Author: pebblewriter

  • Known Unknowns Strike Again

    I’ve glanced wistfully over the years at announcements of runs I’ve enjoyed in the past: countless 5Ks, 10Ks and a handful of marathons. Together with high school football, college rugby and too many pickup basketball games to count, they had bestowed me with the knees of a senior citizen well before any gray hair clocked in.

    But, 2020 was a transformative year. I had one knee replaced, then the other – which of course made my shoulders jealous. Two shoulder surgeries later, I felt better than I had in years – racking up 40-50 miles per week during which I occasionally snuck in a few miles of running (okay, shuffling.)

    When the UCLA Anderson School of Management email arrived announcing a virtual run for charity, I figured it was time to put my surgeons’ handiwork to the test and signed up for the half marathon.  Though it was 24 degrees when I laced up the Sauconys Saturday morning, I felt fantastic.

    The knees were rock solid, barely raising a fuss. The most recently repaired shoulder – still in a sling – grumbled a bit under its breath, but acquiesced.  At the halfway mark, I even picked up my pace. That, as it turns out, was a mistake.

    The known risks weren’t a problem. It was the known unknown ones  – the Morton’s neuromas I had forgotten about because they stopped hurting years ago when I was forced to stop running – that blew up my performance. I walked the final five miles, wincing with every step.

    So it was with the Archegos fiasco. Without a doubt, someone at Credit Suisse and Nomura had given at least some thought to the size of the virtual position Archegos might have amassed and the possibility that it might have made similar bets at rival banks. Certainly they had done the math on their own position. So why the billions in losses?

    Could it have anything to do with this guy?

    For the past 12 years, the Fed has offered an implicit (and often explicit) assurance that nothing bad will happen to equity investors. That’s the carrot. The stick is that bond returns have been pounded into the proverbial dirt, offering negative nominal yields in many cases and negative real yields in even more.

    Together with other central bankers, treasuries, and their proxies, they have backed up that assurance with intervention that was once considered unthinkable except under the most extreme circumstances.  Consider the March 2020 lows.  Is it a coincidence that the Dow bottomed out at 18,213.65, a meager 39 points (0.2%) from the lows registered on Nov 9, 2016, the day after the presidential election?

    And, while we’re talking about November 9, 2016…how is it that VIX suddenly collapsed even as the futures screamed southward, off 4.5% in the wake of the news that Trump had won?  This would be tantamount to calling your insurance agent to cancel your flood insurance as a hurricane is bearing down on your beachfront cottage.

    VIX had spiked 55% within an hour or so. But, it suddenly reversed and gave up all that and more even as ES was still melting down. It even managed to break down from the rising channel it had established 4 months before.

    After a few weeks of being mercilessly hammered at every turn, VIX would reach levels not seen since February 2007. Its “breakdowns” would eventually become commonplace whenever stocks reached significant resistance or needed help in the face of inconvenient news or economic data.The Fed’s message is clear, and the algorithms have taken it to heart. But, it is not without consequences.  Many stocks have risen well above their Feb 2020 highs even though their earnings are nowhere close to where they were a year ago. The prices of many commodities have also soared, spawning a coming spike in inflation to over 3%. Ultra-low mortgage rates have driven housing prices out of reach for many.

    Perhaps most concerning, the Fed is playing a dangerous game of chicken with the bond market in the midst of an unprecedented explosion of debt. New issuance is running about $650 billion per quarter.  Who’s going to buy all those treasuries, knowing that they’ll receive negative real yields now and face substantial interest rate risk as inflation spikes higher and the Fed has to taper or even [he shudders] raise rates?

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  • The VIX is In

    The algos are very happy with the way VIX is melting down.continued for members

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  • Algos to Stocks: “We Got This”

    It’s a light volume day leading up to a holiday weekend – the market’s favorite time to take a shot at important resistance. Though SPX tagged its 3.618 Fibonacci extension several weeks ago, ES has fallen short time after time. The disappointing employment data due out at 8:30 wasn’t going to help, so VIX jumped in with a 7.4% decline at 8:03, falling through the gap close at 18.21 from Feb 21, 2020.  It wasn’t quite enough to get ES up to 3998 (those pesky unemployment data.)But, then, the game’s not over yet…is it?

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  • Stocks to Algos: “Don’t Let Me Down”

    On top of the world, with an adoring crowd gathered below and indifferent law enforcement milling about…there is a bit of a parallel between a famous rooftop concert and the current market.

