Tag: FOMC

  • The Market is (Still) Broken

    Futures came roaring back into the falling white channel yesterday, revealing what many know but few say out loud: the market is broken. When expectations of a 1% quarterly rise in GDP yield, instead, a 1.4% decline, stocks should decline. Plain and simple.

    The old “bad news is good news” argument doesn’t work any more because the Fed no longer has the ability (at least this coming meeting) to ease in response to a slowing economy. Perhaps they would have if they hadn’t squandered the opportunity to taper months ago, but that’s water under the bridge.

    Instead, we get this massive disconnect which is, at the end of the day, a means of ramping stocks in advance of the bad news we all know is coming via the Fed’s meeting next week: a 50+ bps rate hike. Beyond monetary policy, which is now a headwind instead of a tailwind, we see more and more indications of tough times ahead. As Bill Blain (a treasure) sums it up:

    The world is not what we think it should be. It is what it is…and that is getting less pretty.

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  • Fed Minutes on Deck

    Futures are off sharply as we approach the open. Algos are responding to VIX’s pop back above its 200-DMA and the prospect of increasing Fed hawkishness.

    As we pointed out yesterday, the 10Y has again reached the top of a well-formed channel dating back over 30 years. Its ongoing decline has provided much of the fuel for increasing stock, bond and real estate prices, though, reversals at the channel top have marked severe downturns.If the Fed prevents the 10Y from breaking out while continuing to raise short-term rates, the 2s10s will become even more inverted, validating recession forecasts. And, as we discussed last week [see: Should We Fear a Yield Curve Inversion?] the aftermath of these inversions has never been good for stocks.

    Bottom line, the Fed is damned if they do and damned if they don’t.  The real question surrounding today’s minutes is whether members will sound as bewildered on paper as they have in person.

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  • A Moment of Truth for the Bond Market

    The Fed is supposedly reducing its “involvement” in the bond market. So, will they really sit on their hands now that the 10Y is testing the top of a channel dating back over 30 years?

    The charts suggest that if today’s high is taken out, the 10Y could easily reach 3.2%.If it reverses instead, stocks will be in for a world of hurt…

  • Should We Fear a Yield Curve Inversion?

    It seems like everyone’s talking about the yield curve. Will it invert? If so, when? Would it imply or even precipitate a recession? How would it affect Fed policy? What would it mean for the stock market?

    Since our work focuses on forecasting markets, let’s set aside for the moment whether an inversion means a recession is any more or less likely. After all, the stock market is not the economy. Instead, let’s turn our attention to how markets react to yield curve inversions.

    February 2000

    Since 2000, we’ve had four inversions: instances of 10-year yields falling below 2-year yields. The first began on Feb 2, 2000, about 7 weeks before SPX topped out and 5 weeks before COMP topped out. The inversion didn’t last long, however. By the end of December, the 2s10s had swung back to positive. SPX, which had recently corrected nearly 20%, rallied 10% by the end of January, peaking on the same day as the 2s10s (the white arrows on each chart.)

    At that point, SPX began another leg down which would see it shed a total of 30% from the top, a third which totaled 40%, and a fourth which totaled 50%. Notably, these more dramatic plunges didn’t occur until 2s10s spiked higher.

    When 2s10s broke out above a trend line (below, in red) which connected the former highs in 1996 and 1998, stocks’ losses accelerated. In other words, the initial inversion coincided with a modest 20% correction which lagged the 2s10s by 14 sessions.  It was the 2s10s breakout – a sharp rise from 33 bps to 234 bps once it cleared that red trend line – that coincided with the crash.

    Once the 2s10s began its ascent, its oscillations continued to correlate with stocks’. Zooming in, we can see that the 2s10s repeatedly bounced off a rising yellow trend line (TL) for the next six months, finally topping out and dropping through the TL in June 2001 (point 1 on the chart below.) Initially, SPX consolidated.

