The Most Bizarre Market-Timing Chart Ever?

When it comes to strange market timing patterns, for the longest time we thought that it would be impossible to top the following chart by the New York Fed from July 2012, one we dubbed the “Chart of the Year“, showing that the cumulative “bullish” return of the S&P 500 on just the day preceding FOMC meetings resulted in some 800 points in upside in the broader market.

The NY Fed described this truly arcane phenomenon as follows:

We show that since 1994, more than 80 percent of the equity premium on U.S. stocks has been earned over the twenty-four hours preceding scheduled Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announcements (which occur only eight times a year)—a phenomenon we call the pre-FOMC announcement “drift.”

Surely, this is as bizarre as any “market timing” chart can get? Not so fast.

According to a paper by economists at UC Northwestern University and UC Berkeley, Anna Cieslak and Adair Morse and Annette Vissing-Jørgensen, another, even more surprising trading pattern using FOMC announcement has emerged. Specifically, anyone who engaged in the simple “even” strategy of buying the stocks of the S&P 500 on the day before a Fed policy announcement, selling them a week later, then buying them again the following week and sticking with the pattern until the subsequent Fed meeting generated a whopping 650% return since 1994, far outperforming the inverse “odd” strategy which shocking had a negative return over the past two decades years, and jsut as surprisingly, outperforming the market’s own 505% return during this period.

Behold what may be the most bizarre pattern chart yet:

As the WSJ adds, “the pattern of stocks performing better in even weeks of the Fed cycle—the week of the policy-setting meeting, two weeks after it, and so on—is persistent. Given financial markets’ complexity, though, it is possible to find many interesting, significant-seeming patterns that are really just matters of chance.”

The pattern appears robust, with clear peaks and valleys in returns during even and odd weeks that appear statistically significant. Splitting the data into three subperiods—1994 through 2000, 2001 through 2007 and 2008 onward—they found the pattern still held. International stock returns follow it as well.

So what is causing this miraculous “get rich quick and just trade alongside the Fed” pattern? The answer is not clear:

The dates for the eight policy-setting meetings the Fed sets each year come at different times of the month, and have moved around over time, so they haven’t regularly lined up with economic releases or corporate earnings reports (The next one, for example, comes at the end of this month.) Moreover, the economists found that volatility in the federal-funds futures market, where investors bet on the course of the Fed’s overnight target rate, follow the same pattern.

 

Neither reports from the Fed nor speeches and testimony from Fed officials follow the pattern. But since 2001, the Fed’s Board of Governors discount-rate meetings have tended to fall into the biweekly cycle.

 

So one scenario goes like this: Board members tend to gather on even weeks after the Fed’s rate-setting meeting to talk things over. The content of those discussions makes its way into financial markets, maybe through news reports, maybe through people in business, finance or academia that the Fed talks to, maybe through some combination of sources. As a result, investors have greater certainty on the direction of policy, and stocks rise.

There’s that. There is also the possibility of merely matching a particular pattern with an FOMC meeting variable, in other words, attempting to fit correlation as causation.

Still, as readers are aware, and as first Zero Hedge showed, and then even the US Treasury confirmed, buying stocks on large POMO days, or simply during the duration of POMO between 10:15 am and 11:00 am during the day, has also generated massive market outperformance.

So are these merely self-fulfilling prophecies, where people jump on the pattern thus validating it, involving either the FOMC meeting or the daily bond buybacks by the Fed, or is there something more sinister here? Perhaps the answer will only emerge after this “pattern” information is fully public knowledge and when everyone, not just a select group of traders, are privy to the pattern and trade around it.

Usually, it is those kinds of mass knowledge events that make such pattern trading null and void.

Or at least, they used to. After all, we are now in the New centrally-planned normal, when the Fed has made the market so simple by design an idiot caveman can generate a 30% each year: with every other “wealth creation” instrument failing, the S&P 500 is the only thing the Fed has left.

Which is why it wouldn’t surprise us if, counterintuitively, as everyone piled into the “Even” trade, its outsized return became even more pronounced. At least until such time, as the Fed, with its relentless, self-destructive and ultimately futile micromanagement of everything, finally loses control. Then patterns, charts and indeed markets, will be the last thing on anyone’s mind.




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The Changing Correlation Between The S&P 500 & Oil

Via The World Complex blog,

Today we investigate the relationship between oil and the broad US market, using the S&P 500 index as a proxy.

A common thought is that the two functions are inversely correlated, with the US market in danger whenever oil rises too high.

The relationship has been a complex one over the past 11 years, but the correlation is positive most of the time.

