Friday, November 1, 2019

Weekly Commentary: Music to the Market

October non-farm payrolls expanded a stronger-than-expected 128,000 (estimate 85k), in a month when the GM strike reduced payroll growth by upwards of 42,000 and another 20,000 positions were lost to a shrinking census workforce. September’s job gains were revised 44,000 higher to 180,000, and August payrolls were revised up 51,000 to 219,000. At 3.6%, the unemployment rate is near a 60-year low. Average hourly earnings were up 3.0% y-o-y, versus a ten-year average of 2.3%. And at 34.4 hours, Average Weekly Hours were right at the 10-year average (as well as the average from boom-times 2006-2007).

October 30 – Financial Times (Brendan Greeley and Colby Smith): “The Federal Reserve cut US interest rates by 25 bps for the third time this year but signalled that it has finished easing monetary policy for the time being, pending clearer economic data. The US central bank… said that uncertainty on the economic outlook justified its latest cut but chairman Jay Powell said that a preliminary US-China trade deal and lower risk of a no-deal Brexit had the potential to increase business confidence… After a two-day meeting in Washington, the Fed’s rate-setting committee made two significant changes to the language of its monetary policy statement. It said it would ‘assess the appropriate path’ for rates instead of saying it would ‘act as appropriate to sustain the expansion’… ‘This is a hawkish cut,’ said Peter Tchir, the head of macro strategy at Academy Securities.”

With a “hawkish” rate cut and stronger-than-expected October job growth, one might have expected some pressure on bond prices. Ten-year Treasury yields did rise (3bps) to 1.85% on the release of the Fed statement, only to reverse sharply lower during Chairman Powell’s press conference - to end the session at 1.77%. Yields then dropped eight bps Thursday and rose only two bps on better payrolls data - to close the week down nine bps to 1.71%.

Modest adjustments to the FOMC’s policy statement could be interpreted as leaning “hawkish.” An hour-long discussion with the Fed Chair was decidedly “dovish.” Powell made it clear the bar to raise rates in the foreseeable future is being set at a height that would challenge the world’s leading pole vaulters.

Somehow, “inflation” was spoken 53 times during the course of an hour, testament to the degree contemporary policy doctrine has hopelessly diverged from reality.

From the Chairman’s prepared statement: “Inflation continues to run below our symmetric 2% objective. Over the 12 months through August, total PCE inflation was 1.4% and core inflation was 1.8%… We are mindful that continued below-target inflation could lead to an unwelcome downward slide in long-term inflation expectations.”

Question (New York Times’ Jeanna Smialek): “You’ve previously sort of compared this rate cutting cycle to the insurance cuts in the '90s, and in both of those instances, the Greenspan Fed took those cuts back after a while. They raised rates again fairly quickly. And, I guess I’m just curious what the onus is for doing that in this cycle. What would make you guys decide it’s appropriate to raise interest rates again?”

Powell: “…The reason why we raised interest rates is because, generally, is because we see inflation as moving up or in danger of moving up significantly, and we really don’t see that now… So, we really don’t see that risk, and inflation expectations have also kind of moved down and sideways both surveys and market based over the course of this, of really the recent months. And… we think that inflation expectations are very important in driving actual inflation, and we’re strongly committed to achieving our 2% inflation objective on a symmetric basis. We think it’s essential that we do that. So, we’re not thinking about raising rates right now.”

Question (The Wall Street Journal’s Nick Timiraos). “You described the recent slide, Chair Powell, in inflation expectations as unwelcome. You said that inflation expectations are very important. What, if anything, would the Committee be prepared to do to address this slide in inflation expectations if it continued?”

Powell: “As I mentioned, we do think that inflation expectations are, they’re quite essential, quite central in our framework of how we think about inflation. We need them to be anchored in a level, at a level that’s consistent with our symmetric 2% inflation goal. And, we think that we need to conduct policy in a way that supports that outcome… We’re also, as part of our review, looking at potential innovations, changes to the way we think about things, changes to the framework, that would lead us, that would be more supportive of achieving inflation on… a symmetric 2% basis over time… We’re in the middle of thinking about ways that we can make that symmetric 2% inflation objective more credible by achieving symmetric 2% inflation. And, it comes down to using your policy tools to achieve 2% inflation, and that is the thing that must happen for credibility in this area.”

Responding to a question from Fox Business’s Edward Lawrence on the possibility of rate hikes next year in the event that some current uncertainties are “cleared up,” the Chairman stated: “You come back to the question of raising rates, so that’s really about inflation, and you know, we haven’t yet, we’ve just touched 2% core inflation to pick one measure.”

And Powell’s response to the risk of “Japanification” posed by Japanese journalist Naoatsu Aoyama: “…There are significant disinflationary pressures around the world. …We don’t think we’re exempt from those pressures, and we are, therefore, strongly committed to having inflation expectations anchored at the level that is consistent with the symmetric 2% inflation objective. That’s what we’re committed to, and we’ll use our tools to achieve. So, we take the risk very seriously… The risk is that what we’ve seen is other economies getting on a disinflationary path, but it’s been very hard for them to get off. Once inflation expectations start sliding down, inflation moves down… …We think that the right thing to do is to do what we can now to hold and really move inflation expectations up…”

Music to the Markets. If markets maintain high confidence in one specific outcome, it would be that the trend of global disinflationary pressures continues (and likely worsens). At this point, everything points to the Fed and global central bankers fixating on consumer-based inflation, leaving the likelihood of any tightening of monetary policies over the short- and intermediate- term as remote. At the same time, markets see the probability of central banks being disappointed by below-target inflation rates as high. Further aggressive monetary stimulus is anticipated. And with global policy rates already extremely low, this ensures the future will see even greater reliance on QE. And, clearly, central bankers are determined to ignore excesses. The chorus: Music to the Markets.

And if Powell suggesting the prevailing focus on pushing inflation higher wasn’t specific enough, the downgrading of the financial stability (mentioned only six times) mandate was surprisingly direct.

Question (Market News’ Jean Yung): “I wanted to ask about financial stability risk. Recently, the IMF and some other global policy makers have been expressing concerns over the high level of risk in corporate debt. So, as rates get lower in the U.S. and around the world, are you more worried about financial stability reach for yield?

Chairman Powell: “So, we monitor financial stability risks very carefully all of the time. It’s what we do since the financial crisis… Currently, we don’t see large imbalances. This long expansion is notable for the lack of large financial imbalances like the ones we’ve seen certainly before the crisis happened. So, we have a four-part framework, I’ll quickly mention. The first is leverage in the financial system which is low by historical standards. The second is funding risk which is the risk of runnable funding, and that risk is also quite low for banks but also for the nonbanking financial sector. If you look at asset prices, we see some high asset prices, but not broadly across a range. We don’t see bubbles in that kind of thing. And, that leaves the fourth which is leverage in the nonfinancial sector and that’s households and businesses. So, with households, again, we don’t see leverage. We see them actually getting in very good shape financially in the aggregate. Obviously, plenty of households are not in great shape financially, but in the aggregate, the household sector’s in a very good place. That leaves businesses which is where the issue has been. Leverage among corporations and other forms of business, private businesses, is historically high. We’ve been monitoring it carefully and taking appropriate steps. That’s what I would say, but it’s corporate debt is one part of a larger part of our framework, and it is something that we’re paying quite a bit of attention to, and it’s been part of the last couple of shared national credit exams, and we’ve been monitoring it carefully and taking appropriate action.”

“This long expansion is notable for the lack of large financial imbalances…” “Leverage in the financial system… is low by historical standards…” “…Funding risk which is the risk of runnable funding, and that risk is also quite low…” “We don’t see bubbles…” As for the household sector, “we don’t see leverage”; “very good shape financially”; and “in a very good place.” “That leaves businesses which is where the issue has been.”

Sound analysis would today have central bankers downplaying consumer price inflation, while elevating financial stability as the overarching priority. It’s Music to the Markets that the Fed apparently sees no stability risk on the horizon that would pressure the Fed into pulling back on monetary stimulus. This is a momentously misguided.

The mortgage finance Bubble period was dominated by the rapid expansion of household mortgage debt. There were huge excesses involved in both the financial sector’s intermediation of mortgage risk and with speculative leverage. Today’s “notable… lack of large financial imbalances” completely ignores federal government debt said this week to have reached $23 TN, up from about $9.5 TN to end 2008. Moreover, there’s overwhelming analytical support for the view that today’s global sovereign debt markets are history’s greatest episode of asset inflation, distorted markets and speculative price Bubbles.