    When 2s10s popped up through overhead resistance (the purple TL) however, SPX began another sharp leg down. It happened again at point 2, breaking down through another yellow TL from the 2000 lows and popping up to new highs above the purple TL.

    We can draw two general conclusions from this inversion:

    1. First, the initial inversion is not a sell signal. If someone had gone to cash the day the 2s10s inverted, they would have missed the last 10% of the rally which followed;
    2. While breakdowns often coincide with corrections, it’s the breakouts which coincide with crashes.

     

    December 2005

    Let’s look at the next inversion, which began in December 2005. The 2s10s bounced back and forth until June 2007 – five weeks before the legitimate July 16, 2007 high and a full 4 months before the October 11 high. Anyone rushing to cash out when the inversion first occurred would have missed out on the last 25% of upside.

    Again, the correction began about the same time as the breakout. An 8% correction occurred in May 2006 (point 6) when 2s10s briefly turned positive. The big correction waited until shortly after the lasting breakout at point 8.

    SPX shed 20% by the time 2s10s reached point 9, bounced 15% as 2s10s retraced to point 10, then cratered as 2s10s broke out of the recent trading range.

    Note that the crash picked up steam when 2s10s pushed to new highs in Oct 2008.  When 2s10s topped out in November, SPX began bouncing again, rallying until 2s10s reached its former lows at point 12.

    By March 2009, QE was taking hold. Stocks were rescued by massive amounts of liquidity which transformed the bond market from a barometer of economic conditions to a tool by which the Fed could signal algorithms to buy stocks.  It was the beginning of the end for price discovery.

    Once the Fed assumed control of yields, all bets were off. The 2s10s rallied along with stocks and pretty much everything else that wasn’t nailed down.

    The lessons learned from this inversion were quite similar to the one in 2000:

    1. The initial inversion wasn’t a great sell signal – stocks rallied another 25% before finally topping;
    2. While breakdowns often produce corrections, it’s the breakouts that produce the more serious crashes.

     

    August 2019

    We now turn our attention to the most recent period and the impending inversion everyone’s talking about.  Spoiler alert: There will be one, probably by Friday.

    We’ll start with the big picture. Remember, the yellow TLs usually reflect horizontal levels through which 2s10s break down (and, sometimes, backtest and break out through.) The red TLs are longer term – typically multi-year – and highlight major breakouts which presage sharp rallies in 2s10s and corrections in stocks.

    There has been no shortage of yellow trend lines over the past 12 years, with most breakdowns usually presaging a correction. Some examples:

    – Point 15: 17%
    – Point 16: 22%
    – Point 18: 15%

    But, of course, the real action occurred when 2s10s broke out above the red TLs.  The most glaring example is the one extending almost 6 years from December 2013 to October 2019. It validates the adage that “the bigger they are, the harder they fall” and set the stage for the 35% drop in Feb/Mar 2020 [see: Buckle Up.]

    That breakout, however, was really a series of breakouts and breakdowns that helped position 2s10s for a very bearish move. A closeup illustrates, for instance, the 20% correction beginning in Sep 2018 which followed the breakout of a red TL from Feb 2018 (point 21) and the subsequent breakdown below horizontal support.

    2s10s spent the next year in a very narrow range, finally dropping through horizontal support again and becoming inverted in August for a grand total of 2 days. It wasn’t exactly dramatic. In fact, SPX actually rallied in what would turn out to be the calm before the storm.

    After the inversion, 2s10s push up through the yellow TLs representing previous support (now resistance) and three separate multiyear red TLs. When it finally cleared the last one (the white arrow) the equity market fell apart, crashing 35%.

    I should mention here that it also pushed above a very important trend line we haven’t yet discussed, the dashed white TL connecting previous inversions dating back to 1995. I mention this because at point 25 we also broke back down through this same TL, all but guaranteeing that SPX’s recent bounce is over and lower lows are in the offing.

