Black Swan - Inflation is TransitorySpeculation for Macro:
I argue that price and consumer price inflation do not influence equities as much as the dollar. Investors who are betting on stocks because of 'inflation' will be in for a shock. Yields indicate we may be entering stagflation. Economic slowdown and rising dollar will prove a stronger force than consumer price inflation. After all the Eurodollar market is the market. Not used cars, not meat, not even gas. Investors going on margin to buy stocks because of the inflation narrative are making a grave mistake. (Monetary) Inflation and QE are frauds designed to get force investors into riskier assets and distribute risk onto them.
QE does not lead inflation. Credit leads inflation. QE is just a swap of reserves, so even if media is blaring that Fed is 'printing money' and 'hyperinflation' it does not leave the banking system. In fact, commercial banks hoard it all. We can see by reverse repurchase agreements that banks are stuffed with money and would rather take the overnight rate than trade it for risk. Money enters the economy through lending by the commercial banks.
QE does reduce volatility by backstopping banks and guaranteeing solvencies. For a time, it forces investors into higher risk assets to search for yield. It affects investors' psychology and creates speculative bubbles by making them believe they are hedging against inflation. Jerome Powell was even mentioning the VIX in one of his interviews. They watch that.
What is inflationary is credit. Investors, being deluded into complacency and invincibility, will take loans and buy more and riskier assets backed by lower quality collateral. We are not just talking about stocks either, but people will buy bigger homes, better cars, etc. More risk and more liabilities. All will be paid back.
We know that the global credit impulse has peaked and China's Credit Impulse has turned negative. The Credit Cycle is reversing and debt will be called. Debtors at the front of the curve are harvesting their liabilities, and it will create a collapse in the credit bubble. Credit leads the economy. Credit is going down. Recession is coming, as indicated by yields. M2V has collapsed and is not even shown anymore. While seemingly complex, the economy is just a series of transactions. Low velocity of transactions is deflationary and signals a demand for the dollar, rather than goods or services.
Furthermore, QE has a side effect of reducing the top tier collateral (US Treasuries) from the system. When the credit bubble collapses, the low quality collateral which investors have been forced into will suddenly become illiquid and bidless.
The dollar actually rises with QE and the Fed Balance sheet (especially since 2008):
Investors, particularly foreign sovereigns need the dollar to hedge US investments and creates more demand for it. It is the Eurodollar market that drives the price of the dollar and the global financial market. Just an aside, the Eurodollar market is all digital, it is the real Bitcoin. Sovereigns want dollars not Bitcoin. It is the Eurodollar market which drives risk-taking and currencies. QE is a tiny drop in the ocean.
While certain commodities are heating up and there is a lot of 'news' about demand and supply chain shortages, I believe that commodity demand will rather decline to follow the price of the dollar, not the other way around. Shortage expectations are assuming a nation running at full capacity, but productivity is slowing and the labor market is revealing tightness. Shortages are typically followed by gluts. News follows price. Watch for big busts in 2022 similar to lumber in many commodities. It is more a speculative bubble, rather than a fundamental one.
Credit leads the economy, which leads dollar demand, as banks and sovereigns hoard it because they know recession is coming.
Real rates will continue to fall, offshore dollar shortages are showing, as massively leveraged businesses like Evergrande collapse, and it may only be just the beginning. It is a Lehman moment for China. With defaults, there is more forced demand for the dollar. When dollar demand rises to uncontrollable levels, there can be no more lending, and there will be a cascade of insolvencies by junk bond issuers. At this point, yields may indeed spike.
The dollar will continue to rise, and the only thing that can stop it is the US defaulting on its debt. Watch for the debt ceiling, but remember that has been raised almost every year for 100 years. Technically, the dollar is in a demand zone, with a double bottom and testing resistance. Unless the debt ceiling is not raised, I doubt it will go back to 80. When dollar demand rises to uncontrollable levels, there can be no more lending, and there will be a cascade of insolvencies by junk bond issuers. Being long inflation, you are basically short the dollar right now. This cascade can happen slowly... then all at once.
