2019’s Five Most Mispriced Tail Events

tail events

 

  1. Trump Leaves Office By Year-End
    There is only one thing Trump likes more than power – money.  As his legal troubles grow exponentially in 2019, the president has an epiphany that he could lose all his wealth.  He cuts a Spiro Agnew-like deal and resigns from office in return for leniency.   The markets rally into the announcement but Trump doesn’t go easy and dog whistles to his base as he hits the exit.  The U.S. experiences a period of political and social instability.   Stocks sell-off hard.
    Long American water cannons
  1. China-Taiwan Conflict Gets Hot; Xi Launches Peaceful “Human Wave” Attack On Taiwan

    War scenario games continue to evolve, but a very real threat could come from neither hard weaponry nor cyber hackers. In the case of Taiwan, a “peaceful invasion” may unfold, with a fleet of, say, 100,000 mainland Chinese arriving by private boats with the intention of settling in Taiwan. Surely this would be an incredible test of the “One China” policy and a potential game-changer in South China Sea geopolitics. – Japan Times

    Long Taiwanese water cannons

  1. Brits Vote To Remain In Europe After Second Referendum
    The House of Commons can’t pass a BREXIT deal, and the British government orders a second referendum. The “People’s Vote” results in a landslide victory for the remainers.  Cable initially rallies to 1.35 on the referendum announcement  where it experiences some volatility on the back of mass protests by the BREXITeers.     The pound trades to 1.50 as the landslide victory becomes more evident.
    Long British water cannons and pound sterling
  1. Apple Nosedive Continues; Reinvents Itself As a Medical Services Company
    Apple begins to lose market share to cheaper smartphones.  Revenue growth turns negative, and the stock trades briefly with a double-digit handle.   The company starts to reinvent itself into a significant medical hardware and services company.
    Short Apple above $150/long at $100
  1. Trouble In The Treasury Complex; Monthly Auctions Begin To Sputter
    Several of the Monthly Treasury auctions experience rough sailing as foreign demand continues to fade (for a plethora of reasons) and supply grows.  Markets also begin to fear more supply as talks of an infrastructure deal get serious.   The Fed is forced to suspend its balance sheet reduction to reduce the size of monthly auctions, all in the name of softening economic data.   Long speculators get smoked in the first quarter as interest rates drift higher after hitting their lows on the second trading day of the year.  Market pundits are perplexed as rates move higher into a softer economy.  Bond Market Conundrum 2.0 cometh.
    Long American water cannons/Short the 10-year at 2.55 percent

Disclaimer – Before bombarding us with hate email, make nasty comments, and dance on our grave if we get a few wrong, please understand and think hard about the nature of tail events and what it means to be mispriced.  Our trades are not recommendations, may or may not be in jest, and we may or may not execute all or none of them.

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Global Risk Monitor – January 4

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Sector ETF Performance – January 4

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etf_2018

 

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Ten Good Weekend Reads – January 4

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  • Major themes set to shape markets in 2019 – FT
  • Five Doom Loops to Navigate in 2019 – Bloomberg
  • As China Talks Begin, Trump’s Trade Negotiator Tries to Keep President From Wavering – NY Times
  • Japan in 2019: 10 surprises – Japan Times
  • Powell May Mark The Beginning Of An Independent Fed – Forbes
  • In Defense of the Fed by Stephen S. Roach – Project Syndicate
  • Behind Lumber’s Collapse: A Perfect Storm of Housing and Trade – WSJ

 

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  • Apple’s China Trouble Makes Trump’s Trade War Harder to Defend – Bloomberg
  • China annual auto sales fall for first time in about two decades with more pain on the way – CNBC
  • The EU and Euro Keep Defying the Doomsayers – Bloomberg

Bonus

  • What happens if Mueller comes up empty – CNN
  • Snake-Oil Economics: The Bad Math Behind Trump’s Policies, N. Gregory Mankiw – Foreign Affairs
  • China’s Moon Landing: Lunar Rover Begins Its Exploration – NY Times
  • 10 Conflicts to Watch in 2019 – Foreign Policy
  • The Ghosts of Brazil’s Military Dictatorship – Foreign Affairs

Where to invest in 2019? | The Economist

 

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Yield Spike

We highlighted the potential risk in our post yesterday,

Druckenmiller On Bonds

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.

Nevertheless, this confirms our suspicion the bond market has been hijacked by stock bears and short sellers.  How far they push down yields is anyone’s guess.  We just wonder who they are going to sell to when its time to get out.  They couldn’t be betting on a central bank takeout in a new round of QE?

Unexpected bond market volatility could be the Black Swan of 2019.   We will flesh out our thoughts in a later post. – GMM, Jan 3rd

 

 

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Opening China Shanghai ETF Trade

Taking some ASHR, the Xtrackers Harvest CSI 300 China A ETF at $22.20 for a short-term trade going into next week’s trade negotiations.  Our sense is Trump and Xi are under enormous pressure to generate a positive outcome, or at least some good news.  Moreover, the monetary moves by the PBOC this morning relieves some of the near-term economic pressure.  Stop at $21.50.  Target $23.50.

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Apple Closes Just Inside Red Zone

The Apple bulls, if any still exist, now have their work cut out as the stock closed just a penny inside the red zone.   The 200-week moving average also looms large as short-term support at $141.82.

The time for a bounce is now.

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That’s America!

What a great story.

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Adding To Britsh Pound Trade

Taking cable right here at 1.2670 (March).   Stop at 1.2470.    Target 1.35.

Looking for positive BREXIT news: either Corbyn caves and supports a new referendum or soft BREXIT potential emerges.  We do recognize the risk of big volatility to the downside if the politics go sideways.

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S&P500 Key Levels

Stocks were hit with a double punch with the Apple warning and this morning’s weak ISM data (see table).  The S&P took out all its hard work since the Christmas Eve tank to close at its post-Christmas low.

We’re not going to bore you with the key levels as they are evident in the table.

The logical short-term trade here is to bet on a test of the recent low at 2346.58, 4 percent down from today’s close.  But as we quoted Stan Druckenmiller in our recent post,

“Logical doesn’t mean profitable.” 

Eventually,  and relatively soon, we think the test is a no-brainer, however, tomorrow’s employment data and Jerome Powell speech are events that could generate a bounce.

If the employment data comes in soft but not too soft, coupled with today’s weak ISM gives the Fed Chair the cover to strike an exceedingly dovish tone in his speech tomorrow.  Ergo rally time and the shorts get their Friday facial and should further boost our gold trade.

Moreover, it’s now or never for a bounce.  The chart below shows how rare it is that the S&P500 has closed this far below its 200-day moving average.   In fact, only three times since  August 2011.

If there is no or just a feeble bounce tomorrow, we get shorty the e-minis for the test of the recent low.

Brazil Equity Trade

How ’bout that Brazil trade, (EWZ), we identified on January 1st?  It was up almost one percent in today’s extremely weak tape and now up almost 5 percent from our $39.00 entry point.  We are moving the trailing stop up to $38.77.  We like the country ETF as it also captures the currency move.

Druckenmiller On Bonds

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.

Nevertheless, this confirms our suspicion the bond market has been hijacked by stock bears and short sellers.  How far they push down yields is anyone’s guess.  We just wonder who they are going to sell to when its time to get out.  They couldn’t be betting on a central bank takeout in a new round of QE?

Unexpected bond market volatility could be the Black Swan of 2019.   We will flesh out our thoughts in a later post.

 

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Source:   Institute for Supply Management

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