The "Trade Of The Year" Just Returned 30% In Two Days
Submitted by Tyler D.
02/12/2016 - 15:11
CHESAPEAKE SAID PLANNING TO PAY $500 MILLION DEBT DUE IN MARCH
This Is The NIRP "Doom Loop" That Threatens To Wipeout Banks And The Global Economy
Submitted by Tyler D.
02/12/2016 15:26 -0500
Remember the vicious cycle that threatened the entire European banking sector in 2012?
It went something like this: over indebted sovereigns depended on domestic banks to buy their debt, but when yields on that debt spiked, the banks took a hit, inhibiting their ability to fund the sovereign, whose yields would then rise some more, further curtailing banks’ ability to help out, and so on and so forth.
Well don’t look now, but central bankers’ headlong plunge into NIRP-dom has created another “doom loop” whereby negative rates weaken banks whose profits are already crimped by the new regulatory regime, sharply lower revenue from trading, and billions in fines. Weak banks then pull back on lending, thus weakening the economy further and compelling policy makers to take rates even lower in a self-perpetuating death spiral. Meanwhile, bank stocks plunge raising questions about the entire sector's viability and that, in turn, raises the specter of yet another financial market meltdown.
Below, find the diagram that illustrates this dynamic followed by a bit of color from WSJ:
From WSJ:
In a way, the move below zero was a gamble. The theory went like this: Banks would take a hit, but negative rates would get the economy moving. A stronger economy would, in turn, help the banks recover.
It appears that wager isn’t working.
The consequences are deeply worrying. Weak banks may now drag the economy down further. And with the economy weak and deflation—a damaging spiral of falling wages and prices—looming, central banks that have gone negative will be loath to turn around and raise rates.
Moreover, central banks have few other levers to escape that doom loop. The ECB has instituted a bond-buying program, but President Mario Draghi last month indicated he was ready to launch additional monetary stimulus in March. Japan’s decision to implement negative rates follows three years of aggressive monetary easing, aimed at ending two decades of low inflation and stagnant growth.
The pushes into negative territory also amount to a sort of competitive currency war that no one seems willing to call off.
Major economies around the world are desperate to spur inflation; one way to do that is to cut interest rates, which typically would make their currencies less attractive. Lower currencies raise the prices of imported goods and boost the fortunes of exporters.
Switzerland, Sweden and Denmark have all used negative rates to help ward off inflows of foreign funds that push up their currencies. Economists said an aim of the Bank of Japan’s move to negative rates last month was to weaken the yen. It hasn’t worked: The yen shot up Thursday and is stronger than it was before the rate cut.
The move below zero compounds the miseries for lenders in those countries. Banks traditionally make a profit by lending at higher interest rates than the rates they pay on deposits, a difference called the net interest margin. Low rates have already squeezed that margin, and banks’ funding costs from other sources, such as bond markets, have surged this year.
German banks earn roughly 75% of their income from the margin between rates on savings accounts and the loans they make, according to statistics from the
Bundesbank, the country’s central bank. Plunging rates dragged German banks’ interest revenue down to €204 billion ($230 billion) in 2014 from €419 billion in 2007, according to the Bundesbank.
Negative rates cost Danish banks more than 1 billion kroner ($151 million) last year, according to a lobbying group for Denmark’s banking sector.
Consider that and then have a look at the following chart, which certainly seems to indicate that we are on step 8 in WSJ's doom loop...
Step 9 is when things really start to go south for the real economy. So buckle up.
Martin Armstrong Warns "Systemic Risk Is Rising For All Markets"
Submitted by Tyler D.
02/12/2016 - 15:30
The increasingly unstable footing that we find ourselves standing on is reflected in widening credit spreads that demonstrate that CONFIDENCE is indeed collapsing. We are on the precipice of what can only be described as a rising systemic risk for all markets.
Raymond James Analyst Is Out With A Major Bearish Call
Submitted by Tyler D.
02/12/2016 16:15 -0500
From Robin Landry of Raymond James
Since the last update the market has fallen to test the 1810 area as seen on the attached chart. The news and various indicators I use are getting more bearish. The world is drowning in debt and the central banks are showing themselves to be powerless to turn the economies of their respective countries around. Now they are moving to negative interest rates which only confirms my view of the world being in a DEFLATIONARY trend that has years to go. The talk of doing away with currency and moving to a digital currency is also showing the desperation. I believe a digital currency is coming much sooner that most people realize. The count shown in the attached chart is the one which gives a little larger view of where I believe the market is headed over the next few months if the top is already in. The rally happening, as I write this, is mainly due to the rally in oil. If the market is to make a new high, as I have suggested in earlier updates, this rally must break through the resistance in the S&P 500 around the 1950 area on increasing volume. If it fails, then the decline will drop to the 1740 area which I have repeatedly said MUST HOLD or the markets are in a MAJOR BEAR MARKET that will test the lows reached in 2009.