Fund managers are FOMOing into risk, as you can't miss a quarter by being bearish if you are managing money. Damn the consequences. When it blows up, everyone will blow up, and they will be bailed out anyway, right? You aren't in a worse position than anyone else. However, when it ends, everyone will want out, and fast. The first one out wins.
My point is that credit contraction, followed by a rising dollar which is about to break out will crash this bubble.
The bottom line is that there will be a collateral squeeze, as there is more that has been lent out (leverage) vs the high quality collateral that creditors desire, as indicated by margin debt at ATH... While retail believes that the opposite is happening and they willingly destroy themselves by taking on risk for collateral. What is so different from now than 08? NFTs and cryptocurrencies are similar to the CDOs of subprime mortgages. They are just highly leveraged packages of lending backed by low-quality collateral, or even nothing. The product, or ticker, might change, but they are just units of credit, which are dictated by the Credit Cycle.
I've been hearing that the market can't go down until there is a blowoff top. What do you think this is?
When it comes to debt, you can't just 'not pay it back'. Federal budget deficit doesn't have much to do with it. The money that is 'printed' by the Fed is just hoarded by banks, and Treasury and Fed are separate. However, more Treasury debt just means citizens pay more in taxes, as it is paid for by tax revenue as it matures. It will only increase the cost of borrowing for corporations, causing more downward pressure on the economy, which will make banks hoard even more.
Again, on top of that you have default risk (watch the debt ceiling), and reduced government spending outside of debt servicing. Military, social, and economic influence will decline. China just continuously buys US debt to devalue the yuan and gain a trade surplus. Increasing the US federal deficit will increase debt servicing and decrease military spending, and in the case of a default, while China will lose revenue, they will gain share of global influence. That's the game that's being played between them, so you can't just default. What happened in Afghanistan?
In the end, it's really all just a ruse for those that lead the Credit Cycle to harvest more wealth and assets. Since when did people believe markets can't go down, Fed has your back, you have to be in stocks to beat inflation.
It's not different this time.
There is nothing new under the sun.
I guess you could say that inflation was an attempt to use credit to boost the underlying economy, which failed.
The real black swan will be a deflationary shock.
"Inflation is transitory." - Jerome Powell
GLHF
- DPT
Debt
Total Liabilities : GDP / Macro Review 01The Ratio Expansion is unprecedented in US HIstory.
A clear pattern emerges after the initial Apex - the
gentle stair-step higher into higher and higher Highs.
Debt itself remains the Life-Support of the US Economy.
The Debt to GDP ratio is the Probability of a Nations
ability to Pay Its Debts.
____________________________________________
Corporate Equity to GDP has reached ~220% - in 2008
it peaked at ~150%.
The Equity Complex remains the Center of the
US Economy and GDP.
____________________________________________
Credit Cycle Expansions eventually return to the Mean
after extreme periods of dislocation in Debt Markets begin
to Fail to Settle.
The 30 Yr Bond Auction's Failure is a late-stage warning
sign the appetite for Debt at present Rates of Yield is
unacceptable.
DXY weakness !The US debt problem has caused increased weakness and caused a downtrend since October open ! The problem has been stemmed on by many people in congress and i have little faith this problem will get resolved fully in a timely manner.
While this is bad for America , this would provide the perfect opportunity for a parabolic leg in crypto and potentially increase institutional investors due to inflation increasing !
Currently i have two paths planned out which both heavily rely on a debt solution or lack of :
The blue path is the path we would ideally see for another parabolic leg and it relies on congress being slow to act on a full resolution.
The yellow path will only occur if more solutions are presented and this problem is fully solved with a plan put into place to potentially stop this recurring debt ceiling .
Playing the Squid Game on South KoreaThe South Korean show Squid Game dramatizes, in part, the extremely high household debt levels in that country. With household debt-to-GDP highest in the world, South Korean 30-somethings owe an average of 270% of their annual income.
Those are the kinds of household debt levels that could either plunge the country into recession as credit tightens or cause young Koreans to compete to the death on a dystopian game show for the entertainment of billionaire VIPs.
