Paul Tudor Jones Likes U.S. Stocks & Dollar

Great interview with Hall of Famer, Paul Tudor Jones (PTJ ), who has always been our fave, and even more so with what he is doing with JUST Capital.   See here for the top-ranked most JUST companies.

PTJ likes U.S. stocks for technical reasons as he doesn’t know where supply is going to come from to meet another year of trillion dollar plus corporate buybacks.   We like that analysis.  It does assume markets are entirely inefficient and will not reprice lower based on changing fundamentals, however.

He currently likes the dollar and believes U.S. markets will outperform EM.

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Click here for the interview.

Bad Call On Year-End “Melt-Up”

Even the greatest can, and often, get it wrong.  He was expecting a year-end “melt-up” in 2018.  You know how that played out — quite the opposite.

Indeed, billionaire US hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones sees the potential for a major melt-up in the US share market later this year, fuelled by this inflammatory mix of fiscal and monetary stimulus.  – Financial Review, June 13, 2018

Anyone who plays this game understands you’re lucky if you get 50 percent of your trades right.   Success is, at the end of the day, determined by money management.  Cutting your losses quickly and letting your winners run.  Easier said than done.

 

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Dollar On The Launchpad

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To the moon, Alice! – Jackie Gleason, The Honeymooners

In our New Year’s Day Year In Review post, we doubted the market’s conventional wisdom the dollar would weaken throughout the coming year.  Not emphatically,  but we doubted,

The dollar index was up over 4 percent on the year hitting a high of 97.71 in mid-December.  Markets are betting on a lower dollar.  Not so sure.  We will watch and wait and don’t believe the U.S. is heading into a recession in 2019 – GMM,  Jan 1st

The following chart explains the recent dollar strength, in our opinion, with the Dixie now trading with a 97 handle and only 0.6 percent away from its Dec 14th high at 97.711.

Global Yields

Source:  Renaissance Macro

Exchange Rate Determination

We have written many pieces on what determines exchange rates.  Here is a synopsis from a post last October,

We cut our teeth as a young economist on Anne Krueger‘s book,  Exchange Rate Determination.   The book is dated, but we highly recommend it, a good and quick read.

FX traders use many models to justify and fundamentally rationalize trades at any period in time, such as:

  1. GDP growth differentials;
  2. Interest rate differentials;
  3. FX reserve levels (mainly in the emerging markets, especially);
  4. Current account balances;
  5. Capital flows;
  6. Purchasing Power Parity (long-term model);
  7. Other;
  8. and, now, Greg’s PMI Differentials

FX traders are married to none of the above, and switch back-and-forth between the various FX models, or, at least, they act as if they do.  – GMM, Oct 2nd

Traders have definitely zeroed in on recent growth and interest rate differentials and are whipping and driving their short-term positions accordingly.

We see no let-up unless the U.S. economy rolls over unexpectedly.  Doubt it.

Much of the weakness in Europe is due to Germany and its trade-dependent economy.  It’s possible with a China trade deal and Trump easing up could improve expectations.  And pigs do fly.

We perceive the post-War order, i.e., globalization, is crumbling and markets are in complete denial or just plain ignorant.  That is the major factor why we believe even long-term investors should be wary of the risk markets until assets get much cheaper.   We believe they will.

Upshot

The dollar goes higher.  Breaks through 97.711 high (only 0.6 percent from current levels) with a measured move to 101.722, or a move of 4.8 percent.   The emerging market trade is over.  Taking profits and moving on.

As always, we reserve the right to be wrong.   Stay tuned.

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The Fed And Mr. Market

Dangling interest rate cuts and QE or is that strawberry a China trade deal?  The whining makes it seem even more real.

Wait!  Is that Kramer?

