FOMC: Bid Adieu to QT

Just our quick take on today’s Fed.

The major takeaway from today’s FOMC announcement is the end of QT in September with the cap moving down to $15 billion in the SOMA Treasury portfolio in May.

  • The Committee intends to slow the reduction of its holdings of Treasury securities by reducing the cap on monthly redemptions from the current level of $30 billion to $15 billion beginning in May 2019.
  • The Committee intends to conclude the reduction of its aggregate securities holdings in the System Open Market Account (SOMA) at the end of September 2019. – FOMC, March 20th

The end of QT will have little impact on liquidity in a monetary sense — that is credit creation — in our opinion but will reduce significantly the “crowding out” effect as the Treasury will have to issue a substantially lower amount of new securities at the monthly auctions to maintain its balances at the Fed.

It is also quite possible the Fed was also worried about complicating the coming battle over raising the debt ceiling as the Treasury usually runs down its Fed account to fund itself when restricted from issuing new debt.  QT would have made funding the U.S. government exponentially more treacherous during a debt ceiling battle.

Our quick analysis:

Reduction in Treasury New Issuance After Today’s FOMC announcement

$137 billion – 2019
$352 billion – 2019-20

We believe the Fed, Treasury officials, and some market participants understood the changing structural dynamics and pressure that QT was putting on the Treasury market, which we pointed out last September, and acted accordingly  to circumvent a potential crisis.

The stated reason given for ending its balance sheet reduction is that banks now demand more reserves, which makes no sense to us.  Certainly banks demand for cautionary reserves is higher post the financial crisis given their near death experience, but they now are paid 2 plus interest on those reserves, which, we think/but not sure, have no capital requirements.  Why wouldn’t they desire a higher level of reserves if they are now being paid 2 percent risk-free to lock them up at the Fed?  Free money is always good, no?   Also note the excess reserves are most likely highly concentrated in a few large banks.

We think the Fed has got a tiger by its tail and has no idea how to effectively extract itself from QE, and the market has trouble understanding the dynamics of QE/QT, which, in our view, is just fiscal policy on steroids.

Today’s announcement of the end of QT is probably also a major factor (lower expected supply) why the 10-year yield broke to a 2019 low at 2.52 percent, which will further panic yield chasers and add fuel to the Power of Zero, which is now driving the risk markets. Reducing the potential supply of  more than $350 billion of new Treasury issuance through 2020 is not small change, folks.

Absurd?  Yes, the Market Socialists once again have beat the Fed into submission but that is the reality we all are dealt, so let’s go out and make some money.  Emerging markets are the place to be and probably another 10 percent in the S&P500 coming during the rest of the year.

The piper will have to wait for payment until a later date.

Back to you when we have more time to think and do further analysis.

SOMA_1

 

SOMA_2

Help keep the lights on at the Global Macro Monitor.  Donate by clicking widget on the right side of our website. 

 

Posted in Monetary Policy, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Trump Trade Deal Market Tease While China Balks On 737 Max

Wow!  Mr. Market must love the taste of strawberries.

How long will it continue to be led and whipped around by this administration’s Gulliver Gullible Travels on a China trade deal and get itself all lathered up over every positive POTUS tweet on an imminent deal?

Wait!  Is that little boy Kramer?

How Is It Going?

We can only infer from the tape bombs that hit us almost on a daily basis, such as the Trump-Xi March summit being pushed way out, from March to now talk of June, and Bloomberg reported yesterday that China is walking back some concessions.

Some U.S. negotiators are concerned that China is pushing back against American demands in trade talks, according to people familiar with the negotiations, even as President Donald Trump sounded optimistic about reaching a deal that could boost his reelection chances.

Chinese officials have shifted their stance because after agreeing to changes to their intellectual-property policies, they haven’t received assurances from the Trump administration that tariffs imposed on their exports would be lifted, two of the people said on condition of anonymity. — Bloomberg, March 19th

Moreover, the South China Morning Post reported yesterday

China is looking at excluding Boeing Co.’s troubled 737 MAX jet from a list of American exports it would buy as part of a trade deal with the US, people familiar with the matter said.