    April 2022

    Since topping in March 2021, the 2s10s has broken down through multiple yellow TLs of support. It also dropped through the dashed purple TL connecting the 2000 lows and the Sep 2019 lows and another TL from 1980. If you knew nothing else about investing, you would correctly assume that this positions it for the correction which has already begun.

    The 2s10s has already inverted intraday a few times this week (also coming very close, therefore, to breaking below the Sep 2019 lows.) As we’ve seen in past, inversions aren’t in and of themselves terribly bearish for stocks.  It’s the bounce, subsequent rally, and spike higher following its inversion that do the most damage to stocks.

    Let’s take just a moment to discuss what causes inversions. Below we can see a chart of the 2Y versus the 10Y for the past few years. Periods during which SPX corrected are shaded in blue. We can see that just prior to those periods, the 10Y and 2Y converge. Think of it as a coiling.

    When stocks finally plunge, we see the 2Y drop much more rapidly than the 10Y, causing the gap between them to rapidly grow larger – the spike in the 2s10s.The same thing has happened almost every time since 2000. The single anomaly was in 2011, when the 10Y dropped much further and more rapidly than the 2Y.  Recall that this coincided with the US credit downgrade and it precipitated a 21% correction in SPX anyways. It also coincided with the most precise crash warning I have ever issued, but that’s another story.

    As discussed above, the 2Y’s plunge hasn’t always occurred immediately after the convergence. In some cases, such as 2006, they continued in lockstep for over a year.

    But, combined with the signals generated by the breakdowns and breakouts in the charts above, we have a very strong argument that the correction is not finished and could, in fact, get much worse.

    If you’re thinking to yourself “sure it works in practice, but what about in theory?” there’s a very simple explanation for all of the above. Think about those previous equity meltdowns. As stocks rolled over, short-term treasuries yielding anywhere from 0-5% with little downside risk were very preferable to equities with plenty of downside risk.

    Remember, markets aren’t about those participants in the tails changing their tune. Bears will be bears, and everyone else buys the dip.  But, when the 90% of all investors who are direction agnostic (index funds, program sellers, etc.) panic or are stopped out, it doesn’t take much of a shift for the pendulum to swing in favor of the bears.

    There are also many fundamental economic arguments for the inversion and its unwinding. The most important one is that as the economy begins to slow, recession fears increase. Capital is reallocated. Risky long-term investments are reined in and short-term, fixed income investments are favored.

    In the past, the Fed has “fixed” this phenomenon by reducing short-term rates dramatically enough to stimulate more risk taking. But that’s difficult to do when rates have spent years at zero, and impossible to do when said policy has led to an inflationary spiral that has the economy teetering on the verge of stagflation.

    I’ll leave you with one last chart. For the past few decades, the 10Y has followed a very well-formed path. The channel shown below has been extremely reliable in forecasting tops. It was also very reliable in forecasting bottoms until 2020, when a return to the channel bottom would have meant negative interest rates.

    The 10Y recently completed an Inverted Head & Shoulders pattern, a fairly reliable pattern that in this case targets 3.2%. Given that inflation is currently pushing 8%, a 3.2% 10Y would be, if anything, too low.

    But, it would also cause the 10Y to break out of this 30-year channel – a very serious threat given that the national debt now exceeds $30 trillion. The Fed can’t be excited about letting this happen. They probably have this very same chart on the wall, smacking it for luck a la Ted Lasso every time they head into an FOMC meeting.

    In any case, the channel top is currently at 2.58% – meaning the Fed is officially between a rock and a hard place. They have little choice but to watch the 30-year downtrend in rates to come to an inglorious end in an effort to rein in the inflation that they obviously and inevitably caused.

    It’s simply too late to engineer an economic slowdown that would resolve the inflation problem without entailing higher rates. Given the Ukraine invasion and the shortage of journalists willing to give their lives in exchange for lower oil/gas prices, CPI will remain elevated for at least a few more months.