We’re now a decade into the “global government finance Bubble.” Fundamental excesses have unfolded in sovereign debt and central bank Credit. When Chairman Powell states, “That leaves businesses…”, he is using a conventional analytical framework that ignores the government sector and the central bank. Both have employed unprecedented leverage during this cycle, a massive Credit expansion that continues to support the purported soundness of the household and financial sectors. In contrast to the previous Bubble, the nucleus of the current Credit boom is money-like instruments (i.e. Treasuries and central bank Credit) that have been issued in outrageous quantities without the need for risk intermediation through the financial sector.

From a conventional “financial stability” standpoint, this Credit cycle may appear virtually pristine. Yet Credit Bubbles survive only with unrelenting debt growth. Today’s mirage of “financial stability” depends on ongoing massive federal deficits coupled with aggressive monetary stimulus.

A further rebuttal to Powell’s sanguine commentary on leverage and funding risks is appropriate. Is not recent “repo” market upheaval testament both to problematic leverage and funding issues? And have we already forgotten acute market fragilities unmasked less than a year ago?

It’s clear that speculative securities leverage is a huge facet of the current Bubble, much of it domiciled in “offshore financial centers” and securities funding markets (and derivatives) internationally. Moreover, I’ve used the concept “moneyness of risk assets” (expanding the previous cycle’s “moneyness of Credit”) as an overarching facet of the “global government finance Bubble.” Dr. Bernanke unleashed central bank inflationary activism to instill the perception of liquidity and safety upon risky financial instruments (equities, corporate Credit, derivatives, etc.), in the process empowering Wall Street opportunism and innovation. The Fed – and global central bankers more generally – are deluding themselves when they downplay the risk of a crisis of confidence and resulting run on the ETF complex and other perceived safe and liquid instruments and strategies (including “repos”!).

And while on the subject of runs…

November 1 – Bloomberg: “It started with an unverified rumor from an obscure social media account: Yichuan Rural Commercial Bank was insolvent. Within hours of the post on Tuesday, more than 1,000 worried customers had lined up to withdraw their money. By Wednesday, a run on the bank had prompted local authorities to arrange more than 30 billion yuan ($4.3bn) of liquidity injections. As branch staff sought to restore confidence, they displayed stacks of cash to convince depositors that there was enough to go around. While the panic appeared to subside on Friday, the episode marked the latest test of faith in more than 2,000 rural Chinese lenders that collectively control $5 trillion of assets. Confidence in their financial strength has dwindled since May, when the government seized a bank for the first time since 1998 and imposed losses on some of its creditors.”

Meanwhile…

October 29 – Bloomberg: “A Chinese company’s bond default is causing market concern that trouble may spread to other firms in the province. Shandong-based steelmaker Xiwang Group Co.’s failure to repay 1 billion yuan ($142 million) of bonds last week, saw investors dump neighboring firms’ notes on contagion fears as companies in this province are well known for providing guarantees for each other’s debt. China Hongqiao Group Ltd.’s dollar bond due 2023 and Shandong Sanxing Group Co.’s 2021 dollar bond have both dropped to their lowest levels after Xiwang’s default… ‘Xiwang’s default onshore has raised concerns that other privately owned enterprises in Shandong, particularly those from the same locality, may have been associated with the firm,’ said Wu Qiong, executive director at BOC International Holdings…”

And a curious development…

October 30 – Bloomberg: “A sell-off in China’s sovereign notes is weighing on its corporate bond market. The yield spread between the country’s top-rated three-year corporate bonds over government securities of the same tenor widened this week to its highest in four months… That’s after the 10-year sovereign bond yield rose to the highest in five months. It’s also hit sales of new company bonds, with the most amount of cancellations this month since June.”

China’s 10-year sovereign yields rose three bps this week to 3.27%, trading earlier in the week at the high (3.33%) since May. With bank failures and corporate defaults poised to significantly escalate going forward, a major expansion of China central government debt should be expected. I continue to ponder the amount of leverage that has accumulated in relatively high-yielding Chinese Credit instruments (government, corporate and financial). A “phase 1” trade deal and associated truce have reduced the odds of trade war escalation becoming a near-term catalyst for upheaval and crisis. At the same time, the risk of acute financial and economic instability in China remains highly elevated.

I suspect China happenings put some downward pressure on global yields this week. And lower yields continue to support equities and corporate Credit markets. One could look at various negative developments (i.e. China, impeachment proceedings, Brexit, global unrest, etc.) and question the rationality for the risk markets’ vision of nothing but blue skies ahead. It’s not entirely irrational. Trouble in China ensures additional Beijing stimulus, along with heightened disinflationary risks that will keep the Fed, PBOC, ECB, BOJ and others pushing monetary stimulus. Impeachment risk? Doesn’t that virtually guarantee President Trump will strike a deal with the Chinese, while avoiding policies, comments and tweets that might upset the applecart?

October 31 – Bloomberg (Margaret Collins): “President Donald Trump resumed his attacks on the Federal Reserve and its Chairman Jerome Powell, a day after it cut interest rates for the third time this year. ‘People are VERY disappointed in Jay Powell and the Federal Reserve,’ Trump tweeted… ‘The Fed has called it wrong from the beginning, too fast, too slow.’”

With the Fed having cut rates three times in three months, while expanding its balance sheet by $239 billion in seven weeks, one would think the President might back off.

November 1 – Wall Street Journal (Michael S. Derby): “The Federal Reserve Bank of New York added $104.583 billion in temporary liquidity to financial markets Friday, when it also added permanent reserves to expand its balance sheet. The Fed’s intervention came in two parts. One was through repurchase agreements that expire Monday, in which the Fed took in $73.133 billion in securities; the other was a 13-day repo operation that took in $31.45 billion. The Fed also bought $7.501 billion in Treasury bills.”

Concluding his prepared comments, Chairman Powell addressed operations to expand Federal Reserve Credit through the purchase of T-bills (to expand bank reserves): “These actions are purely technical measures to support the effective implementation of monetary policy as we continue to learn about the appropriate level of reserves. They do not represent a change in the stance of monetary policy. In particular, our Treasury bill purchases should not be confused with the large-scale asset purchase programs that we deployed after the financial crisis. In those programs, we purchased longer-term securities to put downward pressure on longer- term interest rates and ease broader financial conditions. In contrast, increasing the supply of reserves by purchasing Treasury bills only alters the mix of short-term assets held by the public and should not materially affect demand and supply for longer-term securities or financial conditions more broadly.”

That the Fed would move to expand its balance sheet by hundreds of billions with the stock market at record highs, financial conditions loose, and the economy in expansion, clearly conveys, once again, that the Federal Reserve has no tolerance for market adjustment or correction. Why do we need a multi-trillion “repo” market, anyways? Is it compatible with a financial stability mandate that the Fed openly nurtures speculative leveraging? Silly me: with consumer prices slightly below target – and the U.S. economy “in a good place” – no need to be concerned with egregious speculative leverage at the heart of the financial system. Nothing but Music to the Markets.


For the Week:

The S&P500 gained 1.5% (up 22.3% y-t-d), and the Dow rose 1.4% (up 17.2%). The Utilities slipped 0.3% (up 21.7%). The Banks increased 1.0% (up 23.3%), and the Broker/Dealers jumped 2.4% (up 13.3%). The Transports fell 1.1% (up 17.1%). The S&P 400 Midcaps rose 1.2% (up 19.3%), and the small cap Russell 2000 jumped 2.0% (up 17.9%). The Nasdaq100 advanced 1.6% (up 28.9%). The Semiconductors jumped 3.0% (up 46.3%). The Biotechs surged 3.0% (up 7.3%). With bullion jumping $14, the HUI gold index rose 2.3% (up 36.3%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.4875%. Two-year government yields dropped seven bps to 1.55% (down 94bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields fell eight bps to 1.54% (down 97bps). Ten-year Treasury yields dropped nine bps to 1.71% (down 97bps). Long bond yields fell 10 bps to 2.19% (down 83bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields sank 15 bps to 2.63% (down 87bps).

