Tag: gold

  • Charts I’m Watching: Jul 28, 2022

    Another Fed meeting, another VIX-driven algo meltup.

    But, something’s more than a little sketchy about this one – aside from the fact that the recession which Powell refused to acknowledge yesterday just got closer to being official.

    It might be shallow, but the 0.9% drop in Q2 (first estimate, vs +0.5% consensus) makes for two quarters in a row – the commonly accepted definition of a recession.

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  • FOMC Day: Jul 27, 2022

    Futures have ramped almost 1% overnight – a common occurrence lately, especially in advance of a Fed decision.

    Even the durable goods orders beat (a miss if you’re looking for the Fed to slow their rate hikes) did nothing to thwart the algo-driven meltup.

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  • Holding the Line

    Can VIX be contained for another few days? If you want to know what’s going to happen in the market this week, that’s the critical question.

    As weak earnings reports and economic data have dribbled out over the past week, VIX has tested its 200-day moving average almost every day. Every time it comes close, it gets smacked back down. So far, those tasked with preventing another leg down in stocks have been able to hold the line.

    It’s how ES, directed by algos, climbed back above its 50-day moving average and managed to remain there. So far, at least.

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  • Fast and Furious

    Between an FOMC meeting, consumer confidence, GDP, durable goods, PCE, consumer sentiment, new home sales and a slew of important earnings calls, this week promises to be one of the most important so far in 2022.

    Somewhere in all that data we should learn whether the economy is really in a recession (spoiler alert: it is.) The market’s response could be both fast and furious.

    Futures are up modestly but fading as we approach the open.continued for members(more…)

  • Fixing Gas Prices

    Gasoline futures (RBOB) have reached our 200-day moving average target set on March 3 [see: The Devil You Know] after having broken out of a falling flag pattern.  Then…

    …nothing would be as effective at punishing Russia and helping to solve the inflation problem as crashing the oil market…If oil does retreat, stocks should too. Reversing at the .786 would be a good start……as would RB reversing at its 1.618.

    …and now.By falling 33% since then, RB has given the economy several gifts, chief among them the opportunity to bring inflation down – if retail follows suit.  EIA reported 4.272 per gallon for the month of March. July is shaping up as 4.41 – a tiny drop compared to futures prices.

    The YoY increase in retail prices would remain elevated at 45%, down from June’s 60.7% but in line with average increases during Mar-May, when CPI averaged 8.46%.

    Even if RB were to decline further, it face falling comps from August 2021. Retail prices remained steady from July to August. So, the onus is now on retailers to make a difference. And, something tells me they’re rather enjoying their windfall profits.

    The top five oil companies – Shell, ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron and ConocoPhillips – saw their Q1 profits triple from 2021 to 2022. ExxonMobil, for instance, netted $2.7 billion in Q1 2021 and $8.8 billion in Q1 2022. It is expected to report over $10 billion in Q2. Taking into account futures prices, it is obvious that the Russian invasion of Ukraine has provided cover for what’s really just good old American greed.

    Meanwhile, equities markets are trying to make sense of the ECB’s 50 bps rate hike (all the way up to zero!)Hate to tell you, Ms. Lagarde, but 0% in an 8.6% inflationary environment with a 2% inflation target is still wildly stimulative – not to mention delusional.

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  • A Better Fit

    Yesterday’s mind-bending rally made very little sense except for the fact that it both washed out many more weak bears and resulted in a more logical placement of ES’ downside target. I’ll explain.

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  • Waiting in the Wings

    This morning feels a whole lot like yesterday morning, with futures ramping higher on the latest smackdown in VIX. Of course, these maneuvers can be an effort to force a breakout in stocks. But, they can also be an effort to put a little more air under stocks in advance of a downturn.  With plenty of important earnings still to be announced, the Gazprom threat, and a potential ECB rate hike just ahead, there’s plenty or risk waiting in the wings.

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  • OPEX Strikes Again

    Futures are up sharply… …as VIX is being crushed in order to provide cover for about $2 trillion in options expiring today.

    We’ve been seeing this all week, with multiple downturns reversed by late-session assaults on VIX even as earnings and economic data have argued for lower stock prices. Chase this rally at your own peril.

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  • Oil and Inflation

    WTI has reached our 200-day moving average target posted last month.This is a very significant move which, unfortunately, didn’t happen soon enough to affect June CPI or PPI.

    Long-time readers know that I’ve been harping on inflation for a long time. The reason is simple: math.

    Annual “headline” CPI, which is the one we all fret about, is based on the year-over-year increase in prices – which is why I started worry about inflation in March 2020 after oil and gas prices cratered.

    I did a deep dive on the historical relationship between oil and gas prices and inflation and quickly discovered that the incredibly strong correlation which we began writing about in 2018 was likely to produce some truly scary results.

    Up until late 2018, falling oil and gas prices had been responsible for CPI generally remaining below 2%. This chart from Jan 15, 2019 [see: The Big Picture] illustrated how every time inflation got a little out of control (over 2%) gas prices cratered enough to bring it back in line.

    Interest rates had risen right along with inflation until October 4, 2018 at which point I called a top in both [see: The 10Y Breaks Out.]  The fundamentals didn’t suggest it at all. In fact, more than a few observers questioned my sanity.  But, I reasoned that the recent breakout in rates from a 20-yr channel would prompt the usual response: a sharp decline in oil and gas prices as shown above.

    Trump had been tweeting up a storm with no effect…

    …until one day the Saudis handed him a gift. Journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a thorn in the side of the Saudi crown prince, was murdered and dismembered at what was obviously the direction of said prince. The world was pissed and MBS went from being the “cool Saudi” to an international pariah overnight. Trump suddenly had leverage.  From Coincidences and Consequences:

    Many considered my connecting the dots in this way a bit of a leap, but it was confirmed by Trump himself while being interviewed by Bob Woodward for his book Rage.Long story short, oil and gas nosedived – along with stocks – until they both bottomed out in December. CPI, which had been as high as 2.95% a few months prior, had dropped to 1.55% by Jan 2019.