    If stocks fall far and fast enough, the 2s10s could invert for more than a few days – a coiling that would ultimately unleash an even larger correction. My crystal ball says that the S&P 500 will drop to 3956 and possibly 3855 in the next month or two. If those support levels don’t hold, we could be in for a drop as low as 3047.

    Should we fear a yield curve inversion? Not particularly. But what comes after one could ruin your whole day. Stay tuned.

     

     

  • PPI: Record Highs

    Headline PPI reached record highs in February, coming in at 10.0% YoY. Under the hood, prices for unfinished goods registered 14.6%, the highest since January 2001. Prices for processed goods jumped 23.3%. Prices increased across the board, with the largest gains in energy.

    Futures were flat going into the early morning VIX plunge, but gained steam once VIX dropped back below its 10-day moving average at 32.28. Look for a backtest of the broken white channel at around 4205.continued for members(more…)

  • Update on USDJPY: Mar 14, 2022

    USDJPY reached our 118 target overnight.

    We charted this target over a year ago [see: USDJPY’s Turn] following USDJPY’s breakout from the falling purple channel [see: The Usual Suspects], reasoning that the Bank of Japan would ramp up the yen carry trade in order to support the Nikkei’s breakout.

    The BoJ rarely disappoints, and they didn’t in this case. The question, now, is how far they’re willing to go.

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  • Bullard Speaks

    In a CNBC interview this morning, Fed President Jim Bullard said “Our credibility is on the line here…”  Anyone paying any attention to the Fed knows that that ship sailed a long time ago.

    Futures have been all over the map, down as many as 55 points before VIX was hammered following a false news report regarding the situation in Ukraine.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Feb 11, 2022

    This is all it took to get FOMC members to walk back Bullard’s hawkish comments. Note the tiny channel breakdown. Terrifying enough to keep QE going and to respond to the worst inflation in 40 years with a mere 25 bps rate hike a month from now? Apparently.How else can you explain this insanity?

    If it’s too hard to see the Fed Funds rate on the above chart, here’s a close up.continued for members(more…)

  • The Fed’s Gut Check

    After Monday’s tumble, will Powell have the guts to stick to his inflation-fighting guns?  Futures are up about 1.5%, but are still just shy of the 200-day moving average.

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  • The De Facto Shutdown

    Companies and individuals alike are cutting back their activities as the omicron outbreak continues to accelerate. Many companies, short of employees, supplies, or customers are raising pay, trimming back hours or cutting product offerings in order to stay afloat. Individuals are cutting back their activities in order to stay healthy.

    Though not official, the shutdown is real and is spreading, complicating the Fed’s already arduous task of reversing runaway price inflation. Woefully behind the inflationary curve, the Fed is leery of tipping the economy into stagflation and even more leery of tripping up the stock market. With that as a background, we’ll take a look back at 2021 and what to expect in 2022.

     

    The Bear Case

    As we’ve discussed many times over the past year, the market has responded positively to the prospect of reinflation. Stocks rally, for instance, when oil and gas prices rise – a sign of increased economic activity. But, the rally in oil and gas prices finally went too far, turning what might have been narrowly-focused, transitory inflation into widespread, persistent inflation which has permeated the labor market – the most sticky category of all. Inflation won’t subside unless the oil and gas rally at least flatlines – a negative for stocks.

    The falling US dollar has likewise benefited stocks, but contributed to the spike in inflation as imports became pricier. DXY’s bounce off its May 2021 lows has been tentative, barely reaching the halfway mark of its drop from its March 2020 highs. Lower inflation will require the dollar to strengthen – a negative for stocks.

    Historically low interest rates have obviously contributed to the market’s success over the past year. Companies and (some) individuals can borrow more cheaply, leveraging existing revenue streams into higher profitability. The present value of a future stream of income is worth more. And, perhaps most importantly, funds which might have been invested into bonds have landed instead in equities. If rates increase, as the Fed suggests they will, this would also be a negative for stocks.

