Friday, September 27, 2019

Weekly Commentary: Q2 2019 Z.1 and Repos

Non-Financial Debt (NFD) expanded $408 billion during Q1 to a record $53.015 TN. This was down from Q1’s $765 billion expansion. On a seasonally-adjusted and annualized (SAAR) basis, Q2 NFD growth slowed to $1.652 TN from Q1’s booming $3.061 TN. The slowdown was chiefly explained by the timing of federal government borrowings. Federal debt expanded SAAR $1.751 TN during Q1 and then slowed markedly to $382 billion during Q2. Averaging the two quarters, NFD expanded SAAR $2.360 TN. This compares to 2018’s annual $2.274 TN growth in NFD, the strongest annual Credit expansion since 2007’s $2.518 TN. As a percentage of GDP, NFD slipped to 248% from 249% during the quarter. NFD ended 1999 at 183% of GDP and 2007 at 226%.

On a seasonally-adjusted and annualized basis, Household borrowings expanded $668 billion, up from Q1’s SAAR $323 billion, to a record $15.834 TN. Household mortgage debt expanded SAAR $330 billion, up from Q1’s SAAR $226 billion, to a record $10.440 TN. Total Business debt growth slowed to SAAR $680 billion, down from Q1’s booming $1.023 TN (strongest since Q1 ’16), to a record $15.744 TN. State & Local debt contracted SAAR $77 billion, after declining SAAR $36 billion during Q1, to $3.039 TN. Foreign U.S. borrowings expanded nominal $231 billion for the quarter (to $4.291 TN), the strongest foreign debt growth since Q1 ’17.

Considering recent “repo” market tumult, let’s take a deeper-than-usual dive into the Z.1 category, “Federal Funds and Securities Repurchase Agreements” (aka “repo”). “Repo” Liabilities jumped $239 billion (nominal) during the quarter, or 24% annualized. This pushed growth over the past three quarters to $710 billion, or 27% annualized. This was the largest nine-month growth since the first three quarters of 2006. At $4.280 TN, “repo” ended June at the highest level since Q3 2008.

It’s no coincidence that the $710 billion nine-month increase in “repo” corresponded with a spectacular 106 bps decline in 10-year Treasury yields. I’ll assume repo market ballooning continued into early-September, as yields dropped another 44 bps. The expansion of securities Credit (the “repo” market being a key component) generates new marketplace liquidity. Moreover, the concurrent expansion of “repo” Credit and system liquidity is in today’s highly speculative global environment powerfully self-reinforcing.

September 26 – Bloomberg (Vivien Lou Chen): “It may take as much as $500 billion in Treasury purchases by the Federal Reserve to fix all of the cracks exposed last week in the more than $2 trillion U.S. repo market. Estimates from analysts at TD Securities, Morgan Stanley, BMO Capital Markets and Pictet Wealth Management range from roughly $200 billion to half a trillion dollars. They’re not alone. Two former Fed officials said Thursday that the central bank might need to do $250 billion of outright Treasury purchases to prevent further pain in U.S. money markets. There’s a growing consensus that the central bank’s daily efforts to restore order in the short-term funding market are falling short of what’s needed: a much larger effort to build up a substantial buffer of bank reserves…”

As we’ve witnessed over the past two weeks, the unwind of securities Credit and the attendant contraction of liquidity turns immediately problematic. A Thursday afternoon Bloomberg headline (from the above article) resonated: “Repo-Market Cure May Take $500 Billion of Fed Treasuries Buying,” referring to Wall Street estimates of the scope of Fed intervention necessary to stabilize funding markets. I have posited a serious globalized de-risking/deleveraging episode would require multi-Trillion expansions of Federal Reserve and global central bank balance sheets.

“Brokers & Dealers” is the largest borrower by Z.1 category, with “repo” Liabilities up $92 billion during Q2 to $1.781 TN (high since Q3 ’13). Broker “repo” Liabilities surged $296 billion over three quarters, or 27% annualized.

As the second largest borrower, Rest of World (ROW) “repo” Liabilities increased $10 billion during the quarter to a record $1.102 TN. ROW “repo” Liabilities surged $254 billion over the past three quarters, or 40% annualized. ROW “repo” peaked at $857 billion during the previous cycle (Q1 ’08).

While not at the same level as the Wall Street firms or ROW, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) have as well been notably aggressive “repo” borrowers. REIT “repo” Liabilities rose $30.3 billion during Q2 to a record $369 billion. REIT “repo” Liabilities were up $107 billion, or 41%, over the past year and $150 billion, or 69%, over two years. REIT “repo” Liabilities posted a previous cycle peak during Q2 2007 at $106 billion.

Money Market Funds (MMF) are a large holder of “repo” Assets (second only to Brokers & Dealers). MMF “repo” holdings jumped an eye-opening $153 billion during Q2 to a record $1.133 TN, with a gain over three quarters of $213 billion, or 23%. It’s worth noting MMF “repo” holdings peaked at $618 billion during Q4 2007 (having doubled over the preceding two years).

It’s also worth highlighting that the Fed’s balance sheet contracted $58 billion during the quarter to $4.140 TN. Some have been confounded by the lack of impact to system liquidity from the Fed somewhat drawing down its securities portfolio. But with securities Credit expanding by multiples of the decline in Fed Credit, marketplace liquidity has been dominated by securities speculating and leveraging. As I often repeat, contemporary finance works miraculously on the upside. Fear the downside. The Fed’s balance sheet expanded as much over past week as it contracted during the second quarter.

Bank (“Private Depository Institutions”) assets increased $203 billion during the quarter to a record $19.506 TN, this despite a $159 billion decline in “Reserves at Federal Reserve”. Bank Loans jumped $192 billion during the quarter, or 6.8% annualized, bouncing back strongly after Q1’s slight contraction (and ahead of Q2 ‘18’s $174bn). Bank Loans were up $550 billion, or 5.0%, year-over-year. Bank Mortgage Loans expanded $76 billion (5.5% annualized) during the quarter to a record $5.540 TN, the strongest expansion in two years.

Bank holdings of Debt Securities jumped $112 billion, or 10% annualized, to a record $4.505 TN (one-year gain of $320 billion, or 7.7%). Debt Securities holdings were below $3.0 TN going into the 2008 crisis. Bank Agency/GSE MBS holdings jumped a huge $82.2 billion during the quarter, the largest increased since Q1 ’12. Over the past three quarters, Banks boosted Agency Securities by $217 billion, or almost 10%, to a record $2.588 TN. Banks’ Agency Securities holdings are about double the level from the crisis. Bank Holdings of Treasuries rose $34 billion during Q2 to a record $771 billion, jumping $121 billion over three quarters. Treasury holdings were up 22% y-o-y. For comparison, Banks’ Corporate Bond holdings increased $25 billion y-o-y, or 3.9%, to $664 billion.

Broker/Dealer Assets jumped $132 billion during Q2, or 16% annualized, to $3.487 TN (high since Q2 ’13). This was a sharp reversal from Q1’s small ($4bn) contraction. Broker/Dealer Assets were up a notable $349 billion, or 11.1%, over the past year. "repo" Assets jumped $227 billion y-o-y, or 20.0%. Over this period, “repo” Liabilities surged $326 billion, or 22.4%, to $1.781 TN. This was the highest level of “repo” Liabilities going back to Q3 2013, a period that corresponded with a sharp upside reversal in market yields and contraction in “repo” securities Credit.

Total system Debt Securities increased nominal $304 billion during Q2 to a record $45.771 TN. This boosted the gain since the end of 2008 to $14.825 TN, or 48%. As a percentage of GDP, Debt Securities ended Q2 at 214% (record 223% Q1 ’13). Equities jumped $1.602 TN to $49.799 TN, ending Q2 slightly below Q3 ‘18’s all-time record ($50.419 TN). Equities ended Q2 at 233% of GDP (record Q3 ’18 243%). Total (Debt and Equities) Securities jumped $1.906 TN during Q2 ($7.51 TN during the first half) to a record $95.569 TN. Total Securities-to-GDP ended June at 448% (record Q3 ’18 458%). Previous cycle peaks were 379% during Q3 ’07 and 359% in Q1 ’00. Total Securities-to-GDP began the eighties at 44% and the nineties at 67%.

I view the “repo” market expansion as indicative of overall speculative leverage. The rapid growth of Bank and Broker/Dealer debt securities holdings is symptomatic of speculative excess and likely associated with derivative-related trading activities. To simplistically connect the dots, the expansion of “repo” securities Credit along with ballooning Bank and Broker/Dealer securities holdings generate the liquidity abundance and speculative impulses for a general inflation of securities market prices (debt and equities). The inflation of perceived wealth then feeds into the real economy through strong consumer and business spending.

Accordingly, the Household Balance Sheet remains a Bubble Analysis Focal Point. Total Household Assets increased $2.024 TN during the quarter to a record $129.671 TN, with a $7.358 TN gain during 2019’s first-half. And with Liabilities up $175 billion, Household Net Worth (Assets less Liabilities) jumped $1.949 TN during Q2 to a record $113.463 TN. Household Net Worth rose $7.177 TN during this year’s first-half, a record six-month advance. Net Worth rose to a record (matching Q4 ’17) 532% of GDP. For comparison, Household Net Worth-to-GDP posted cycle peaks of 492% during Q1 2007 and 446% to end Q1 2000. Net Worth-to-GDP began the eighties at 342% and the nineties at 378%.

Household Real Estate holdings increased $257 billion during the quarter, down from Q1’s $707 billion gain (strongest since Q4 ’05). Yet Real Estate jumped $1.692 TN over the past year to a record $32.676 TN (153% of GDP). Real Estate holdings posted a previous cycle peak of $26.466 TN (189% of GDP) during Q4 ’06.

Financial Assets are the unquestionable epicenter of this cycle’s Bubble. Household holdings of Financial Assets jumped $1.700 TN during Q2, after surging $4.544 TN in Q1. Financial Asset holdings ended Q2 at a record $90.689 TN, or 425% of GDP. Financial Assets-to-GDP ended Q3 2007 at 376% and Q1 2000 at 355%. Household Assets began the nineties at 267% of GDP.

Household Total Equities (Equities and Mutual Funds) holdings ended Q1 at record $27.427 TN, or 129% of GDP. The previous two cycles saw Household Equities peak at $14.930 TN (102% of GDP) during Q3 ’07 and $11.742 TN (117% of GDP) in Q1 ’00. Total Household Equities holdings began the nineties at 47% of GDP.

Rest of World (ROW) is key to Bubble Analysis as well, though with layers of ambiguity and complexity. ROW holdings of U.S. Financial Assets surged $843 billion during Q2 to a record $32.582 TN. Holdings were up $1.798 TN y-o-y, boosting ROW holdings-to-GDP to a record 153%. ROW holdings-to-GDP ended 2007 at 108% and 1999 at 74%. ROW holdings of U.S. Debt Securities increased $337 billion during Q2 to a record $11.906 TN. Debt Securities jumped $728 billion during the first half, with Treasury holdings rising $372 billion to a record $6.637 TN. ROW repo Liabilities jumped $187 billion, or 20%, during the first six months of 2019 to a record $1.102 TN.

Few see the Bubble, yet the Fed’s Z.1 report offers a compelling outline. This week saw “repo” market instability bumped from the headlines by instability at the White House. Markets reacted to whistleblower allegations and the opening of an impeachment inquiry in typical fashion: “The President under duress is more likely to strike a deal with China.” In comments Wednesday, the President was happy to play along: “They want to make a deal very badly... It could happen sooner than you think.” President Trump’s tough talk directed at China Tuesday at the U.N. didn’t leave one feeling the administration was softening up for an imminent deal.

And then came the Friday afternoon Bloomberg scoop (Jenny Leonard and Shawn Donnan): “Trump administration officials are discussing ways to limit U.S. investors’ portfolio flows into China in a move that would have repercussions for billions of dollars in investment pegged to major indexes, according to people familiar with the internal deliberations. The discussions are occurring as Washington and Beijing negotiate a potential truce in their trade war that’s rattled the world’s two biggest economies and investors for more than a year… A U.S. crackdown on capital flows would therefore expose a new pressure point in the economic dispute and cause disruption well beyond the hundreds of billions in tariffs the two sides have levied against each other.”

Markets would like to believe the administration is posturing ahead of the next round of trade talks. Bloomberg follow-up articles included comments from Wall Street analysts, including: “This is huge.” “Ludicrous.” “The news opens up a new front in the U.S.-China trade conflict.” “It’s another example of how every time people think this trade war is deescalating, it escalates again.” A Reuters article was on point: “…what would be a radical escalation of U.S.-China trade tensions.”

Chinese company listed ADRs were slammed in Friday U.S. trading. This creates Monday morning Chinese market and currency vulnerability. To this point, it’s been the Teflon President affixed to Teflon markets. But between “repo” market instability, Washington chaos, the risk of serious trade war escalation – in a world of heightened financial, economic and geopolitically instability – there is a scenario where the unraveling begins. Markets have to this point demonstrated astounding faith that the President will ultimately act in their best interest. As always, markets are a contest of greed and fear. One of the bad scenarios would be the markets fearing an administration resorting to a “scorched earth” gambit.