Greek 10-year yields declined two bps to 1.18% (down 322bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields slipped two bps to 0.20% (down 152bps). Italian 10-year yields rose four bps to 0.99% (down 175bps). Spain's 10-year yields were unchanged at 0.27% (down 114bps). German bund yields dipped two bps to negative 0.38% (down 62bps). French yields declined one basis point to negative 0.07% (down 78bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened one to 31 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields declined two bps to 0.66% (down 61bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index slipped 0.3% (up 8.5% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index added 0.2% (up 14.2% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields dropped four bps to negative 0.18% (down 18bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 increased 0.7% (up 21.8%). The German DAX equities index gained 0.5% (up 22.7%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index fell 1.1% (up 9.2%). Italy's FTSE MIB index rose 1.4% (up 25.2%). EM equities were mostly higher. Brazil's Bovespa index gained 0.8% (up 18.9%), and Mexico's Bolsa increased 1.0% (up 5.2%). South Korea's Kospi index added 0.6% (up 2.9%). India's Sensex equities index surged 2.8% (up 11.4%). China's Shanghai Exchange was little changed (up 18.6%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index fell 1.7% (up 7.9%). Russia's MICEX equities index jumped 2.0% (up 23.7%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $2.324 billion, and junk bond funds posted inflows of $940 million (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates increased three bps to 3.78% (down 105bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates added one basis point to 3.19% (down 104bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates rose three bps to 3.43% (down 61bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates unchanged at 4.11% (down 72bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week jumped $32.7bn to $3.966 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $155bn, or 3.8%. Fed Credit inflated $1.155 Trillion, or 41%, over the past 364 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt increased $2.2bn last week to $3.422 TN. "Custody holdings" rose $7.2bn y-o-y, or 0.2%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply surged $43.1bn last week to a record $15.204 TN. "Narrow money" gained $944bn, or 6.6%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $0.7bn. Total Checkable Deposits surged $108.5bn, while Savings Deposits sank $123.5bn. Small Time Deposits slipped $1.7bn. Retail Money Funds gained $8.7bn.

Total money market fund assets jumped $27.3bn to $3.513 TN. Money Funds gained $641bn y-o-y, or 22.3%.

Total Commercial Paper surged $25.2bn to $1.113 TN. CP was up $26bn, or 2.4% year-over-year.

Currency Watch:

The U.S. dollar index declined 0.7% to 97.121 (up 1.0% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Swedish krona increased 1.3%, the Norwegian krone 1.2%, the New Zealand dollar 1.2%, the Australian dollar 1.2%, the British pound 0.9%, the Swiss franc 0.9%, the euro 0.8%, the South Korean won 0.6%, the Japanese yen 0.4%, the Singapore dollar 0.4%, and the Brazilian real 0.3%. On the downside, the South African rand declined 2.7%, the Canadian dollar 0.6% and the Mexican peso 0.3%. The Chinese renminbi increased 0.40% versus the dollar this week (down 2.25% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

October 30 – Reuters (Jennifer Hiller): “In the shale field that helped launch the U.S. natural gas boom a decade ago, Chesapeake Energy Corp this month set aside its last drilling rig. The problem for the once No. 2 U.S. gas producer was not a lack of gas, but too much of it. A long, steady increase in U.S. gas production – much of it a byproduct of the shale oil boom – has prices for the fuel heading toward a 25-year low, with output outpacing U.S. consumption and expected to hit 91.6 billion cubic feet, up 10% over last year… Producers have sought to turn much of the U.S. surplus to liquefied natural gas (LNG) and export it. But even with rising sales in Asia and Europe, global LNG prices have tumbled this year as new export plants opened.”¬

The Bloomberg Commodities Index rose 1.4% this week (up 4.7% y-t-d). Spot Gold gained 0.7% to $1,514 (up 18.1%). Silver was little changed at $18.052 (up 16.2%). WTI crude declined 46 cents to $56.20 (up 24%). Gasoline fell 1.0% (up 25%), while Natural Gas surged 10.4% (down 8%). Copper declined 0.8% (up 1%). Wheat slipped 0.3% (up 3%). Corn added 0.6% (up 4%).

Market Instability Watch:

October 28 – Financial Times (Benedict Mander and Colby Smith): “Investors breathed a sigh of relief at Alberto Fernández’s narrower-than-expected victory in Argentina’s presidential elections, but were anxious for more clarity over the leftist leader’s first moves when he takes power on December 10. While financial markets took heart that Mr Fernández failed to win a majority in congress, restraining his ability to push through controversial laws, the precise direction that his economic policy will take remains unclear given his refusal to unveil a cabinet… With reserves falling by almost $4bn in the week before the elections… restoring confidence with investors is crucial, said Diana Amoa, a fixed income portfolio manager at JPMorgan… ‘One way to do that is to appoint a more credible cabinet and show a willingness to engage debt holders and the IMF,’ she added.”

Trump Administration Watch:

October 29 – Reuters (Heather Timmons and Hallie Gu): “U.S. President Donald Trump’s demand that Beijing commit to big purchases of American farm products has become a major sticking point in talks to end the Sino-U.S. trade war, according to several people briefed on the negotiations. Trump has said publicly that China could buy as much as $50 billion of U.S. farm products, more than double the annual amount it did the year before the trade war started. U.S. officials continue to push for that in talks, while Beijing is balking at committing to a large figure and a specific time frame. Chinese buyers would like the discretion to buy based on market conditions. ‘China does not want to buy a lot of products that people here don’t need or to buy something at a time when it is not in demand,’ an official from a Chinese state-owned company explained.”

October 30 – Bloomberg (Justin Sink, Shawn Donnan, and Jenny Leonard): “President Donald Trump’s plan to ink the first installment of a trade accord with Xi Jinping next month was thrown into question… after Chile canceled an upcoming summit where the two leaders planned to meet. The cancellation… appeared to catch the White House off guard. But the administration insisted that it would continue to press to finalize the ‘phase one’ agreement in coming weeks.”

November 1 – The Hill (Niv Elis): “The federal government's outstanding public debt has surpassed $23 trillion for the first time in history, according to… the Treasury Department… Growing budget deficits have added to the nation’s debt at a speedy rate since President Trump took office. The debt has grown some 16% since Trump's inauguration, when it stood at $19.9 trillion. It passed $22 trillion for the first time just 10 months ago.”

October 28 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “The U.S. Treasury said… it expects to borrow $29 billion less during the fourth quarter than previously estimated. The department… expects to issue $352 billion through credit markets during the October-December period, assuming an end-December cash balance of $410 billion. Treasury also expects to issue $389 billion in net marketable debt in the January-March 2020 period. In the third quarter of this year, Treasury borrowed $440 billion through credit markets.”

October 30 – Reuters (David Brunnstrom): “U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo… stepped up recent U.S. rhetoric targeting China’s ruling Communist Party, saying Beijing was focused on international domination and needed to be confronted. Pompeo made the remarks even as the Trump administration said it still expected to sign the first phase of deal to end a damaging trade war with China next month… ‘They are reaching for and using methods that have created challenges for the United States and for the world and we collectively, all of us, need to confront these challenges ... head on,’ Pompeo said…”

October 28 – CNBC (Lauren Hirsch): “The U.S. will consider extending certain tariff exclusions on $34 billion of imports from China as the two nations work toward a trade agreement, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative said… Nearly 1,000 products were exempted from the July 2018 tariff, and those exclusions are set to expire on Dec. 28.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Kelsey Butler): “U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is open to loosening financial crisis-era regulations that have stiffened liquidity rules for big banks to relieve possible cash crunches in short-term funding markets. Mnuchin said… he had spoken to Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co., and other banks about how to avoid liquidity problems. ‘The banks have raised an issue around intra-day liquidity, and that is something that makes sense for regulators to look at,’ Mnuchin said…”

October 28 – Wall Street Journal (Andrew Ackerman): “Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s federal regulator took new steps to privatize the mortgage-finance companies on Monday, telling the firms to help lay the groundwork for their own transitions out of an 11-year government conservatorship. In new policy goals, the Federal Housing Finance Agency for the first time released formal objectives calling for Fannie’s and Freddie’s return to the private sector. The companies have been in government conservatorship since the 2008 financial crisis.”