Boeing planes were featured on a draft list of American products China would buy to reduce its trade surplus with the US, the sources said, asking not to be identified discussing private deliberations. Now, safety concerns are pushing China to examine whether to cut the 737 MAX from the list altogether or replace it with other Boeing models after the crash of a plane operated by Ethiopian Airlines led to the aircraft being grounded worldwide, they said. – SCMP, March 20

Why is last night’s  Boeing tape bomb so important?

The chart below speaks for itself,  Heavy aircraft is one of China’s largest imports from the United States, though we are not sure of the actual impact the 737 Max has on total imports.  Chinese airlines took down 20 percent of 737 Max deliveries worldwide through January according to Boeing.

China Imports

More Than Trade

We have always believed that trade is just a small part of the increasingly complicated and complex U.S.-China relationship, and is won’t be easy to negotiate the deal that Trump administration would like to achieve.  China appears to be playing 3-D chess, while the U.S. plays checkers.

Furthermore, after hundreds of years climbing back to global superpower status, why would President Xi now give away the keys to the Middle Kingdom?

Study your history, folks.  China has not had such a great experience with western powers trying to force their hand on international trade,

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the demand for Chinese goods (particularly silk, porcelain, and tea) in Europe created a trade imbalance between Qing Imperial China and Great Britain. European silver flowed into China through the Canton System, which confined incoming foreign trade to the southern port city of Canton. To counter this imbalance, the British East India Company began to grow opium in India and smuggle them into China illegally. The influx of narcotics reversed the Chinese trade surplus, drained the economy of silver, and increased the numbers of opium addicts inside the country, outcomes that worried Chinese officials.

In 1839, the Daoguang Emperor, rejecting proposals to legalize and tax opium, appointed viceroyLin Zexu to go to Canton to halt the opium trade completely. Lin wrote to Queen Victoria an open letter in an appeal to her moral responsibility to stop the opium trade.[9] When he failed to get a response, he initially attempted to get foreign companies to forfeit their opium stores in exchange for tea, but this ultimately failed too. Then Lin resorted to using force in the western merchants’ enclave. He confiscated all supplies and ordered a blockade of foreign ships to get them to surrender their opium supply. Lin confiscated 20,283 chests of opium (approximately 1210 tons or 2.66 million pounds). 

The British government responded by dispatching a military force to China and in the ensuing conflict, the Royal Navy used its naval and gunnery power to inflict a series of decisive defeats on the Chinese Empire, a tactic later referred to as gunboat diplomacy.  – Wikepedia

We find it extremely ironic, but not inappropriate, that President Trump has raised Chinese exported fentanyl to the U.S. in the trade talks.  The new Opium Wars?

Who Is Winning?

But, hey, the stock market is up so the U.S. can take a harder line, no?   Not so fast.

The problem with that argument is China’s stock market is up almost double that of the U.S. year-to-date.

Stock Market.png

 

Does that mean, using POTUS logic,  China is winning?

Don’t get us wrong, we are rooting for a good deal, where China graduates to developed market status and adjusts its trade and investment policies accordingly.

President Trump Doesn’t Understand Trade

It is clear, at least to us, the President does not understand free trade, that there will always be winners and losers when engaging in trade, but mostly winners in the form of higher real incomes and purchasing power for the general population.  Does he even understand American importers and consumers and not the Chinese are paying his tariffs?

We also feel bad for those in the rust belt, who are now paying higher prices for imported consumer goods but will never return to the golden age of employment that President Trump promised them during the campaign.  It’s time for more and accelerated forward-thinking to prepare these workers for the 21st plus century economy.  A new Marshall Plan for the rust belt.

