Long Pitchforks And Water Cannons

The juxtaposition of the following two tweets is absolutely stunning and just freaking… WOW!

Potential Major Political Blowback 

Can you imagine the political blowback that is coming if the economy doesn’t snap back soon as the levered bad actor oil companies (just to name one sector)  have been bailed out while the Administration is still trying to kill Obamacare and even tried to cut food stamps to the poor earlier this year?

Nothing partisan here, we are just extrapolating the consequences and political analysis of the GFC to the current crisis.  Think about it, last week Main Street registered another 6 million-plus hit in lost jobs and junk bond investors got bailed out of their risky and dumb-ass bets.

Op-Ed: Get ready for the recovery of the 1%

There were two important economic events on Thursday. The government reported that 6.6 million Americans filed for unemployment, an all-time record. And the Federal Reserve announced a new program to flood the economy and financial markets with $2.3 trillion in liquidity — including buying up junk bonds from debt-laden companies.

Which one moved the market? The Fed move, driving the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 500 points by midday.

The market jump, unemployment surge and Fed rescue efforts all converged to form a new split in the economy, between the asset-rich and the rest of America.  — CNBC

Also, seeing a lot of the privileged Bailout Queens on Twitterati taking victory laps thinking they’re geniuses — and some even grotesquely posting pictures of their steak and lobster dinners like anybody gives a shit — after the Fed has saved their bacon for the umpteenth time.  Yet they have no clue of the consequences of what may be about to come. Must be the ultimate contrarian signal.

For some reason, the Bailout Queens are now mocking the bears saying they are angry about the bailouts and calling them “liquidationists,” probably as a vague reference to Andrew Mellon, President Hoover’s Secretary of Treasury when the Great Depression first broke out,

“Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate.” That, according to Herbert Hoover, was the advice he received from Andrew Mellon, the Treasury secretary, as America plunged into depression. — NY Times 

They have no clue of the anger that is about to besiege the political system.  Heads are gonna roll and we doubt it will be the W.H.O. or the Chinese as some are trying to deflect to and scapegoat.

Moi?

We are bearish, angry and would  like to see the pain more evenly shared this time with many more economic and Chapter 11 restructurings, which are not liquidations x/ shareholders, by the way.  Otherwise, we risk losing an entire generation to stagflation and a highly indebted zombie economy, and that is if we are lucky.

If this is the case, what will really irk us, beside seeing the poor getting poorer, is to watch the Bail Out Queens continue to take their victory laps, still thinking they’re geniuses surfing the Fed liquidity, and still posting their god damn steak and lobster dinners on Instagram.  Yuck, gonna hurl just thinking about it.

Why do think there was such a ginormous political shock in 2016?  Much of it was because none of the banksters, who were a big portion of the nefarious group of actors that caused the Great Financial Crisis (GFC),  were never criminally prosecuted.  No, Virginia, it wasn’t just Lehman Brothers.

Cash And Gold

Even Arnold would love our gold and cash barbell position as we wait patiently on the virtual Venice Beach.  We have zero desire to own the stock market at these astronomical valuations, 130-140 percent of GDP, which probably puts it in the 90th percentile valuation rank (back to you with confirmation) even during talk of another potential Great Depression.

With the unemployment trajectory approaching that of the Great Depression at 25 percent, albeit temporary,  should stocks be trading at such valuations?  Have we slipped into some alternative universe or did we miss something?

Back To The Thirties

It is interesting stocks are experiencing daily moves not seen since 1933, when FDR came to power and the Dow returned its best year ever.  It was a big bounce after an approximately 80 percent flop from the September 1929 high.  President Roosevelt had a lot of runway to work with back then as the national debt was low, the federal government and financial regulations, for that matter, including deposit insurance were virtually nonexistent.

The monetary authorities were also learning some very painful lesson by not providing liquidity to financial institutions during the runs and panics allowing banks, even the strong ones to fail.  Milton Friedman estimated the money supply shrank 25 percent due to the bank failures and was the main cause of the Great Depression (again, we need to confirm the data as we are writing on an iPad and away from the desk).