Federal Reserve Watch:

October 30 – New York Times (Jeanna Smialek): “The Federal Reserve cut interest rates Wednesday for the third time this year as slowing business investment, ongoing trade tensions and global weakness continued to weigh on the American economy. But the Fed signaled that it will pause and assess incoming data before it considers lowering borrowing costs again. Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell said that while ‘there’s plenty of risk left,’ some of it has subsided, pointing to the potential for a limited trade deal between the United States and China and a negotiated exit for Britain from the European Union. ‘Overall, we see the economy as having been resilient to the winds that have been blowing this year,’ he said. Wednesday’s decision to cut rates for a third time was made ‘to help keep the U.S. economy strong in the face of global developments and to provide some insurance against ongoing risks.’”

October 30 – Bloomberg (Jesse Hamilton and Emily Barrett): “Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank has been looking at long-term options to improve market liquidity, including ‘intraday’ measures, after short-term markets suffered an alarming funding squeeze last month. The Fed is considering technical adjustments to head off a repeat of the September crunch, Powell said… He said he doesn’t think the agency will consider changes to Wall Street’s capital or liquidity rules. ‘It used to be a common thing for banks to have intraday liquidity from the Fed, what we called daylight overdrafts,’ Powell said. ‘That’s something we can look at, and there are some technical things we can look at that would perhaps make the liquidity that we have -- which we think is ample -- in the financial system move more freely.’”

October 29 – Wall Street Journal (Michael S. Derby): “The New York Fed added both permanent and temporary liquidity to financial markets ahead of this week’s rate-setting central bank meeting and before the end of the month, which can bring volatility to short-term markets as banks sort out their respective financing needs. The permanent addition happened by way of central bank buying of Treasury bills aimed at expanding the central bank’s balance sheet of just under $4 trillion. The Fed bought $7.501 billion in short-term government securities. Eligible banks offered $24.105 in Treasury bills. That’s less than the $35.755 billion offered in a similar Fed operation Friday and the $44.218 billion offered Oct. 23. On the temporary front, the Fed injected $104.483 billion in short-term liquidity to financial markets Tuesday.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

October 28 – Bloomberg (Claire Boston and Elizabeth Rembert): “Jamie Dimon has been quick to trumpet the strength of U.S. consumers. Federal Reserve chief Jay Powell calls them a bright spot that is countering weakness in the manufacturing sector. But there are signs that U.S. households are starting to feel stretched, possibly making it harder for them to continue propping up the economy. The evidence is showing up on the debt side. Serious delinquencies on credit cards and auto debt have been creeping up in recent quarters. That’s pushed some banks to set aside more money to cover bad loans and tighten lending standards for credit cards and other consumer loans.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (William Edwards): “Contract signings to purchase previously owned U.S. homes posted the largest annual increase in four years, signaling lower mortgage rates are reviving interest from buyers. The National Association of Realtors’ Index of pending home sales increased 6.3% in September from a year earlier on an unadjusted basis, the biggest gain since August 2015… On a monthly adjusted basis, contracts rose 1.5%, exceeding the median forecast… of 0.9%. The result indicates the housing market is regaining traction after a separate report showed contract closings fell 2.2% in September.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Kelsey Butler): “Home prices in 20 U.S. cities declined in August from the prior month for the first time in a year, reflecting moderation in some once-hot real estate markets. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller index of property values fell 0.2% during the month, compared with estimates for a 0.1% decline, after no change in July… Prices increased 2% from August 2018, matching the year-over-year gain in the prior month but slightly below the median estimate… Nationally, annual home prices were up 3.2% after a 3.1% increase in July.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Reade Pickert): “Three years after Donald Trump campaigned for president pledging a factory renaissance, the opposite appears to be happening. Manufacturing made up 11% of gross domestic product in the second quarter, the smallest share in data going back to 1947 and down from 11.1% in the prior period… The latest number compares with 13.4% for real estate, 12.8% for professional and business services and 12.3% for governments…”

October 28 – Wall Street Journal (Ben Eisen and Laura Kusisto): “The mortgage market turned red hot over the summer, posting its biggest three months since the financial crisis. Lenders extended $700 billion of home loans in the July-to-September quarter, the most in 14 years, according to… Inside Mortgage Finance. Mortgage originations for the full year are on pace to hit their highest level since 2006, the peak of the last housing boom. Falling interest rates spurred homeowners to trade higher-rate mortgages for lower-rate ones to save on monthly payments. Refinancings kept mortgage lenders busy, though home sales haven’t recovered as much as economists expected.”

October 28 – Wall Street Journal (Michael Wursthorn): “Exchange-traded funds have swelled into a $4 trillion juggernaut over the past quarter of a century, but many asset managers say the industry is entering a new phase of competition and oversaturation that threatens to squeeze out smaller funds. More than 90 funds have closed this year through early October, following a record 139 closures last year. Meanwhile, launches of new exchange-traded products… peaked in 2011 and have remained relatively flat since dipping from that level… The tepid pace of development could be just the beginning of a bigger shakeout across the industry, as more than half of the roughly 2,100 exchange-traded products listed in the U.S. have less than $100 million in assets, according to David Perlman, an ETF strategist at UBS.”

October 28 – Bloomberg (Heather Perlberg and Melissa Karsh): “KKR & Co. has gathered more than $2 billion to invest in fast-growing technology companies as it further expands beyond the mega-deals that made its reputation. The firm is raising its second fund dedicated to growth-equity investments in technology, media and telecommunications… The fund… is about triple the size of the debut vehicle: the KKR Next Generation Technology Growth Fund raised $714 million in 2016.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Christopher Maloney and Adam Tempkin): “The payday-loan business was in decline. Regulators were circling, storefronts were vanishing and investors were abandoning the industry’s biggest companies en masse. And yet today, just a few years later, many of the same subprime lenders that specialized in the debt are promoting an almost equally onerous type of credit. It’s called the online installment loan, a form of debt with much longer maturities but often the same sort of crippling, triple-digit interest rates. If the payday loan’s target audience is the nation’s poor, then the installment loan is geared to all those working-class Americans who have seen their wages stagnate and unpaid bills pile up… In just a span of five years, online installment loans have gone from being a relatively niche offering to a red-hot industry. Non-prime borrowers now collectively owe about $50 billion on installment products…”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Edvard Pettersson): “It’s meant to be one of the crown jewels of downtown Los Angeles’ urban renaissance but now it’s in limbo -- plagued by lawsuits from subcontractors, and victim of an ongoing trade dispute between China and the U.S. and a Beijing crackdown on credit and capital flight. Construction has largely stalled at the three towers of Oceanwide Plaza across from Staples Center where the NBA’s Lakers and Clippers and the NHL’s Kings play their home games… The developer, Beijing-based Oceanwide Holdings Co., offered few details on the future of the $1 billion-plus project -- other than to insist that it has financing and work is continuing. The lawsuits by unpaid subcontractors, on the other hand, give a glimpse of the developer’s struggle to come up with needed money to finish the project.”

October 30 – Wall Street Journal (Matt Wirz and Juliet Chung): “The Kincade Fire blazing north of San Francisco is wreaking havoc thousands of miles away: on Wall Street. Investors in PG&E Corp. stocks and bonds lost about $4.1 billion in the four trading days after the blaze in Sonoma County, Calif., started… The stock has dropped 25% since the fire began, cutting the utility’s market capitalization to $3.25 billion on Wednesday from a high of $37 billion in 2017. PG&E bond prices have fallen as much as 12.5%... The swings in PG&E securities are complicating hedge funds’ efforts to profit from what some are describing as the first major bankruptcy induced by climate change.”

October 29 – New York Times (Peter Eavis and Ivan Penn): “California’s Pacific Gas & Electric problem isn’t going away. The giant utility has been in bankruptcy for months, and it is not clear who will end up controlling it. This uncertainty has extended into the wildfire season, exposing not just the shortcomings in PG&E’s fire-prevention efforts but also the threat that fire liabilities still pose to the company’s viability. No surprise, then, that state officials are getting restless and looking for bolder ways forward. Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared that his office would ‘love’ to see Warren E. Buffett’s holding company, Berkshire Hathaway, make a bid for PG&E… But any idea must go through the federal bankruptcy court where two camps of investors — one aligned with wildfire victims seeking damages from PG&E, and another with management — have submitted plans to reorganize the company. PG&E, facing an estimated $30 billion or more in liabilities, mainly from fires in 2017 and 2018, sought bankruptcy protection in January.”