A Chief Investment Strategist that I have great respect for has always said that people don’t care whether things are good or bad but ARE THEY GETTING BETTER. The evidence I am looking at does not say things are getting better. THEY ARE GETTING WORSE!!! I have been in the investment business for over 40 years and have found that the charts of the various markets tell me what is going on in the longer term. I have repeatedly said that the Central Banks and the various Governments CAN change things over the short to medium term but THEY CANNOT CHANGE THE LONG TERM. Cycles have always existed and while they may be skewed to the left or right for awhile they ultimately happen until they are finished.
In Graduate school I took a Humanities course which I hated and was one of the few which I did not make an A in. Life is funny because that course taught me something which has turned out to be one of the most eye opening things I have experienced so far in my 69 years of life and my 40 plus years in this business.
The book used in that course was a book about Civilization. It outlined the dominance of Eastern and Western countries and how the Dominance changed every 500 years with a smaller 250 year cycle inside that where the major country in that hemisphere also changed. For example, the dominant hemisphere over the last 500 years has been the West. For about 250 years it was Great Britain, then it has been the United States. Now it is time for it to swing back to the East and we can easily see that happening every day in the news. China appears to be the next leader in the world, at least the way it looks now. You might ask what does that have to do with the stock market? Everything!! While the change does not happen overnight, it does happen and involves great turmoil. I got interested in cycles after reading that book in the Humanities class and wrote my Master’s thesis on the stock market. In that process I ran across the Elliott Wave theory. It allows one to map, as best as I have ever found, where we are in cycles at various degrees. One of the things that stands out in the study of cycles is that approximately every 80 years or so there is a Depression and then every 250 years an even greater change which I call a revolution. I believe that is what we are in the very early stages of. In the revolution cycle governments fall and new one’s rise. Look at all the changes going on around the world with everything changing in ways many of us would have never dreamed unless we had studied History and Cycles.
I won’t attempt to explain the Elliott Wave theory in this update. Robert Prechter along with A.J. Frost have written a book titled “Elliott Wave Principle” and explains it far better that I ever could. Elliott Wave International’s website is www.elliottwave.com. There you can find his book, newsletter’s and other materials if you want to learn more. The reason I bring this up, I have said in recent Market Updates that if we have already topped out in the stock market, then the market decline will be the biggest one anyone alive has ever seen and the result will be changes in every aspect of life that few people have ever dreamed of. It has been said that because the wave structure pattern can be very subjective that you can have 3 experts in Elliott Wave in the same room and have 3 different opinions. I have worked to take as much of my own opinion out of my analysis by using various technical indicators others have created over the years to help me determine where we really are in the wave structure.
I have expressed my opinion that we are in a large Cycle wave 4 correction and once it is finished a final 5th wave up to new highs will happen before the big downturn starts. Very few other EW technicians agree with me and think the top is already in and the downturn has already started. That is why over the years I have shown charts with my preferred count and my alternate count. What my personal opinion is does not matter. What does matter is what does the wave structure and the technical indicators say. They are telling me we are at a critical juncture. There are numerous supports from the recent low around 1810 down to the 1740 area which I IMHO believe will determine what the true count is. I am hoping for the best but also trying to prepare for the worst. I could go on for hours explaining all the things which tell me why I believe this support area is so important but I do not have the time and my typing skills are almost nonexistent.
Weekend Reading: Bull Struggles & NIRP
02/12/2016 16:45 -0500
Submitted by Lance Roberts
AAA-WeekendReading-021116
Wow…things are certainly happening faster than I expected. As January kicked off the new year, I posted my outlook for 2016 in which I discussed why, despite views of Goldman Sachs and many others, interest rates were going lower rather than higher.
“With the Federal Reserve raising interest rates on the short-end (Fed Funds), it will likely push the long-end of the curve lower as the economy begins to slow from the effects of monetary policy tightening.