    As stocks slink into the end of Q1 amidst a bevy of perils, there’s a sense of calm before the storm. Then again, SPX closed yesterday above its 3.618 Fibonacci extension – though just barely this time. Can the algos keep the music playing?

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  • USDJPY’s Turn

    Members will recall that one critical component of our oil/gas decline scenario is USDJPY’s breakout from the falling channel from 2017 shown below.  Guess what?

    The yen carry trade is a tried and true method of goading the algos into buying equities – even overpriced ones. It works especially well as a counterweight to falling oil/gas prices as we first observed in 2015 [see: Did TPTB Crash Oil?]

    So, it’s absolutely no surprise to see central banks pull it out of the playbook at a time when folks are suddenly curious about hidden, systemic risks and oil/gas prices are in the midst of a healthy reset.

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  • What Were They Thinking?

    The massive Ever Given container ship has been freed from the Suez Canal’s mud just in time for the market’s open. While positive for global trade, stocks are arguably more focused on the ambit of the latest Wall Street scandal – this one involving the Reddit-style goings-on of Archegos Capital and the banks which apparently neglected to check on their collateral from time to time.

    The failure of some of the biggest and most sophisticated banks in the world to recognize the Long-Term Capital Management doppelgänger on their books is emblematic of the frenzy with which institutions and individuals alike regard the equity market. Why bother analyzing exposure when central banks will never allow a significant decline anyway?

    Futures are off about 20 points – just enough to put SPX’s 3.618 Fibonacci extension at 3956.64 to the test on the open.

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  • The Usual Suspects

    There’s a well-known scene at the end of the classic film Casablanca where Captain Renault (Claude Reins), having seen Rick (Humphrey Bogart) shoot a Nazi in order to enable Ilsa and Lazlo to escape, tells his men to “round up the usual suspects.” It saves Rick, Ilsa and Lazlo’s collective bacon (though I suspect it sucks for the usual suspects.)

    click to play

    So it is with the algos driving equities lately. With oil/gas prices on their back heels and VIX being bid up every day by nervous carbon-based investors, it falls to the the usual suspects in the currency markets to provide algos with the proper “motivation.”

    Think of USDJPY’s breakout not so much as a bug, but a feature of the modern market — one of the many quiddities which allows futures to ramp higher on, say, disappointing economic news.

    While it is sometimes difficult to know when stocks will get much-needed support, these tools have been fairly predictable and have provided excellent trading opportunities.

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  • Update on Gold and Silver: Mar 25, 2021

    We have multiple targets being reached this morning, and several more in the works. We’ll start with ES, which just tagged our SMA50 target in a backtest of the falling white channel from which it broke out two weeks ago.

    The one we’ve been waiting on for what feels like forever, though, is silver. SI broke out of the falling white channel twice before it managed to tag our 30.35 target in January. But, as we discussed at the time [see: Hi Ho Silver]:

    With the SMA200 crawling along toward current prices, we can’t discount the potential for a long overdue backtest.

    We’re finally getting that backtest. But, given DXY’s breakout, we have to wonder whether SI’s backtest will hold. We’ll update the prognosis for silver and gold and also sneak in a discussion of EURUSD, which officially reached our next downside target yesterday.

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  • Don’t Fight the BoJ

    I know what you’re thinking: it’s “don’t fight the Fed.” While that’s generally true, too, the Bank of Japan is the central bank which most conspicuously wears its balance sheet on its sleeve. When my charts are a farrago of bearish indicators, but the Nikkei pushes up through resistance? I’ve learned to ignore the indicators and become bullish.

    Conversely, when the narrative is incredibly bullish but the NKD slips below important support, it’s time to short. For those who haven’t been paying attention, that’s where we are right now. We’ve had a few hints over the past week or so, but the NKD suggests there’s more to come. US stocks just haven’t gotten the message yet.

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  • Fedsplaining

    Today we get the benefit of both Jerome Powell and Janet Yellen telling us that, despite how incredible the outlook is, things are so horrible that they need to keep pumping billions of dollars into the markets every day.  For the little people. You know – unemployed folks who can really benefit from rapidly rising food, energy, and housing costs.

    It’s now been a year since SPX bottomed out, 9 months since a test of its 200-DMA, and five months since a test of its 100-DMA. The algos have been working overtime. Corrections have been short and sweet, quickly extinguished by rallies in oil and USDJPY and sharp collapses in VIX.

    From this point forward, expect them to come as a surprise to many investors.

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