China Watch:

November 1 – CNBC (Yun Li): “China said Friday that it has reached a consensus with the U.S. in principle after a phone call among high-level trade negotiators this week. The Chinese Ministry of Commerce said Vice Premier Liu He had a phone call with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday. It said the two sides conducted ‘serious and constructive’ discussions on ‘core’ trade points and talked about arrangements for the next round of talks.”

October 31 – Bloomberg (Shawn Donnan, Jenny Leonard and Steven Yang): “Chinese officials are casting doubts about reaching a comprehensive long-term trade deal with the U.S. even as the two sides get close to signing a ‘phase one’ agreement. In private conversations with visitors to Beijing and other interlocutors in recent weeks, Chinese officials have warned they won’t budge on the thorniest issues, according to people familiar with the matter. They remain concerned about President Donald Trump’s impulsive nature and the risk he may back out of even the limited deal both sides say they want to sign in the coming weeks.”

October 29 – Associated Press: “China… accused the U.S. of ‘economic bullying behavior’ after U.S. regulators cited security threats in proposing to cut off funding for Chinese equipment in U.S. telecommunications networks. China would ‘resolutely oppose the U.S. abusing state power to suppress specific Chinese enterprises with unwarranted charges in the absence of any evidence,’ Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters… ‘The economic bullying behavior of the U.S. is a denial of the market economy principle that the U.S. has always advertised,’ Geng said… ‘We would like to urge the U.S. once again to stop abusing the concept of national security,’ Geng said.”

October 29 – Reuters (Michelle Nichols): “China’s U.N. Ambassador Zhang Jun warned… that U.S. criticism at the world body of Beijing’s policy in remote Xinjiang was not ‘helpful’ for negotiations between the two countries on a trade deal. The United States, Britain and 21 other states pushed China on Tuesday at the U.N. to stop detaining ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims, a move that was countered by Beijing and some 53 countries jointly defending its “remarkable” rights record. ‘The trade talks are going on and we are seeing progress,’ Zhang told reporters. ‘I do not think its helpful for having a good solution to the issue of trade talks.’”

October 28 – Bloomberg: “China’s room to ease monetary policy to aid the slowing economy is being limited further by price rises due the ongoing swine fever epidemic, economists said. Analysts… warned that surging consumer inflation has become a major constraint on the People’s Bank of China, and the likelihood for major monetary easing in the coming months has declined. That’s despite increasing evidence that economic growth will drop below 6% next year. ‘With surging pork prices, continued spill-over effects to other food prices, and the risk of a wage-price spiral, we believe the PBOC may become more reluctant to deliver any high-profile monetary easing in the coming quarters,’ Lu Ting, chief China economist at Nomura…”

October 31 – Bloomberg: “China’s ruling Communist Party warned that internal and external risks were increasing after wrapping up its most important meeting of the year. The party ‘holds high the great banner of socialism’ in the face of ‘a more complicated situation with risks and challenges significantly increasing at home and abroad,’ according to a communique… The party’s 200-plus-member Central Committee also discussed ways to improve the market-based economic system as well as the legal system in Hong Kong ‘for safeguarding national security.’ … “The communique confirms that the Xi administration’s outlook is one of increasing domestic and global risks, and therefore the solution is to double down on the party’s absolute control,’ said Jude Blanchette, Freeman Chair of China Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.”

October 30 – Reuters (Gabriel Crossley and Ryan Woo): “Factory activity in China shrank for the sixth straight month in October and by more than expected, while service sector growth eased as firms grapple with the weakest economic growth in nearly 30 years… The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 49.3 in October, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said on Thursday, versus 49.8 in September.”

October 30 – Reuters (Cheng Leng and Ryan Woo): “China’s anti-corruption watchdog said… it is investigating the former chairman of a rural bank for suspected corruption, and the central bank promised to take ‘forceful’ measures to preserve financial order after depositors rushed to withdraw their savings. Fears of poor management, risky lending practices and high levels of hidden debt at China’s thousands of small and rural banks have spurred regulators to tighten scrutiny this year. Financial strains have increased as economic growth slows to near 30-year lows.”

October 29 – Bloomberg: “A wall of maturing debt will soon add more strain to China’s sovereign-bond market, already under pressure from a global sell-off and rising inflation. More than 2 trillion yuan ($283bn) of local-government notes will mature in 2020… -- a record and 58% more than this year’s level. This means fresh debt to refinance the borrowing could start hitting the market shortly. A report Tuesday said the southern province of Guangdong may sell notes as early as November.”

October 28 – Bloomberg: “Investors seized the chance to take part in China’s largest convertible bond sale, showing just how coveted the equity-like securities have become. Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co.’s 50 billion yuan ($7.1bn) deal was about 330 times oversubscribed… With about half of the offering first allocated to existing shareholders, that means new investors placed 7.8 trillion yuan worth of orders for the remaining supply. For context, that money could buy Brazil’s entire equity market with some change to spare.”

October 30 – Bloomberg: “The regulator in China’s financial center has ordered Shanghai’s more than 40 peer-to-peer lenders to exit the business, people familiar with the matter said, the latest blow to an online industry that’s shrunk by half this year. Some of the nation’s biggest platforms including Ping An-backed Lufax and Dianrong.com have been told in recent meetings with Shanghai’s financial services bureau to stop issuing new products and to wind down existing peer-to-peer lending services, the people said… The development indicates China’s determination to overhaul an industry that had more than $150 billion of loans outstanding and upwards of 50 million investors at its peak, but was plagued by fraud and defaults.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Kevin Hamlin): “Determined to start his own business, but reluctant to ask family or friends for money, Zhang Peng turned to online lender Jiebei for 30,000 yuan ($4,260) to open a shop selling nuts. Interest on the one-year loan was 18%, and Zhang struggled with the payments at first. But it got him started. Now, two years later and still aged only 22, he owns a Mercedes and plans to open a second store in his hometown… Leveraging the massive online population and advanced e-commerce ecosystem, an upstart fintech industry has sprung up in China. A plethora of new platforms offer ways for entrepreneurs and households to get credit… Online giant Alibaba Group only set up MYBank in 2015, but it’s already provided micro loans worth more than 2 trillion yuan to some 16 million small businesses. It offers non-collateral credit via a model known as ‘3-1-0’: 3 minutes to apply, 1 second to approve, 0 humans involved.”

October 31 – Reuters (Noah Sin and Twinnie Siu): “Hong Kong slid into recession for the first time in a decade in the third quarter, weighed down by increasingly violent anti-government protests and the protracted U.S.-China trade war… The city’s economy shrank 3.2% in July-September from the preceding period, contracting for a second straight quarter and meeting the technical definition of a recession…”

Central Banking Watch:

October 28 – Bloomberg (Piotr Skolimowski, Arne Delfs, and Yuko Takeo): “Mario Draghi made one last plea for euro-zone fiscal support as he signed off from the European Central Bank presidency in a ceremony attended by the leaders of the bloc’s biggest economies… ‘We need a euro-area fiscal capacity of adequate size and design: large enough to stabilize the monetary union, but designed not to create excessive moral hazard,’ Draghi said. ‘National policies cannot always guarantee the right fiscal stance for the euro area as a whole.’”

October 30 – Bloomberg (Paul Gordon, Piotr Skolimowski, and Craig Stirling): “One of Christine Lagarde’s most important tools for stimulating inflation might be falling out of favor even before she gets to wield it as European Central Bank president. Doubts over negative interest rates are beginning to surface among policy makers on the continent where they first appeared half a decade ago. A growing contingent of officials at the ECB in Frankfurt are starting to wonder if they cause more harm than good, and Sweden’s Riksbank seems desperate to be rid of them altogether.”

October 31 – Bloomberg (Jeannette Neumann): “Luis de Guindos joined the growing number of European Central Bank officials warning about the negative side effects of an ultra-expansionary monetary policy. The vice president of the ECB also said policy makers alone can’t shield the euro-area economy from disruptive trade conflicts or the uncertainty generated by the U.K.’s impending exit from the bloc… ‘We’ve begun to notice that the collateral effects of this policy, of this monetary policy, are increasingly significant,’ Guindos told a group… That’s one reason why monetary policy ‘can’t be the only response to the economic slowdown’ in the euro area.”

