Why Smart Money Use Bonds As A Stock Short Proxy

Today is a classic example of why smart money buy bonds as a proxy for shorting stocks.  Bear market bounces, such as today’s, are much too violent and can, including for many today, be fatal.

Here is a post about Stan Druckenmiller’s strategy right around the 2018 Nightmare Before Christmas Bear Market,

If you listened to the Druckenmiller interview we posted on New Year’s Day,  he thrives in bear markets, not by shorting stocks but being long bonds.  Shorting stocks in a bear market, though more profitable,  he has learned is riskier due to the higher propensity for nutcracking short squeezes.  Druck also worries about the level he is buying at.  – GMM,  Jan 2, 2019

Our Twitter feed was full of stories about traders who shorted S&P futures at the Globex open last night blowing up just a few hours later.   If you shorted Spooz at the open last night, for example,  you lost 5.74 percent by the close.  A long T-Bond position would have lost you 0.64 percent.  Of course,  what matters is your relative position size and the extra leverage you take on with the bond trade versus the stock short.

S&P_Mar2_5

Key Levels

The Dow had its biggest one day gain today (see tables below) with the S&P recapturing the 200-day moving average.   A very interesting low in this correction at 2855.84, right at the October low and launch point for the Fed’s No QE ramp.   That is the level the bears will now be gunning for.    Pay attention.

At the end of the day,  the central banks are fundamentally irrelevant in this crisis, in our opinion,  and we really won’t get a handle until the Feds start testing en masse for the coronavirus.  Note we said “fundamentally,” folks, not technically.  Spare the hate mail.

The low COVID-19 count in the U.S. is largely the result of not testing, i.e.,  “Don’t Test, Don’t Tell.”

In the United States, tests have taken place at a far slower pace. A genetic analysis suggested that the coronavirus, which causes a highly infectious respiratory disease called covid-19, has been spreading undetected for about six weeks in Washington state. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Saturday took steps to sharply expand testing.  – Wash Post

Wait, there’s more if you want to be outraged,

South Korea had tested a total of 66,652 people for the COVID-19 coronavirus virus as of 4 p.m. local time Thursday, whereas Japan had reported administering roughly 1,890 tests and the U.S. only 445. The huge discrepancy compared to other countries reflects how quickly South Korea’s numbers have been rising, experts say.  – ABC

 

S&P_Mar2

 

S&P_Mar2_2

Valuation As Our Gas Gauge

So, after the 15 percent crash from the February 19th high to February 28th low,  the S&P is still down 9 percent.

Are we buyers?   Check out the black line on the chart below, which shows valuations still at extreme historical valuations.    We saw one comparison of today’s price action to March 2009.   No, no, no.  Not much gas left in the tank.

Yours, baby.

S&P_Mar2_3

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China’s Manufacturing PMI Falls To 35.7 From 50.0, Services To 29.6

China_PMI

Those are some ugly numbers, folks, and as a matter of fact, the lowest on record.  Not totally unexpected but much worse than anticipated.  The February print came in much lower than the median forecast of 43 by economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal.

China’s official manufacturing PMI dropped to 38.8 in November 2008 at the start of the global financial crisis.  The composite PMI, which combines the manufacturing and services indices, dropped to 28.9 from 53.0 in January

The export order sub-index dropped to 28.7 from 48.7 in January, while imports fell to 31.9 from 49.0. The sub-index for manufacturing production nosedived to 27.8 in February from January’s 51.3, while the reading for new orders plunged to 29.3, down from 51.4 a month earlier.

The low employment sub-index illustrates the difficulty of finding and recruiting labor, while the high input price sub-index pointed to higher costs for manufacturers due to disrupted logistics and supply chains.

Foxconn’s biggest iPhone plant has struggled to return to full production because of housing problems for workers in need of quarantine. Foxconn and other manufacturers often house workers on-site in large dormitories.

Separately, Taiwan on Saturday reported a cluster of infections in a hospital, the most significant instance of local spread of the disease since the epidemic began. The infections brought Taiwan’s count of confirmed cases to 39. – FT

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Coronavirus, You’re On Your Own

Say what you will about Chris but he has nailed the coronavirus from the beginning.

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Are We Cheap Yet?

One helluva weak week for the stock market.  Three of the five largest Dow point flops in history.  Yes, we have already been lectured like a little schoolboy by the Twitterati geniuses “it is the percentage drops that count.”  No shit.

Cheap?  You gotta be fricking kidding me.  Not even close.  Look at our favorite valuation metric — market cap-to-GDP.     But, interest rates are going to zero, yada, yada, yada!   That is not exactly a positive, in our opinion.

Oversold?  Yes, and the S&P finally carved out a daily green candlestick,  to close higher than its opening trade.