For the Week:

The S&P500 declined 1.0% (up 18.1% y-t-d), and the Dow slipped 0.4% (up 15.0%). The Utilities gained 1.3% (up 23.1%). The Banks dipped 0.6% (up 16.9%), and the Broker/Dealers dropped 2.6% (up 12.3%). The Transports fell 1.1% (up 12.8%). The S&P 400 Midcaps declined 1.1% (up 15.6%), and the small cap Russell 2000 dropped 2.5% (up 12.7%). The Nasdaq100 fell 1.8% (up 21.4%). The Semiconductors declined 1.3% (up 33.6%). The Biotechs sank 6.1% (down 0.4%). With bullion down $20, the HUI gold index dropped 3.5% (up 31.1%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.74%. Two-year government yields declined five bps to 1.63% (down 86bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields dipped four bps to 1.56% (down 95bps). Ten-year Treasury yields fell four bps to 1.68% (down 100bps). Long bond yields declined three bps to 2.13% (down 89bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields slipped two bps to 2.62% (down 87bps).

Greek 10-year yields slipped a basis point to 1.32% (down 308bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields dropped eight bps to 0.17% (down 156bps). Italian 10-year yields sank 10 bps to 0.82% (down 192bps). Spain's 10-year yields fell nine bps to 0.15% (down 127bps). German bund yields declined five bps to negative 0.57% (down 82bps). French yields fell six bps to negative 0.28% (down 99bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread narrowed one to 29 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields sank 13 bps to 0.50% (down 78bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index rallied 1.1% (up 10.4% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index declined 0.9% (up 9.3% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields declined three bps to negative 0.24% (down 24bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 fell 0.9% (up 19.2%). The German DAX equities index dipped 0.7% (up 17.3%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index was little changed (up 7.5%). Italy's FTSE MIB index declined 0.5% (up 20.2%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index added 0.2% (up 15.5%), while Mexico's Bolsa slumped 1.6% (up 2.9%). South Korea's Kospi index dropped 2.0% (up 0.4%). India's Sensex equities index rose 2.1% (up 7.6%). China's Shanghai Exchange sank 2.5% (up 17.6%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index surged 4.9% (up 15.2%). Russia's MICEX equities index lost 1.4% (up 16.4%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $1.067 billion, while junk bond funds posted outflows of $258 million (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates dropped nine bps to 3.64% (down 108bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates declined five bps to 3.16% (down 100bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates sank 11 bps to 3.38% (down 59bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates down 12 bps to 4.04% (down 72bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week surged $58.6bn to $3.809 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $353bn, or 8.5%. Fed Credit inflated $998 billion, or 35%, over the past 359 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt fell $8.3bn last week to $3.459 TN. "Custody holdings" gained $20.0bn y-o-y, or 0.6%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply gained $10.4bn last week to a record $15.021 TN. "Narrow money" gained $786bn, or 5.5%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $2.4bn. Total Checkable Deposits fell $17.0bn, while Savings Deposits rose $18.9bn. Small Time Deposits were unchanged. Retail Money Funds added $6.0bn.

Total money market fund assets surged $40.5bn to $3.443 TN. Money Funds gained $559bn y-o-y, or 19.4%.

Total Commercial Paper increased $3.9bn to $1.097 TN. CP was up $15bn y-o-y, or 1.4%.

Currency Watch:

The U.S. dollar index gained 0.6% to 99.109 (up 3.0% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the New Zealand dollar increased 0.6% and the Canadian dollar gained 0.1%. On the downside, the British pound declined 1.5%, the South African rand 1.3%, the Mexican peso 1.2%, the South Korean won 1.0%, the Swedish krona 0.8%, the euro 0.7%, the Singapore dollar 0.4%, the Japanese yen 0.3%, the Brazilian real 0.3% and the Norwegian krone 0.2%. The Chinese renminbi declined 0.44% versus the dollar this week (down 3.43% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

September 22 – Wall Street Journal (Summer Said, Benoit Faucon and Rory Jones): “The Saudi Arabian Oil Co. is in emergency talks with equipment makers and service providers, offering to pay premium rates for parts and repair work as it attempts a speedy recovery from missile attacks on its largest oil-processing facilities, Saudi officials and oil contractors said. It may take many months—rather than the maximum 10 weeks company executives have promised—to restore operations to full working order, they said.”

The Bloomberg Commodities Index declined 1.1% this week (up 1.8% y-t-d). Spot Gold fell 1.3% to $1,497 (up 16.7%). Silver lost 1.1% to $17.652 (up 13.6%). WTI crude sank $2.18 to $55.91 (up 23%). Gasoline fell 1.6% (up 25%), and Natural Gas sank 5.1% (down 18%). Copper slipped 0.3% (down 1%). Wheat gained 0.6% (down 3%). Corn increased 0.2% (down 1%).

Market Instability Watch:

September 27 – Bloomberg (Alex Harris): “The repo market has calmed down, but the Federal Reserve is gearing up its safeguards seemingly to prevent turmoil from resurfacing on Monday. Last week’s craziness was not the first time in recent memory that U.S. money markets have shown signs of stress. It’s tended to happen around quarter-end, most notably in late December. The third quarter ends Monday. So, for the past two days, the New York Fed has run $100 billion overnight repo operations -- bigger than the $75 billion daily liquidity injections that began early last week -- plus separate 14-day operations. Neither of Friday’s actions were fully subscribed and short-term lending rates are well below the peak seen last week, a sign order has been restored for now. But on Monday, that larger $100 billion size will be repeated and the overnight operation will run from 7:45 a.m. to 8 a.m. New York time, earlier than prior morning actions. Both signal the Fed is getting ready in case rates spike again.”

September 26 – Bloomberg (Brian Chappatta): “The repo market madness lives on for a ninth day. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced Wednesday that it would increase the size of its next overnight system repurchase agreement operation to a $100 billion maximum, from $75 billion previously, and also raise the limit on its 14-day term repo operation to $60 billion from $30 billion. Simply put, the bank wants to flood the funding market with enough cash to soak up all the securities that dealers submit and leave no doubt that the critical financial-system plumbing is in fine working order ahead of the end of the quarter.”

September 23 – Wall Street Journal (Daniel Kruger and Vipal Monga): “The tumult in the market for short-term cash loans highlights some analysts’ concerns about the Federal Reserve’s proposed replacement for the troubled London interbank offered rate. The secured overnight financing rate, known as SOFR, rose to a record 5.25% last week…, pulled higher by a jump in borrowing rates for overnight repurchase agreements, or repos… SOFR’s price is based on repo rates, so the spike in that market last Tuesday caused the new benchmark for variable-rate securities to jump almost 3 percentage points to its highest level on record.”

September 26 – Wall Street Journal (Maureen Farrell, Corrie Driebusch, Miriam Gottfried and Allison Prang): “The IPO market took another hit Thursday as Endeavor Group Holdings Inc. yanked its planned offering, and Peloton Interactive Inc. ’s shares skidded on their first day of trading. Endeavor became the second big casualty of the IPO market’s recent chill after WeWork’s parent company pulled its offering earlier this month. It is the second time Endeavor has hit the brakes on its IPO this year.”

September 27 – CNBC (Kate Rooney): “This has been a tough week for bitcoin. The world’s first and largest cryptocurrency plunged more than 20% over seven days, hitting a low of $7,757 Friday — its lowest level since June. Bitcoin futures meanwhile, were on pace for their worst week of the year.”

Trump Administration Watch:

September 26 – Associated Press (Lisa Mascaro, Mary Clare Jalonick and Julie Pace): “President Donald Trump pressed the leader of Ukraine to ‘look into’ Joe Biden, Trump’s potential 2020 reelection rival, as well as the president’s lingering grievances from the 2016 election, according to a rough transcript of a summer phone call that is now at the center of Democrats’ impeachment probe. Trump repeatedly prodded Volodymyr Zelenskiy, new president of the East European nation, to work with U.S. Attorney General William Barr and Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer. At one point in the July conversation, Trump said, ‘I would like for you to do us a favor.’”

September 27 – Bloomberg (Jenny Leonard and Shawn Donnan): “Trump administration officials are discussing ways to limit U.S. investors’ portfolio flows into China in a move that would have repercussions for billions of dollars in investment pegged to major indexes, according to people familiar with the internal deliberations. The discussions are occurring as Washington and Beijing negotiate a potential truce in their trade war that’s rattled the world’s two biggest economies and investors for more than a year. They also come as China is removing limits on foreign investment in its financial markets. A U.S. crackdown on capital flows would therefore expose a new pressure point in the economic dispute and cause disruption well beyond the hundreds of billions in tariffs the two sides have levied against each other.”

September 24 – Reuters (Jeff Mason and David Lawder): “U.S. President Donald Trump delivered a stinging rebuke to China’s trade practices… at the United Nations General Assembly, saying he would not accept a ‘bad deal’ in U.S.-China trade negotiations. Four days after deputy U.S. and Chinese negotiators held inconclusive talks in Washington, Trump’s remarks were anything but conciliatory and emphasized the need to correct structural economic abuses at the heart of the countries’ nearly 15-month trade war. He said Beijing had failed to keep promises it made when China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001 and was engaging in predatory practices that had cost millions of jobs in the United States and other countries. ‘Not only has China declined to adopt promised reforms, it has embraced an economic model dependent on massive market barriers, heavy state subsidies, currency manipulation, product dumping, forced technology transfers and the theft of intellectual property and also trade secrets on a grand scale,’ Trump said. ‘As far as America is concerned, those days are over.’”

September 25 – Wall Street Journal (Kate O’Keeffe in Washington and Jeremy Page): “Beijing is increasingly tapping private Chinese firms to acquire foreign technology for its military, according to officials and a new report, in a strategy that is prompting calls by leaders in Washington to retool U.S. national security policy. Chinese President Xi Jinping is pressing these companies to bid for defense contracts as part of a ‘military-civil fusion’ drive to upgrade an arms industry long dominated by a handful of inefficient state-run contractors and research institutes. The initiative… is alarming U.S. officials, who fear it is a central plank in Beijing’s attempt to build a world-class military capable of challenging the U.S. in Asia and beyond... ‘China’s obfuscation and elimination of barriers between the defense and civilian sectors has troubling implications for foreign as well as domestic Chinese firms,’ a senior U.S. administration official said…”

September 22 – CNBC (Nancy Hungerford): “As President Donald Trump puts pressure on Beijing to end unfair business practices, the Department of Justice has a warning for companies: Bolster your defenses. ‘More cases are being opened that implicate trade secret theft’ — and more of them point to China, said U.S. Deputy Assistant Attorney General Adam Hickey. Since 2012, more than 80% of economic espionage cases brought by the department’s National Security Division have implicated China. The frequency of cases has been rising in recent years, according to Hickey.”

September 24 – Reuters (Humeyra Pamuk and David Brunnstrom): “The United States led more than 30 countries in condemning what it called China’s ‘horrific campaign of repression’ against Muslims in Xinjiang at an event on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly that was denounced by China. In highlighting abuses against ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims in China, Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan said… the United Nations and its member states had ‘a singular responsibility to speak up when survivor after survivor recounts the horrors of state repression.’”

September 22 – Reuters (Humeyra Pamuk): “The United States aims to avoid war with Iran and the additional troops ordered to be deployed in the Gulf region are for ‘deterrence and defense,’ U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said…”

September 22 – Bloomberg (Danielle Moran): “President Donald Trump reiterated his call for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates to less than zero in a tweet on Sunday. ‘We should always be paying less interest than others!’ Trump tweeted, referring to the negative rates that have become commonplace in Europe and Asia. About $14.3 trillion of global debt yields at sub-zero rates, according to Bloomberg indexes. That’s down from a high of $17 trillion in late August.”

September 22 – Wall Street Journal (Andrew Ackerman): “Mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are expected to start keeping their earnings as early as this week, pausing a yearslong arrangement in which they handed nearly all of their profits to the Treasury Department. The move, in an expected agreement between the Trump administration and their federal regulator, would be an initial major step in allowing the companies to build up capital so they can operate as private companies again. Under the forthcoming agreement, the companies would be allowed to retain about a year’s worth of profits, or about $20 billion…”

Federal Reserve Watch:

September 24 – Wall Street Journal (Daniel Kruger and Sam Goldfarb): “Banks on Tuesday flooded the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with more than twice as much demand for new two-week loans than the central bank was offering, a sign that banks could need more cash than Fed officials had anticipated. In its latest effort to calm short-term lending markets, the Fed offered $30 billion of two-week cash loans and received $62 billion in demand from banks offering collateral in the form of Treasury and mortgage securities. In a second offering, the Fed received $80.2 billion of demand for $75 billion of shorter-term overnight loans.”

September 23 – Wall Street Journal (Michael S. Derby): “A swift response to market unrest by the Fed last week helped short-term interest-rate markets, Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams said. Temporary injections of liquidity by the central bank ‘had the desired effect of reducing strains in markets, narrowing the dispersion of rates, and lowering secured and unsecured rates to more normal levels relative to other benchmarks,’ Mr. Williams said... Mr. Williams acknowledged the degree of strain seen in short-term markets was larger than expected, but the central bank was ready to respond. ‘We were prepared for such an event, acted quickly and appropriately, and our actions were successful,’ Mr. Williams said, adding that the mantra at the bank is to ‘quickly diagnose the problem, develop the right action plan, and execute that plan.’”