October 26 – Reuters (Francesco Canepa): “Christine Lagarde will ensure European Central Bank policymakers climb down from their ‘ivory tower’ and face the political realities of the euro zone, the ECB’s vice president, Luis de Guindos, said…”

Brexit Watch:

October 30 – Reuters (Elizabeth Piper): “The phoney war is over. After months of rehearsing his election strategy, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is poised to run a high-risk campaign designed to exploit divisions over Brexit despite his public appeals for national unity. Ahead of the Dec. 12 vote, he will focus on portraying his new Brexit deal with the European Union as a victory for a leader who many said would be unable to win concessions from Brussels and would instead leave without an agreement. Central to the election campaign will be the message that only Johnson can finish the job of leaving the EU, two sources close to the campaign said.”

EM Watch:

October 27 – Reuters (Cassandra Garrison): “Argentina’s former president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, a rockstar politician adored by the poor but feared by big business and investors, is back, although as vice president this time. The South American country’s leader for eight years until 2015, ‘Cristina’, as she is known to fans, returns to the Casa Rosada palace after she and senior running mate Alberto Fernandez scored a decisive victory in Sunday’s election. The return of the fiery Fernandez de Kirchner is a major twist in Argentine politics, turning Latin America’s third-largest economy abruptly back towards the left after four years under conservative leader Mauricio Macri.”

October 28 – Reuters (Jorge Otaola and Walter Bianchi): “Argentina central bank president Guido Sandleris pledged…to do everything possible to protect the bank’s international reserves, as the South American country transitions to a new leftist government amid swirling economic crisis. Sandleris said… the central bank will hold meetings with the team of President-elect Alberto Fernandez, who defeated incumbent Mauricio Macri in Sunday’s presidential election… In the early hours of Monday, the central bank announced it would tighten a restriction on dollar purchasing to $200 per month for individuals, down from $10,000 a month…”

Japan Watch:

October 30 – Reuters (Tetsushi Kajimoto): “Japan’s industrial output rebounded in September to log its fastest gain in four months, offering some relief to manufacturers amid a slowdown in global demand and rising pressure on the country’s exports from the U.S.-China trade war.”

Global Bubble Watch:

October 29 – Financial Times (Tommy Stubbington): “Cash has flowed out of the eurozone at an unprecedented pace for most of the past five years, thanks in large part to the European Central Bank’s bond-buying programme. With the central bank restarting quantitative easing this week after a 10-month absence from markets, investors are wondering whether the flood is set to resume. From March 2015 to December last year, the ECB snapped up nearly €2.6tn of debt. Investors who sold their bonds under the QE programme often chose to spend the proceeds on assets overseas. Fund managers largely balked at vanishingly low bond yields in the eurozone and chose to chase higher returns elsewhere, resulting in steady outflows that washed up in everything from the US bond market to high-end real estate. ‘Eurozone investors were buying foreign assets in massive quantities,’ said Stefano Di Domizio, head of fixed income at Absolute Strategy Research. ‘They didn’t want to compete with the ECB in chasing yields lower.’”

November 1 – Bloomberg (Pei Yi Mak, Blake Schmidt, Venus Feng, Yoojung Lee, Steven Crabill, Peter Eichenbaum, Andrew Heathcote and Tom Metcalf.): “Mukesh Ambani’s late father, who started the family’s business empire with $100, used to tell his son that he didn’t know what it was like to be poor. For the Ambanis, whose palatial home towers over Mumbai and is one of the world’s most expensive private residences, that has never been truer. They are Asia’s richest family, with a $50 billion fortune. The region’s 20 wealthiest clans are now worth more than $450 billion combined, underscoring how the world’s economic growth engine is minting fortunes on an unprecedented scale.”

October 26 – UK Guardian (Simon Tisdall): “A spate of large-scale street protests around the world, from Chile and Hong Kong to Lebanon and Barcelona, is fuelling a search for common denominators and collective causes. Are we entering a new age of global revolution? …Each country’s protests differ in detail. But recent upheavals do appear to share one key factor: youth. In most cases, younger people are at the forefront of calls for change…. There are more young people than ever before. About 41% of the global population of 7.7 billion is aged 24 or under. In Africa, 41% is under 15. In Asia and Latin America (where 65% of the world’s people live), it’s 25%.”

October 28 – Financial Times (Valentina Romei): “Global foreign direct investment contracted sharply in the first half of this year as trade tensions between the US, Europe and China weighed on the world economy. The flows fell by a fifth in the first six months of 2019 compared with the second half of the previous year, to $572bn, according to… the OECD. The drop was particularly concentrated in the second quarter, when flows contracted by 42%. FDI flows into the US dropped by more than a quarter from the latter half of 2018 to the first half of 2019, to $151bn, while flows into the EU dropped by 62% to $107bn. By contrast, flows to China increased by 5% to $82bn. FDI flows from China to the US peaked at $16bn in the second half of 2016 and have since fallen to less than $1.2bn as Chinese companies invest less and sell off some of their holdings, the OECD said.”

October 28 – Bloomberg (Zoe Schneeweiss and William Horobin): “In the first half of 2019, global foreign-direct-investment flows decreased by 20% compared with the second half of 2018, with a sharp drop in the second quarter, according to OECD data. Quarterly flows can be volatile -- often affected by a few very large transactions. …The latest decline continues the slowdown following the post-crisis peak in 2015 and can be partly attributed to ‘uncertainties regarding trade tensions and prospects for future economic growth.’”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

October 29 – Bloomberg (Kelsey Butler): “A competitive underwriting environment, falling credit quality and low interest rates will pressure a $100 billion corner of the private debt market in the coming year, according to a new Fitch Ratings report. Business development companies will continue to face challenges heading into 2020 as execution risk is elevated for those looking to boost leverage at a time when deal structure and terms are softer, analysts led by Chelsea Richardson said… ‘Terms continue to weaken in the middle market and that is really driving the negative sector outlook,’ Richardson said…”

October 28 – Bloomberg (Lisa Lee and Sally Bakewell): “A group of about ten lenders agreed to provide a $1.6 billion loan for an insurance brokerage owned by private equity firm Kelso & Co LP. Wall Street banks that companies typically turn to for such debt had little hand in it. The lending list includes KKR & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s merchant banking unit, Golub Capital, Oak Hill Capital Partners and Apollo Global Management… The unitranche loan… is one of the largest provided by direct lenders, the people said… Direct lenders, which bypass a syndication process where banks arrange leveraged loans for issuers and sell them on to institutional investors, typically finance small and medium-sized businesses. But as they amass larger pools of capital, they are increasingly doing bigger deals…”

Geopolitical Watch:

October 30 – CNBC (Eustance Huang): “The U.S. dollar has been the world’s major reserve currency for decades, but that status could come under threat as ‘very powerful countries’ seek to undermine its importance, warned Anne Korin, from the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security. ‘Major movers’ such as China, Russia and the European Union have a strong ‘motivation to de-dollarize,’ said Korin, co-director at the energy and security think tank… ‘We don’t know what’s going to come next, but what we do know is that the current situation is unsustainable,’ Korin said. ‘You have a growing club of countries — very powerful countries.’”

October 28 – Reuters (Ahmed Aboulenein): “Tens of thousands of Iraqis protested in Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square on Tuesday for a fifth day, angered by reports of security forces killing demonstrators in the city of Kerbala and the prime minister’s refusal to call early elections.”

October 29 – Bloomberg (Dana Khraiche): “Calls are mounting for Lebanon to impose formal restrictions on the movement of money to defend the country’s dollar peg and prevent a run on the banks when they open their doors on Friday after two weeks of nationwide protests. The closures have led to a backlog in dollar demand from importers and other businesses while speculation swirls about the measures lenders will need to take to avert financial collapse… In a sign of crumbling confidence, banks have been getting calls from clients asking to move their money abroad while others are working at a frantic pace to transfer funds to Swiss accounts as soon as lenders resume operations, local and foreign bankers said.”

October 29 – Reuters (Karin Strohecker and Tom Arnold): “Lebanon’s sovereign dollar bonds suffered one of their worst days on record on Tuesday after Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri resigned, fanning uncertainty about how the country will emerge from its most dire economic crisis in nearly 30 years. In a televised address to the nation, Hariri declared he had reached a ‘dead end’ in trying to resolve almost two weeks of widespread unrest. The address came after a mob loyal to Shi’ite Muslim groups Hezbollah and Amal attacked and destroyed a protest camp set up by anti-government demonstrators in Beirut.”

