Blacks than Whites, Black police are >3x likelier to shoot versus White police.  Whites tend to murder anyone at a lower late, and this is despite the glorification in the media of a small fraction of incidences the don't represent the righteous struggle for many.
 
It is clear where the threat is where it comes to violent crimes, and so too why the recent movement against Whites is an awkward paradox.  Whites certainly have their flaws and discriminations and certainly struggling to make ends meet just like everyone else, but we also see that Black lives do matter to Whites.  And all innocent lives should matter.  The question is, why do Black lives (or any innocent lives) not matter to Blacks who are disproportionately murder?  This makes the appeal that Whites don’t care about anything, hard to absorb.  
 
Let’s put this all a little differently.  If we were in a situation in America, where we had an equal proportions of Blacks as Whites, in this hypothetical the number of butchered Americans in the hands of Blacks would burgeon (and astonishingly by police would fall) uncontrollably and our entire society would be left effectively unbalanced.  That would not be a stellar result.

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China Warns US Patrols In South China Sea Could End In “Disaster” As It Launches Navy Drills

Less than a week after a Hague tribunal found that China has no territorial rights in the South China Sea, contrary to Beijing’s “Nine Dash Line” claims, China has made it abundantly clear that it will no comply with the ruling when overnight a senior Chinese admiral said that Freedom of navigation patrols carried out by foreign navies in the South China Sea could end “in disaster” while also announcing the unexpected start of navy drills in the contested waters, in the most direct warning to the United States yet.

 

According to AP, Hainan’s maritime administration said an area southeast of the island province would be closed from Monday to Thursday, but gave no details about the nature of the exercises. The announcement came during a three-day visit to China by US Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson to discuss the South China Sea dispute and ways to increase interaction between the two militaries, which continue to have a tense relationship. 


Chinese missile frigate Yuncheng launches an anti-ship missile during a military exercise

in the waters near south China’s Hainan Island and Paracel Islands, July 8, 2016

Further provoking a US response, Beijing also stated that it would not halt the construction on islands and reefs in the South China Sea, state news agency Xinhua reported the head of the country’s navy as saying, adding that China will not leave the outcropping that is under construction half finished. Furthermore, despite the meeting between the US and Chinese militaries, Sun Jianguo, an admiral and deputy chief of the Joint Staff Department of China’s Central Military Commission, said behind closed doors on  Saturday that freedom of navigation patrols by foreign navies in the South China Sea could end “in disaster,” according to Reuters.

“When has freedom of navigation in the South China Sea ever been affected? It has not, whether in the past or now, and in the future there won’t be a problem as long as nobody plays tricks,” Sun said.

 

“But China consistently opposes so-called military freedom of navigation which brings with it a military threat, and which challenges and disrespects the international law of the sea,” Sun added.

 

“This kind of military freedom of navigation is damaging to freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, and it could even play out in a disastrous way,” he said, without elaborating.  

 

He said the court case at The Hague must be used by China’s armed forces to improve its capabilities “so that when push comes to shove, the military can play a decisive role in the last moment to defend our national sovereignty and interests”.

With tensions in the South China Sea already riding high, the comments are seen as the loudest warning to the US, which has conducted such patrols close to Chinese-held islands over the past year. Those patrols prompted Beijing to send fighter jets and ships to track and warn off the American ships, while accusing the US of threatening its national security.

In a further development, Chinese air force spokesman Shen Jinke was quoted by state media as saying that air force fighters and bombers had recently conducted patrols over the South China Sea and would make that “a regular practice” in future.

In short,

Despite the warnings, China and the United States have been maintaining open lines of communication, with U.S. Chief of Naval Operations John Richardson meeting the head of the Chinese navy, Wu Shengli, in Beijing on Monday. “I think that you can visit China this time at our invitation, that shows both sides attach great concern to maritime security,” Wu told Richardson in brief comments in front of reporters.

Victor Gao, director of the China National Association of International Studies, told RT that he believes the US was “very much involved in this arbitration case brought by the Philippines…trying to put pressure on China.”

“China will stand firm on the matter of principle and China will also use all military resources to make sure that the US will not win this battle against China,” he said.

Separately, in yet another act of defiance to the trbunal verdict, China landed two civilian aircraft on new airstrips on the disputed Mischief and Subi reefs and dispatched its coast guard to block a Philippine fishing boat from reaching a contested shoal.

The small glimmer of good news is that according to the latest US Naval map update, where there were two US aircraft carriers in the South China Sea, now there is just one, as the John Stennis – after hosting Joe Biden on July 14 while the ship and John C. Stennis Strike Group (JCSSG) were participating in the Rim of the Pacific maritime exercise – appears to be quietly leaving the area.