September 25 – Bloomberg (Rich Miller): “Recent turbulence in U.S. money markets has cast light on a big problem hidden at the root of the Federal Reserve’s conduct of monetary policy: It is targeting an increasingly irrelevant interest rate. Less than $100 billion changes hands each day in the federal funds market, the overnight interbank rate that the central bank targets. In contrast, considerably more than a trillion dollars are traded daily in the market for repurchase agreements, where financial institutions swap Treasury securities for cash. ‘Fed funds is a moribund market,’ said Mark Cabana, head of U.S. interest rates at Bank of America... ‘It does not really represent where banks are truly seeking to lend and borrow.’”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

September 26 – Associated Press (Mike Schneider): “The gap between the haves and have-nots in the United States grew last year to its highest level in more than 50 years of tracking income inequality, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures… Income inequality in the United States expanded from 2017 to 2018, with several heartland states among the leaders of the increase, even though several wealthy coastal states still had the most inequality overall… The nation’s Gini Index, which measures income inequality, has been rising steadily over the past five decades.”

September 25 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “Sales of new U.S. single-family homes rebounded more than expected in August, the latest sign that the sluggish housing market was starting to get a lift from lower mortgage rates… The Commerce Department said new home sales increased 7.1% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 713,000 units last month, boosted by a surge in activity in the South and West. July’s sales pace was revised up to 666,000 units from the previously reported 635,000 units. It was the second time in three months that new homes sales jumped above 700,000.”

September 24 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Home price gains have been shrinking since March 2018, but now signs point to reheating in the housing market. The much-watched S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index rose 3.2% annually in July, the same gain reported in June. Prices are still cooling in the largest cities, however. The 10-City Composite rose 1.6% annually, down from 1.9% in the previous month. The 20-City Composite posted a 2.0% annual gain, down from 2.2% in June. The hottest cities for home price appreciation were Phoenix, Las Vegas and Charlotte, North Carolina.”

September 25 – Bloomberg (Esha Dey, Drew Singer, Ryan Vlastelica, Kristine Owram and Mathieu Benhamou): “Unprofitable companies are raising money in initial public offerings at the fastest pace since the dot-com bubble when a revolution in the banking industry sparked a rush to risk. Peloton Interactive Inc.’s planned Nasdaq debut on Thursday extends this year’s run of IPOs by so-called unicorns—huge, money-losing firms like Uber Technologies Inc. and Pinterest Inc. The unprofitable members of the 2019 class of IPOs have already raised the most cash of any year since at least 2000… And there’s more to come: Another 107 companies filed in 2019 to go public, among them The We Co., parent to WeWork, the office-share operator awash in red ink… ‘It used to be an article of faith that you couldn’t go public until you turn a profit,’ said Rett Wallace, chief executive officer of Triton Research… ‘Not a path to profitability, a profit.’ The 2019 class of IPOs may turn out to be as risky as those dot-com companies that went bust at the turn of the century despite the exuberance surrounding them.”

September 27 – Financial Times (Richard Waters and Richard Henderson): “A series of IPO crashes, as investors turned their backs on some of Silicon Valley’s most prized companies, has prompted forecasts of a broader reset in valuations after the long tech boom. Endeavor Group, the Hollywood talent agency that has expanded rapidly into new areas of digital media, became the latest company to pull its initial public offering, after the fitness bike start-up Peloton tumbled to one of the worst first-day performances of the year on Thursday. Wall Street has also been spooked by the collapse of a planned IPO for office space rental company WeWork, which repeatedly slashed its mooted valuation after investors balked at its huge losses and corporate governance.”

September 26 – Bloomberg (John Tozzi): “The cost of family health coverage in the U.S. now tops $20,000, an annual survey of employers found, a record high that has pushed an increasing number of American workers into plans that cover less or cost more, or force them out of the insurance market entirely. ‘It’s as much as buying a basic economy car,’ said Drew Altman, chief executive officer of the Kaiser Family Foundation, ‘but buying it every year.’”

September 23 – Financial Times (Richard Henderson): “Executives across the US are shedding stock in their own companies at the fastest pace in two decades… Corporate insiders — typically chief executives, chief financial officers and board members — sold a combined $19bn of stock in their companies through to mid-September, according to… Smart Insider, a UK-based group. That puts them on track to hit about $26bn for the year, which would mark the most active year since 2000, when executives sold $37bn of stock amid the giddy highs of the dotcom bubble. That projected total for the year would also set a post-crisis high, eclipsing the $25bn of stock sold in 2017.”

September 22 – CNBC (Ari Levy): “Other years have had more tech IPOs than 2019, but there’s never been a year that’s minted so many big ones. After Datadog’s first-day pop on Thursday, the provider of analytics and monitoring tools became the fourth cloud software company to go public in 2019 and attain a market cap of at least $10 billion. Videoconferencing company Zoom, chat app Slack, and cybersecurity vendor Crowdstrike are the three others. The new crop brings to 16 the total number of cloud software companies in the 11-digit club. While 14 of those companies have gone public since the beginning of 2012, this is the first year with more than two that reached $10 billion in value.”

China Watch:

September 24 – Reuters (David Brunnstrom and David Lawder): “China’s top diplomat hit back at U.S. criticism of its trade and development model…, saying Beijing had no intention to ‘play the Game of Thrones on the world stage’ but warned Washington to respect its sovereignty, including in Hong Kong. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister and state councilor, said Beijing would not bow to threats, including on trade, though he said he hoped a round of high-level trade talks next month would produce positive results.”

September 24 – Associated Press: “China urged President Donald Trump… to listen to developing countries and oppose bullying after the American leader criticized its trade status at the United Nations. A foreign ministry spokesman called on Trump to ‘meet China halfway’ in settling trade disputes. The two governments are locked in an escalating tariff war over complaints about Beijing’s trade surplus and technology ambitions. It threatens to tip the global economy into recession. Trump complained… that the World Trade Organization improperly gives China preferential treatment. He was referring to complaints China, the No. 2 global economy and biggest trader, is abusing the leeway given to developing countries to subsidize exports or delay opening markets.”

September 24 – Bloomberg: “China’s economy in the third quarter was the weakest it has been this year, according to the China Beige Book, with manufacturing, property and the services sectors all worsening, even as borrowing picked up. Manufacturing revenue, profits, volumes and sales prices fell by double-digit paces from the previous three months, although borrowing remained at its highest level, according to the quarterly report. ‘Retail and services stood out mostly for how incapable they were at picking up the slack,’ the report said… The current weakness in the economy is primarily due to manufacturing. While a drop in exports was a factor, most of the decline was due to ‘considerably slower sales price growth,’ according to the report… The services sector continued to underperform, with both revenue and profits dropping from the same period last year. Hiring also slowed, which means that ‘if manufacturing does have to shed a large number of jobs, services has shown no capacity to absorb them,’ the report said. There was a resurgence of borrowing in the period.”

September 24 – Financial Times (Don Weinland): “China’s $8.4tn shadow bankin industry has surged back to life this year, as regulators scale back deleveraging in an effort to spur economic growth. Financial regulators in China have for several years grappled to control the country’s massive shadow lending sector, which includes many forms of off-balance-sheet lending from banks, peer-to-peer lenders and credit extended by asset managers. The opaque industry has long been associated with financial risks, and became the target of a regulatory crackdown in 2018, part of a central government attempt to maintain financial stability. But following the onset of the trade dispute with the US and slowing economic growth, shadow lending has made an unprecedented return in the second and third quarters of 2019, according to China Beige Book International… Shadow lenders accounted for 39% of total lending in the third quarter of the year, and 45% in the second quarter, the highest percentage of shadow financing since at least 2013... As recently as the middle of last year, shadow lending had shrunk to just 21% of total loans. ‘For six months now the non-bank share of loans has been highest on record,’ according to the report, which surveyed more than 10,000 companies’ credit conditions this year. ‘The consensus view that China’s economy is currently credit-constrained should be discarded.’”

September 27 – Bloomberg: “A scrapped bond sale by a mining company in Qinghai this week is sharpening focus on debt risks in the Chinese province. Western Mining Group, controlled by the local government, pulled a 1 billion yuan ($140 million) bond sale on Thursday… Lack of demand was behind the cancellation, according to people familiar with the matter… The failed sale underscores weakening investor appetite for bonds from companies in the mineral-rich province in China’s northwest, after missed payments and debt restructuring at other firms in the region… ‘Negative headlines definitely have had ripple effect on other Qinghai firms,’ said Li Yunfei, a credit analyst with Pacific Securities Co.”

September 24 – Wall Street Journal (Chao Deng): “The head of China’s central bank said that the country’s interest rates were appropriate and that it wouldn’t aggressively ease monetary policy, even as other central banks lower borrowing rates in a bid to spur growth. People’s Bank of China Governor Yi Gang said… Beijing wouldn’t follow other countries in taking certain steps to expand credit, such as substantially cutting the required amount of reserves maintained by commercial banks or pushing interest rates below zero. He told reporters that the economy, despite recent signs of weakness, was still performing within expectations, while inflation was relatively mild. Mr. Yi emphasized instead the importance of preserving flexibility on policy options as the economy slows to its lowest rate of growth in nearly three decades. ‘We should cherish the space for normal monetary policy,’ Mr. Yi said, adding that while Beijing has room to take monetary and fiscal measures, it should continue with normal policy as along as possible.”

September 26 – Bloomberg (Jason Gale): “China’s pig herd has halved to 200 million head over the past year because of a deadly swine disease that may depress pork supplies for years, a Rabobank analyst said. The emergence of African swine fever in China in August 2018, and the subsequent deaths and culling of pigs, have wiped out 25% the country’s pork production, or about 13 million metric tons, which is ‘unprecedented,’ said Pan Chenjun, Rabobank’s Hong Kong-based senior animal proteins analyst…”

September 22 – Bloomberg (Lulu Yilun Chen): “The government of one of China’s top technology hubs is dispatching officials to 100 local corporations including e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., the latest effort to exert greater influence over the country’s massive private sector. Hangzhou… is assigning government affairs representatives to facilitate communication and expedite projects, the city government said…”

September 26 – Reuters (Jessie Pang and Felix Tam): “Thousands of Hong Kong protesters rallied at the harbor side on Friday, chanting slogans accusing the police of brutality and setting the stage for a weekend of demonstrations leading up to the 70th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China.”

Central Banking Watch:

September 26 – Bloomberg (Ferdinando Giugliano): “It’s all kicking off at the European Central Bank.Sabine Lautenschlaeger, the executive board member from Germany, is to resign at the end of October, slightly more than two years before the end of her mandate. Her exact motives are unknown, but they add to a sense of chaos at the central bank barely a month before a crucial leadership change. Christine Lagarde, who’s taking over from Mario Draghi in November, will have a very tough job ensuring the ECB keeps running effectively. Lautenschlaeger has been a vocal opponent of the central bank’s recent decision to restart quantitative easing, as it tries to counter a slowdown and bring inflation back on target.”

September 23 – Bloomberg (Fergal O'Brien): “European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the Governing Council should be open to ideas such as Modern Monetary Theory, while noting they’re closer to fiscal policy and should be directed by governments. Draghi was responding to a question from European lawmakers about helicopter money and the best ways to channel funds to the economy in a way that helps inequality. He mentioned MMT and a recent paper by former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer… which said central banks should put money ‘directly in the hands of public and private sector spenders.’ ‘These are objectively pretty new ideas,’ Draghi said. ‘They have not been discussed by the Governing Council. We should look at them, but they have not been tested.’”

September 26 – Reuters (Anthony Esposito): “For the second time in a row, Mexico’s central bank cut its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 7.75%, as it cited slowing inflation, widening slack in the economy, and expectations for a slight economic recovery.”

September 23 – Reuters (Leika Kihara): “Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said… that if the central bank were to ease monetary policy further, it would aim at pushing down short- and medium-term interest rates without flattening the yield curve too much. Kuroda said the BOJ has no preset idea on whether to ramp up stimulus at its next rate review on Oct. 30-31, suggesting that the decision will depend on market moves and the economy’s resilience to overseas risks. But he said the central bank has become more eager to top up monetary support than before due to heightening risks such as the widening fallout from the U.S.-China trade conflict. ‘As risks regarding overseas economy are heightening, we need to be increasingly vigilant to the chance the overseas slowdown could affect Japan’s economy and inflation,’ Kuroda said…”

Brexit Watch:

September 25 – Reuters (Elizabeth Piper and William James): “Boris Johnson’s attorney-general said the British parliament was ‘dead’ in a defiant outburst after lawmakers were recalled following a Supreme Court ruling that the prime minister’s suspension of the assembly was unlawful. The comments by Geoffrey Cox… prompted outrage among Johnson’s opponents seeking to stop him taking Britain out of the EU without a deal. Britain faces an Oct. 31 departure deadline, but after three years of political crisis it remains unclear when, if or on what terms the it will leave the bloc it joined in 1973.”

September 27 – Financial Times (Judith Evans): “The £850m sale of a building that includes one of WeWork’s largest sites has collapsed, in a blow to a London property market wrestling with Brexit worries and the turmoil at the shared office company. A deal to sell Southbank Place near Waterloo station, which also includes the London headquarters of Royal Dutch Shell, to the Singaporean group Bright Ruby was called off on Friday, according to two people briefed on the situation. The collapse of the sale comes as WeWork battles with the fallout from its aborted initial public offering process and the departure of Adam Neumann, its chief executive.”