Friday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500, Nasdaq set records on jobs data, trade headway

[Reuters] Oil rises nearly 4% on U.S.-China trade hopes, but sets weekly decline

[Reuters] U.S.-China trade deal in sight after progress in high-level talks

[CNBC] China says it’s reached a consensus in principle with the US during this week’s trade talks

[The Hill] US debt surpasses $23 trillion for first time

[Reuters] 'Deja vu': Argentina braced for new round of debt talks with markets stalled

[Bloomberg] U.S. Shadow Lenders See Loan Volume Slow, Quality Decline

[Bloomberg] Asia’s 20 Richest Families Control $450 Billion

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Friday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street higher on upbeat U.S. jobs report, China data

[Reuters] Treasury yields jump after better-than-expected jobs report

[Reuters] Oil prices edge up, but set for big weekly loss on rising output, trade woes

[CNBC] October job creation comes in at 128,000, easily topping estimates even with GM auto strike

[CNBC] US manufacturing contracts for a third straight month

[CNBC] A private survey shows China’s manufacturing activity expanded in October, better than expected

[Reuters] Asia's factory pain deepens on trade war, global slowdown

[Reuters] Hong Kong protesters plan huge march after gatecrashing Halloween

[AFP] China warns it won't tolerate dissent in Hong Kong

[Reuters] Iraqis pour into streets for biggest protest day since Saddam

[Bloomberg] Bank Run in Rural China Tests Faith in Thousands of Lenders

[Bloomberg] Don’t Call It Stagflation, But China Assets Flash Economic Worry

[Bloomberg] Dollar Bonds Linked to Top China Universities Plunge by Record

[NYT] The Fed’s View on Inflation Is Quietly Shifting. Here’s Why.

[WSJ] The Super Rich Are Buying $100 Million Homes. For Some, One Isn’t Enough.

[FT] Fed caught between political factions over repo

[FT] Derivatives to crash markets again? 

[FT] Japan sounds warning on China’s growing military might

Thursday Evening Links

[Reuters] Wall Street falls on U.S.-China trade jitters

[Reuters] Oil prices decline on U.S. pipe disruptions, weak Chinese data

[Reuters] Trump says U.S., China to announce new venue to ink trade deal soon

[CNBC] Trump rails against Powell a day after the Fed cuts rates for a third time this year

[Reuters] Trump says Fed hurting U.S. competitiveness, needs to cut rates more

[Reuters] Exclusive: Iran intervenes to prevent ousting of Iraqi prime minister - sources

[WSJ] Chinese Bank Run Extends to Third Day

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Thursday's News Links

[Reuters] Stocks drop as U.S.-China trade worries resurface

[Reuters] Oil prices dip as U.S. crude stocks and demand outlook weigh

[Reuters] U.S. consumer spending rises moderately, wages flat

[Reuters] China's factory activity shrinks for sixth month as trade war clouds outlook

[Reuters] China's probe of rural bank chief renews worries over small banks' health

[Reuters] Pompeo says U.S. must confront China's Communist Party

[CNBC] A ‘growing club’ of ‘very powerful countries’ is steering away from using the dollar

[Reuters] Japan September factory output rebounds, but risks cloud outlook

[Reuters] Hong Kong falls into first recession in 10 years as protests, trade war weigh

[Bloomberg] China Doubts Long-Term Trade Deal Possible With Trump

[Bloomberg] China’s Rising Sovereign Yields Are Stirring Its Corporate Bonds

[Bloomberg] China Warns Risks Are Increasing After Biggest Party Meeting

[Bloomberg] China’s Financial Hub Moves to Shut Down P2P Lending

[Bloomberg] Negative Interest Rate Skepticism Grows at the European Central Bank

[Bloomberg] Guindos Joins ECB Officials Warning Against Policy Side Effects

[FT] China manufacturers divert cash into financial products

Wednesday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P closes at record on Fed bump

[CNBC] Fed cuts rates but indicates a pause is ahead

[Reuters] U.S. Treasury yield curve flattens after Fed cuts rates

[CNBC] Here’s what changed in the new Fed statement

[CNBC] The international summit where Trump and Xi were planning to sign a trade deal has been suddenly canceled

[Reuters] Consumers support U.S. economy as business spending slumps

[Reuters] U.S. natgas glut dims outlook for big producers as prices head to 25-yr low

[Bloomberg] Powell Says Fed Wants to Amp Repo Liquidity Without Rewriting Rules

[Bloomberg] Trump-Xi Trade Deal Hits Another Hurdle After Chile Cancels APEC

[NYT] Federal Reserve Cuts Interest Rates for Third Time in 2019

[WSJ] Fed Cuts Rate for Third Time This Year, Signals Pause

[FT] Federal Reserve delivers third rate cut but signals it is done for now

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Wednesday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street set to open slightly higher; Fed decision looms

[Reuters] Gold firms as investors await Fed verdict

[CNBC] US GDP rose 1.9% in the third quarter, vs 1.6% growth expected

[AP] U.S. private sector job growth picks up in October: ADP

[AP] Fed is expected to cut rates but may offer little guidance

[Reuters] Chile says it can't host trade and climate summits after protests

[Reuters] With balance sheet in background, markets focus on Fed's rate decision

[Reuters] In U.S.-China talks, Beijing's refusal to spell out farm buys is big sticking point

[Reuters] China warns U.S. criticism at U.N. over Xinjiang not 'helpful' for trade talks

[Reuters] Divide and conquer: PM Johnson launches high-risk election strategy

[Reuters] Japan retail sales rise most since 2014, but outlook murky

[Reuters] Iraqi prime minister's main backers agree to oust him

[Bloomberg] Fed Prepares to Pause After Third Rate Cut: Decision Day Guide

[Bloomberg] China Steelmaker Default Sparks Debt Contagion Fear

[Bloomberg] China’s Biggest Banks Prepare for Hard Times

[Bloomberg] Worst Isn’t Over for Chinese Bonds as Supply Surge Looms

[Bloomberg] L.A.’s $1 Billion Trophy Tower Halted as China Pulls Back

[Bloomberg] Capital Controls Seen on the Cards for Lebanon as Crisis Deepens

[NYT] The Fed Is Expected to Cut Rates for a Third Time. Its Next Move Is a Mystery.

[NYT] Can PG&E Survive the California Wildfires?

[WSJ] Fed Eyes Third Rate Cut, but Faces Questions Over What Comes Next

[WSJ] Fed Adds $104.5 Billion to Financial Markets, Also Buys More Treasury Bills

[WSJ] PG&E Trade Punishes Hedge Funds as California Burns

[FT] Why ECB’s resumption of quantitative easing could spur eurozone outflows

[FT] India’s shadow banking crisis raises spectre of contagion

Tuesday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500 hits record high on robust Merck, Pfizer earnings

[Reuters] Exclusive: U.S.-China trade deal might not be ready for signing in Chile - U.S. official

[Reuters] U.S. consumer confidence slips in October

[Bloomberg] Pending U.S. Home Sales Post Biggest Annual Increase Since 2015

[AP] Here’s the single phrase to watch for from the Fed this week

[Reuters] Britain spins toward Christmas election in bid to break Brexit deadlock

[Reuters] Lebanon suffers record bond sell-off as PM Hariri resigns, protests turn violent

[Reuters] Iraqi protesters pack Baghdad square as anti-government movement gathers momentum

[Bloomberg] Manufacturing Is Now Smallest Share of U.S. Economy in 72 Years

[Bloomberg] Cheapest Debt In a Year Prompts Flurry of Corporate Bond Sales

[Bloomberg] Credit Quality, Leverage in Focus for Private Debt, Fitch Says

[Bloomberg] U.S. Home Prices Declined in August for First Time in a Year

[Bloomberg] Mnuchin Open to Looser Rules Backed by Dimon to Ease Repo Stress


Monday, October 28, 2019

Tuesday's News Links

[Reuters] Stocks cling to gains on trade hopes, mixed earnings weigh on Europe

[Reuters] China lifts yuan midpoint to strongest level in over 2 months

[Reuters] Three-peat? Fed copies 1990s playbook in bid to avert a downturn

[Reuters] Brexit election nears as UK opposition backs early poll

[AP] China accuses US of ‘economic bullying’ over equipment ban

[CNBC] US considers extending some tariff exclusions on Chinese imports as trade talks continue

[Reuters] Iraqi security forces open fire on protesters, kill 14

[Bloomberg] Fed Wants a Break From Rate Cuts. Will Bond Traders Allow It?