In particular, we see from 2003 until late 2007, both oil and the market rose in tandem. The only time the two records show an inverse correlation was during the windup to the financial crisis–from late 2007 to July 2008.

The collapse in both market index and oil price through the second half of 2008 shows up quite clearly. The two prices rise in tandem from early 2009 to the end of 2012.

It doesn’t seem logical that the S&P should be positively correlated to oil prices–so it is more likely that both records are correlated to the same thing–inflation. But what to make of the last 18 months, in which we see an almost vertical rise in the stock market without an increase in the oil price? Is an American renaissance in the works, powered by increased American oil production? Or is it due to the much rumoured mass purchase of securities by financial institutions, powered by monetary creation?

Is it being done to prevent another period of negative correlation, which might foretell another economic crisis?

Stay tuned . . .




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Kurdish Government Threatens to Sue Iraq Over Oil Exports—May Be Moving Forward on Independent State

not yetIraq has lost metaphorical and real ground in its
ongoing dispute with the Kurdish regional government over oil
exports—the first
thing I wrote about
here more than two years ago. Back then
Iraq’s central government was busy trying to coerce foreign oil
companies into not making lucrative deals with the stable
government in Arbil. And now, as Reuters
explains
:

Baghdad has cut the KRG’s budget since January over the dispute,
arguing the sales are illegal, and has repeatedly threatened to sue
any firm that buys oil from the autonomous region.

But since the KRG took control of the northern oil hub of Kirkuk
amid the retreat of the Iraqi military from the Islamic State-led
insurgency, the autonomous region has been emboldened.

On Thursday, the president of Iraq’s Kurdish north asked the
region’s parliament to prepare the way for a referendum on its
long-saught goal of independence.

The Kurdish people have never had an independent country of
their own. Turkey, which also has a geographically contiguous area
populated by Kurds, has long opposed the creation of a Kurdish
state—quelling rebellions at home and fearing an independent state
carved out of Iraq would make it harder for them to manage their
Kurdish majority. Apparently no more. A spokesperson for Turkey’s
ruling party said earlier
this week
the country was ready to welcome an independent
Kurdish state. Turkey, fore one, appears to be choosing stability
over sectarianism.

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Viva PorcFest and the Free State Project! Now With More Ice Cream!

Last
weekend, I traveled to speak and hang out at the Free State Project‘s annual
hootenany, which is called PorcFest (short for Porcupine Freedom
Festival). It was a great and excellent time and I hope to write up
something about in the next few days.

Here’s
a nice writeup
of the event and the FSP by The
Economist
‘s Emily Bobrow:

In the jovial atmosphere of PorcFest, where idealists bond over
their shared mistrust of rules and big institutions, the prospect
of a future New Hampshire that can do without such things seems
far-fetched. Tech geeks (who still dominate the Free State
movement) enjoy home-made “bananarchy” ice cream while prattling on
about the power of crypto-currencies. “Bitcoin can topple
governments and end war,” gushes one fan.

Others are more realistic. “I’m an incrementalist,” explains
Jason Sorens, the subdued intellectual who dreamed up the Free
State Project while he was getting his PhD from Yale. Now a
lecturer at Dartmouth College in Hanover, he is eager to use New
Hampshire to test libertarian theories about enlightened
self-interest and reciprocal altruism, small government and large
networks of voluntary institutions. “We don’t have all the
answers,” he says, “but it’s worth the experiment.”

The “Bananarchy” ice cream was pretty damn fine, btw, but even
better was the “Who Will Build My Rocky Road.”


Read the whole thing.

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The Left’s Reaction to the SC’s Hobby Lobby and Harris Rulings Shows that it Hates Freedom

There is no other way to interpret the hissy fits it is
throwing. In both instances, I note in my column in The
Week
, HobbyLobbythe Supreme Court upheld the
liberties of religion, speech and association enshrined in the
First Amendment. But it did so on grounds so narrow so as to not
even be worth chugging a Sam Adams for this July 4.

Hobby Lobby challenged Obamacare’s mandate that companies offer
contraceptive coverage even in violation of their religious
beliefs. I note:

Yet instead of simply affirming the owners of Hobby Lobby’s
broad constitutional right not to be forced to violate their
religious beliefs, the justices ruled in the company’s favor only
because not doing so would have violated the Religious Freedom and
Restoration Act.

All that the act requires is that before violating someone’s
religious liberties, the government demonstrates that it had no
other way to achieve its ends. In this case, the “conservative”
justices questioned neither the end — provision of contraceptives —
nor whether it was a “compelling state interest.” These fanatics of
limited government ruled only that because there were
less-religious-liberty-busting ways to achieve contraceptive
coverage — for example, by the government directly funding it as
it’s doing for religious universities and hospitals — the mandate
did not meet the RFTRA test.