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Week In Review – February 8

Summary

  • The S&P kissed its 200-day then reversed bringing most risk markets down with it. Now, analysts are “retrofitting” their fundamental view to downside price action.   Nice skate save on Friday
  • Go no further than local bond markets to confirm the risk-off end of week move. Developed yields in x/Mexico, the Euro periphery and EM out.  Even the French sovereign spread out 7 bps.  Surveillez cet endroit!
  • U.S. credit stable on the week but weaker at the end of the week
  • Dollar stronger with major Latins giving back some YTD gains. The Dixie only 1.1 percent or a chip shot away from taking out its December 14th high at 97.71, which could put the kibosh on the EM rally
  • Aussie stocks led the weak or week
  • Iron ore jumped to its highest levels since 2014 on  Vale concerns. We flagged Iron Ore early as an indicator and signal the old China economy is about to kick in
  • Natural gas ugly and should be higher given seasonals.

Commentary:  On February 3rd we posted,

Thus we expect the market to trade through the .618 Fibo at 2713 and kiss or temporarily pierce the 200-day moving average at 2740, getting the bulls Super Bowl lathered up, before reversing and setting on a new trajectory to test the December low.  – GMM,  Feb 3rd

Check.

We believe the index is on its way but certainly not in a straight line.  Some are betting on a 1990’s melt-up as Fed will have to ease.    That’s possible if the Fed begins easing with the S&P at 1000.   Never have seen such nonsense, however.

The initial conditions in the 1990s couldn’t be more different than they are today.  The mid-’90s was the beginning of globalization, cheap labor from China, India, and Eastern Europe.  Peak America.

Now the reverse is true.  The post-War order, i.e., globalization, is fading fast, and one, and the major reason we are cautious here,  even as a long-term investor, and will steer clear of stocks until they get much cheaper.  We are confident they will.

We don’t like the XLF (financials ETF) chart.  Ugly Doji daily candle to end the week (see chart below) clinging to its 20-day.  Watch this schpace (go lower)!

Natural gas is freakishly low here at this time of year.  Yes, shale supply HELL.   We think it deserves a stab down at these levels, however,  but on a tight leash (which is a danger in itself as Nattie can easily, and often does, move 10% in one day).  Be warned we have lost a ton of money in the “widow maker.”

China back online this week,  Mnuchin and Lighthizer to China for negotiations, mo earnings, CPI, and government funding deadline on Friday.

Senate Appropriations Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) acknowledged on Sunday that negotiations had stalled, and he put the odds of getting a deal at 50-50.  – Politico, Feb 10th

It will get done.  They are not that foolish.

Happy hunting this week, folks.

 

Ugly Doji On Friday Clinging To 20-day.  Going Lower

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Nattie Down 48 Percent Since Novie In Midst of Polar Vortex

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Reality Clashes With Presidential Spin

Presidential Stock Performance

EM Should Start To Give Some/More Back With Stronger $

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Returns For Week, February, and Year-to-Date

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Feeling Rejected?

This is rejection.  Freaking stunning.

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California über alles!

California

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Sector ETF Performance – February 8

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Global Risk Monitor – February 8

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BFTP: Call Me Comrade!

BFTP = Blast From The Past

Does it ever change?

We were going through some old posts this morning and came across this pearl from over eight years ago.   Charges of socialism were also polluting the political environment back then just as they are today.   Branding the other side as “socialist” is going to be the central strategy of one party in the 2020 election.

We are proud that we were way ahead of this last February.  The young are left and prefer Nordic Capitalism over  the American economic mishmash and they finally flexed their political muscle during the midterms, also as we expected.

Socialism Defined

We are trained economists and purists, so it pisses us off more than you know when we hear somebody called a socialist because of their support for Medicare, a 40-hour workweek, or, for that matter, government guaranteed bank checking and saving deposits, subsidies to build a new football stadium or support for mortgage interest tax write-offs.  The American economy is a mix of both the private and public sector.

We define socialism as government ownership of the means of production, especially its “commanding heights.”   Ironically, it does seem we are now moving toward some sort of managed international trade regime, which is about as socialist as it gets, folks.

Enough.  We may have a more in-depth post on this subject over the weekend.

Keep it on your radar.

Our 2010 Mindset

When we wrote the following, our focus was on one thing, and one thing only –  our trading P&L.  We were whipping and driving billions back then and I think our main focus was in Apple’s stock and gold futures.