Staying on the beach.

Market Cap

Note the above chart is a ratio of the total stock market capitalization to nominal gross domestic product (GDP) and cannot continue to move higher forever.  It gyrates from an upper limit of extreme overvaluation to the lower limit of extreme undervaluation.

You decide where we are at.

Dow_Flops_28

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Triple Yikes!

Especially 50 seconds in.

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Efficient Markets

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Just As The Doctor Ordered

Don’t think its over, however….

https://twitter.com/NorthmanTrader/status/1232939910014869505?s=20

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S&P’s Beastly Streak: Five Consecutive Red Candlesticks

Five Red Candles

Extremely ugly price action today with the S&P reversing a 54.30 point gain to close down 11.82 points, carving out a 5th consecutive red daily candlestick.

Such an ungodly losing streak is relatively rare and has not happened since the 2018 nightmare before Christmas bear market — yes, don’t let the idjits mislead you, Q4 ’18 was a bear market from its September intraday high to the Boxing Day intraday low (-20.21 percent).

Red candlesticks are usually associated with bear market action.  The market closes lower than its opening trade.  The opposite price action is true in bull markets.

As we write, S&P futures are down 40 points, right at the key December low price of 3070.30, a must hold, by the way,

“If that December low is taken out to the downside in the first quarter of the new year, watch out.”  – Jeff Saut,  CNBC

No Confidence In Global Leadership

The markets don’t seem to have much confidence in the world’s leaders to contain the coronavirus and/or manage the public’s confidence.  This is especially true after the Trump administration,

In 2018, … fired the government’s entire pandemic response chain of command, including the White House management infrastructure. In numerous phone calls and emails with key agencies across the U.S. government, the only consistent response I encountered was distressed confusion.  —Foreign Policy

The markets are also calling bullshit on the economic containment nonsense.  The global economy is currently falling off the cliff but markets still hanging on to the hope of a V-shaped recovery next quarter.

Border Closings

Stunning to hear the former ECB President, Jean-Claude Trichet today engaging in a discussion where the EU countries would even contemplate closing its borders.  He was not advocating for, by the way.

If the Schengen Treaty is compromised, which we doubt it will be, it could spell the end of open border Europe as we know it, and a massive acceleration of deglobalization.  Bad, bad, bad for markets and the global economy.

Upshot

We’re not touching this market as the chart below illustrates valuations are just back to the level where the 2018 nightmare before Christmas began.   The market has to deal with its valuation problem before it can heal itself and the Fed, in our opinion, should step out of the way and allow it to happen.

However, the fact the overnight S&P traders seemed to have thrown in the towel after Trump’s speech, methinks increases the probability of a green candlestick tomorrow.  Green candlesticks equal green shoots for a potential short-term tradeable bounce but maybe not before setting a humungo panic-driven bear trap by piercing the 200-day and then reversing.   Wait for it.

GDP_Market Cap_Feb 26th

 

But, hey, like everyone else, we don’t know f*$k all how this plays out.

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The Supply Chain Gangbangers

I had a conversation last night with a friend who works in construction management. She said her side of the business is screeching to a halt as the company can’t get materials and furniture out of China.   True story.

WTF?   Construction is in the nontradeable sector and this is a relatively small local construction firm.  It exposes how interconnected the global economy is — one massive loop of billions upon billions of feedback loops.   Now you understand why it is so difficult to get economic forecasts correct?

I asked her if lower interest rates would help.  She laughed her FAO.

Blank Sailings From China

This is a must video, folks.  I learned a new term – “blank sailings”, which are up 67 percent at the Long Beach port.

Blank_sailings

             Click here to view the video

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The Stock Market’s Key GPS Coordinates

Ugly two daze of trading.   In fact, two of the four largest point drops in the history of the Dow Jones Industrial Index.   The S&P500 is now sitting right on a key Fib level at 3124.74.

Now What?

A  bounce is coming.  It’s the quality of that bounce that counts.

All the disciplined trend traders have been blown out and the market is still far from cheap.

The first stop to the upside is to recapture the 100-day at 3164.18.   Then the key fibs at 3183.61 and 3188.17.

To the downside,  the December low at 3077.33 is an absolute must hold with the reinforcement wall at 200-day at 3044.57.  That is less in percentage terms than today’s sell-off.

“That was conveyed to me by a guy named Lucien Hooper, who was a contributor to Forbes and worked for Thomson Mckinnon Securities, back in 1971,” said Saut. “If that December low is taken out to the downside in the first quarter of the new year, watch out.”  – Jeff Saut,  CNBC

The point-blank range is now 3044.57-3077.33.  Keep it tight, folks.

S&P_Chart

Key Levels

Note Trump’s stock market owns the nine largest Dow flops.

Dow_Flops_2

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