None of this, however, prevented the left from throwing a
collective hissy-fit. Social media erupted into tiresome taunts
of fascism.

As for Harris vs. Quinn in which a mom sued Illinois’ public
unions for garnishing the state subsidies she receives for taking
care of her disabled son, one would have thought that standing up
for the mother would be a no-brainer for the left. But, apparently,
letting her keep her money, according to Salon‘s Joan
Walsh, is a victory for the “one percent” and the “plutocrat
carte.l”

I cannot do justice to Walsh’s twisted logic in a few words, so
just go and read the damn column
here
– and then weep tomorrow about how unhinged the left has
become in this country.

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Global Macro In 1 Simple Chart

The US and UK are the ‘best’ performing world economies based on PMIs. Despite slumping real incomes, surging gas prices, a dismal Q1, fading Q2 growth expectations, and the US being the worst relative performing macro-surprise index in the world this year, it is the cleanest clean shirt with the great expansion based on soft-survey data. France joins Korea at the bottom of the global pile of macro-economic performers with Russia, Brazil, Australia, and Greece also in contraction. Here is your 1-stop-shop guide to global macro – USA USA USA…

 

 

Source: JPMorgan




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India’s Central Bank To Sell Gold On The Market In Exchange For Gold At The Bank Of England

Submitted by Mike Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

India’s gold policy over the last several years is about as dysfunctional as any government policy I have ever seen, and that’s saying a lot. In case you need a reminder, here are a few posts I have written on the subject:

The Times of India: “Almost Every Passenger on a Flight from Dubai to Calicut Was Found Carrying 1kg of Gold”

Gold Smuggling Increases 7x in India and Surpasses Illegal Drug Trade

Indian Temples Fight Back Against Government Gold Grabbing Plot

In a nutshell, Indians were buying too much gold for their government’s comfort, so the “authorities” stepped in with duties and import restrictions in an attempt to stifle the trade. So smuggling soared.

Fast forward to today. It appears the government has finally realized they can’t stop their citizens penchant for gold, so they have decided to dump central bank gold onto the market. What is incredible to me is that they are justifying this with a so-called “swap” into phantom gold at the Bank of England. The favored global hub of shady, rent-seeking, banker oligarchs.

What’s even more interesting about this is the fact that so many Central Banks seems to be swapping or selling their gold to Western interests. Most notably Ecuador selling to Goldman Sachs, which I highlighted in the piece: Ecuador to Transfer More Than Half its Gold Reserves to Goldman Sachs in Exchange for “Liquidity.”

Now from Reuters:

MUMBAI, July 2 (Reuters) – India’s central bank said on Wednesday it has sought quotes from banks to swap gold in its own vaults for international-standard gold, aiming to improve the management of its reserves.

 

The Reserve Bank of India said the operation would “standardise the gold available with RBI in India with respect to international standards” and the gold acquired would be delivered to its overseas custodian, the Bank of England.

 

By holding gold reserves in London, the RBI would gain flexibility to mobilise them if needed to defend the currency. It shipped some of its gold holdings to Britain in 1991 as part of a series of emergency measures to tackle a financial crisis.

This begs the question of who really needs the gold, the RBI, or London bankers?

According to the World Gold Council, India holds the 11th-largest gold reserves of 557 tons. At current market prices, they would be worth nearly $24 billion. It was not immediately clear how much of that would be swapped.

 

Market participants said the central bank was likely to offload its old gold onto the local market in India.

At least the people will get a hold of it as opposed to criminal Central Bankers.

That would have the beneficial effect of boosting domestic gold supply without hitting India’s current account – which faces renewed pressure as the conflict in Iraq has pushed up India’s oil import bill.

 

“It’s a good move by the RBI, this will at least ease the stock requirement of the jewellery industry,” said a senior official with a foreign bank that supplies gold to India.

You have to wonder if this in any way relates to concern about the upcoming Swiss referendum on the country’s gold reserves, which Parliament has been fighting hard to prevent from happening. For example, back in May Bloomberg reported that:

Swiss parliamentarians urged rejection of a popular initiative that would curtail the Swiss National Bank (SNBN)’s independence by requiring it to hold a fixed portion of its assets in gold.

 

Members of the Swiss parliament’s lower house voted 129 to 20 with 25 abstentions today against the plan, which demands that at least 20 percent of the central bank’s assets be in gold. It would also disallow the sale of any such holdings and require all SNB gold be held in Switzerland.

 

No date for a national vote has yet been set.