    The story might have ended there, with oil and gas generally bouncing around as supply and demand and interest rate goal-seeking dictated, but the coronavirus had other ideas. By the time the dust had settled WTI had plunged below our 20 target and finally bottomed out below 0.This meant that year-over-year deltas would remain negative for quite a while. But, importantly, it also means that beginning in early 2021, year-over-year deltas would start soaring – which they did.

    In Mar 2021, we laid out the case for a sharp uptick in inflation and interest rates [see: Big Picture: Oil and Gas] and asked:

    Given that interest rates are close to zero and must remain near zero out of necessity and the dramatic increase in oil and gas prices since last April’s crash would result in at least a 40%+ YoY increase and CPI is very positively correlated with YoY increases in gas prices and interest rates are very positively correlated with CPI, will politicians and central bankers allow oil/gas prices to remain at these levels?

    At the time, I thought not. CPI had reached 2.6% and the 10Y had reached 1.75%. I thought it a likely point for a pause lest CPI pop up over 3.5%.

    But, the Fed — which had fallen under the spell of rapidly rising stock and housing prices — decided otherwise. They advised us to ignore what we could see with our own eyes and play along with their “transitory” fantasy.

    They doubled down and sold Wall Street on the wonders of the reflation trade (remember when that was a good thing?)  A month later, CPI topped 3%. Two months later, it topped 4%.  Tuesday, we learned that has now reached 9.1% – seemingly out of control.

    Many blame President Biden, arguing that his energy policies are responsible for the rise in oil prices and, thus, inflation. While it’s true that WTI rose from 53 to 93 in the first year of Biden’s presidency, the YoY delta in gas prices had peaked at 62% in Nov 2021 and was rapidly declining. By Feb 2022, it had fallen to 41% – historically commensurate with CPI around 5%.

    It didn’t play out that way for four primary reasons:

    1. Putin invaded Ukraine
    2. energy inflation spilled over into most other categories
    3. the Fed was inexplicably still pumping $120 billion into the markets every month
    4. a shortage of journalists willing to be chopped up into little pieces by a Saudi despot

    Reasons 2-4 might indeed have been transitory. We’ll never know. But, it was Putin’s invasion of Ukraine that spoiled the Fed’s plans. Instead of reversing at a very logical Fibonacci level which coincided with the top of an obvious price channel, CL popped up and tagged a target on Mar 7 that we hadn’t expected to be reached until the end of the year.

    Had prices even stabilized at January’s levels, inflation likely would have fallen as the YoY delta fell back to under 20%.

    Even if prices had continued to rise at the 1.73% per month average seen in the first year of Biden’s presidency, it seems likely that CPI would have fallen.Take away the Fed’s profligate QE and Putin’s monumental miscalculation and we might never have seen 6%. Instead, we’ve got this.

    The Fed is finally on the case, raising interest rates and trimming back their balance sheet. But, it’s hard to know how large a decline in stock values they can stomach before at least signaling a pause.

    It’s also difficult to know how deep a recession to expect. I believe we’re already in one. But, how far will the economy fall? Various sentiment surveys and the Atlanta Fed’s research indicate that the decline is gaining momentum.

    Will it spill over into real estate as in 2008-2009? Will rapid wage inflation morph into rising unemployment prints? I think so, but suspect the Fed will blink at some point. The first test will likely be when stocks decline to pre-COVID levels – about 30% from the January highs.

    Last, I’ve no clue when/if/how the war in Ukraine will end – just that it will eventually will. But, God knows how much damage will be done in the interim. Europe is in for a very tough 2022, with inflation spiraling higher thanks to surging energy costs, the plunging euro, and no wiggle room in a slowing economy to preemptively raise rates.

    A broader war with Russia seems increasingly near-fetched.  If they’re really lucky, they’ll merely experience a quarter or two of stagflation. If not, we could be looking at Great Financial Crisis II, with bank failures and spiraling interest rates thrown in for good measure.

    And, don’t think for a moment that it wouldn’t affect the US. The Fed is gambling on a soft landing with nearly full employment. But, it never seems to work out that way, does it? And, would we even want that?

    A soft landing would probably mean energy prices never get to clear. That the proverbial can gets kicked down the road for the next administration/Congress to not handle. I live in California, where gas prices are still well above $6/gallon. I’m okay paying that if it means forcing Putin to back down. It might even accelerate the development of alternative energy so my grandchildren will inherit a planet worth living in.

    But, I’m well aware that I’m in the minority. So, the guys behind the curtain are going to need to come up with some pretty fancy footwork: a plan that keeps energy prices falling, inflation back under 4% and the 10Y back under 2.5% – all without bringing on a recession that sends stocks down 50% and real estate down 20%.

    Personally, I don’t think it’s possible. I think the recession and falling asset prices are not only inevitable, but necessary.  It’s also what our analog suggests.  To that end, here are our expectations for the very exciting next few days.

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  • New Highs for CPI

    CPI reached a new cycle high in June: 9.1% versus expectations of 8.8%. This is the highest print since November 1981. Core came in at 5.9%. Monthly prints were 1.3% headline and 0.7% core.

    The recent decline in oil and gas prices – although substantial – came too late to help mitigate June inflation. The Jun YoY price increase in gas remained strong at 60.73% – among the highest readings recorded in recent years.Futures are dumping on the news, as it clearly takes smaller Fed rate hikes off the table. VIX is even forgoing its usual pre-market dump and breaking out instead.Our analog remains on track.

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