Europe Watch:

September 26 – Bloomberg (Zoe Schneeweiss): “For all the gloom hanging over the euro-area economy, demand for money was surprisingly solid last month. European Central Bank figures published Thursday showed M3 -- a broad measure of the money circulating in the economy -- expanded at the quickest pace since 2009, and loan growth to companies accelerated to 4.3% from 4.0%. That adds fuel to the arguments of the sizable minority in the ECB’s Governing Council who argued that President Mario Draghi’s stimulus package on Sept. 12 was too much too soon.”

September 23 – Bloomberg (Piotr Skolimowski): “Growth in the euro-area economy almost ground to a halt at the end of the third quarter amid evidence that the manufacturing slump is starting to spread into the services sector. A Purchasing Managers’ Index for the 19-nation region fell to 50.4 in September, missing estimates, down from 51.9 a month earlier and the weakest in more than six years… Markit showed. That suggests growth of just 0.1% in the third quarter and further deterioration in the coming months, it said.”

Asia Watch:

September 27 – Bloomberg (Denise Wee): “A growing pile of bad debt in Asia is luring more global investors. That’s the view of consulting firm Deloitte LLP, which estimates that nonperforming loans held by banks across Asia jumped 23% to $640 billion… China continues to dominate the region’s soured loans, with a total of $295 billion held by Asian banks, while India is the second largest at about $160 billion, according to Deloitte… The scale of China’s nonperforming loan market is ‘on par with even the busiest of European markets,’ with Deloitte estimating that 380 billion yuan ($53bn) of soured debt traded in the secondary market in 2018.”

September 24 – Reuters (Patturaja Murugaboopathy and Gaurav Dogra): “Asian countries are looking for catalysts beyond China to drive their economies as the Sino-U.S. trade war forces Chinese demand for their exports to shrink. Luring foreign companies to their shores, finding ways to boost domestic consumption and scouring for alternate export markets are part of that policy mix as China’s neighbors cope with flagging demand from the mainland, hitherto a large market for Asia in the regional supply chain. Thailand has unveiled a ‘relocation package’ comprising tax incentives and changes in laws to attract foreign firms.”

EM Watch:

September 25 – Bloomberg (Suvashree Ghosh): “Indian authorities are scrambling to suppress speculation about bank closures a day after the regulator imposed restrictions on a local lender, the latest indication of how jittery savers are amid a slowing economy and scandals in the financial system. ‘Reports appearing in some sections of social media about RBI closing down certain commercial banks are false,’ the Reserve Bank of India said in a terse Twitter message…”

September 22 – Reuters (Abhirup Roy): “India’s Altico Capital said… it was evaluating options to resolve its liquidity issues, following its recent default on an interest payment that was due earlier this month. Altico, backed by Clearwater Capital Partners and Abu Dhabi Investment Council, said it defaulted on the interest payment after a rating downgrade prompted several of its lenders to recall a substantial amount of debt causing it to face a liquidity squeeze.”

Japan Watch:

September 24 – Reuters (Tetsushi Kajimoto and Takahiko Wada): “A Bank of Japan board member said… the central bank would ease policy further without hesitation if momentum for hitting its 2% inflation target was lost, adding that she was concerned about mounting risks from overseas economies. ‘My recent concern is that, amid significant downside risks concerning overseas economies, negative effects would be exerted on prices,’ Takako Masai said… ‘I intend to continue to conduct monetary policy appropriately toward achieving the price stability target while considering all conceivable adverse and positive effects from every angle.’”

Global Bubble Watch:

September 25 – Associated Press (Seth Borenstein): “Earth is in more hot water than ever before, and so are we, an expert United Nations climate panel warned in a grim new report Wednesday. Sea levels are rising at an ever-faster rate as ice and snow shrink, and oceans are getting more acidic and losing oxygen, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said in a report… It warned that if steps aren’t taken to reduce emissions and slow global warming, seas will rise 3 feet by the end of the century, with many fewer fish, less snow and ice, stronger and wetter hurricanes and other, nastier weather systems. ‘The oceans and the icy parts of the world are in big trouble, and that means we’re all in big trouble, too,’ said one of the report’s lead authors, Michael Oppenheimer, professor of geosciences and international affairs at Princeton University. ‘The changes are accelerating.’”

September 23 – Financial Times (Leslie Hook and Camilla Hodgson): “French president Emmanuel Macron has urged world leaders to respond more urgently to climate change, as the New York climate summit opened with a dire warning from the UN secretary-general about the ‘apocalyptic’ impact a warming planet would have on humanity. Mr Macron said France would not pursue new trade negotiations with countries that were not following the Paris climate agreement, adding that doing so would be ‘deeply hypocritical’. António Guterres, UN secretary-general, earlier set the tone for the gathering when he told the assembled audience...: ‘Our warming earth is issuing a chilling cry: stop.’ ‘If we don’t urgently change our ways of life, we jeopardise life itself. My generation has failed in its responsibility to protect our planet. That must change.’”

September 24 – Financial Times (Toby Stubbington): “The level of government debt around the world has ballooned since the financial crisis, reaching levels never seen before during peacetime. A Deutsche Bank analysis shows the world’s major economies have debts on average of more than 70% of GDP, the highest level of the past 150 years except for a spike around the second world war… Unlike earlier eras, when governments typically ran surpluses during peacetime, the pressures of modern democracy and welfare systems have made persistent deficits the norm in many countries… ‘The problem in sustainably recreating such a scenario today is that the post-WWII era saw much higher levels of GDP growth due to favourable demographics, post-war reconstruction and high productivity growth,’ said Deutsche’s Jim Reid.”

September 22 – Reuters (Saikat Chatterjee): “Lending standards in the rapidly growing loan market are deteriorating and complex financial products that mask risks to banks have parallels with the run-up to the 2008 financial crisis, the Bank for International Settlements warned… The number of collateralized loan obligations (CLOs), a form of securitization which pools bank loans to companies, has ballooned in recent years as investors hunt for higher returns by buying into loans to lower-rated and riskier companies. Like the collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) that bundled U.S. sub-prime mortgages into complex products and were blamed for triggering the global financial crisis, CLOs also have complex structures that can mask underlying risks… The global outstanding CLO market is now estimated to stand at about $750 billion, while the CDO market in 2007 before the crisis came to $640 billion, the BIS said.”

September 23 – Wall Street Journal (Lucy Craymer and Jacob Bunge): “China is on a global meat-buying spree, pushing up beef, pork and poultry prices around the globe as the world’s most populous nation scrambles to fill a large void in its meat supply. Meat buyers for China are ramping up purchases after a swine disease hit hog farms… and reduced its pig herd—the world’s largest—by more than a third. Domestic pork prices have surged and China’s meat imports are swelling in response, straining global supplies and sending ripples across the global economy. In Brazil, poultry shipments to China have jumped 31% from a year ago and retail prices for chicken breasts, thighs and legs have increased roughly 16%. Shoppers in Europe are on average paying 5% more for pork, because more domestically produced meat is being sent to China. Lamb prices in Australian grocery stores have jumped 14%, while ground beef on shelves in New Zealand now fetches record prices.”

September 22 – Associated Press (Carlo Piovano and Gregory Katz): “Families stranded, honeymoons and vacations canceled, thousands of workers laid off: The sudden collapse of British tour company Thomas Cook and its network of airlines and hotels sowed chaos for hundreds of thousands of travelers and businesses around the world Monday. Brought down by a variety of factors, including crushing debts and online competition, the 178-year-old travel agency that helped pioneer the package tour ceased operating in the middle of the night. Its four airlines stopped carrying customers, and its 21,000 employees in 16 countries lost their jobs.”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

September 27 – Bloomberg (Michael Gambale): “This month has seen a record number of bond sales by blue-chip companies, incentivized by low interest rates and supercharged investor demand to refinance debt. The market priced 127 deals, surpassing September 2017’s 110 offerings as the busiest month, based on Bloomberg records began going back 20 years. Total volume of $154.9 billion is still short of the $177 billion record set in May 2016. But with two days remaining in September, sales are poised to be the third-highest ever. The surge in supply came as a growing pile of bonds offer negative yields overseas, driving investors desperate for higher returns into the U.S. corporate credit market.”

September 23 – Bloomberg (Danielle Moran): “U.S. state and local governments are selling bonds at the fastest pace since the record-setting flood in December 2017, seizing on a slide in interest rates that has pushed their borrowing costs to the lowest in more than half a century. The volume of new debt sales in September is poised to rival or exceed the $38 billion that was issued in August, which was the busiest month since governments rushed to the market before President Donald Trump’s tax law pulled the subsidies from a key refinancing tactic. Governments have sold about $28 billion of long-term debt in September, a 33% increase from the same period a year ago, and more than $10 billion is already scheduled to be offered over the next week…”

September 24 – Reuters (Karen Pierog): “Local governments in the U.S. Midwest and Southeast regions face elevated exposure to climate change in the coming decades as rising temperatures pose a credit risk for their debt, Moody’s… said… The credit rating agency said heat stress could hurt agriculture, lower labor productivity, increase infrastructure costs, boost energy demand and impair public health. ‘If significant enough, now and over ensuing decades, these difficulties have the potential to lower revenue, increase expenses, impair assets and increase liabilities and debt, among other effects,’ Moody’s said…”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

September 27 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang and Melissa Karsh): “The violent rotation from momentum stocks into value that had caught many investors off guard earlier this month turned out to be too short for hedge funds to adjust their playbooks. After enduring some of their worst bleeding in years, long-short hedge funds have since clawed back almost half of the drop as the rout in their favored stocks suddenly stopped. The group’s month-to-date losses, which bucked broad market gains, have now narrowed to 1% from as high as 1.75%... As performance improves, there are signs the smart money is dashing back into the old habit of chasing winners and dumping losers.”

Geopolitical Watch:

September 20 – Reuters: “Iran will pursue any aggressor, even if it carries out a limited attack, and seek to destroy it, the head of the elite Revolutionary Guards said…, after attacks on Saudi oil sites which Riyadh and U.S officials blamed on Tehran. Be careful, a limited aggression will not remain limited. ‘We will pursue any aggressor,’ the head of the Guards, Major General Hossein Salami, said… ‘We are after punishment and we will continue until the full destruction of any aggressor.’”

September 26 – Reuters (Tim Kelly): “China’s growing military might has replaced North Korean belligerence as the main security threat to Japan, Tokyo’s annual defense review indicated on Thursday, despite signs that Pyongyang could have nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles.”

Friday Afternoon Links

[Reuters] Wall Street drops as White House weighs delisting Chinese companies

[Reuters] Treasuries - Yield curve steeper after Trump threatens China delisting

[CNBC] White House deliberates block on all US investments in China

[Reuters] Trump considers delisting Chinese firms from U.S. markets: source

[CNBC] Lending to house flippers hits a 13-year high as prices and competition heat up

[CNBC] Bitcoin nosedives 22% this week to its lowest level since June

[AP] The Latest: German govt says time is running out on Brexit

[Bloomberg] White House Weighs Limits on U.S. Portfolio Flows Into China

[Bloomberg] ‘This Is Huge’ as China Threat Dents Markets: Wall Street Reacts

[Bloomberg] ‘Ludicrous’ Portfolio-Flow Proposal Sends China ADRs Plummeting

[Bloomberg] The Fed Is Girding for Repo Trouble Monday Even as Market Calms

[WSJ] Global Slowdown Spreads Across U.S. Economy

[FT] IPO crashes send chills from Wall Street to Silicon Valley

[FT] Blow to London property market as £850m deal collapses

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Friday's News Links

[Reuters] Shares rise as trade optimism muffles impeachment noise

[CNBC] Oil prices head for big weekly loss as supply fears wane

[Reuters] U.S. consumer spending slows in August; incomes rise

[AP] US durable goods orders edge up slight 0.2% in August

[Reuters] China's August industrial profits fall as headwinds hit firms

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] The ECB Is Moving Closer to All-Out War

[Reuters] Hong Kong braces for weekend protests ahead of major Chinese anniversary

[Reuters] Japan promotes China as bigger threat than nuclear-armed North Korea

[Bloomberg] U.S. Economy Cools as Consumer Spending Misses Forecasts

[Bloomberg] European Confidence Drops to Four-Year Low as Economy Stumbles

[Bloomberg] Deadly Virus Has Slashed China’s Pig Herd by Half, Rabobank Says

[NYT] Wall Street Skeptics Poke at Start-Up Bubble

[FT] Banks’ demand for short-term cash wanes in Fed’s latest repo operation

[FT] German scepticism of the ECB reveals a eurozone paradox

[FT] Repo turmoil is a symptom of a much bigger problem

[FT] Federal Reserve standing repo facility is coming into view

[FT] Thomas Cook’s collapse shows perils of debt derivatives

Thursday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street dips as whistleblower report adds to investor caution