His trade war has also torched the American farm belt and his comments today will not ease the anxiety in the corn and wheat fields of the heartland,

We’re not talking about removing [tariffs], we’re talking about leaving them for a substantial period of time, because we have to make sure that if we do the deal with China that China lives by the deal  – President Trump, CNBC, March 20th

The administration also has a lot of ‘splaining to do with American farmers as reports U.S. wheat farmers are losing market share in Japan to other countries that remained in the TPP,

US farm groups are ramping up pressure on Donald Trump to quickly launch trade talks with Tokyo, as they face mounting evidence of lost sales and market share in Japan following America’s withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. In recent weeks, wheat, pork and beef producers in the US have complained that they are being rapidly outflanked and replaced in the lucrative Japanese market by rivals including Canada, Australia, and EU member states, whose trade deals with Japan entered into force in recent months.  – FT, March 18th

Hysteresis Due to TPP Pullout

At best, a bilateral trade deal with Japan, which even now looks distant, will not make American farmers better off than if the U.S. had stayed in TPP,  in our opinion.  And look at the freaking cost!

Moreover, there will be some hysteresis in terms of lost export markets.  Hysteresis implies that the lost export market share, may not necessarily be regained when a new bilateral trade deal is struck.  Competitors who entered the markets in order to exploit the U.S., temporary — we all can hope — protectionist backslide will not immediately be abandoned by these countries.

Art Of The Deal

Can you see the pattern developing and the results of the administration’s Art of Deal negotiating style and so-called trade and budget deals — that is little gain, lots of pain?

Conclusion

We leave you with two thoughts:

  1. The Thucydides Trap:  Trade is just a small part in managing now the world’s most dangerous geopolitical relationship. Keep that in mind. It’s more than just a few tons of soybeans.
  2. and, on a sadder note,  Farmers are really hurting as a result of the Trade Wars,

The worst agricultural downturn since the 1980s is taking its toll on the emotional well-being of American farmers.

In Kentucky, Montana, and Florida, operators at Farm Aid’s hotline have seen a doubling of contacts for everything from financial counseling to crisis assistance. In Wisconsin, Dale Meyer has started holding monthly forums in the basement of his Loganville church following the suicide of a fellow parishioner, a farmer who’d fallen on hard times. In Minnesota, rural counselor Ted Matthews says he’s getting more and more calls.” –  Duluth News Tribune, March 20th

P.S.  We are still working a strategy to protect the contributors to Global Macro Monitor while dealing with the free riders but not at the expense of our readers in the weak currency countries, some of which have capital controls.  It’s coming. 

Help keep the lights on by making a donation with any major credit card by clicking on the donate widget at the right side of the website.   

 

 

Posted in Agriculture, Trade War, Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment

QOTD: Fading Breton Woods = Instability – Arminio Fraga

QOTD = Quote of the Day

…with the US less dominant and less willing to provide global economic and financial leadership, systemic instability is likely to increase. As the American economic historian Charles Kindleberger famously warned, this typically occurs in transitional moments when a global hegemon is absent. Some signs of this are already visible in trade and regional tensions, growing leverage, and rising nationalism.  – Arminio Fraga, Project Syndicate

Posted in Geopolitical, Quote of the Day, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Third Brexit deal vote could be held the day before Brexit

Posted in Brexit, Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

A French Cat Named Brexit

https://twitter.com/bakerluke/status/1107589186314485760?s=12

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Inching Toward A Second Brexit Referendum

John Bercow, the Speaker of the House of Commons effectively blocked a third vote of the Prime Minister’s Brexit deal slowly chipping away at the roadblock to a second Brexit referendum.   Theresa May’s Brexit deal must be “fundamentally different” from the last two deals that MPs have voted down in order to be considered by Parliament.

Cable flatish on the day.

 

 

Any doubt about our view?

Every poll for a year has put remain ahead – most by some 8% – and a delay means a better chance of a second vote. The country needs a long extension. To impose anything without a public vote would be the great denial of democracy, the great betrayal.  – Guardian OpEd, March 18th

Posted in Brexit, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Father of Great Gatsby Curve, Alan Krueger, R.I.P.

Alan Krueger

We’re shocked at the passing of economist Alan Krueger.   Great economist and great guy.  Way too young to leave us. He will be missed.

GMM sends thoughts and prayers to his family,  Lisa Simon, Benjamin, and Sydney.