South Korea looks better in terms of government debt-to-GDP, which allows room for government to provide household debt relief or economic stimulus by growing its debt. That's partly why South Koreans elected a center-left proponent of universal basic income in last Sunday's presidential election.
South Korea's technology-heavy stock index trades at about half the price of other advanced economies on a free cash flow basis. Stocks have sold off sharply in recent months, setting up a possible short-term long-side mean-reversion play. By buying the index, you get large exposure to household names like Samsung and Hyundai. I also like some smaller names like South Korea Telecom, which trades at 2.75 forward P/E with nearly 5% dividend yield.
But household debt remains a long-term risk for South Korea, so I think you carefully scale in. I took a small position here just to satisfy my FOMO, in case we bounce now that the presidential election is over. I am hoping for further selloff to about $26.20 to take a real entry-level position. I will add more at secondary support around $24. Because of the risk of a credit recession, I am sizing my position so that if I should happen to lose this squid game, I won't get killed. :)
This is part of my recent initiative to diversify away from US stocks.
Change Your Mindset to Profit from the Upcoming Market DipAt this stage of the game, there are genuinely too many things to list that would back up the idea of an impending drop in the market.
Instead of eating, sleeping breathing FUD and living in the fear based, scarcity mindset and focusing on how “the market is going to crash” I encourage everyone to see the clearance buffet we are about to have in front of us.
We are about to have an opportunity for generational wealth transfer style profit making. Many missed the ultimate BTFD moment (COVID) but I believe we’re in for a mini round 2. The bigger the dip, the bigger the rip and I’m being a bit facetious here but I mean it.
If you’re gonna rob a bank, are you gonna plan how to do it ahead of time, or just walk in? You know the phrase get away with murder? Well, the people who get away with it are the people who plan it and not the ones who do it impulsively in the moment!
So get ready for the murder of the market that brings a traditional Christmas pump. If you're uncomfortable trading chop, spend this time:
1. Charting High Time Frame on Fundamentally Sound Tickers
2. Setting Alerts at Buy Zones
3. Waiting
Spend this time making all of the money you can OUTSIDE of the market so when opportunity presents itself (massive fear and a drop) to be bought you have the opportunity to do so.
The most important takeaway from yesterday testifyI believe the stock market will correct in the next 2-3 weeks and then we should evaluate the opportunities emerging in the market!
Crypto Market will not respond positively to more regulation!
The stock market will not respond positively to increase rates or decrease inflation!
Markets are constantly in a state of uncertainty and flux and money is made by discounting the obvious and betting on the unexpected.
Evergrande Explained: What Does It All Mean For Markets?Evergrande is something that most of you will have heard about lately, and if you haven’t… you should get the know about it.
This has been one of the main causes of the latest sell off in markets. Its affecting all financial markets from the stock market to the crypto market right now.
I want to explain why that’s the case and what impact it might have going forward…
What is Evergrande?
For anyone who has never heard of Evergrande or maybe has heard it but isn’t sure what it is…
Evergrande is Chinas 2nd largest Real Estate developer and 122nd largest company in the world.
They employ over 120,000 people.
They have over 1,300 building projects in China.
And importantly, they also have some of the largest company debt in the world…
They owe approximately 300 BILLION dollars.
And can’t afford to pay it back…
So What Does It All Mean & Why Is This Important?
Evergrande defaulting on its debt payments has shaken confidence in Chinese real estate markets and caused investors to “de-risk” their portfolios…
Its caused volatility and market sell offs in the stock market as investors or lender to Evergrande are no doubt selling assets to cover some the capital now at risk of default with Evergrande.
Its also made investors worry about a wider spread debt crisis or “contagion” event in markets where lenders or debtors to Evergrande are then also at risk if those debts are not paid back.
So Whats Going To Happen?
So while we outline what this does mean for markets its important to also outline what it doesn’t mean… There are fears that this could be a similar event to the real estate crisis in the US around 2008 where Lehman Brothers defaulted on their debts… and we all know how that ended right?
Well I don’t think this is the same… and more importantly I don’t think that the Chinese authorities would allow that to happen.