[Reuters] China's top diplomat says Beijing willing to buy more U.S. products

[AP] Census: Inequality grew, including in heartland states

[Reuters] Mexico central bank cuts rate, more reductions on the horizon

[Bloomberg] Repo Meltdown Shows Budget Deficit Has Limits

[FT] The repo crisis is a warning signal in the financial system

[WSJ] IPO Market Takes a Punch as Peloton Slides, Endeavor Cuts Range

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Thursday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street drops as turmoil in Washington outweighs trade optimism

[MarketWatch] U.S. trade deficit in goods widens slightly in August

[AP] US economy grew at modest 2% rate in second quarter

[Reuters] U.S. business investment much weaker in second-quarter than previously estimated

[Reuters] U.S. pending home sales rise more than expected in August

[Reuters] Dallas Fed's Kaplan says global economy 'fragile' but U.S. will 'skate through'

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] U.S. Sanctions Chinese Shipping Companies for Iran Oil Dealings

[Reuters] ECB's Lautenschlaeger says resigning was best course of action: email

[Reuters] Brexit 'inferno' lays bare a divided United Kingdom

[Reuters] BOJ's Kuroda warns of overseas risks, signals readiness to adjust policy

[Bloomberg] Fed Should Buy $250 Bln in Treasuries, Ex-Officials Suggest

[Bloomberg] Euro-Area Money Supply Grows at Fastest Pace Since 2009

[Bloomberg] Korean Investors Lose 98.1% in German-Rate Bets Gone Very Wrong

[WSJ] Big Banks Loom Over Fed Repo Efforts

[WSJ] Many Manufacturers’ Ups and Downs Have Little to Do With Trump

[FT] Banks snap up $60bn in two-week loans in latest Fed operation

[FT] ‘German problem’ at ECB exposed by Lautenschläger departure

[FT] India is slow to fix banking and finance system’s ‘messed-up gearbox’

Wednesday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street rises on Trump's trade comments; Nike hits record high

[Reuters] U.S. Justice Department to open Facebook antitrust investigation: source

[Reuters] Trump says trade deal with China could happen sooner than people think

[Reuters] Lower mortgage rates stimulate lethargic U.S. housing market

[CNBC] New home sales see unexpected surge, but analyst says ‘entry level’ price is now much higher

[Reuters] U.S. new home sales accelerate; lower mortgage rates a boost

[Reuters] Peloton raises $1.2 billion after IPO prices at top of range

[Bloomberg] N.Y. Fed Boosts Size of Repo Ops After Offerings Oversubscribed

[Bloomberg] Health Insurance Costs Surpass $20,000 Per Year, Hitting a Record

[Bloomberg] Xi Doubles Down on Stability-First Slow Growth in China

[Bloomberg] China Defaults Set to Worsen as $7.8 Billion Bonds Due Next Year

[Bloomberg] Trump’s Interior Department Says ‘There Is Not a Climate Crisis’

[WSJ] New York Fed Boosts Size of Repurchase Operations

[FT] New IMF head warns of world’s ability to handle global slump

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Wednesday's News Links

[Reuters] Shares stumble over Trump impeachment threat, China jibes

[CNBC] Higher interest rates send weekly mortgage applications tanking 10%

[AP] China rejects Trump criticism on trade

[CNBC] US-China cold war and rising protectionism could split world order

[Reuters] China says has no intent to play 'Game of Thrones' but warns on sovereignty

[Reuters] PM Johnson faces hostile parliament as Brexit chaos deepens

[Reuters] Asia seeks ways to cope with trade war's hit to China demand

[Reuters] BOJ board member says ready to ease again as risks grow

[Reuters] Timeline: Seven decades of Communist China

[AP] New climate report: Oceans rising faster, ice melting more

[Bloomberg] Unprofitable Companies Are Raising the Most IPO Cash Since the Dot-Com Era

[Bloomberg] Repo Turmoil Spawns Doubt Fed Is Targeting Right Interest Rate

[Bloomberg] Gold Gets Another Boost as U.S. Risks Strengthen Case for Havens

[Bloomberg] China’s Economy Struggling Across All Sectors, Beige Book Says

[Bloomberg] India Central Bank Denies Rumors of Bank Closures

[WSJ] China Taps Its Private Sector to Boost Its Military, Raising Alarms

[FT] Global debt surges to highest level in peacetime

[FT] US-China decoupling shifts into capital markets

[FT] China’s shadow banking industry roars back

Tuesday Evening Links

[Reuters] Asian shares edge lower as U.S. House readies Trump impeachment inquiry

[Reuters] Wall Street drops on Trump's trade comments, weak consumer data

[Reuters] U.S. quarter-end funding costs stay elevated

[Reuters] Oil falls 2% after Trump ratchets up U.S.-China trade war

[Reuters] U.S. consumer confidence falls in September, trade fears dominate

[Reuters] Fed adds longer-term cash to U.S. banking system

[Reuters] Trump criticizes China's trade practices at U.N., will not take 'bad deal'

[AP] US home prices rise at slowest pace in 7 years

[Reuters] Climate change poses credit risk as U.S. Midwest, Southeast heat up -Moody's

[Reuters] U.S. leads condemnation of China for 'horrific' repression of Muslims

[WSJ] Banks Flood the Fed With Demand for Two-Week Loans

Monday, September 23, 2019

Tuesday's News Links

[Reuters] Trade optimism bolsters shares, pound whipsawed by Brexit drama

[Reuters] Oil prices fall due to weak economic data, Saudi output recovery

[MarketWatch] New York Fed term repo operation twice oversubscribed

[CNBC] Signs point to re-heating in housing market as home price gains stop slowdown, S&P Case-Shiller July index says

[Reuters] Brexit crisis deepens as court rules Johnson unlawfully suspended parliament

[CNBC] Here are 4 charts that show China’s rise as a global economic superpower

[Reuters] China central bank governor says in no rush to take big policy easing steps

[Reuters] U.S.-Japan trade deal hits snag as Tokyo seeks assurances on car tariffs

[Reuters] BOJ's Kuroda says any easing will target short-, medium-term rates

[Reuters] Argentina's markets, caged by controls, strain beneath the surface

[Bloomberg] Dealers Rush to N.Y. Fed Repo Operations as Quarter-End Nears

[Bloomberg] China Must Avoid Massive Stimulus and Control Debt, Says PBOC’s Yi

[Bloomberg] BOJ’s Kuroda Expounds on Virtues of Negative Rates

[Bloomberg] The World's Wealthiest Families Are Stockpiling Cash as Recession Fears Grow

[Bloomberg] No Laughing Matter: How Climate Change Is Scaring Central Banks

[WSJ] Fed’s Williams: Fast Action by Central Bank Helped Calm Short-Term Interest-Rate Markets

[WSJ] China’s Central Bank Won’t Follow Others in Easing

[FT] Insider stock sales rise to two-decade high in the US

[FT] Fed’s effort to increase reserves could drag on dollar

Monday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street buoyed by Apple; trade concerns, mixed PMI cap gains

[Reuters] NY Fed's Williams says NY Fed actions had desired effect of reducing market strains

[Reuters] Fed's Bullard: U.S. policy now 'considerably' looser, but markets may demand more

[Fortune] Why the Repo Market Is Such a Big Deal—and Why Its $400 Billion Bailout Is So Unnerving

[CNBC] More Americans are house rich, but they’re leaving that cash in the house

[Reuters] EU's Barnier says it's hard to see Brexit solution

[Bloomberg] Dudley Says Fed Will Strongly Consider a Standing Repo Facility

[Bloomberg] Draghi Says ECB Should Examine New Ideas Like MMT

[Bloomberg] Muni-Bond Sales Surging as Yields Tumble to Lowest Since 1960s

[WSJ] Repo-Market Tumult Raises Concerns About New Benchmark Rate

[WSJ] Aramco’s Repairs Could Take Months Longer Than Company Anticipates, Contractors Say

[FT] World leaders call for action to avert ‘apocalyptic’ climate change


Sunday, September 22, 2019

Monday's News Links

[Reuters] Stocks sink on dismal economic data, mixed trade signals

[Reuters] European stocks sink after weak business surveys

[CNBC] Chinese theft of trade secrets on the rise, the US Justice Department warns

[MarketWatch] Stock market’s eerie parallels to September 2007 should raise recession fears

[Reuters] ECB's Knot: New economic stimulus program 'disproportionate'

[AP] Travel chaos, jobs lost as UK firm Thomas Cook collapses

[Reuters] Hong Kong mops up after fresh violence, braces for October 1 anniversary

[NYT] In the Decade Since Madoff, Ponzi Schemers Try New Tactics

[Bloomberg] Euro-Area Economy Comes Close to Stalling as Factories Suffer

[Bloomberg] Life in China Is Getting Harder, and Xi Jinping Should Worry

[Bloomberg] China Steps Up Government Presence at Alibaba, Private Giants

[Bloomberg] President Trump Doubles Down on Call for Negative Interest Rates

[Bloomberg] Draghi’s Highway to Inflation Goal Risks Ending in Taper Tantrum

[WSJ] Fed Adds $49.7 Billion to Financial System

[WSJ] Your Meat Is Getting Pricier Because China Is Peckish for Protein

[FT] Shadows loom over China’s 70th birthday celebrations

[FT] Eurozone economy stalls as data trigger fears of recession

Sunday Evening Links

[Reuters] U.S. stock futures gain on better trade tone, oil climbs

[Reuters] Booming securitized loan market has echoes of financial crisis, BIS warns

[AP] EU’s Juncker: Irish border controls needed in no-deal Brexit

[Reuters] Markets face major risks over lax climate forecasts, top investors warn

Sunday's News Links

[Reuters] China needs to change way it finances economy, think tank says

[Reuters] Indian shadow bank Altico says evaluating options after default

[CNBC] More $10 billion software companies are being minted than ever before — here’s why

[Reuters] Pompeo says U.S. mission is to avoid war with Iran but measures in place to deter

[Reuters] Iran says it will destroy any aggressor

[Bloomberg] Repo Market’s Liquidity Crisis Has Been a Decade in the Making

[WSJ] Time to Worry About Corporate Debt Again

[WSJ] Fannie, Freddie Poised to Keep Profits in an Initial Privatization Move

[WSJ] Yemeni Rebels Warn Iran Plans Another Strike Soon

Friday, September 20, 2019

Weekly Commentary: No Coincidences

September 20 – Wall Street Journal (Daniel Kruger): “The Federal Reserve Bank of New York will offer to add at least $75 billion daily to the financial system through Oct. 10, prolonging its efforts to relieve funding pressure in money markets. In addition to at least $75 billion in overnight loans, the New York Fed… will also offer three separate 14-day repo contracts of at least $30 billion each next week… On Friday banks asked for $75.55 billion in reserves, $550 million more than the amount offered by the Fed, offering collateral in the form of Treasury and mortgage securities. The Fed’s operation was the fourth time this week it has intervened to calm roiled money markets. Rates on short-term repos briefly spiked to nearly 10% earlier this week as financial firms looked for overnight funding. The actions marked the first time since the financial crisis that the Fed had taken such measures.”

With the Lehman collapse setting off the “worst financial crisis since the Great Depression”, instability in the multi-trillion repurchase agreement marketplace generates intense interest. This market for funding levered securities holdings is critical to the financial system’s “plumbing.” It's a market in perceived “money” – highly liquid and virtually risk free-instruments. If risk suddenly becomes an issue for this shadowy network, the cost and availability of Credit for highly leveraged players is suddenly in question. And any de-risking/deleveraging at the nucleus of the global financial system would pose a clear and present danger for sparking “risk off” throughout Credit markets and financial markets more generally.

I’ll usually begin contemplating the CBB on Thursdays. This week’s alarming dislocation in the “repo” market was clearly a major development worthy of focus. But I was planning on highlighting the lack of initial contagion effects in corporate Credit, a not surprising development considering the New York Fed’s aggressive liquidity injections.

Investment-grade Credit default swaps (CDS), for example, closed Thursday trading near their lowest levels since February 2018. Junk bond spreads (to Treasuries) went out Thursday near the narrowest since early-November. Bank CDS, another important indicator, also continued to signal “all’s clear” throughout Thursday trading. As of Thursday’s close, Goldman Sachs’ (5yr) CDS was up a modest three points for the week to 58, after closing the previous Friday near the low going back to January 2018.

But Friday’s trading session came with additional intrigue. Investment-grade CDS jumped 15% to 59.7, the highest close in about a month. Goldman Sachs CDS rose 9.4% to 63.1, an almost four-week high. JPMorgan CDS rose 8.9% (to 42.7), BofA 11.0% (to 47.5) and Citigroup 5.7% (to 61.1). And as key financial CDS prices moved sharply higher, safe haven bond yields dropped. Treasury yields fell six bps in Friday trading to 1.72%, and Bund yields declined two bps to negative 0.525%. Even more curious, Gold popped almost $18 Friday to $1,517, boosting the week’s gain to $28.

The Fed’s return to system liquidity injections after a decade hiatus received abundant media coverage. For the most part, analysts were pointing to a confluence of unusual factors: $35 billion money market outflows to fund September 15th quarterly corporate tax payments; settlements for outsized Treasury auctions; and the approaching end to the quarter (where money center banks generally reduce balance sheet leverage for financial reporting and regulatory purposes).

Missing from the discussion was that this week’s money market tumult followed on the heels of instability in other markets. Is it coincidence that Monday’s spike in repo rates followed last week’s extraordinary bond market reversal – where 10-year Treasury yields surged 34 bps and benchmark MBS yields spiked an incredible 46 bps (2.37% to 2.83%)?

