GPS: The Battle Over Reopening – MUST VIEW

Empathy – the psychological identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another. – Dictionary.com

Maybe once every few years we read, hear or see something that is so profound it shakes our intellectual foundation to the very core, awakens our sleeping dogmas within, and causes us to reassess our world view.  Yesterday was one of those times after watching the following 5-minute segment on Fareed Zakeria’s GPS.

We couldn’t understand why there isn’t 100 percent buy-in to reopen the economy only after the nation’s health officials sound the all the clear signal.   It’s very complicated and Fareed helps us understand the context.

Context Is Everything

Context is everything if we are to understand the positions of those we disagree with or the actions of those we are so quick to judge.   The following “Man on the Subway” from the Seven Habits of Highly Effective People by Steven Covey is an extremely powerful story about context,

“I remember a mini-paradigm shift I experienced one Sunday morning on a subway in New York. People were sitting quietly – some reading newspapers, some lost in thought, some resting with their eyes closed. It was a calm, peaceful scene.

Then suddenly, a man and his children entered the subway car. The children were so loud and rambunctious that instantly the whole climate changed.

The man sat down next to me and closed his eyes, apparently oblivious to the situation. The children were yelling back and forth, throwing things, even grabbing people’s papers. It was very disturbing. And yet, the man sitting next to me did nothing.

It was difficult not to feel irritated. I could not believe that he could be so insensitive as to let his children run wild like that and do nothing about it, taking no responsibility at all. It was easy to see that everyone else on the subway felt irritated, too. So finally, with what I felt like was unusual patience and restraint, I turned to him and said, “Sir, your children are really disturbing a lot of people. I wonder if you couldn’t control them a little more?”

The man lifted his gaze as if to come to a consciousness of the situation for the first time and said softly, “Oh, you’re right. I guess I should do something about it. We just came from the hospital where their mother died about an hour ago. I don’t know what do think, and I guess they don’t know who to handle it either.”

Can you imagine what I felt at that moment? My paradigm shifted. Suddenly I saw things differently, and because I saw differently, I thought differently, I felt differently, I behaved differently. My irritation vanished. I didn’t have to worry about controlling my attitude or my behavior; my heart was filled with the man’s pain. Feelings of sympathy and compassion flowed freely. “Your wife just died? Oh I’m so sorry! Can you tell me about it? What can I do to help?” Everything changed in an instant.”  – FLORA SAGA

Powerful!

We had a similar powerful paradigm shift yesterday after watching the following video.

Self-discovery, folks.  Today’s pols, though not all of them, have little interest in healing and uniting our divided nation but have rather perfected and mastered the art of exploiting the anger and rage, which divides the body politic, for their own personal gain and political power.

Our Friends

We are so thankful to CF and Matthew Dowd – both, true saints, in our book – for helping us along in becoming more empathetic for and understanding of others during these very difficult days.  Our country, and the world, for that matter, could use a little lot more empathy.

Posted in Coronavirus, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 5 Comments

QOTD: Walt Whitman

QOTD: Quote of the Day

Happiness, not in another
place but this place…
not for another hour
but this hour – Walt Whitman,
“A Song for Occupations,” Leaves of Grass

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Battle OF The Fibos & The Negative Yield Wall

Fibonacci retracement levels are horizontal lines that indicate where support and resistance are likely to occur. They are based on Fibonacci numbers. Each level is associated with a percentage. The percentage is how much of a prior move the price has retraced. The Fibonacci retracement levels are 23.6%, 38.2%, 61.8%, and 78.6%. While not officially a Fibonacci ratio, 50% is also used. – Investopedia

Traders and ‘bots are clearly in control of this market.

We are fairly convicted the 50% Fibo won’t hold, which sets up a quick move to 50-day moving average at 2721-ish.


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Source: Carl Quintinalla

Be careful out there, folks, the shorts have been destroyed in the big bounce off the March 23rd bottom and there is very little holding up this market now x/ hope, delusion, and the specter of more financial asset shortages, in our opinion.