This event in some ways has been caused by the Chinese authorities trying to calm the excesses they knew about in the Chinese real estate market…
So I believe this is somewhat a controlled explosion by authorities in China that are looking to deleverage their market excesses.
If that is the case then the fear in the market currently of contagion risks and full blown market crisis is over exaggerated. That means there’s a real possibility that this COULD offer an opportunity to get a good entry into the market during this pullback.
4 hour SPY chart.Let's keep this simple. SPY on the four hour chart. One more day of consolidation will complete the right shoulder. Lower then average volume, to many bad bad super bad catalyst to not have this play out. Evergrande, debt ceiling, over leveraged banks, and hedge funds, housing bubble, inflation, fed tapering. Don't kid yourself.
Capital Formation Died Long AgoWe can see the effects of the Monetary and Fiscal Policy Failures
during the 2006 - 2009 crisis.
The blame was reported on you, good citizen consumer.
The collapse of the housing market, fueled by low interest rates,
easy credit, insufficient regulation, extensive leverage and
Toxic subprime mortgages led to the economic crisis of 06-09.
Does this sound familiar?
In reality, what caused the Financial Crisis was deregulation
of the Financial edifice.
Degenerate Gambling @ the Casino, whereby Private losses were
backstopped with Public Funds.
$34 Trillion from the US Central Bank to Global Financial Institutions.
The problem currently, it is orders of magnitude worse.
Buy STONKs, close your eyes and Buy everything.
It'll be okay, we promise...
Bonds - US10Y Cannot and Will Not Rise SignificantlyIdea for 10Y Treasury Bond Yields:
I speculate that yields cannot and will not rise significantly until the equity bubble pops.
I think that it will start a wave reaching 0.7 this month.
Why is that?
- There is almost $300 trillion in private sector debt globally.
- Companies used margin debt for share buybacks to boost EPS, creating the illusion of economic growth.
- There is a borrowing cost for private debtors, debt must be serviced.
- 10Y is used as a risk-free rate benchmark for credit derivatives, especially for risk spreads.
- Furthermore, rising yields means that a rate hike would inevitably follow.
- The premium on credit risk is at a record low (BBB).
- Even junk bonds and Greece is negatively yielding.
- Zombie companies are at an ATH (one that isn’t generating enough income to cover the annual interest payments on its debts. With interest rates so low, these zombies have stayed “alive” by refinancing their debts at increasingly lower rates, or simply tacking on more debt to keep breathing. But with rates rising, zombies may be forced to refinance at higher rates.)
- Since debt is increasing, the magnitude that rates can rise before negatively impacting the private sector is decreasing.
Any significant rise in rates will quickly cause mass insolvencies in these zombie companies, which also would cause a cascade of liquidations in yield chasers who had sold credit default swaps - accumulating asymmetric risk. It is a massive, massive bubble, and any significant rise in rates would collapse the equity market and the economy.
The only way to keep equities stable would be for negative rates, but the dollar is without a doubt - rising. As debt rises, liquidity is sucked out of the collateral pool in a proportional amount. You will just eventually get to a point where debt servicing becomes too expensive anyway from a collateral supply perspective. That's the fundamental condition which will eventually bring about the reflexive regression to the mean.
So is it a slow and painful death, or a quick flush?
I'd bet on the latter... more money to be made for insiders who short it.
In fact, I would wager that the Bill Ackmans of the world are betting big on credit default swaps on zombie companies, similar to CDSs/CDOs on subprime mortgages in 2008. People are buying with both hands bonds which are expected to yield less than what they paid for at the maturity. Any change in conditions would cause this to be capitulation into a bid-less market, don't you think? It's pure insanity and there is only one thing to do here.
GLHF
- DPT
Macro - Global Inflation Expectations Rolling OverSpeculation for Macro:
These are the underlying conditions:
- Inflation expectations are what leads risk appetite. After all, who would hold or buy an asset expected to depreciate in value?
- Global inflation expectations turning down and have been in a downtrend for decades. Of course it is deflationary. If DEBT fueled GDP growth (for appearances over results) misses expectations vs. the underlying conditions, what can you really do?