What a nightmare it’s been over recent months for those attempting to hedge interest-rate risk. After trading to 4.10% in November, benchmark MBS yields were down to 3.02% near the end of March. MBS yields then rose to 3.34% in April, before reversing lower to trade all the way down to 2.51% by late June. Yields were back up to 2.91% in mid-July – only to then reverse to a three-year low of 2.30% on September 4th. Collapsing MBS yields spur waves of refinancings, shortening the lives (“duration”) of existing MBS securities trading in the marketplace (as old MBS are replaced with new lower-yielding securities).

The marketplace for hedging MBS and other interest-rate risk is enormous. Derivatives really do rule the world. When market yields are declining, players that had sold various types of protection against lower rates are forced into the marketplace to acquire instruments for hedging their escalating rate exposure. Much of this levered buying would typically be financed in the repurchase agreement (“repo”) marketplace. This type of hedging activity can prove strongly self-reinforcing. Intense buying forces Treasury and bond market prices higher, “squeezing” those short the market while spurring additional hedging-related purchases. At the same time, the expansion of “repo” securities Credit boosts overall system liquidity, supporting the upside inflationary bias in bond and securities prices.

The recent downside dislocation in market yields included tell-tale signs of manic blow-off speculative excess. At 1.46% lows (September 3rd), an exuberant marketplace was calling for sub-1% Treasury yields – as if the unending supply from massive deficit spending would remain permanently divorced from market price dynamics. Meanwhile, booming corporate issuance was gobbled up at near record low yields - and at the lowest spreads to Treasuries in two years. Inflows were inundating the fixed-income ETF complex. Excesses in U.S. fixed-income were unfolding as $18 TN of global investment-grade bonds traded at negative yields, including European corporate debt.

Things got conspicuously out of hand. With global central bankers in aggressive easing mode – including an ECB restarting the QE machine while pushing rates further into negative territory – market participants were in the mood to believe central banks had abolished market cycles. Like deficits and Current Account Deficits, speculative excess and leverage don’t matter.

While everyone was relishing the mania, trouble was building under the market's surface – in the “plumbing.” As yields collapsed, speculative leverage mounted. Surging prices incited a buyers’ panic in Treasuries, MBS, corporate bonds, CDOs and structured finance – a chunk of it financed in the “repo” and money markets. Derivative player hedging activities also significantly boosted system leverage. All the speculative leveraging worked to expand system liquidity, crystallizing the market perception of endless liquidity abundance. While a deficient indicator of system liquidity, it’s still worth noting M2 “money” supply has expanded $560 billion over the past six months. Money market fund assets (retail funds included in M2) are up $350 billion since the end of April. Where’s all this “money” been coming from?

Market “melt-up” upside dislocations sow the seeds for abrupt market reversals and attendant upheaval. One day’s panic buying (on leverage) can be the following session’s frantic selling (unwind of leverage). Especially in the derivatives arena, self-reinforcing derivative-related dynamic (“delta”) hedging during an upside speculative blow-off is susceptible to abrupt reversals. Hedging programs necessitate buying into rapidly rising markets, only to immediately shift to aggressive selling in the event of market weakness. The associated leverage spurs liquidity excess on the upside, creating vulnerability for illiquidity in the event of downside sell programs and speculative deleveraging.

It is surely No Coincidence that this week’s “repo” ructions followed last week’s spike in yields and resulting deleveraging. Is it a Coincidence that the marketplace experienced a powerful “rotation” that saw the favorite stocks and sectors dramatically underperform the least favored? Is it a Coincidence that hedge fund long/short strategies have been clobbered, in what evolved into a powerful short squeeze and dislocation? Surely, it’s No Coincidence the so-called “quant quake” foresaw this week’s quake in the repo market.

Let’s expand this inquiry. Is it a Coincidence that this week’s money market upheaval followed by a few months dislocation in the Chinese money market? And is it mere Coincidence that U.S. money market instability erupted on the heels of the ECB’s decision to restart QE?

There are No Coincidences. Chinese money market issues and currency weakness were fundamental to the global yield collapse. Trade war escalation risked pushing China’s vulnerable Credit system and economy over the edge. Global central bankers responded to sinking bond yields with dovish talk and monetary stimulus, feeding the unfolding bond market dislocation. Collapsing market yields and dovish central banks stoked melt-up dynamics in stocks and sectors seen benefiting from a lower rate environment. Growth stocks were caught up in speculative melt-up dynamics, while short positions in underperforming financials and small caps were popular hedging targets. Both momentum longs and shorts became Crowded Trades

Meanwhile, booming markets and the resulting loosening of financial conditions quietly bolstered flagging growth dynamics – from China to the U.S. to Europe. The prospect of constructive U.S./China trade talks risked catching the manic bond market out over its skis. Some stronger U.S. data then sparked a sharp bond market reversal, with rising yields spurring a reversal of Crowded equities trades. Losing on both sides, the long/short players suffered painful losses. De-risking of long/short strategies incited a powerful short squeeze, a dynamic that gained momentum into expiration week.

The S&P500 is only about 1% from all-time highs. Yet there’s been some real damage below the markets' surfaces. The leveraged speculating community, in particular, has been shaken. There were losses in Argentina and EM currencies more generally. Bond markets have turned unstable – on both the up- and downside. Long/short strategies have been bludgeoned. Short positions have turned highly erratic. And this week instability engulfed the overnight funding markets, with contagion effects for other short-term funding vehicles at home and abroad. Trouble brewing.

The leveraged speculating community is the marginal source of liquidity throughout U.S. and global markets. Not only have they faced heightened risk across the spectrum of their holdings, they now confront funding market uncertainty into year-end. This doesn’t necessarily indicate imminent market weakness. But it does signal vulnerability. Many players are afflicted with increasingly “weak hands.” They’ll exhibit less tolerance for pain. This dynamic increases the likelihood that market weakness will spur self-reinforcing de-risking and deleveraging.

There was considerable market vulnerability this time last year – even with equities at all-time highs. Global markets, economies, trade relationships and geopolitics are all more troubling today. Central bankers have burned through precious ammunition, in the process spurring problematic late-cycle excess. Understandably, there is dissention within the ranks – from the Fed to the ECB to the BOJ. Is monetary stimulus the solution or the problem?

Autumn is set up for some serious instability. There’s all this talk of the need for the Fed to create additional bank reserves. The issue is not a shortage of reserves but a gross excess of speculative leverage. It started this week. The Fed’s balance sheet will be getting much bigger. The Fed and the markets were blindsided by this week’s repo market instability. The surprises will keep coming.

For the Week:

The S&P500 dipped 0.5% (up 19.4% y-t-d), and the Dow fell 1.0% (up 15.5%). The Utilities jumped 2.2% (up 21.5%). The Banks retreated 1.0% (up 17.6%), and the Broker/Dealers dropped 1.5% (up 15.3%). The Transports sank 3.3% (up 14.0%). The S&P 400 Midcaps declined 0.9% (up 16.9%), and the small cap Russell 2000 fell 1.2% (up 15.7%). The Nasdaq100 lost 0.9% (up 23.6%). The Semiconductors dropped 2.7% (up 35.3%). The Biotechs advanced 1.0% (up 6.0%). With bullion jumping $28, the HUI gold index surged 6.9% (up 35.9%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.86%. Two-year government yields dropped 12 bps to 1.69% (down 80bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields fell 15 bps to 1.72% (down 96bps). Ten-year Treasury yields dropped 18 bps to 1.72% (down 96bps). Long bond yields sank 21 bps to 2.16% (down 85bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields dropped 19 bps to 2.64% (down 85bps).

Greek 10-year yields dropped 23 bps to 1.33% (down 307bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields declined seven bps to 0.25% (down 147bps). Italian 10-year yields gained four bps to 0.92% (down 182bps). Spain's 10-year yields fell seven bps to 0.24% (down 118bps). German bund yields dropped seven bps to negative 0.52% (down 76bps). French yields declined five bps to negative 0.22% (down 93bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened two to 30 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields sank 13 bps to 0.63% (down 65bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index slipped 0.3% (up 9.2% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index added 0.4% (up 10.3% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields fell five bps to negative 0.21% (down 21bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 increased 0.6% (up 20.3%). The German DAX equities index was unchanged (up 18.1%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index increased 0.4% (up 7.5%). Italy's FTSE MIB index dipped 0.3% (up 20.7%). EM equities were mostly higher. Brazil's Bovespa index gained 1.3% (up 15.2%), and Mexico's Bolsa jumped 1.7% (up 4.6%). South Korea's Kospi index rose 2.1% (up 2.5%). India's Sensex equities index gained 1.7% (up 5.4%). China's Shanghai Exchange declined 0.8% (up 20.6%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index dropped 3.2% (up 9.8%). Russia's MICEX equities index added 0.2% (up 18.0%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $2.831 billion, and junk bond funds posted inflows of $3.292 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped 17 bps to 3.73% (down 92bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates rose 12 bps to 3.21% (down 90bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates gained 13 bps to 3.49% (down 43bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates down 16 bps to 4.16% (down 69bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week jumped $23.4bn to $3.750 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $423bn, or 10.1%. Fed Credit inflated $939 billion, or 33%, over the past 358 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt gained $13.8bn last week to $3.467 TN. "Custody holdings" gained $40.8bn y-o-y, or 1.2%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply jumped $12.3bn last week to a record $15.011 TN. "Narrow money" gained $791bn, or 5.6%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $5.8bn. Total Checkable Deposits rose $12.6bn, while Savings Deposits declined $14.0bn. Small Time Deposits were little changed. Retail Money Funds gained $8.6bn.

Total money market fund assets gained $4.9bn to $3.402 TN. Money Funds gained $519bn y-o-y, or 18.0%.

Total Commercial Paper dropped $22.2bn to $1.094 TN. CP was up $19bn y-o-y, or 1.8%.

Currency Watch:

The U.S. dollar index added 0.3% to 98.513 (up 2.4% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Japanese yen increased 0.3%, the South Korean won 0.2% and the Canadian dollar 0.2%. On the downside, the South African rand declined 2.4%, the New Zealand dollar 1.9%, the Australian dollar 1.6%, the Brazilian real 1.4%, the Swedish krona 1.1%, the Norwegian krone 0.8%, the euro 0.5%, the Singapore dollar 0.3%, the Mexican peso 0.2%, the British pound 0.2% and the Swiss franc 0.1%. The Chinese renminbi declined 0.17% versus the dollar this week (down 3.0% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

September 17 – Bloomberg (Javier Blas and Catherine Ngai): “The Sunday opening of the oil market is traditionally a sedate affair: volumes are minimal and only a few traders in Asia, where it’s already early Monday, are in front of their screens. Last Sunday was different. Order volumes were sky high and hedge funds, refiners and oil trading houses had their top traders staffing operations, according to interviews with multiple market participants. Brokers put special teams in place to beef up skeleton weekend crews. ‘It wasn’t just profit and loss,’ said Richard Fullarton, the founder of… oil hedge fund Matilda Capital Management. ‘People’s careers and livelihoods changed on Sunday night.’ Those who put in the extra hours were confronted with the kind of market that few if any traders ever experienced before with positions that were previously profitable potentially deeply loss-making, and vice versa. Within 24 hours, the world’s two main exchange-traded futures had their busiest trading day ever. Even diesel transactions hit an all-time high as turmoil spread beyond the crude market.”

September 16 – Bloomberg (Tom Schoenberg and David Voreacos): “U.S. prosecutors took an unusually aggressive turn in their investigation of price fixing at JPMorgan…, describing its precious metals trading desk as a criminal enterprise operating inside the bank for nearly a decade. The prosecutors charged the head of JPMorgan’s global precious metals trading operation and two others…, accusing them of ‘conspiracy to conduct the affairs of an enterprise involved in interstate or foreign commerce through a pattern of racketeering activity.’”

The Bloomberg Commodities Index increased 0.6% this week (up 2.9% y-t-d). Spot Gold jumped 1.9% to $1,517 (up 18.3%). Silver rose 1.6% to $17.849 (up 14.9%). WTI crude surged $3.24 to $58.09 (up 28%). Gasoline jumped 8.1% (up 27%), while Natural Gas fell 3.1% (down 14%). Copper dropped 3.4% (down 1%). Wheat increased 0.2% (down 4%). Corn gained 0.5% (down 1%).

Market Instability Watch:

September 17 – Wall Street Journal (Nick Timiraos and Daniel Kruger): “For the first time in more than a decade, the Federal Reserve injected cash into money markets Tuesday to pull down interest rates and said it would do so again Wednesday after technical factors led to a sudden shortfall of cash. The pressures relate to shortages of funds banks face resulting from an increase in federal borrowing and the central bank’s decision to shrink the size of its securities holdings in recent years. It reduced these holdings by not buying new ones when they matured, effectively taking money out of the financial system.”

