7:48 China Dec gold imports through Hong Kong highest since 2013 (Reuters)
Deutsche Bank Declares War On Mario Draghi, Warns Him Any Further QE Will Push Stocks Lower
Submitted by Tyler D.
01/26/2016 - 08:46
In what is the first official warning to a central bank to no longer do what has been done so far for seven years, earlier today Deutsche Bank came out with a startling presentation addressed to Mario Draghi, warning him explicitly that any more QE will not only not help stocks (and certainly not DB stock which continues to plumb post-crisis lows on fears it is overexposed to the commodity crunch and potentially such names as Glencore and various other commodity traders), but will actually push equities lower.
3% Downpayment FHA Loans Surge As Subprime Buyers Are Back In The Housing Market
Submitted by Tyler D.01/26/2016 - 09:21
Americans across the country have been priced out of the U.S. housing market since the “recovery” began due to a combination of factors; stagnant wages, private equity purchases and money laundering foreigners. As such, many potential first time buyers have been sidelined despite the availability of meager 3% downpayment loans from the FHA as well as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Fortunately for the U.S. ponzi scheme economy, the U.S. government has a solution. Lower mortgage insurance premiums.
John Paulson Puts Up Personal Holdings To Secure Credit Line As AUM Plunges
Submitted by Tyler D.
01/26/2016 - 09:55
Back in August we noted that John Paulson managed to get himself and his investors involved in two rather dubious "firsts" in 2015: Puerto Rico became the first US commonwealth in history to default, and Greece became the first developed country to default to the IMF. Paulson had invested in Puerto Rican and Greek assets. Now, amid a client exodus, the billionaire is putting up his own holdings to secure a longstanding line of credit with HSBC.
Chinese "Lose Faith In Collapsing Stock Markets And Currency", Import Most Gold Since 2013
Submitted by Tyler D.
01/26/2016 - 10:21
China's demand for gold is back: as China's equities slumped and its yuan currency finished 2015 with a record yearly loss, "people looked at other investment alternatives that's why there was huge demand for gold," said Brian Lan, managing director at gold dealer GoldSilver Central in Singapore.
Gold Soars Above Key Technical Level Near 2-Month Highs
Submitted by Tyler D.
01/26/2016 - 11:27
Gold futures just broke out of their recent range, pushing well above the key 100-day moving average and testing towards $1120 - the highest since early November. It appears precious metals are signaling - as they have done since mid-December - that The Fed will be forced to admit it is wrong - just as Jeffrey Gundlach warned.
"The Risk Of An Earnings Recession" And Six Other Reasons Why JPM Just Cut Its S&P Target To 2000
Submitted by Tyler D.
01/26/2016 11:33 -0500
The onslaught from JPMorgan continues, which in the aftermath of first Marko Kolanovic's periodic threats about sudden market crashes, and Mislav Matejka's recurring warnings that BTFD is dead and "not to overstay your welcome in the bounce", earlier today JPM's chief equity strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas has officially cut his 2016 year-end S&P500 earnings forecast to $120 from $123 "on stronger US Dollar and lower economic growth forecast" as well as trimming his year end S&500 target from 2,200 to 2,000.
Here are the seven reasons why JPM continues to push the bear case:
The risk-reward for equities is deteriorating. There is increasing risk that elevated volatility starts incurring enough technical damage to market psychology and spills over, negatively impacting investor, consumer and business sentiment, resulting in a lack of risk taking, and eventually creating a negative feedback loop into the real economy. Going forward we see equity risk remaining asymmetric to the downside given:
1. rising risk of US earnings recession,
2. diverging central bank policies and a Fed that is trying to tighten causing USD to strengthen,
3. US manufacturing sector already in recession territory and non-manufacturing sector continuing to decelerate,
4. deteriorating macroeconomic backdrop with China posing a significant risk to global markets,
5. credit spreads widening and high yield approaching recession levels,
6. late cycle dynamics,
7. continued elevated volatility likely to impact sentiment—VIX has been averaging ~20 for the last 6 months.
As Dubravko summarizes, "this all makes for an unattractive equity backdrop." Furthermore, just like his peers, the third croat notes that there may be a short-term rebound, it is one that should be sold:
"While in the short term an expected pickup in buyback activity and positive 4Q earnings surprises may provide some support to equities, absent a positive central bank catalyst we see equity risks skewed to the downside over the medium term. We have been highlighting for some time that normalization of US monetary policy could pose a significant risk to equities. If equities get progressively worse with sentiment spilling over into the real economy, the Fed may be forced to pause for a while. This could be a relief to the USD and a positive for equity prices and earnings. However, if the Fed continues to normalize, there is a high degree of risk that equities begin to price in a policy error. Also, this is an election year in the US with partisan debate around a range of issues—tax reform (corporate, personal), fiscal policy (infrastructure, defense programs), healthcare. Depending on election outcome (i.e. far right vs. far left) the implication for US equities and sectors could vary by a wide degree.
All of this puts the Fed's credibility in the crosshairs: the market is already expecting just one rate hike in 2016 vs the Fed's "dot plot" forecast of 4. Just how will Yellen converge the two outlooks without leading to even more volatility?
And then there is the economy: "US economic growth estimate for 2016 GDP has been revised down to 1.8% compared to 2.3% in December, which is a step down from 2.4-2.5% seen over the last two years:"
Which brings us to the conclusion:
We are lowering 2016 S&P 500 EPS to $120 from $123 on stronger US Dollar and lower economic growth forecast. The negative revision to our 2016 EPS estimate is due to the further rise in USD TWI (every 2% increase in USD results in negative earnings revisions of ~1%) and deceleration in US GDP forecast (to 1.8% from 2.3%). Our revised $120 EPS assumes flat sales growth (Street at 3%), flat margins (Street at +6bps) and buybacks contributing ~2% to EPS growth. Risk of earnings recession is rising, with S&P 500 likely to print 2 consecutive years (’15, ‘16e) of flat to negative earnings growth. Additionally, we expect volatility to remain elevated and continue to exert negative pressure on the P/E multiple.
Of course, using a well-known Keynesian strategy, if one only excludes all the negatives, only the great news is left, which may explain what the algos are doing today the stock market today. As for tomorrow, we hope Gartman decides to chase the rebound so the shorting can again resume.