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French Prime Minister Booed At Moment Of Silence In Nice

In the aftermath of last Thursday’s tragic truck attack in Nice, France which killed 84 and injured hundreds, public opinion turned even more sour on the country’s increasingly unpopular Prime Minister Manuel Valls, who said that “times have changed, and France is going to have to live with terrorism, and we must face this together and show our collective sang-froid”, a statement which many took as an admission of defeat toward the terrorist threat sweeping across France in particular, and Europe in general.

The French resentment toward its Prime Minister was on full display again today, when Valls was loudly booed at memorial service to remember the victims of the Nice terror attack. The prime minister attended the service alongside the Mayor of Nice, Philippe Pradal, the regional president Christian Estrosi and the reigning prince of nearby Monaco, Prince Albert.

Valls was booed as he went to sign the book of condolence at the memorial service on the Promenade des Anglais. “Resignation!” “Murderers” was shouted by the crowds before and after the ceremony.

While the crowd was furious with Valls, it cheered to celebrate the work of the emergency services, who were applauded with shouts of “Thank you firefighters!” They broke in applause and raised their fists in the air when they heard the French national anthem.

Tensions are running high over the French government’s handling of security in the country when it was revealed Mr Estrosi’s request for more security at the event was denied despite France being in a state of emergency stemming from the Paris attacks in November.

Many blame President Francois Hollande’s Socialist administration for falling to prevent the three major Isis-inspired terror attacks on French soil in the past 18 months which have now killed more than 200 people. Hollande and Valls were also booed and jeered at by onlookers on Friday when they visited the site of the attack on the promenade with Estrosi.

Quoted by The Independent, local resident Isabel, who declined to give her surname, said she did not boo but understood why tensions are running high. She said: “They want him (Mr Valls) to resign because he didn’t put enough police on on the day. I was there (on Thursday) and didn’t see police. It’s terrible to say but we need a stronger prime minister with laws against radicalism.

And while the existing government continues to slide in the polls, its approval rating tumbling with every new attack on French soil, one person keeps on winning: the National Front’s party leader, Marine Le Pen, cited by many as the most likely next French president.  Marine Le Pen, the leader of the National Front, issued a statement on Friday denouncing the Bastille Day attack. She blamed “the scourge of Islamist fundamentalism” for the attack, which killed at least 84 people, even though officials have not yet attributed responsibility for it.

According to the most recent survey published by Le Monde one month ago, with one year to go until the French 2017 presidential elections, Hollande was polling at 14% while likely Republican candidate and former president Nicolas Sarkozy scored 21%. The clear winner of the poll was Marine Le Pen who was favoured by 28% of those surveyed. We expect that the most recent deadly attack will only further cement her lead in the polls.

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Former Turkey Air Force Commander Unsure If He Was Ring-Leader In Coup, Pleads Guilty

The farcical ‘coup’ fallout continues. Having earlier denied his involvement in the coup in statements he made to Turkish media (insisting he worked to quell the uprising), Turkey’s state-run news agency reports that former Air Force commander General Akin Ozturk has now pleaded guilty to organizing the coup attempt. “I started to act aiming to stage a coup,” Ozturk admitted during interrogation… but, adding to the confusion, CNN Turk additionally reports that Ozturk stated “he was not the one to plan the coup.”

Earlier today,

Turkey’s state-run news agency says a total of 103 generals and admirals have been detained for questioning across Turkey over the failed coup.

 

Anadolu Agency says Monday that 41 of them have been ordered jailed pending trial so far.

 

Earlier, the agency said prosecutors in Ankara were questioning 27 generals and admirals, including former Air Force commander Gen. Akin Ozturk, who has been described as the ringleader of the foiled uprising.

 

Ozturk, who remained in active duty, has denied he was involved and insisted he worked to quell the uprising in statements he made to Turkish media.

And now…

The ex-commander of the Turkish Air Force has pleaded guilty to organizing the coup attempt, Anadolu news agency reported.

 

“I started to act aiming to stage a coup,” Akin Ozturk said during the interrogation.

NOTE – The Turkish State Media has since deleted this tweet!

But…

 

 

So, to be clear, he did not plan it but acted with intent to stage it… and that is how Erdogan gets his scapegoat (as Sputnik News reports, according to Sabah newspaper, Ozturk may be linked to Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen staying in self-imposed exile in the United States, who was blamed by Ankara for the attempted coup.)

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General Market Commentary 7-18-2016 (Video)

By EconMatters


Pay Attention to the Yen for your risk on “heads up” to get the market direction right in the short term. Typical No Commitment Monday in Markets. Earnings are going to drive markets this week along with Housing Econ News, as well as the API and EIA Energy Reports.