Bonds

Moreover, there is little room in yields for bonds to now be used as a stock market hedge or short proxy.

Though it’s possible the trading momo boyz & ‘bots may believe Jerome Powell will take them out of their longs at -2.0 percent, we have our doubts as it will create a real problem for the Fed and Treasury.

It’s [negative interest rates] an unsettled area. I know that there are fans of the policy, but for now, it’s not something we’re considering. We think we have a good toolkit, and that’s the one we’ll be using.” – Chairman Powell, May 13th

Though the Chairman was likely referring to only policy interest rates, it is not clear that if traders pushed U.S. notes and bond yields into negative territory the Fed would be there to buy as part of their QE program.  If they do, imagine the shit show this would cause with the monthly Treasury auctions.

Treasuries are not German bunds and have polar opposite supply technicals.  The former with “trillions upon trillions” of new issuance coming and the latter as scarce as hand sanitizer and a 2020 Yankee game, the result of perennial budget surpluses, making the border crossing into the negative yielding promised land a cakewalk.  Not so for Treasuries, however, as massive deficit financing has erected a border wall at zero percent that only President Trump can fantasize about.

It’s not that hard to issue a few billion euros of negative yielding German bunds but super-sized billion dollar Treasury auctions with negative yields?  Forget about it.

Are Long-Term Fundamental Bond Investors Extinct?

How could any fundamental real money fiduciary responsibly purchase an asset that is guaranteed to lose money if held to maturity?  Maybe long-term bond investors have gone the way of the Pterodactyl.  It’s pretty safe to say the 40-year jig in bonds is over. 

We suspect the momo boyz and ‘bots don’t have the firepower to climb the wall into negative yielding territory but if the Fed is taking down most or all of the new issuance and then some, you just never no.  Stunning, at least to us, how some bond bulls have no clue about this as they take their pyrrhic victory laps on Twitter.

Do the ‘bots and momentum boyz have this context and understand what is at stake?  More important, do the policymakers? 

What. An. Absolute. Fricikin’ Mess.

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Here’s to hoping and let us pray money demand in the U.S. remains infinitely elastic as our policy morph into MMT depends on it. Good luck with that.

As always, we reserve the right to be wrong.

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QOTD: Stan Druckenmiller All Beared Up

QOTD: Quote of the Day

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Hedge fund legend, Stanley Druckenmiller, is all beared up saying the risk-reward for equities is the worst he’s seen in his career, and he has been around the block more than a few times.  He does like Amazon, however, saying people should be thankful that the company exists right now given the number of jobs created.

In the future, [Druckenmiller] said he wouldn’t be surprised if the Trump administration’s response to the coronavirus outbreak becomes the “poster child for the worst public policy decisions ever made from a cost-benefit analysis.” – Bloomberg

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GDP Now Q2 Estimate At -34.90 Percent, So What Now?

Summary

  • The Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now is estimating a -34.9 percent Q2 GDP print, which is 3.5x the largest quarterly decline in the post-WWII economy
  • If realized, the 11.3 percent non annualized first-half GDP collapse in 2020 will approach the worse year of the Great Depression, when in 1932, the economy shrank 13.1 percent for the entire year  
  • We are not paying much attention to these numbers as they reflect an economy that has been closed for two months, which should experience a relatively sharp snapback in Q3, with unemployment most likely peaking this month
  • Nonetheless, the pandemic and economic lockdown will do long-term structural damage to the economy
  • The rapid growth of the monetary aggregates alleviates much of the deflationary forces in the economy in the short-term and we perceive inflation a much bigger risk over the medium-term
  • If the GDP Now estimate holds, and even if GDP prints a record annualized 27.6 percent number in Q3, real output will still be 7 percent below the Q4 2019 level with unemployment remaining close to low double digits
  • We suspect the recovery will come too late and not be enough to save President Trump and the Republicans though the White House will tout it as “the greatest economic recovery in the history of the world“
  • Investors and companies should plan for higher capital gains and corporate taxes
  • Check out the astonishing performance of our stock picker’s large-cap portfolio, which is trouncing the S&P500 this year

Since the COVID crisis hit America, many businesses are operating at limited capacity while others have ceased operations completely.  The unprecedented aggregate supply and demand shock to the U.S. economy has resulted in horrific economic data, including the 20.5 in nonfarm payroll jobs lost in April and the unemployment rates shooting up over 14 percent.