- AMZN missing expectations is a hint. Bonds and currencies lie less than stocks. Stocks are the last to get the message.
AMZN - This is a pattern prevalent globally right now. Look how it resolved in HSI, and now AMZN:
- Druckenmiller says that funds position for 18 months in advance. The sell-off in tech and lack of interest is a huge tell. In decelerating markets, sector losers will be sold off heavily.
- If you cant stimulate earnings & job growth by dumping money into stock buybacks, then you have failed. You will have price inflation ONLY, but it is not creating GDP growth nor lasting means to do so. Only raising DEBT, and then when you take away QE/negative rates you are left with nothing but high prices, and a big asset bubble. Now, we are to assume that investors will keep bidding up assets that are expected to depreciate in value? No they will just sell, and money managers see what is coming just from AMZN + GDP missing expectations.
- When you only have price inflation, but the population not accumulating capital, it will lead to consumers being priced out of discretionaries and demand will decrease. You will revert society back to demanding bare necessities, rather than creating innovation.
- You can keep pouring in money through QE, but rates cant go more negative... CBs will just eventually hold all of their own negative yielding debt and keep printing money when nobody is actually giving you money for the debt? How does it create GDP growth when the money they print is depreciating in value vs. existing debt which needs to eventually be financed?
- Debt is the deflationary force that money printing is fighting against. They need the economy such that it can eat away the debt without them pouring money into it, but if companies fail to produce increasing revenue while debt is increasing, they have failed.
- Then for the next crisis, your are left with no options except to lie down and take it.
- Institutional money will begin to sell off as they realize what is happening and data factors begin to confirm this trend.
Global Liquidity Providers with a red flag:
Softbank:
Evergrande:
Bitcoin/Blackrock - US equities have yet to factor in the selloff in Bitcoin (Bitcoin is the US liquidity provider/Shadow Bank IMO):
- What is the Trigger to actually sell the US equities though? How to action this global shift? Its very tricky obviously, but I am looking at the leaders (FAANG) which have upheld the bull run up till now as hard supports vs. the weakening market breadth. That's why AMZN is an important cue for me.
- Asia is the key. As we know, China is attempting to pop their asset bubble, and it is creating a deflationary wave which has reached HK and now Japan. It will spillover to EU and US without question.
- You can see the COVID and other fears being set up to be blamed as a 'catalyst' to blame, rather than CB's blatant failure to navigate the crisis.
- Of course, stocks aren't the economy... but when smart money realizes that revenue will decline, and no value will be created for them, of course they will sell. i.e. Its going to translate to revenue, innovation, dividends and stock buybacks.
I expect a correction at the very least in the near future in US equities, and a big one in the mid-long term. All I can do is short the setups and prepare for the big one.
But where will investors put their money then?
- Dollars, housing and bonds from the looks of it. Anything to escape the tail risk in equities. Even the junkiest of yields are below inflation as investors seek yield.
- It is a bit sinister, because the Fed is buying bonds and MBS's, and eventually it will be returned in theory. So they retain the ability to strike down the havens.
When new instruments which are riskier and riskier are created so that investors can obtain yield and institutions can sell their risk to them, it piles on more risk into the system, such that the threshold for a tail event is lowered. That is probably where the liquidity eventually flows to.
Just because there is an immense amount of money in the system doesn't mean investors won't sell that risk. When everyone is risk-on, wouldn't it create more yield to just flush risk assets first and then buy the dip?
The great Black Swan here is that inflation is indeed transitory. It would mean that even QE Infinity and negative rates cannot stimulate the economy.
How it Unfolds:
- While M Money Stock has increased, it has done little to reduce debt vs. money, nor increased GDP (growth YoY).
- The Credit Cycle is the beginning of liquidity flows. The global credit impulse is negative, meaning new inflationary credit is not created, and eventually, debt will be called instead. Inflation will be destroyed. Debt is at an all time high.
- For debt to be serviced, those institutions which have sold debt must now pull liquidity from assets in order to service the debt. While the assets have appreciated in monetary value, they have depreciated vs. debt, meaning that they will need to return more M Money than they borrowed. This means that at the end of it, there will be a money SHORTAGE!