    Obviously, reflation wasn’t the only factor in last year’s rally. The Fed poured $8.7 trillion into markets between March 2020 and December 2021, reinflating bubbles in stocks and commodities and essentially destroying price discovery in the bond market. If the Fed sticks to its accelerated tapering schedule, that assistance will grind to a halt in March 2022 – an enormous negative for stocks.

     

    The Bull Case

    Even as it tapers, however, the Fed is still slated to pump a few hundred billion into markets by March 2022.  No one would be shocked to see the taper schedule adjusted if, say, COVID continued to accelerate and economic activity the stock market took a major hit.

    How and when the Fed “invests” those funds before the music finally stops could still exert a great deal of influence on markets. By periodically swooping in to hammer interest rates, manipulate currencies, or crush vol, the Fed still has the ability to influence markets. Algos are usually only too happy to play follow the leader.

    Then, there’s the issue of the narrative. Although its reputation is somewhat impugned, the Fed’s utterances still carry weight. Consider how many months it took for the financial press to finally question the Fed’s “transitory inflation” fairy tale.  Even with CPI at 6.8%, you still hear the word bandied about.

    Fundamentally, many corporations have taken advantage of the Fed’s largesse to improve their balance sheets – retiring debt with lower priced borrowings or generous equity offerings. To the extent the economy is able to continue humming along, many also enjoy pricing power which will give them at least a fighting chance to keep up with inflation.

    And, unless rates rise very sharply, stock repurchases will continue to be a major driver of rising stock prices. Companies no longer seem to care about appearances, tying purchases to tests of important price levels – an activity which used to be considered price manipulation.

    There will be winners and losers, of course, with the largest and best capitalized companies continuing to attract the lion’s share of investment, even at nosebleed valuations in the absence of profits.  Stay-at-home stocks will remain vulnerable to sharp downdrafts following positive COVID news and sharp rallies in response to negative COVID news. Should the pandemic eventually pass and markets balance themselves out, reopening stocks might even grow into their overinflated valuations.

     

    The Verdict

    Instead of one case or the other proving out, I see a strong possibility that both come to fruition.  As we’ve discussed, inflation is a math problem. CPI is only 6.8% because of strong YoY increases in prices. If already elevated prices were to stabilize at present levels, it would hurt those already suffering from cash flow issues, but CPI would drop sharply as YoY price comparisons slid back toward a more acceptable 2-3%.

    Once CPI reaches that range, the impetus for higher rates would be eliminated. This is the scenario the Fed was hoping for when first touting the transitory story. They either miscalculated badly or decided that prospective market gains justified consumers’ pain.

    Of course, there’s another way rates could be contained, albeit one that involves a little short-term pain for longer-term gain. When equities sell off sharply, interest rates tend to plunge as well. A substantial equity correction triggered by a sharp drop in oil/gas prices and spike in the US dollar would knock inflation and interest rates back in a hurry.

    If prices were to then stabilize and then resume a gradual increase with CPI and the 10Y in the 90 bps – 1.5% range, we’d again have a very constructive environment for equities. We came very close to this scenario unfolding several times over the past year.

    Since June 2020, potential corrections have been halted 12 times by the 50-day moving average, 7 times by the 100-day moving average, and twice by the 200-day moving average.  There was only one significant lower low during that period – the Sep 20 – Oct 1 Head and Shoulders pattern slump that produced a whopping (sarc) 6.3% drop that was erased within 3 weeks. Had the pattern played out normally, it would have resulted in a 20% drop and the backtest of a major Fibonacci level.

    However, it would also have required a drop below the 200-day moving average – an unacceptably bearish development in Chartland. Instead, VIX was hammered by 50% and WTI and USDJPY made new highs. Algos responded and the bearish pattern was promptly busted.

    Interestingly, SPX/ES face another similar opportunity. But, things are different this time.

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