BLS_1

The data released Friday also caused the Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now model to lower its Q2 GDP estimate to a stunning annualized -34.9 percent, which puts it at the lower end of the range of Blue Chip forecasts.  The GDP Now Q2 estimate will certainly change as new economic data is released over the next few months.

GDP_Now_Title

Atlanta FRB

GDP_Now

Context

It is important to keep the data in context.  The economy has been slammed shut for two months and is just starting to slowly reopen.   The data surely does not reflect the prospects for the economy over the next 12 months unless a second and more virulent wave of COVID-19 breaks out, which is not a zero probability, by the way.

Still, if Q2 GDP does come in at the annualized -34.9 percent, it would represent a quarterly collapse 3.5x the next largest decline of 10.0 percent during the Eisenhower recession in Q1 1958.  Even more stunning, the non annualized first-half 11.3 percent GDP collapse in 2020 would approach the worst year of the Great Depression when GDP fell 13.1 percent for the entire year during a period of mass bank failures.

GDP_Now_2

Depression Data But Depression Not The Base Case

We all can take a little consolation and hope, at least for now, that though we are witnessing economic data plumbing the depths of the Great Depression, the data will improve as the economy slowly reopens.  It is uncertain how much structural damage the pandemic and the temporary lockdown has done to the economy but it will be significant.

There is also very little doubt it will take some time for the economy to recover.  How long is anyone’s guess?

The table above illustrates for U.S. GDP to recover its Q4’19 level by Q3 (assuming the Q2 GDP Now estimate holds),  growth will have to snap back by an annualized 61.3 percent next quarter.   To recover real output fully by the end of the year,  GDP growth will have to average an annualized 27 percent in Q3 and Q4.

We. Don’t. Think. So.

Recovery During The Great Depression

Depression

During the Great Depression, the economy didn’t recover its 1929 real output level until 1936.

Depression_2

Furthermore, because of the virulent deflationary forces that took hold during the Depression, the result of the 25-30 percent contraction in the monetary aggregates, caused by the massive bank failures from 1931-33, nominal GDP did not recover its 1929 level until 1941.  From 1929 to 1933,  demand deposits, which made up over 85 percent of narrow money in 1929, fell by 35 percent.  The Fed failed big-time in its role as lender of last resort.

That’s not the problem today as illustrated in the following charts of the compounded rate of change in M1 and M2.  The U.S. central bank has painted itself into a corner as markets and the economy cannot survive without ever increasing doses of free and easy money.

While many fret over temporary deflationary pressures, some of which are just relative price changes as the economy begins to adjust to the post-COVID new normal,  we fear more about a coming wave of big inflation over the medium-term, which absolutely nobody is prepared.

Lord have mercy on bond investors.

M1 Money Stock Compounded Rate Of Change

M1

M2 Money Stock Compounded Rate Of Change

M2

Go Stonks

A macro argument has and can be made when the monetary aggregates are growing faster than nominal GDP the differential provides the liquidity and rocket fuel for the stock market.  Just throwin’ it out there and if traders believe it is true it effectively becomes a self fulfilling feedback loop. 

Q3 Economic Snapper Is Coming

We suspect the economy has already troughed and the employment data will bottom in May allowing GDP to realize a fairly sharp snapback in Q3, which will most likely exceed the 3.9 percent largest Q/Q GDP increase in the post-WWII period, realized in Q1 1950.    There is no doubt the Trump administration will sell it as “the greatest economic recovery in history” and tout the huge annualized GDP growth number.