GLHF
- DPT
A long time coming.I have been testing and researching a new strategy for a long while now and I wanted to make sure it worked before presenting, I hope you all enjoy. Without further ado, let's start off the day with tracking the core of the market. VIX, DXY, oil and debt. This is my market tracker. as you can see, oil looking good, VIX in a manipulated range, DXY looking about equal to the vix and inflation and debt relative to the M2 and money velocity is as expected. All four of these are on the day. Next up is silver.
BASICS OF SAVING & INVESTMENT | RULES YOU SHOULD NEVER BREAK
Debt and living on credit is a universal norm .
While the "wisest" among us are trying to persuade themselves how they "hack" the system buying on credit card smartly, the richest among us keep following totally different commandments .
You must remember that debt makes you dependent , it makes you submissive to the system.
To become truly free and wealthy, here are the simple rules that will change your life if you follow them:
1 - Spend less than you make
2 - Do not save what is left after spending, but spend what is left after saving
3 - Invest the rest in the industries that you understand
4 - Never borrow to invest
5 - Stop trying to get rich quick
6 - Never let your emotions intervene
7 - Patience pays
The rules by themselves are very easy and straightforward, however, most of us are not disciplined enough to follow.
Learn them, try them, practice them and one day you will become free!
❤️ Please, support my work with like and lovely comment !❤️
It truly helps!
Thank you!
Hyper INFLATION (scarcity) & Bubbles - Bear Attack - Nasdaq 100 The printing clown show continues. On lookout for Hyper Inflation in scarcity plays (profit generators today not 10 years from now sillies). Those overvalued hyped names of the past decade will come down hard (no profits in sight for next decade). #investingainteasy #epiceconomics
Are bonds ready for a bounce?Bond have fallen a lot and quite fast. The sentiment is really stretched and most expect yields to rise more (bonds to fall lower). In my opinion there is quite a decent chance the bond bull market is over given that we had a massive blow off top in March 2020, but this doesn't mean that I don't see a potential bounce here or even bottom. Bonds hit key support, swept the lows before the big move up and are no showing signs of life.
When I see so much debt, when I see slow growth and all the bad things going on around us... I don't think we'll get huge inflation any time soon. To me this is cyclical inflation after a supply shock rather than anything else. Many other yields are decreasing and spreads are the tightest they've been in years, so why would bonds go much lower? The Fed has failed to meet its inflation target for years, but they are going to make it now? We are also post the SLR cliff that could had been the 'sell the rumour buy the news event'
WMT 1Q Earning Target 2021WMT flopped its fourth quarter earnings in 2020 announcing -.74 cents a share. I expect a report with a lot more strength with integration of E-commerce into it online store models as well as less fear surrounding COVID-19 creating boost in sales. With only 1% of shares floating short, The slow grind up, which has been evident since the middle of March, is likely to continue without any strong resistance. Being the largest retailer in 2019 boasting 523 B in sales (NRF.com) doubling AMZN sales, this stock is a solid frontrunner as we move into a post pandemic economy. The NFP report on April 2nd of 916k (almost double the previous month report) compared to the 652k estimate is also encouraging as this could lead to more consumer spending. Still to come this month are MOM retail sale reports on the 15th and 16th which will could potentially back this thesis. Furthermore, with the market creating new highs quickly, there could be a tinge of uncertainty or heightened volatility as the rally hasn't really had much catalyst other than jobs, but with WMT's Beta of .47 (Zachs) this stock is relatively safe. With a debt to equity ratio at a 2 year low as well, this stock is definitely a strong buy in my opinion and I have set my post earnings target for 160 with this stock. This would be an all time high and about a 2% increase from current highs which is definitely within reason all things considered.
SPY Bull Case for March 24thSPY has been in a bit of a tricky situation lately, stuck between the debt expansion of the fed which is bullish, and the yield curve and DXY going up which is bearish for SPY. Until the Fed implements Yield Curve Control (which I believe they will do in the near future) SPY could keep correcting and this volatility will remain. The market wants more debt expansion, so until we get it SPY will be indecisive.