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle   

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The Entire Financial System Is Exposed To This ‘Junk’ Bond Market

Submitted by Tim Price via SovereignMan.com,

Japan got there first. 15 years ago, we met a Japanese equity manager who made an astonishing prediction:

“Japan was the dress rehearsal. The rest of the world will be the main event.”

That seemed an extraordinary suggestion 15 years ago. Today, not so much.

In the aftermath of the late 1980s real estate and stock market bubble, and its subsequent banking crisis, Japan became a giant laboratory experiment for novel insane monetary policies.

In 2001 the Bank of Japan tried Quantitative Easing. It was a policy that Richard Koo of the Nomura Research Institute described as the “greatest monetary non-event”.

It turned out, not for the first time, that academic economists had it all wrong.

Borrowers, not lenders, were the fundamental bottleneck in Japan’s recession:

“The central bank’s implementation of QE at a time of zero interest rates was similar to a shopkeeper who, unable to sell more than 100 apples a day at $1 each, tries stocking the shelves with 1,000 apples, and when that has no effect, adds another 1,000.

 

As long as the price remains the same, there is no reason consumer behaviour should change – sales will remain stuck at about 100 even if the shopkeeper puts 3,000 apples on display.

 

This is essentially the story of QE, which not only failed to bring about economic recovery, but also failed to stop asset prices from falling well into 2003.”

The central banks of the rest of the developed world have had more success in boosting asset prices through their own deployment of QE, but they have had just as little impact on their real economies.

What QE has done is made the asset-rich richer, and the poor relatively poorer. Inasmuch as social equality is a stated aim of most governments, QE has been a disaster.

But it has done wonders for bond prices.

John Seagrim of CLSA points out that despite having yielded very little for a very long time, Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) have been surprise performers in 2016.

The 40-year JGB has risen by 50 percent in price since the start of the year, reducing the annual yield to a level that’s now just 7 basis points (i.e. 0.07%).

Assuming investors hold the JGB to maturity in 2056, they will achieve a total return of just 2.96 percent over the life of the bond, not accounting for inflation or taxes.

Those investors might be interested to see what they could earn from a different asset class.

If they bought and held a Topix ETF (Japanese stocks) instead, they would earn a current dividend yield of 2.37 percent per year, not including any gains from potential appreciation in the share prices.

Of course, many government bonds are more expensive than the 40 year JGB in that they offer no yield whatsoever, or only a negative one.

10-year German bonds currently yield minus 0.07 percent. 10-year Swiss paper currently yields minus 0.64 percent. The 10-year US Treasury yield of 1.58% seems almost too good to be true at this point, a sad reflection of our investing environment.

Yet somehow, despite policy failures that are made obvious by the lowest interest rates ever recorded in human history, a persistent narrative still dominates financial markets: all-knowing, omnipotent central bankers are still in full control of the situation and will do ‘whatever it takes’ to maintain order.

As Richard Koo puts it:

“Even though QE failed to produce the expected results, the belief that monetary policy is always effective persists among economists in Japan and elsewhere.

 

To these economists, QE did not fail, it simply was not tried hard enough. According to this view, if boosting excess reserves of commercial banks to $25 trillion has no effect, then we should try injecting $50 trillion, or $100 trillion.”

But investors are starting to realize that ‘whatever it takes’ may not be enough.

Ben Hunt of Salient Partners writes convincingly that this status quo narrative is starting to falter very badly, and in the face of events like Brexit, becoming harder and harder to maintain:

“… status quo political and economic institutions – particularly Central Banks – have failed to protect incomes and have pushed income and wealth inequality past a political breaking point.

 

They made a big bet: we’re going to bail-out / paper-over the banks to prevent massive losses in the financial sector, we’re going to inflate the stock market so that the household sector feels wealthier, and we’re going to make vast sums of money available for the corporate and government sectors to borrow really cheaply.”

Narratives die hard, but when the ‘omnipotent central bank’ narrative finally and conclusively fails, bond investors will suffer a religious experience as the market rushes to reprice these heavily overvalued bonds.

Think about it: how much will a bond with a NEGATIVE yield be worth on the day that investors lose confidence in their central bankers’ abilities to control the weather financial markets?

Investors holding these junk bonds are going to take a big hit.

Here’s the rub: even if you don’t own bonds personally, you may still have significant exposure.

More than likely your pension fund and your bank all have substantial positions in low (or negative) yielding debt. So there may be a system-wide hit once this repricing occurs.

Ben Hunt again:

“Our portfolios should minimize the maximum risk the world actually presents, not maximize the reward our crystal ball models predict. . .

 

For me, that means real assets and real yield, fractional ownership in real companies with real cash flows from real economic activity with real people. You know, what a stock market used to mean before it became a Central Bank casino.”

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