September 20 – Bloomberg (Liz Capo McCormick and Alexandra Harris): “Signs that stress in U.S. funding markets is rebuilding ramped up pressure on the Federal Reserve to permanently increase reserves by boosting Treasury holdings, even as it was preparing a temporary liquidity injection for a fourth straight day. The New York Fed plans to do another $75 billion overnight repo operation on Friday. It follows liquidity doses of the same size Thursday and Wednesday, and $53.2 billion on Tuesday. The central bank is deploying this remedy for the first time in a decade. This week’s actions have helped calm the funding market, with repo rates declining to more normal levels after soaring to 10% Tuesday… However, swap spreads tumbled to record lows Thursday amid concern Fed policy makers haven’t announced more aggressive steps. Swaps are signaling less appetite for Treasuries, driven by concern traders won’t be able to fund purchases through the repo market. ‘The Fed needs to do at least double what they offered now and maybe even be more vigilant and do something even more significant,” said Thomas Simons, senior economist at Jefferies LLC. ‘This attitude of trying to kind-of fix the problem is not great.’”

September 18 – CNBC (Patti Domm): “As the Fed was meeting to consider cutting interest rates, it lost control of the very benchmark rate that it manages. It’s been a rough week in the overnight funding market, where interest rates temporarily spiked to as high as 10% for some transactions Monday and Tuesday. The market is considered the basic plumbing for financial markets, where banks who have a short-term need for cash come to fund themselves. The odd spike in rates forced the Fed to jump in with money market operations aimed at reining them in, and after the second operation Wednesday morning, it seemed to have calmed the market. The Fed announced a third operation for Thursday morning. In a rare move, the Fed’s own benchmark fed funds target rate rose to 2.3% on Tuesday, above the target range set when it cut rates at its last meeting in July… ‘This just doesn’t look good. You set your target. You’re the all-powerful Fed. You’re supposed to control it and you can’t on Fed day. It looks bad. This has been a tough run for Powell,’ said Michael Schumacher, director, rate strategy, at Wells Fargo.”

September 16 – Bloomberg (Alex Harris): “One of the key U.S. borrowing markets saw a massive surge Monday, a sign the Federal Reserve is having trouble controlling short-term interest rates. Amid the settlement of Treasury coupon auctions and the influx of quarterly corporate tax payments, the rate on overnight repurchase agreements soared by as much as 248 basis points to 4.75%, the highest level since December, according to ICAP pricing. It came back down to 2.50%, still up 23 bps for the day. Curvature Securities spotted a different peak: 8%. While the spike doesn’t necessarily mean credit markets are seizing up or a financial calamity is imminent, it could hamper the Fed’s ability to steer the economy… ‘The Fed has lost control of funding,’ said Mark Cabana, head of U.S. interest rates at Bank of America Corp.”

September 16 – Bloomberg (Christopher Maloney): “The swift move higher in Treasury rates sent mortgage duration, a measure of a bond’s sensitivity to changes in interest rates, to its biggest weekly increase in almost nine years. The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. MBS index duration rose to 3.11 years from 2.45 years last week, a 27% increase. This was the most violent swing higher in percentage terms since the 47% increase seen during the week ending Sept. 24, 2010…”

September 16 – Bloomberg (Alexandra Harris): “Costs in one of the key U.S. borrowing markets surged Monday amid the settlement of Treasury coupon auctions and the influx of quarterly corporate tax payments. The rate on overnight repurchase agreements soared by more than 140 bps to 3.68%, the largest daily increase since December, based on ICAP pricing. ‘Secured funding markets are clearly not functioning well,’ said Jon Hill, a rates strategist at BMO Capital Markets. A jump like this, especially since it’s not happening at the end of a quarter, is ‘bordering on chaos,’ he added.”

September 19 – Bloomberg (Liz McCormick and Alex Harris): “When plumbing works well, you don’t need to think about it. That’s usually the case with a vital but obscure part of the financial system known as the repo market, where vast amounts of cash and collateral are swapped every day. But when it springs a leak, as it did this week, it rivets the attention of the U.S. Federal Reserve, the nation’s largest banks, money-market funds, corporations and other big investors. The Fed calmed things down by pumping in billions of dollars, but it may have a lot more work to do on the pipes.”

Trump Administration Watch:

September 16 – Bloomberg (Josh Wingrove and Daniel Flatley): “Donald Trump risks a political backlash if he retaliates against Iran over a weekend strike on Saudi Arabian oil facilities after campaigning on promises to withdraw the U.S. from foreign wars. Trump tweeted Sunday that the U.S. is ‘locked and loaded,’ raising bipartisan alarm after the weekend attack that halved Saudi oil production. Speaking on Monday to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump said: ‘It’s certainly looking that way at this moment,’ and ‘we pretty much already know’ who did it. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has blamed Iran, though Riyadh is stopping short of directly doing so.”

September 19 – Reuters (Tuqa Khalid and Aziz El Yaakoubi): “The United States said… it was building a coalition to deter Iranian threats following a weekend attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities. Iran has warned U.S. President Donald Trump against being dragged into a war in the Middle East and said it would meet any offensive action with a crushing response. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that Trump, who has ordered more sanctions on Iran, wants a peaceful solution to the crisis.”

September 18 – Reuters (Jeff Mason and Stephen Kalin): “U.S. President Donald Trump said… there were many options short of war with Iran after U.S. ally Saudi Arabia displayed remnants of drones and missiles it said were used in a crippling attack on its oil sites that was ‘unquestionably sponsored’ by Tehran. ‘There are many options. There’s the ultimate option and there are options that are a lot less than that. And we’ll see,’ Trump told reporters… ‘I’m saying the ultimate option meaning go in — war.’ The president struck a cautious note as his Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, during a visit to Saudi Arabia, described the attacks as ‘an act of war’ on the kingdom, the world’s largest oil exporter.”

September 20 – Bloomberg (Mike Dorning, Jordan Fabian, and Mario Parker): “A Chinese trade delegation canceled a planned visit to farms in the U.S. heartland, driving down stock indexes as investors turned pessimistic on progress toward resolving the two nations’ trade war. The cancellation came only about an hour after President Donald Trump said he wasn’t interested in ‘a partial deal’ with China based on Beijing increasing its purchases of U.S. agricultural products. U.S. and Chinese officials held negotiations this week and are aiming for a high-level meeting around Oct. 10.”

September 16 – Reuters (Michael Martina and Andrea Shalal): “U.S. and Chinese officials will restart trade talks at the end of this week, but any agreement the world’s largest economies carve out is expected to be a superficial fix. The trade war has hardened into a political and ideological battle that runs far deeper than tariffs, trade experts, executives, and officials in both countries say. China’s Communist Party is unlikely to budge on U.S. demands to fundamentally change the way it runs the economy, while the U.S. won’t backtrack on labeling Chinese companies national security threats. The conflict between the two countries could take a decade to resolve, White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow warned on Sept. 6. Yu Yongding, an influential former policy adviser to China’s central bank, told Reuters that China was in no rush to make a deal.”

September 18 – Reuters (David Lawder): “U.S. and Chinese deputy trade negotiators resumed face-to-face talks for the first time in nearly two months on Thursday, as the world’s two largest economies try to bridge deep policy differences and find a way out of their protracted trade war. The negotiations, which will extend into Friday, are aimed at laying the groundwork for high-level talks in early October that will determine whether the two countries are working toward a solution or headed for new and higher tariffs on each other’s goods.”

September 17 – Reuters (Roberta Rampton): “U.S. Vice President Mike Pence has canceled plans to meet with the leader of the Solomon Islands to discuss development partnerships after the Pacific island cut ties with Taiwan in favor of China this week, a senior U.S. official said… The Solomon Islands was the sixth country to switch allegiance to China since 2016. Self-ruled Taiwan has accused China - which claims Taiwan as its territory - of trying to meddle in its upcoming elections.”

September 16 – Wall Street Journal (Rebecca Ballhaus): “President Trump repeated his sharp criticism of the Federal Reserve after an attack in Saudi Arabia over the weekend led to a major crude oil disruption. In a pair of tweets Monday, the president questioned whether the Fed would ‘ever get into the game’ and said the central bank and its chairman, Jerome Powell, ‘don’t have a clue.’ He again badgered the Fed to lower the interest rate, citing a strong dollar’s harmful effect on U.S. exporters. ‘And now, on top of it all, the Oil hit,’ he wrote. ‘Big Interest Rate Drop, Stimulus!’”

Federal Reserve Watch:

September 18 – Associated Press (Martin Crutsinger): “A sharply divided Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate… for a second time this year but declined to signal that further rate cuts are likely this year. The Fed’s move reduced its key short-term rate… by an additional quarter-point to a range of 1.75% to 2%. The action was approved 7-3, with two officials preferring to keep rates unchanged and one arguing for a bigger half-point cut. The divisions on the policy committee underscored the challenges for Chairman Jerome Powell in guiding the Fed at a time of high economic uncertainty. The Fed did leave the door open to additional rate cuts — if… the economy weakens. For now, he suggested, the economic expansion appears durable in its 11th year, with a still-solid job market and steady consumer spending.”

September 18 – Bloomberg (Alexandra Harris): “The Federal Reserve on Wednesday made an adjustment to its tools used to control key benchmark rate in conjunction with its decision to ease overall policy. Fed officials decided to lower the interest paid on excess reserves by 30 bps to 1.8%, effective Sept. 19, while lowering its target range by 25 bps to 1.75% to 2%. It also lowered the rate on its overnight facility for repurchase agreements by 30 bps to 1.70%. The central bank’s shift follows three days of volatility in the market for repurchase agreements.”

September 18 – Reuters (Jonnelle Marte, Ann Saphir and Megan Davies): “Wild swings this week in U.S. money markets have raised fresh concerns about whether the New York Federal Reserve under John Williams has lost its deft touch with markets. The New York Fed had to intervene in cash markets this week when the repo rate, a key measure of liquidity in the global banking system, sky-rocketed, forcing the Fed to make an emergency injection of more than $125 billion on Tuesday and Wednesday. A key interest rate the Fed aims to influence also broke above the central bank’s target range on Tuesday for the first time since the financial crisis. ‘What has happened in the repo market is far from a minor problem,’ said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist for Jefferies. ‘That’s a financial crisis waiting to happen if they don’t get that under control.’”

September 20 – Bloomberg (Matthew Boesler): “The market apparently believes the economy needs added stimulus to continue the expansion. My own view is different,’ Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren says. ‘The data we have in hand suggest instead that the recovery would continue apace even with little monetary policy accommodation,’ Rosengren says… ‘So far the economy seems to have weathered the impact of trade disruptions and slowing foreign growth.’ ‘While risks clearly exist related to trade and geopolitical concerns, lowering rates to address uncertainty is not costless.’ ‘In my view, there are clearly risks of headwinds hitting the economy, but the stance of monetary policy is already accommodative. There are also risks of tailwinds and costs to monetary policy being too accommodative”

September 18 – Bloomberg (Annie Massa and John Gittelsohn): “Mark Wiedman, head of international and corporate strategy at BlackRock Inc., sounded an alarm about negative interest rates… ‘We’re slouching toward the U.S. moving into negative rate territory,’ Wiedman said... ‘Negative rates are corroding and poisoning financial systems.’ Wiedman joined Steve Schwarzman and Jeffrey Gundlach in stressing the harm of negative rates to banks and the economy… ‘My strong view is I don’t think it makes any sense whatsoever,’ Schwarzman, the founder of Blackstone Group Inc., said… ‘Why would I take my money and pay somebody to take it? It’s hard enough to make it. I really just don’t understand the theory behind negative interest rates.’”

September 17 – Bloomberg (John Gittelsohn and Katherine Greifeld): “The spike in overnight repurchase agreements may prompt the Federal Reserve to expand its balance sheet, according to Jeffrey Gundlach… ‘Is it an imminent disaster? No. The Fed is going to use this warning sign to go back to some balance sheet expansion,’ Gundlach said… during a webcast for his $54 billion DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund. It’s a way of ‘baby stepping’ to more quantitative easing, he added.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

September 18 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “U.S. homebuilding surged to more than a 12-year high in August as both single- and multi-family housing construction increased, suggesting that lower mortgage rates were finally providing a boost to the struggling housing market. Housing starts jumped 12.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.364 million units last month, the highest level since June 2007…”

September 18 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Homebuyers seemed undeterred by last week’s turnaround in interest rates, or perhaps they were spooked into action. Strong demand from buyers easily offset the drop in demand from those wishing to refinance… Mortgage applications to purchase a home increased 6% for the week and were a strong 15% higher annually.”

September 18 – Wall Street Journal (Dawn Lim): “Money managers that mimic the stock market just became the new titans of the fund-management world. Funds that track broad U.S. equity indexes hit $4.27 trillion in assets as of Aug. 31, according to… Morningstar… Funds that try to beat the market had $4.25 trillion as of that date. The passing of the asset crown is the latest chapter in one of the most dramatic transformations in the history of financial markets. In the past decade, nearly $1.36 trillion in net flows were added to U.S. equity mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that mimic market indexes while some $1.32 trillion fled higher-costing actively managed counterparts.”