From a purely technical perspective, rates have been in a long-term process of a tightening wedge. A breakout to the upside would suggest 10-year treasury rates would soar to 3.6% or higher, the consequence of which would be an almost immediate push of an economy growing at 2% into recession. The most likely path, given the current economic and monetary policy backdrop, will be a decline in rates toward the previous lows of 1.6-1.8%. (Inflation will also remain well below the Fed’s 2% target rate for the same reasons.)”
Rates-Price-Projection-122815
“Of course, falling rates means the ongoing “bond bull market” will remain intact for another year. In fact, if my outlook is correct, bonds will likely be one of the best performing asset classes in the next year.”
Here is that same chart today:
InterestRate-Update-021116
With interest rates now at my target levels in February, and bonds now extremely overbought, this is an opportune time to take some profits out of interest rate sensitive investments.
However, what the plunge in rates also suggests is that the economy is FAR weaker than Ms. Yellen, the mainstream financial media or the bullish blogosphere realize. Unfortunately, by the time the economic data is revised to reveal what rates are already telling you, it will be far too late to protect your investment capital.
But that is just my view. This weekend’s reading list, as usual, is a compilation of reads that provide both sides of the market and economic debate. Our job, as investors, is to reduce our confirmation bias in order to make more logical decisions with our money even though our emotions may be trying to lead us elsewhere. Hope, optimism and greed are all emotions that have led to far greater destructions of capital than negativity and fear ever have.
1) The Greatest Bull Market Of All Time by Ben Carlson via Wealth Of Common Sense
“How many hedge fund managers would kill for the following performance characteristics over a 40-year time frame?
* Annual Returns: 7.7%
* Volatility: 6.9%
* Number of Up Years: 37
* Number of Down Years: 3
* Annual Win %: 93%
* Worst Annual Loss: -2.9%
* Average Annual Loss: -1.9%
* Max Drawdown: -12.4%”
Bond-Returns-1976-2015
But Also Read: Equity Bubble Update by Jeremy Grantham via GMO
2) I Was Too Bullish by Matthew Belvedere via CNBC
“I was far too bullish last December,” Siegel admitted, referring to his call on “Squawk Box” that “valuations can stay on the high side.” He also had predicted on CNBC in November that Dow 20,000 was a “real possibility” in 2016. It was above 15,900 on Monday.
The Wharton School finance professor on Monday summed up his view on the headwinds to the market. “Those deflationary forces … from China, from commodities are really, in the presence of debt that so many of these energy and other companies have, … causing the market turmoil right now.”
Also Read: Just A Bullish Pause by Avi Gilburt via MarketWatch
Opposing View: Deteriorating Liquidity by Luke Kawa via Bloomberg
And Also: America’s Earning Recession Deepens by Alex Rosenberg via CNBC
3) Global Growth Fraying At The Edges by Gavyn Davies via FT
“The weakness in global risk assets that started in May 2015 raises a major question for macro-economists. Is market turbulence foreshadowing – or perhaps causing – a much broader weakening in global economic activity than anything seen since 2009?
Until now, the Fulcrum activity nowcasts have failed to identify a major turning point in global growth. This conclusion is still just about intact, but is subject to much greater doubt in this month’s report. There are some signs that growth in the advanced economies may be fraying at the edges, and China may be embarking on another mini downturn.”
FT-GlobalGrowth-021116
Also Read: Clueless Economists & The Coming Recession by Aaron Layman
4) EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT NIRP
* An Explanation Of Negative Rates by Econobrowser
* Negative Rates: A Giant Policy Failure by Narayana Kocherlakota
* The Fed May Follow Japan’s Path by John Mauldin via Fortune
* The Futile Negative Rates Club by Daniel Gross via Project Syndicate
* Why Japan Went NIRP by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Partners
* Bizarro World Of Negative Rates by Marc Chandler via Real Clear Markets
* The New Frontier Of NIRP by Clive Crook via Bloomberg
* NIRP Confirms QE Failure by Jeffrey Snider via Real Clear Markets
5) Why Stocks Could Fall By 10-20% by Jack Bouroudjian via CNBC
“The market tone began to shift in December — and the warning signals started to flash red.
We started to witness a contraction in earnings for a couple of quarters in a row, which resulted in the price-to-earnings ratio of the S&P 500getting rich. We watched crude oil have a parabolic move to the downside as producers couldn’t pump fast enough. And we started to see the Federal Reserve move rates at a time when all the other central banks were doing the exact opposite which created risk aversion.
As it turns out, this became an I.O.U. market: interest rates, oil and uncertainty.”