FDR’s policies were able to bring unemployment down to about 15 percent.  It didn’t eliminate the Depression but moving from 25 percent to 15 percent alleviated a hell of a lot pain and suffering.   Next time you hear an ideologue call FDR a “socialist,” do us a favor and tell them to stick it where the sun don’t shine.   Roosevelt saved capitalism.

Get Shorty?

Not yet.  The temptation to short now is very high but don’t count out a ghoulish rally as the idjits count it a victory if the final death count comes in at, say 70K instead of the 100-240k estimate, which was very likely fake in order to manipulate and lower the bar.

The experts said they don’t challenge the numbers’ validity but that they don’t know how the White House arrived at them.

White House officials have refused to explain how they generated the figure — a death toll bigger than the United States suffered in the Vietnam War or the 9/11 terrorist attacks. They have not provided the underlying data so others can assess its reliability or provided long-term strategies to lower that death count. – WashPost

Think as in “a final China trade deal is within days.”  Pretty frickin’ sick.

Nevertheless, we hope and pray for not one more COVID casualty.

The flattening of the curve or whatever the market deems as turning the corner on the first order existential threat, i.e, death,  is just the end of the beginning of the crisis.

We do give the the Fed credit for not letting the Titanic sink, at least not yet,  but there are so many other dimensions to this crisis, 2nd, 3rd, even 7th order and more effects.  It’s  just mind boggling.  The Fed and Congress is going to have to rethink the central bank’s mandate.

Ex Ante Structural Weakness 

Contrary to the delusions of some,  we would be in a much stronger position to snap back if the economy was structurally sound before the virus took it out.  Take a look at those bread lines if you disagree and think it was the best economy in history pre-COVID.

That’s a red state, folks.

https://twitter.com/michaeljburry/status/1249011128979480576?s=21

How many people sitting in those cars do you think own stonks?

Hint: Our last analysis estimated 88 percent of public equites are owned by the wealthiest 10 percent of households.

Our bet is they could give a rat’s ass where the Dow closed on Thursday and care about one thing:  how they are going to feed their kids, last night, today, and tomorrow.

‘We just can’t feed this many’

Vehicles start lining up before dawn as locals hit hard by economic effects of coronavirus seek aid from the San Antonio Food Bank.

April 9, 2020

In perhaps the most sobering reminder yet of the economic fallout caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the San Antonio Food Bank aided about 10,000 households Thursday in a record-setting giveaway at a South Side flea market.

“It was a rough one today,” said Food Bank president and CEO Eric Cooper after the largest single-day distribution in the nonprofit’s 40-year history. “We have never executed on as large of a demand as we are now. — San Antonio Express-News

As always, we reserve the right to be wrong.

Happy Easter, folks!

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Chapter 11 Restructuring v. Chapter 13 Liquidation

Know thy difference folks, lest the semantic tyrants trick you into bailing out the bad actors.  GM went through a Chapter 11 restructuring or failure but was deemed to be bailed out.  My kind of bailouts.

What Is Chapter 11?

Chapter 11 is a form of bankruptcy that involves a reorganization of a debtor’s business affairs, debts, and assets. Named after the U.S. bankruptcy code 11, corporations generally file Chapter 11 if they require time to restructure their debts. This version of bankruptcy gives the debtor a fresh start. However, the terms are subject to the debtor’s fulfillment of his obligations under the plan of reorganization. – Investopedia

What is Chapter 13

Chapter 13 refers to a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding in which the debtor undertakes a reorganization of his or her finances under the supervision and approval of the courts. When an individual, married couple or business is laden by debt, they can file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy. As part of the financial reorganization of Chapter 13, the debtor must submit and follow through with a plan to repay outstanding creditors within three to five years. In most circumstances, the repayment plan must provide a substantial payback to creditors – at least equal to what they would receive under other forms of bankruptcy – and it must, if needed, use 100% of the debtor’s income for repayment.  – Investopedia

 

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Wall Street Has Now Morphed Into A Full Blown Soviet Sausage Factory

To paraphrase the police officer who told me my old neighborhood had burned down during the 2017 NorCal fires,  “the markets are no more.”