September 17 – Wall Street Journal (Joe Flint and David Marcelis): “Entertainment heavyweights have spent more than $2 billion on classic television shows in recent weeks while signing talent for new programming, in an effort to win over streaming customers who soon will have many more options to choose from. This week, AT&T Inc. ’s WarnerMedia struck a deal for ‘The Big Bang Theory,’ while Netflix Inc. acquired ‘Seinfeld’ and Comcast Corp. ’s NBCUniversal said it would have exclusive streaming rights to ‘Parks and Recreation.’ Two other shows, ‘Friends’ and ‘The Office,’ changed homes earlier this summer. The commitments total over $2 billion… ‘You will see more of this,’ said industry analyst Hal Vogel of Vogel Capital Management… The spending frenzy comes as four high-profile services—from Apple Inc., Walt Disney Co. , Comcast and WarnerMedia—are to launch between November and the spring…”

China Watch:

September 19 – Fox Business (Brittany De Lea): “As mid-level discussions take place this week between China and the U.S. amid an ongoing trade war, new reports indicate that President Trump might be prepared to escalate the situation should an agreement not be reached in the near future. According to… Michael Pillsbury, who President Trump has referred to as a leading authority on China, the president believes he has so far exercised restraint with regard to tariff rates. ‘Does the president have options to escalate the trade war? Yes, the tariffs can be raised higher. These are low-level tariffs that could go to 50% or 100%,’ he said, as reported by the South China Morning Post.”

September 16 – Reuters (Kevin Yao and Stella Qiu): “The slowdown in China’s economy deepened in August, with growth in industrial production at its weakest 17-1/2 years amid spreading pain from a trade war with the United States and softening domestic demand… Industrial output growth unexpectedly weakened to 4.4% in August from the same period a year earlier, the slowest pace since February 2002 and receding from 4.8% in July.”

September 15 – Reuters: “Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said it is ‘very difficult’ for China’s economy to grow at a rate of 6% or more because of the high base from which it was starting and the complicated international backdrop. The world’s No.2 economy faced ‘certain downward pressure’ due to slowing global growth as well as the rise of protectionism and unilateralism, Li said…”

September 15 – Bloomberg: “China’s slowdown is deepening just as risks for the global economy mount, piling pressure on the authorities to do more to support growth. Industrial output rose 4.4% from a year earlier in August, the lowest for a single month since 2002, while retail sales came in below expectations. Fixed-asset investment slowed to 5.5% in the first eight months, with the private sector lagging state investment for the 6th month.”

September 16 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Ryan Woo): “China’s new home prices grew at their weakest pace in nearly a year in August as a cooling economy and existing curbs on speculative buying put a dent on overall demand. Wary of property bubbles, Chinese regulators have vowed to refrain from stimulating the real estate sector as they roll out measures to boost the broader economy hit by the Sino-U.S. trade war and slowing consumer demand. Average new home prices in China’s 70 major cities rose 8.8% in August from a year earlier, compared with a 9.7% gain in July and the weakest pace since October 2018…”

September 15 – Reuters (Yawen Chen, Kevin Yao and Roxanne Liu): “China’s property investment grew at its fastest pace in four months in August, a boon for the economy as other sectors weaken from the Sino-U.S. trade war and consumer demand slows… Property investment in August rose 10.5% from year earlier, quickening from July’s 8.5% pace…”

September 19 – Financial Times (Don Weinland): “When lossmaking Chinese iron ore miner Shandong Hongda scooped up a UK game developer in 2016, it also had grand plans to diversify into energy and healthcare businesses around the globe and move away from its low-growth mining past. In the end, it held on to Jagex, the creator of the world’s largest online role-playing game for just short of two years and its other plans have since fallen away too. The trajectory of Shandong Hongda, with its brief stint as a game developer and ambitions to expand elsewhere, has been followed by a number of Chinese companies, which have attempted to make debt-fuelled leaps into countries and industries far from their areas of expertise. But as credit conditions have tightened and authorities have taken a much more active interest in how much debt companies hold and the risks they are taking, businesses have drawn in their horns. Since the start of the year, there has been a record sell-off of global assets by Chinese companies totalling about $40bn… At the same time, the pace of acquisitions has slowed to just $35bn, as businesses worry about being labelled speculative buyers. It is the first time in a decade that Chinese companies are net sellers of global assets.”

September 19 – Wall Street Journal (Mike Bird): “China’s property giants are notorious for their rapacious issuance of debt. But a more politically sensitive liability has risen even faster, posing a less well known risk to the country’s housing market. Unearned revenue—the line on developers’ balance sheets that accounts for presales or contracted sales—now makes up a greater share of the 10 largest property developers’ liabilities than total debt. Their combined unearned revenue rose to just over $400 billion in June… The practice of selling homes once construction has started—but often years before completion—now makes up more than 85% of total sales in China. Yields of above 10% aren’t uncommon on Chinese property bonds, making presales an attractive source of financing.”

September 16 – Reuters (Clare Jim and Noah Sin): “Credit rating agency Moody’s changed its outlook on Hong Kong’s rating to negative from stable on Monday, reflecting what it called the rising risk of ‘an erosion in the strength of Hong Kong’s institutions’ amid the city’s ongoing protests… ‘The decision to change Hong Kong’s outlook to negative signals rising concern that this shift is happening, notwithstanding recent moves by Hong Kong’s government to accommodate some of the demonstrators’ demands.’”

September 15 – Reuters (Jessie Pang): “Hong Kong’s businesses and metro stations reopened as usual on Monday after a chaotic Sunday when police fired water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters who blocked roads and threw petrol bombs outside government headquarters. On Sunday what began as a mostly peaceful protest earlier in the day spiraled into violence in some of the Chinese territory’s busiest shopping and tourist districts.”

Central Banking Watch:

September 17 – Financial Times (Stephen Morris, Olaf Storbeck and Martin Arnold): “European lenders are bracing for deeper cost cuts and consolidation after the European Central Bank extended a punishing five-year stretch of negative interest rates. The region’s banks were left disappointed by Mario Draghi’s last major act as ECB president, in which he last week cut its key deposit rate to minus 0.5%, while also unveiling a new tiering system designed to shield a portion of the deposits lenders keep at the ECB from negative rates. However, the relief provided by tiering will barely offset the lost earnings from lower base rates, according to analysts and executives…, piling pressure on a sector already struggling to generate acceptable returns. The ECB is expected to cut its deposit rate again by next year, which could lower even further the Euribor rate on which many loans are priced. ‘Deposit tiers . . . [are] a drop in the ocean,’ said Morgan Stanley analyst Magdalena Stoklosa. ‘Profitability uplifts could be minimal for most banks… as sensitivity to Euribor is multiple times greater versus savings on cash reserves parked at the ECB.’”

Brexit Watch:

September 14 – Reuters (David Milliken and William James): “British Prime Minister Boris Johnson likened himself to the comic book character The Incredible Hulk in a newspaper interview where he stressed his determination to take Britain out of the European Union on Oct. 31… ‘The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets,’ Johnson was quoted as saying. ‘Hulk always escaped, no matter how tightly bound in he seemed to be - and that is the case for this country. We will come out on October 31.’”

September 16 – Associated Press (Lorne Cook and Jill Lawless): “Boris Johnson was booed by protesters and berated by Luxembourg’s leader on a visit to the tiny nation… for his first face-to-face talks with the European Union chief about securing an elusive Brexit deal. On a day of commotion and conflicting signals, Johnson pulled out of a news conference because of noisy anti-Brexit demonstrators, leaving Luxembourg’s prime minister standing alone next to an empty lectern as he addressed the media.”

Europe Watch:

September 17 – Reuters (Michael Nienaber and Christian Kraemer): “German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said… policymakers could not accept the emergence of parallel currencies such as Facebook’s planned Libra, adding that Berlin would reject any such plans… ‘We cannot accept a parallel currency,’ Scholz said... ‘You have to reject that clearly.’”

Asia Watch:

September 18 – Associated Press (Kim Tong-Hyung): “South Korea… dropped Japan from a list of countries receiving fast-track approvals in trade, a reaction to Tokyo’s decision to downgrade Seoul’s trade status amid a tense diplomatic dispute. South Korea’ trade ministry said Japan’s removal from a 29-member ‘white list’ of nations enjoying minimum trade restrictions went into effect as Seoul rearranged its export control system covering hundreds of sensitive materials that can be used for both civilian and military purposes. The change comes a week after South Korea initiated a complaint to the World Trade Organization over a separate Japanese move to tighten export controls on key chemicals…”

EM Watch:

September 15 – Financial Times (Steve Johnson): “Emerging market central banks have turned more dovish than at any point since at least the global financial crisis, according to analysis of the language in 4,000 monetary policy publications. The extreme pro-easing bias is remarkable given that banks, including those of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa and Turkey, have already cut rates this year… Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Emerging Monetary Mood Indicator, based on robotic scanning of keywords used in the publications of 11 big EM central banks, is at its more dovish extreme since the height of the crisis in 2009… Based on single-month figures, the August reading — the latest available — was the most extreme since the depths of the dotcom crash in 2000.”

September 16 – Associated Press (Sheikh Saaliq): “Anuj Kapoor took over his father’s booming auto parts business in 2012, hoping to elevate the company from selling to suppliers to selling directly to carmakers. Seven years later, he’s had to lay off half his workers as drooping sales caused his profit to plummet by at least 80%. Confidence in the Indian economy is giving way to uncertainty as growth in the labor-intensive manufacturing sector has come to a near standstill, braking to 0.6% in the last quarter from 12.1% in the same period a year earlier. The economy grew at its slowest annual pace in six years in April-June, 5%.”

Japan Watch:

September 18 – Reuters (Leika Kihara and Daniel Leussink): “The Bank of Japan kept monetary policy steady on Thursday but signaled the chance of expanding stimulus as early as its next policy meeting in October… BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said the central bank has edged closer toward loosening policy than when its board last met in July, as the U.S.-China trade war and slowing overseas demand dampen prospects for achieving its elusive 2% inflation target. ‘We are more eager to act given heightening global risks. We will scrutinise economic and price developments thoroughly at next month’s meeting to decide whether to ease,’ Kuroda told a news conference…”

Global Bubble Watch:

September 16 – Bloomberg (Anooja Debnath and Susanne Barton): “Trading in the global foreign-exchange market has jumped to the highest-ever level at $6.6 trillion, according to the Bank for International Settlements. The average daily trading in April was up 29% from $5.1 trillion in the same month in 2016, the BIS reported… The growth of FX derivatives trading, primarily swaps, outpaced the spot market and now accounts for almost half of global FX turnover… Trading of outright forwards also increased, with a large part of the rise due to non-deliverable forwards. That reflected strong activity in NDF markets for the Korean won, Indian rupee and Brazilian real, the BIS said. ‘While we’ve seen growth across all forms of FX trading, swaps and forwards have seen particular growth,’ said Matthew Hodgson, CEO and founder of Mosaic Smart Data… ‘The FX market has woken up.’”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

September 16 – Financial Times (Laurence Fletcher): “Parts of Wall Street’s debt securitisation engine are back running at levels not seen since the pre-financial crisis boom. …Dealogic’s indices of US securitisation activity show that issuance of collateralised debt obligations — structured products made up of bundles of bonds and loans — rose above its pre-crisis peak late last year and is currently back close to those levels this year. The market for commercial mortgage-backed securities has also rebounded strongly since late 2008 and early 2009, when issuance completely seized up in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Activity in the asset class is now some way above its 2007 high.”

Geopolitical Watch:

September 18 – Reuters (Phil Stewart and Parisa Hafezi): “The United States believes the attacks that crippled Saudi Arabian oil facilities last weekend originated in southwestern Iran, a U.S. official told Reuters, an assessment that further increases tension in the Middle East. Three officials… said the attacks involved cruise missiles and drones, indicating that they involved a higher degree of complexity and sophistication than initially thought.”

September 15 – Bloomberg (Anthony Dipaola and Verity Ratcliffe): “The latest and most destructive attacks on Saudi oil facilities provide stark evidence of the vulnerability of global crude supply in an age of disruptive technologies that can bring a century-old industry to its knees -- at least temporarily. From remote-controlled drones to anti-ship mines and computer worms, hostile parties have employed an unpredictable array of asymmetric weaponry to confound one of the best-equipped militaries in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia blames many of the attacks against its oil assets on Houthi rebels in impoverished Yemen, where Saudi forces have been fighting since 2015 in a civil war that’s spilling across their shared border.”

September 17 – Reuters (Tuqa Khalid): “Saudi King Salman said… that Riyadh was capable of dealing with the consequences of attacks on its installations. A statement issued after a meeting of Saudi Arabia’s council of ministers said the cabinet had reviewed the damage caused by the attacks on Aramco installations, and it called on world governments to confront them ‘regardless of their origin’.”

September 17 – Reuters (Stephen Kalin, Sylvia Westall): “Billions of dollars spent by Saudi Arabia on cutting edge Western military hardware mainly designed to deter high altitude attacks has proved no match for low-cost drones and cruise missiles used in a strike that crippled its giant oil industry. Saturday’s assault on Saudi oil facilities that halved production has exposed how ill-prepared the Gulf state is to defend itself despite repeated attacks on vital assets during its four-and-a-half year foray into the war in neighboring Yemen.”

September 16 – CNBC (Natasha Turak): “Satellite photos released by the U.S. government and DigitalGlobe reveal the surgical precision with which Saudi Aramco’s oil facilities were struck in attacks early Saturday. The strikes, which unidentified U.S. officials have said involved at least 20 drones and several cruise missiles, forced Saudi Arabia to shut down half its oil production capacity, or 5.7 million barrels per day of crude — 5% of the world’s global daily oil production.”