We have updated the chart, which is totally at odds with what’s currently perceived or being portrayed.  Also, note we were spot on in our prediction of the 2012 presidential election, which was kind of ballsy given Obama’s approval rating was only around 45 percent at the time and heading south, and just after his record shallacking in the 2010 midterms.

The comments are hilarious, but do have some merit.

 

Presidential Stock Performance

 

If this is Socialism, call me Comrade

No politics or partisanship here, “just the facts ma’am”.  The stock market as measured by the S&P500 is up just about 50 percent since President Obama’s inauguration to today’s close.   Only Eisenhower comes close, but not even in the same zip code.   A 50 percent stock move does a lot of “spreading the wealth around” and Joe the Plumber’s pension is in much better shape today than it was in November 2008!

Sure, sure, there are a  ton of reasons to explain the differences, but this is politics folks!    A CapEX spending led economic acceleration and pick-up in hiring in 2011, which usually follows such a strong equity performance,  will make the President look unbeatable same time next year, in our opinion.  Stay tuned.


16 Responses to If this is Socialism, call me Comrade

Wow. This post almost made me want to go back in time and restore the Soviet Union where I spent first 38 years of my life. Call yourself comrades or anything you want but don’t give me more socialism. Using stock market return as yardstick to prove that policies work and that one president is better than other is plain wrong. Can you say that Bush 41 was a better president than Clinton because stock market grew more? Was Comrade Brezhnev a good communist ruler because the quality of life did improve under his rule. And you know what, I bet the fastest economic growth the Soviet Union and Russia for that matter have ever experienced was under Comrade Stalin. Was he good? He started at a very low point and used all the wrong ideas and methods. But if we only judged by economic growth we should have said that he was the best. If we used the healthcare as measure, Comrade Castro would have been the winner. Not considering the starting point and ways the success was achieved is just wrong. For a fuller picture you should have the unemployment chart included as well.

As far as Joe the Plumber is concerned, does he even have a 401K? Even if he had one, he might have spent it because he does not have a job. But if he has the savings account he got zero and will be getting zero for a long time. He was robbed for you to enjoy the stock market gains. Here is where we need to start talking socialism. Exact same thing was happening in the Soviet Union. The actual prosperity, including big Swiss bank accounts, was only among the party elite, their families and close friends.

 

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Ten Great Weekend Reads

 

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  • The Stock Market Finally Acknowledges Reality – Bloomberg
  • America faces a battle to find buyers for its bonds – FT

…given stagnation in international reserves, there is likely an increased need for this debt to be financed domestically.  – Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee

  • Dollar Is ‘Best of a Bad Bunch’ in Surprise Turn for Wall Street – Bloomberg
  • The Day The Vix Doubled: Tales of ‘Volmagedon’ – Bloomberg
  • Why Investors Will Still Flock to Negative-Yield Japan Bonds – Bloomberg

 

Negative Yields

  • American manufacturing companies have a spring in their step – Economist
  • Germany’s long expansion comes under threat – Economist
  • Seven Fixes for American Capitalism – Bloomberg
  • A New Americanism: Why a Nation Needs a National Story – Foreign Affairs
  • The Future of Politics Is Coming to Poland – Foreign Policy
  • Trump’s Attack on Socialism Is a Colossal Blunder – New Republic

Bonus

  • The American left needs to find its voice on Venezuela – Fareed Zakaria
  • The Most Corrupt Countries In The World – Forbes

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  • Leon Cooperman’s Last Year in the Game – Institutional Investor
  • Bill Gross’s fall presages the decline of the investing genius – FT
  • Why Your Superstar Manager May Be Toxic – Institutional Investor
  • All the Fun Has Gone Out of Being a Billionaire – WSJ
  • The Most Innovative Fintech Companies In 2019 – Forbes
  • The Church With the $6 Billion Portfolio – NY Times
  • All relationship problems stem from one persistent myth about romance – Quartz
  • Frank Robinson, MLB’s first black manager, R.I.P.  – NY Daily News

France-Italy row

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