After the Fed announced it is bailing out junk bonds today,  Wall Street has now morphed into a full-blown  “Soviet Sausage Factory.

Jay Powell probably had no choice and needed to blunt the blow of another 6 million-plus print of new unemployment claims but isn’t Socialism and state intervention dandy?

We can understand providing support to local and state municipalities,  now strapped with severe cash flow problems as their tax revenues have gone to near zero,  but junk?

Employment

You know, like many of the same companies that levered up to buy back shares while shitting all over their employees or, say, the wildcat and shale-oil drillers?   Even Jed Clampett and Ellie May understood Texas Tea is risky business.  Come on, man.

Chapter 11 and debt restructurings are not only the right thing to do but the only thing to do lest we lose an entire generation to stagflation and a zombie economy.  That’s probably the best case unless the economy miraculously snaps back, which assumes the economy was structurally sound before the virus took it out.   We seriously doubt that.

Here’s to hoping the bailouts are just a bridge to a major economic restructuring with the long-needed structural reforms.

Waste Of Time

There’s no sense in wasting time analyzing the markets anymore.

We will sit on cash and gold, hope and pray the virus soon passes, and try and tune out this shit show until the major political dislocation that is surely coming on the other side.

“No One Will Fail”

Just heard a trader on CNBC say, “no one will be allowed to fail…earnings don’t matter…nothing matters.”  Oh. My. God!

Wasn’t it just a few months ago the government was going after the young who were falling behind in their student loan payments?

Example: Judy has weekly disposable pay of $300. Based on the minimum wage calculation, she definitely gets to keep $217.50. The government can then take the lesser of the amount his income exceeds $217.50 ($300 – $217.50 = $82.50) or 15% of his income (15% of $300= $45.00). Since $45.00 is less than $82.50, this is the amount the government can take each week from Judy’s wages. – SLBA

Gosplan Setting Prices Now

Most asset prices are no longer determined by market forces — which has been the case for many for some time — but now set by our new Gosplan along with the local Commissar of Free Money, just like the price of eggs way back in the USSR.

I never ever wanna hear from the self-righteous, ignorant ideologues parading as economists again,

“Free market capitalism is the best path to prosperity to Socialism….blah, fucking blah.”

How twisted and sick is our society that the grocery clerks making $12-15 per hour working on the frontline, risking their lives and getting sick to feed us and the 10 percent now profiting from these government bailouts (88 percent of stocks are owned by the Top 10 percent)?

But, wait for it…their thousand dollar check is in the mail.

Come on, folks, give these people a big, as in Bengie big or a large fraction thereof, tip the next time you’re out.  I have no doubt many of you already do and will continue until this plague passes.

Wall Street_USSR

A note from a Bernie Bro,

“In 2016, they told me if I voted for Bernie, the nation would move closer to authoratarianism,  managed trade, MMT, and socialism.  I voted for Bernie and man were they right.”  – Bernie Bro

Happy Maundy Thursday and Pesach.  Stay safe, folks.

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Global Patent Race

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Classic Bear Market Bounce

Big move today in stocks with the S&P500 closing up 7.03 percent.  We are so glad we are out of the market.

We believe stocks are now in phase two of a vicious bear market, where after the initial sharp sell-off, the major indices retrace close to 50 percent of their initial down move.  See the chart below, which illustrates how the Nikkei recovered almost 50 percent of its first big move lower before rolling over again.

The market appears to be reacting to better news on the case and death curves but it is much too early to sound the all-clear.   Italy and Spain have been turning down over the past week (see chart below) so we are a bit perplexed by those touting the market move was a reflection of the green shoots coming out of Europe.

The New York numbers also a little better than expected, thank God.

Hopium is a difficult addiction for markets to kick and it very is clear there is still a ton of it out there.

Four Stages

In early March we wrote about the stages of a pandemic in our post,  Stages Of A Pandemic: Denial, Panic, Fear, and Rationality, moving from denial, fear, and then rationality.   Though we remain in the fear stage, there are signs rationality is starting to take hold but strictly with respect to the existential phase of the pandemic.