Love his Great Gatsby Curve (GGC), which illustrates the relationship between inequality and intergenerational social immobility, which, by the way,  was just confirmed and reinforced by the recent college admissions/bribe scandal.    The GGC could, and should, be a central focus of the 2020 presidential campaign.

Gatsby Curve

Posted in Economics, Uncategorized | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Rory It Is…

The Irishman, Rory McIlroy wins the Players Championship at the TPC Sawgrass in Florida on St. Patrick’s Day with a score of 16 under par.  How cool is that?

I think our “Unleash the Leprechauns!” chant and blessing helped him along today. Hope you bet along with us.  See here.

In the final round of THE PLAYERS Championship 2019, Rory McIlroy made some clutch shots down the stretch, carding a 2-under 70 to finish the tournament at 16-under and one stroke clear of the field for his 15th-career PGA TOUR victory.

SUBSCRIBE to PGA TOUR now: http://pgat.us/vBxcZSh

Posted in Sports, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Week In Review – March 15

Summary

  • Bond yields mostly lower on the week as global growth expectations ratchet downward and yield chasing back in vogue, led by Brazil
  • Credit spreads tighter led by lower-tier credits
  • Major Latin FX rebounds after a few weeks of weakness
  • Dixie rejected right at 97.70 resistance. Chart traders and/or ‘bot in total control.  We was [sic] wrong but believe dollar moves higher into year-end
  • Pound continues to price soft Brexit or new Refie
  • Smart week for global equities
  • Brazil equities bounce big after their bout of weakness
  • S&P closes at its highest level since the bear market began in late September
  • VIX at the lowest level since October
  • Wheat and corn bounce on short covering due to….of course, what else, trade rumors.  The American farmer has been butchered by the trade wars

Commentary:   The S&P500 finally managed to crack and close above the great big beautiful wall at 2816, its highest close since last October.  The Power of Zero is now driving the risk markets — that is fears that global interest rates are going to zero, some of which are already negative with a line of moving vans backed up ready to move into the less than zero neighborhood.

Oy vey!  Equity markets can’t rise with stronger growth because of too much public debt in the world and it’s sensitivity to higher interest rates.  Markets are now driven by FOMO and yield panic.

Nevetherless, we don’t know where the market is going tomorrow as it is pretty close to a  random 50/50 bet (53/47, in fact, similar to the House odds at the roulette wheel) but as we have stated earlier,  history suggests the S&P500 will end March at or around 2850.  Important the S&P stays above 2820.  Our instincts tell us some profit taking coming early in the week but our instincts are biased by human genes, which have evolved over the past 200,000 years of human existence, of which 95 percent of that time was spent running from wild beasts on the savannah.

Underestimate the Power of Zero, which has firmly taken hold of the markets, at your own peril, at least, until we can see the white of the eyes of a global recession.  The market is now pricing a 10 percent chance of a Fed rate cut by June and an almost  30 percent probability by December.   Nuttin’ else seems to matter, honey!

We are we looking at this week?  Glad you asked:

  1. Potentially, another Brexit vote in Parliament.  The PM may or may not table it depending on if she thinks it can pass.  Rumors are that Tory Brexiteers have told her they will vote yes if she stands down as Prime Minister.
  2. The Fed meets and may lay out their exit plans from their balance sheet reduction.
  3. Bank of England meeting.
  4. President Xi’s visit to Italy.
  5. Brazil’s Bolsonero visit to the White House.
  6. The election in Thailand.  Back to democracy?
  7. FedEx earnings
  8. U.S. factory orders and existing home sales
  9. Japan CPI
  10. Eurozone PMI
  11. Argentina Q4 GDP
  12. Other
  13. P.S. More “trade deal” tweets

Happy hunting out there this week, folks.

 

S&P Breaking Out?

WIR_Mar15_S&P

All Asia Global Economy 

WIR_Mar15_GlobalGrowth

Hat Tip@Carol_Kohlberg 

 

 

Week_2019_ETFs

 

Week_Table

Posted in Uncategorized, Week in Review | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

NASA’s Pot of Gold

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment