Everyone Is Just Pretending Nothing’s Wrong Submitted by QTR’s Fringe Finance βIt is a shit storm out here. You have no idea the kind of crap people are pulling, and everyoneβs walking around like theyβre in a goddamn Enya video.β –Β Mark Baum Even if the stock market holds up,Β somethingΒ is going to have to break in a big way. This is about the simplest way I can try and explain how I feel about the state of the economy and markets, delivered to you honestly and devoid of detail, as someone who truly neither has the patience nor the attention span to dive into the intricacies of theΒ Eurodollar systemΒ or theΒ path printed money takesΒ during QE or QT. The fact is that I just donβt care about how the bowels of the system works. I donβtΒ needΒ to care. All I need to know is that money creation as a method of βsolvingβ recessions canβt continue in perpetuity: the dollar amounts necessary for bailouts become astronomical, too quickly, and inflation becomes a pressing issue. Then, as we are now, Central Bankers get stuck between an βinflation vs. recessionβ rock and hard place. Itβs a flawed system that once exploited a loophole (money printing) to slap band-aids on problems. We then thought we could do it in perpetuity to keep ourselves and voters consistently comfortable by presenting theΒ illusionΒ that everything had done βback to normalβ – and now weβre finally going to have to deal with veryΒ uncomfortableΒ consequences of our actions. Howβs that for a book report from someone who didnβt actually read the book? And I didnβt even need to mention βswapsβ or βinterest rate futuresβ to fake sounding smart. Putting aside what bureaucrats are saying about deposit insurance and Fed policy in the midst of the banking crisis we are having, underneath it all people seem to be forgetting that the economy has just tapped into a large pool of chaos and unrest in the form of 4% interest rates weβre supposedly using to fight inflation. CNBC.com And just asΒ was the case with Covid, the headlines today donβt seem to match the reality of whatβs happening in markets. Are we to honestly believe that, in the face of a cascade of bank failures that has now encompassed Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse, with names like Charles Schwab and Deutsche Bank also being tossed around, that a real βflight to safetyβ is people pouring their money into the Nasdaq QQQ ETF at 27x earnings? Because thatβs whatβs happening. Of course this is simply the residual effect of too much liquidity in the system, behavioral incentives that have reversed free market poles over the last 30 years and a stock market that has been coddled, babied, micromanaged and manipulated to the point of no longer making any sense. The further we stray off the path, the closer we get to something having to give. Powell and Yellen I think the key point I am trying to make today is that I strongly continue to believe we have not seen the last – or even the beginning, really – of the volatility weβre in store for as a result of rate hikes. In addition to bank failures, headlinesΒ like this oneΒ about hedge funds taking on huge losses thanks to the plunge in bond prices are going to become more common place. When thereβs over $1 trillion still floating around in the crypto ecosystem and tech stocks are the βrisk offβ trade, you know we havenβt experienced even a modicum of fear or capitulation yet. Itβs the same hubris and arrogance we had during QE infinity. And weβll keep this βplanβ until, in the parlance of Mike Tyson, we are eventually βpunched in the mouthβ by something we didnβt see coming. The question is:Β what is going to break, and when? The answer I have for you today:Β who the hell knows? Weβre already starting to see a flight into gold and silver, probably as a hedge against the system and inflation at once, as well as a response to the idea that the Fed is likely to pause, then pivot, soon. In the last 6 months, gold is pushing a 20% rise: This move in the metals has taken place before Jerome Powell has alluded to rate cuts. In fact, last week he said that rate cuts wereΒ notΒ a part of the Fedβs base case. As I have been saying for months, I still expect the market to tank at some point, which willΒ thenΒ cause the Fed to hurriedly step in with rate cuts. Not only have we not seen a sell off yet, we havenβt even seen theΒ suggestionΒ of a sell off. When I try to visualize the Fedβs priorities, based on their spineless action over the last couple decades, all I can think about is that theyβre going to want to protect the price of stocks at any cost. In other words, soaring inflation by more money printing is okay with them, as long as the nominal price of assets keeps going up. Rising nominal asset prices always seems to trump letting the economy crash for the Fed. Why? Because the former βsolutionβ widens the inequality gap and protects those with assets (the rich), while the latter would actually contract the inequality gap and disproportionately harm those with assets (the rich). In a scenario where the Fed lets the economy crash instead of surrendering to inflation,Β the rich would be most susceptible to taking real losses.Β And we canβt have that, can we? Now say, instead, that the Fed tries to walk a thin line between inflation and recession. Something will still have to break, it may just not be as pronounced or as quick if the central bank commits to one of the other. And by βbreakβ I donβt just mean the economy wrecking somewhere, I mean it showing up in the price of somethingβ¦somewhere. Take a look out there and you can find a case for pretty much any story you want to tell yourself. Thereβs analysts saying gold will go to $8,000, thereβs analysts saying oil could go to $300, thereβs analysts saying the Dow Jones will go to 50,000, thereβs analysts saying copper is going to 20x and thereβs analysts saying the bond market will crack up in the face of yield curve control. All of a sudden my brutal honesty of admitting I donβt have a clue whatβs going to happen next looks pretty good, right? The point is that while everybody has a different take on what the specific malfunction is going to be, it all falls under the umbrella of agreeing there is going to be some major malfunction in prices somewhere. Iβd love to tell you, Jim Simons-style, that I have some theoretical mathematic opinion on the situation, but the fact is, Iβm just kind of sitting around, Eastwood-in-Gran-Torino-style, sipping a beer waiting for something to blow up. The easy, broader point that Iβm trying to make is thatΒ the complacency in the market we are witnessing currently is outrageous. The market will do what it will – I canβt control that. But what I can control is how closely I am watching and paying attention. I truly believe we are in the calm before a very big storm in equity markets, so Iβm focused acutely on day-to-day sentiment. There will come a time when βfear mongeringβ stops and I think the market will be on autopilot again. But that time isnβt now. Every issue heralds the end of the dollar reserve system according to fear mongers https://t.co/cpq6MvCJ1J β Sara Eisen (@SaraEisen) March 26, 2023 In fact, someone should inform Sara Eisen and CNBC that the βfear mongeringβ has now made its way to CNN. If the US dollar’s global supremacy erodes, America will face a reckoning like none before. My take: pic.twitter.com/yxTz16bi3N β Fareed Zakaria (@FareedZakaria) March 26, 2023 Meanwhile the blow up of Silicon Valley Bank and the ensuing swings in the market havenβt pushed volatility levels to any type of alarming level, especially when compared to the onset of the pandemic. And let us not forget that, underneath it all, we still have to deal with the very real consequences ofΒ not dealingΒ with consequences for the last several decades. Once again, it is time to take the medicine from our terrible monetary policy and that, in turn, is going to require a much larger response than it ever has from central banks. Most of the quantitative tightening that the Federal Reserve has already performed has been put back on the central bankβs balance sheet already. Now, the gate will swing wildly in the other direction as the Fedβs balance sheet inevitably starts to grow once again. I know I repeat myself a lot talking about this stuff, but it is so important to realize:Β the fed is still raising rates. Again, for the millionth time, these rate hike (or cut) moves affect the economy with a lag. Silicon Valley Bank blowing up was the result of rate hikes that took placeΒ probably six months to a year ago. That means we have six months to a year of rate hikes that havenβt been βprocessedβ through the economy yet. I would guess that there are blowups happening as you read this. I guarantee you there are compliance officers in the back room of a major hedge fund somewhere right now, examining the size and scope of a massive blowup that is about to take place (or has already), that nobody knows about yet. But in time, all of these blowups and failures will be revealed. And then, it isnβt as though theyβve just magically worked their way out of the system and we can all go about our business. You then have all of the counterparties that need to be looked at and scrutinized carefully. On top of that, every new blowup chips away a little bit more at psychology and sentiment in the market, encouraging a risk offΒ attitude and increasing the likelihood of another blowup. Yikes. Again, I do think the Fed will ride to the rescue here, but only once the market smashes into something hard and immovable. If the stock market was a bowling ball dropped off the roof of a 100 story building and the Fed only stepped in to react after it smashed into the sidewalk, it would still be at about the 98th floor right now. Iβd love to hear your thoughts in the comments in this free discussion here about what part of the market you think is going to blow up first, where it will reflect the most in prices, and what you think the Fedβs βplanβ is going forward. ShareΒ | Subscribe and get 65% off today QTRβs Disclaimer:Β I am not a guru or an expert.Β I am an idiot writing a blog and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning and generally trade like a degenerate psychopath. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any stocks or securities or any asset class – just my opinions of me and my guests. I often lose money on positions I trade/invest in and Iβm sure have lost more than Iβve made in my time in markets. I may add any name mentioned in this article and sell any name mentioned in this piece at any time, without further warning. Positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice. You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates.Β I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but canβt guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it three times because itβs that important. Tyler Durden Mon, 03/27/2023 – 12:20
Everyone Is Just Pretending Nothing’s Wrong
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