White House Cheerleaders Preparing The Pom-Poms

If the economy can muster, say, a 5.0 percent Q/Q growth rate in the third quarter, which may be a push but not totally unreasonable that translates into a 27.6 percent growth headline number, far exceeding the Q1 1950 16.7 percent annualized growth rate.  Don’t you think the White House is preparing the pom-poms for such a rebound and cranking up the Tweet machine?   We suspect this will be the central focus of the President’s campaign strategy.

Even so, U.S. real output will still be down 6.8 percent from its 2019 closing high and unemployment will most likely be in low double digits.  Can Trump be re-elected with those numbers?

November Election

The body politic may give another POTUS, who is more empathetic, honest, more decisive, and popular the benefit of the doubt but that is not who Donald Trump is.

Based on our analysis, not our political bias,  our central case, assuming a fair election, is the Democrats are going to take the White House, Senate, and House by wider than expected margins in November.

Recall our post in early April,  Prepare For The Senate To Flip, when we were a lone voice crying in the wilderness.  We were also putting our money where our analysis is,

We look at the individual Senate races and can’t understand why PredictIt is still pricing the Republicans to remain in control of the Senate with a 61 percent probability.  

…We have our money where our analysis is, betting on a Blue Senate, and if we are right, we are looking at a 439.11 percent compounded annual return (CAAG) by election day.  Beat that in the stonk market, folks. — GMM, April 13

The market is now even money and marching north that the Democrats will take the Senate. We are up 28 percent in 28 days, and now everyone and their mother on Mothers Day is talking about how the Upper Chamber is now in play.   We do realize 175 days to election day is an eternity in politics and much can change but we are sensing a wave election is building.

Investors and businesses should plan accordingly, including for higher corporate and capital gains taxes, which are the low hanging fruit.  More regulation of the financial markets and industry will almost certainly be on the docket.

The markets are still obsessing over “flattening the curve” and the first-order existential effects of the pandemic.  This crisis has n dimensions, however, including state and local government budget crises, a coming tsunami of bankruptcies, and an emerging market debt crises. There is also now increased uncertainty over private property rights, an existential crisis for the Euro currency and European Union,  doubts that small business can survive, especially independent restaurants, and there are many other concerns.

Still a buyer of stocks?

Upshot 

There you have it, folks.  Our thoughts and best guesses.  We are all in the guessing game these days and remain at the mercy of whatever trajectory the pandemic decides to take, which will largely be determined by the efficacy of U.S. health policy, or lack thereof.

As always we reserve the right to be wrong.

GMM Has Some Positive News

We have some potential good news on the ex-Morgan Stanley stock picker we wrote about last month.  We had a chance to analyze her portfolio of 35 large-cap stocks this weekend, looking at the returns for the year and the critical dates of the Feb 19th market high and March 23rd recent low.

Nothing short of astonishing and not tech stocks, by the way.  Check this out.

GMM_Port

We are negotiating on how to bring her in and monetizing her work, which will help you and I make some money.   We are global macro 24/7 and its nice to have a very smart and savvy stock picker around.  Stay tuned for that.

Posted in Black Swan Watch, Coronavirus, Economics, Uncategorized | Tagged | 17 Comments

Curve Flatteners

The term “flattening the curve” now means so many things too so many people. Very Churchillian, no?   We maintain what we should be looking for are inversions ala New Zealand and Korea.

 

 

 

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Average Hourly Earnings Up 4.7 Percent In One Month?

Not!  The deception of averaging as most jobs that were lost are in the lower wage sectors, such as bars and restaurants.

We have written several posts about how deceptive economic data can be simply because of averaging.  See here and here.

In April, average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls increased by $1.34 to $30.01. Average hourly earnings of private-sector production and nonsupervisory employees increased by $1.04 to $25.12 in April. The increases in average hourly earnings largely reflect the substantial job loss among lower-paid workers; this change, along with earnings increases, put upward pressure on the average hourly earnings estimates. (See tables B-3 and B-8.) – BLS

Stay tuned for more analysis on the Employment Report.