Well it appears based on a Bloomberg headline from this morning that a date has been set. A friend sent me the following:

  • (BN) *SWISS TO VOTE NOV. 30 ON `GOLD INITIATIVE’

There may be some very concerned bankers in New York and London this weekend.

Full article here.




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Israel Defense Force Deletes “Nuclear Leak” Tweet; Blames Cyber Terrorism

How to start World War 3? Step 1) Hack IDF Twitter account; Step 2) Tweet that Israel’s secret nuclear facility has suffered a potential leak after shelling; Step 3) wait for US response… It appears (though for now has not been confirmed) that the Israel Defense Force’s Twitter account was hacked by the Syrian Electronic Army who then tweeted “#WARNING: Possible nuclear leak in the region after 2 rockets hit Dimona nuclear facility” The Tweet was deleted soon after – not before all major newswires picked it up – and the report has been denied by the IDF. We can only imagine the market response to this tweet if US traders were not all out buying beers and burgers..

 

The original Tweet from @IDFSpokesperson

 

The Tweet was deleted minutes later after this image (of the Syrian Electronic Army) was tweeted…

 

and this…

 

But The IDF was quick to note it was not correct…

Israeli army is investigating how posting appeared on its official Twitter account saying there was risk of nuclear leak after rocket hit Dimona facility, military spokesman says on condition of anonymity in accordance with regulation.

 

Tweet was later deleted; army spokesman declines to comment on possibility the official account was hacked

*  *  *

And then The IDF issues this statement:

 




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Ukraine’s New Interior Minister Promises To Retake Crimea From Russia

The civil war in east Ukraine – the self-proclaimed republic of Novorossiya – is back on and raging as violently as ever, with unconfirmed reports that even Russia has now gotten involved:

This follows what BBC reported was the death of at least nine civilians during an attack on a village in the Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine. “The rebels have accused the Ukrainian army of shelling and bombing the village of Luhanska. But Ukrainian officials said their forces were not in the area, blaming the rebels themselves.”

In other words more of the same, and certainly not helping any attempts at peace or even a ceasefire, as Russia and Ukraine are again stuck accusing each other of scuttling all attempts at ending hostilities. As Reuters noted, in a telephone conversation with U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, Poroshenko repeated a promise that Kiev could return to the ceasefire, on three conditions. “A statement on his website said he wanted assurances on a ‘bilateral’ truce, the release of hostages, and the deployment of international monitors to check Ukraine’s porous border with Russia. Moscow denies Ukraine’s charges that it is letting fighters and weapons cross into the east of the country.”

Curiously, besides Putin benefiting from higher oil prices as a result of geopolitical instability, and a far better venue to achieve that nowadays would be Iraq anyway, one wonders who actually has more to gain from perpetuating the fighting.

Yet the most surprising news of the day comes not from the contested region, but from Kiev where Ukraine’s president Poroshenko appointed a new Ukraine defense minister, Valeriy Heletey. His first promise? To not only re-engage Russia in Crimea, but to be victorious in doing so. From BBC:

New Ukrainian Defence Minister Valeriy Heletey has promised that the army would retake Crimea, restoring the country’s territorial integrity.

 

Addressing parliament in Kiev, he said: “There will be a victory parade… in Ukraine’s Sevastopol.”

 

Lt Gen Heletey, 46, was approved by MPs in Kiev after being recommended by Mr Poroshenko as someone who would work day and night to restore the military capability of the country’s armed forces. His remark about Sevastopol was applauded by the chamber.

We are confident Putin had a different, and far more amused reaction to the statement.

But while we applaud Ukraine’s attempts at generating populist enthusiasm, a far bigger problem for the nation will be if, as we explained previously, Russia not only manages to finally conclude the South Stream, which despite Europe’s attempts at sabotage, is proceeding according to schedule, but diverts all gas transit away from Ukraine. At that point, Ukraine will be completely irrelevant not only to Russia, which already has under its control, via separatist groups, the industrial regions in the east, but to Europe. It goes without saying that the second Russia makes Ukraine irrelevant as a core transit hub to Europe, all the promises from Europe, NATO, IMF and of course, America, will be gone with the wind. Only then will Ukraine discover just how credible its newly found allies are…




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Jim Epstein on New York City’s Affordable Housing Bonanza for the Rich

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) ||| William Alatriste/NYC CouncilNew York City Mayor Bill De
Blasio (D), who ran on a promise to reduce inequality, is allowing
upper middle class professionals with household incomes as high as
$193,000 to tap into government housing subsidies so they can
continue living in posh areas of Manhattan and Brooklyn.

In a city in which one in five households lives below the
poverty line, writes Jim Epstein, applying limited government
resources to such a purpose is obscene.

View this article.

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