Now The Economics

We are still a long way off in restarting the economy and to a full economic and financial recovery.  There is still an awful lot of denial in this respect.

The table lists some key near-term levels, which we will let you ponder.

 

S&P500_2

S&P500

S&P500_3

 

S&P500_4

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Is This The Newest & Hottest Leading Economic Indicator?

Is this a sign of spiking consumer confidence or just a signal of a less shitty week to come?

The futures markets seem to like it butt you decide.   You think the Masters of the Universe and the Algos are going to use toilet paper returns as a source of alternative data to signal a economic inflection point and get all lathered up in spooz only to get wiped out?  Just ask in.’

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It’s Truly Going To Be Different This Time

97DA6509-8E1F-4D44-9923-8B385D0DB6EA
Can’t you just feel the political winds blowing as exemplified in this bloke’s timeless rant and with my grandmother’s brogue
 (Flynn of County Cork, btw)?

Trump was has been just a Trojan Horse for the 0.1 percenters as a check to this kind of populism but don’t mention that to his base. 

Wealth taxes they are a comin’ 

Trying to get long some Bellota for the coming new political reality.

Irish wasn’t real happy the
King of The Riverdance and Celtic Tiger Live was from Chicago’s South Side — a White Sox fan? — was he?

You think Dictionary.com is going to add “Wankin’-fuckin’-bankers’ to its lexicon anytime soon?

Well, maybe Urban Dictionary.

 

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The Necessary Condition For Economic & Financial Recovery

Futures up 700 points on a lot happy talk out POTUS presser this afternoon even though the Surgeon General stated earlier on the Sunday talk shows we are heading into Pearl Harbor.  The futures spike is the gift that keeps on giving to sell and get out of trapped positions.  Spank you!

Absolutely no recovery until the following questions are answered.

https://twitter.com/andylassner/status/1246866966905675776?s=21

 

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QOTD: Will Rogers

QOTD = Quote of the Day

In this country people don’t vote for, they vote against. – Will Rodgers

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Exponential Growth 201

Here is a another lesson on exponential growth and a warning to states who are lulled into complacency with their relative low case rates.


Beyond the bad coronavirus numbers lie the good ones.
They’re every bit as powerful.

A math teacher once shared the parable of the clever peasant girl and the single grain of rice. The child asked the king to give her a speck of rice as a reward for a good deed, and to double the reward each day for a month. At the end of a week, the girl looked quite foolish, for she had barely a few mouthfuls of rice, despite the favor of the king.

She was hungry, but patient. Her exponential engine kept chugging away, rice to the second power, as 64 grains became 128, and 256, and 512. By the 11th day, one grain of rice had become more than 1,000. On the last day of the month, a cavalry of royal elephants was needed to carry a mountain of rice to the girl.

I think of that lesson each morning when I log on to my computer or click the TV remote. The world is filling with covid-19 patients like grains of feverish rice. When March began, there weren’t 20,000 known patients in the whole world beyond China. This morning, I learned that 20,000 new cases were identified in the past day in the United States alone.

Most of us hear about the girl with a single grain of rice clutched in her palm and we react like the king. “It’s going to be just fine,” said the king — er, the president — when the United States’ first covid-19 case presented in January. And a few days later: “We have very little problem in this country.” And March 5 on Twitter: “Only 129 cases.”

But some people learn of the deal struck by the peasant girl and immediately flash forward to the inevitable phalanx of rice-toting elephants. For them, the single grain foretells the mountain; they have the makings of epidemiologists. They are the Anthony Faucis and the Deborah Birxes, the A students in the front row of the administration whose mathematical insights are worth listening to because they are relentlessly correct, no matter what the spitballers in the back of the room might say…

…This math will give us a vaccine or cure, as sure as the doubling of those rice grains. The solution is coming — though not by the end of April or even Labor Day. We the people are the bridge from bad math to good. If we stay strong now, when the arithmetic is so fearsomely hostile, we’ll be rewarded as the calculus swings in our favor. As surely it will, because numbers don’t lie. — David Von Drehle, Washington Post

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