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Bad Look Of High Stock Prices & High Unemployment

In a few hours, the BLS will release the employment situation for April, which will illustrate the devastation the COVID crisis has inflicted on the U.S. labor market.  Since the crisis began 30 million plus American workers have filed for unemployment insurance, which is about 20 percent of the 150 million workforce.

Not all 30 million will show up in this morning’s number due to lags in how the data is gathered.  We expect the unemployment rate will probably peak in the May report and gradually begin to recover.  All bets off if the country is hit with a second wave of COVID infections and deaths.

Today’s Unemployment Rate Reflects A Closed Economy

Though we are very empathetic to those who have lost their jobs, we are also cognizant that many of the 30 million unemployed will return to work once the economic reopening accelerates and what really matters is how much long-term damage has been done to the economy and American labor force.  Nobody knows for certain as we are all engaged in a guessing game, which will probably be the case until the economic fog begins to burn off in the fall.

There will likely be an initial burst of economic activity due to a huge pent-up demand as America opens for business but the long-term reality will be determined by how much damage and hysteresis the lock-down has inflicted. 

Hysteresis in the field of economics refers to an event in the economy that persists into the future, even after the factors that led to that event have been removed. – Investopedia

Stocks seem to be expecting a fairly rapid return to normal as the S&P is only a little over less than 10 percent from it’s all-time high.   We are not so sanguine and our priors are the unemployment rate will linger in the low double-digit range for sometime.  

A high stock market and double-digit unemployment is not a good look going into the November presidential election, especially for President Trump, who derives much of his support from his populist and anti-elitist rhetoric.

Top 10 Percent Of Households Own 88 Percent Of Stock Wealth

The elites, or let’s say the Top 10 percent of households, for example, own 88 percent of stock market wealth.  See our post,  Why The Stock Bull Is A Big Meh For Most Americans.

And a stock market clinging close to its highs with an unemployment rate that has nearly tripled will reopen the wounds of the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) that the “fat cats” were once again bailed out at the expense of Main Street.

The same toxic politics – but this time on steroids – which helped Trump get elected in 2016.

This is the second time we’ve bailed their asses out,” grumbled Joe Biden, the Democratic presidential candidate, last month. The battle over who pays for the fiscal burdens of the pandemic is just beginning. On the present trajectory, a backlash against big business is likely…

The most overlooked risk is of a political backlash. The slump will hurt smaller firms and leave the bigger corporate survivors in a stronger position, increasing the concentration of some industries that was already a problem before the pandemic. A crisis demands sacrifice and will leave behind a big bill. The clamour for payback will only grow louder if big business has hogged more than its share of the subsidies on offer. It is easy to imagine windfall taxes on bailed-out industries, or a sharp reversal of the steady drop in the statutory federal corporate-tax rate, which fell to 21% in 2017 after President Donald Trump’s tax reforms, from a long-term average of well over 30%. Some Democrats want to limit mergers and stop firms returning cash to their owners. –The Economist

Moreover, a narrative is beginning to take shape that the Trump administration and his Republicans are more of a Trojan Horse for the 1 percent and Greenwich set.  That is, tax cuts for the wealthy and large corporations while cutting social services and healthcare for the middle class and pumping up and bailing out stocks at the expense of Main Street, where the top 10 percent directly hold almost 90 percent of total stock wealth while the bottom 90 percent have only a little over 10 percent.

At the same time, the Trump administration presents itself as sort of a dysfunctional Honey Boo Boo reality show to entertain its base.  Though what some may perceive as a nice circus act but not quite exactly the savior of the working and middle class that many voted for.

Finally, today’s cover of The Economist pretty much nails it and also frets how divorced financial markets are from the current and coming economic reality.

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TOTD: Six Feet Or Six Feet Under Social Distancing

TOTD: ‘Toon of the Day

Fairly safe bet this cemetery ain’t in ‘Frisco.

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QOTD: Paul Tudor Jones

QOTD: Quote of the Day

Intellectual capital will always trump financial capital – Paul Tudor Jones

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