[Bloomberg] China’s Monetary Policy Is Being Hamstrung By Inflation Surge

[Bloomberg] America’s Middle Class Is Addicted to a New Kind of Credit

[Bloomberg] Mini-Loans Have Spurred a Business—And Debt—Boom in China

[Bloomberg] Largest China Convertible Bond Draws $1.1 Trillion in Bids

[Bloomberg] Another Credit Bubble Grows: the $5 Billion Crypto-Loan Market

[WSJ] Powell Faces Tightrope Act Framing Potential Pause on Fed Rate Cuts

[WSJ] Fannie, Freddie Told to Prepare for Return to Private Sector

[FT] US Federal Reserve rate decision: 4 things to watch

Monday Evening Links

[Reuters] Trade optimism, Fed rate-cut expectation sends S&P 500 to record

[Reuters] Treasuries - Yields higher on expected Fed cut, Brexit developments

[Reuters] U.S.-China trade deal hopes drive European shares to 21-month high

[BBC] Brexit: PM to try again for 12 December election after MPs reject plan

[Reuters] U.S. Treasury expects to borrow $352 billion in fourth quarter

[Reuters] UK PM Johnson's Conservatives looking at alternative election routes, dates: spokesman

[Bloomberg] Treasury Prepares Another Debt Deluge as Fed Wades Into Market

[Bloomberg] Draghi Signs Off From ECB With One Last Cry for Fiscal Action

[Bloomberg] Consumer Cracks Emerge as Banks Say Everything Looks Fine

[Bloomberg] Global Foreign-Direct-Investment Flows Decline 20%

[Bloomberg] KKR Raises More Than $2 Billion to Buy Fast-Growing Tech Firms

[WSJ] Why the Fed Is Losing Potency

[WSJ] Warsh: The Fed Needs Trust, Not Tactics

[FT] Investors anxious over new Argentine president’s next move

[FT] Global investment plunges as trade disputes take toll

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Monday's News Links

[Reuters] S&P 500 hits record high on hopes of trade deal, rate cut

[CNBC] Treasury yields climb as Brexit fears ease, US earnings prove better than feared

[Reuters] Trump: 'ahead of schedule' on China trade deal

[Reuters] EU nations agree Brexit delay until January 31 as PM Johnson seeks election

[Reuters] Argentine cenbank will do all possible to protect reserves - Sandleris

[Reuters] Argentina's Peronists sweep back into power as Macri ousted

[Reuters] Comeback queen: Argentina's fiery 'Cristina' stages remarkable return as VP

[Reuters] Argentine central bank cuts dollar purchase limit sharply as forex reserves tumble

[AP] ‘Whatever it takes:’ Key moments from Draghi’s time at ECB

[Reuters] Hong Kong enters recession as protests show no sign of relenting

[Bloomberg] What’s In (and Not In) Step One of the U.S.-China Trade Deal

[Bloomberg] China Bond Rout Worsens as Yield Jumps Most in Six Months

[Bloomberg] China’s Slowdown Rolls On Into October, Early Indicators Show

[Bloomberg] Italian Bonds Stumble as Cracks Start Showing in Political Calm

[WSJ] Falling Rates Boost Mortgage Market to Precrisis Levels

[WSJ] The $4 Trillion ETF Industry Is Creating More ‘Roadkill’

[WSJ] Twilight of the Stock Pickers: Hedge Fund Kings Face a Reckoning 

Sunday Evening Links

[Reuters] Argentine media call Fernandez election winner in worrying sign for Macri

[Reuters] Banks in Lebanon to stay shut on Monday - statement

[Bloomberg] Stocks in Asia to Rise as U.S. Flirts With Record: Markets Wrap

[Bloomberg] Time to Get Picky in Emerging Markets in Grip of Political Risks

[Bloomberg] Xi Uses China’s Biggest Annual Meeting for Politics

[FT] Will the Fed signal a rate cut pause and will the BoJ ease?

Sunday's News Links

[MarketWatch] Three things to watch when the Fed meets next week

[Reuters] Macri the underdog as Argentina heads to the polls

[Reuters] Hong Kong protesters hurl petrol bombs after police fire tear gas to clear rally

[Bloomberg] Fed to Cut Rates Again, But What Comes After That?: Economy Week

[Bloomberg] China’s Industrial Profit Widens Drop on Economy, Deflation

[FT] Federal Reserve faces decision whether to signal pause to rate cuts

Friday, October 25, 2019

Weekly Commentary: Whatever It Takes to Never Give Up

Any central bank head that passes through an eight-year term without once raising rates has some explaining to do. To leave monetary policy extremely loose for such an extended period comes with major consequences (can we at least agree on that?). So, what went wrong? How did policy measures not operate as expected? With the benefit of hindsight, what could have been done differently?

What will be Draghi’s legacy? How will history view his stewardship over eurozone monetary policy? The years sure pass by. I still ponder how history will judge Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke. At this point, with securities prices (equities and bonds) basically at all-time highs, contemporary monetary policy - and its major architects - are held in high regard. I don’t expect this to remain the case following the next crisis.

A reporter question from Draghi’s Thursday press conference: “A recent survey by the Bank of America reveals that impotence and ineffectiveness of central banks, including the ECB, are the second risk perceived by investors. My question is: do you think that these investor concerns are justified? In other words, is there a risk of financial bubbles?”

Mario Draghi: “…You asked whether the expansionary monetary policies of central banks is the second-largest risk. I can answer for the eurozone; in the eurozone, and it’s a question we ask ourselves every day, many times a day, and I’m saying this because we monitor market developments very closely. We see some segments of financial markets where valuations are overstretched. One case is real estate, for example, and especially prime commercial real estate. Now, the causes of these overstretched valuations often don’t lead directly to our monetary policies. For prime commercial real estate, it’s the action of international investors… We may have other segments to watch, but frankly, all in all we don’t see bubbles. When we see some bubbles, they are local bubbles that should be, for example, some segments of the bond market, the high-yield leveraged bond market – which by the way is not a big issue in Europe. It's more of a big issue in another jurisdiction… Certainly the other important issue is that much of this danger, much of this risk, much of this search for yield happens in the non-banking sector and more specifically in the so-called shadow banking sector. Unfortunately there, the perimeter of macro-prudential policies does not include that sector. We have some visibility, pretty good visibility, into what happens in the banking sector… But we don't have much visibility for the rest of the financial sector. I’m talking for the non-banks, so for the shadow banking sector.”

Reminiscent of mortgage finance Bubble era Alan Greenspan, Draghi references “local Bubbles.” Yet Draghi concludes his term staring eye-to-eye with one of history’s most spectacular Bubbles – and it’s anything but “local” and it is not in real estate or high-yield. I’ll assume when ECB officials are monitoring markets “very closely” and pondering risks “many times a day,” perhaps sovereign bond markets garner some occasional attention.

Greek yields were at 22.31% when Mario Draghi began his term on November 1, 2011. Italian yields were at 6.09%, with Portuguese yields at 11.79%, Spanish at 5.54%, French at 3.10% and German yields at 2.03%. At 2011/12 highs, Italian yields reached 7.26%, Spain 7.62%, Portugal 17.39% and Greece 31.68%.

The collapse of eurozone yields has been nothing short of miraculous. Greek 10-year yields ended this week at 1.20%, and Italian yields closed at 0.95%. Portuguese and Spanish yields are down to 0.22% and 0.27% - and those are among the high/positive-yielding instruments. German and French yields ended the week at negative 0.36% and negative 0.06%. Other negative-yielding eurozone 10-year bonds include Netherlands (-0.24%), Austria (-0.14%), Finland (-0.14%) and Belgium (-0.08%). Latvia’s 10-year yields ended the week at zero, slightly ahead of Slovakia (0.03%), Ireland (0.04%), Slovenia (0.08%) and Cyprus (0.46%). It’s curious that history’s greatest bond market inflation didn’t garner so much as a mention during Draghi’s final ECB press conference.

Scant interest in the ECB’s holdings as well. The ECB balance sheet doubled in size over the course of Draghi’s eight-year term. Total ECB Assets ended October 2011 at 2.333 TN euros, having already inflated dramatically from 2005’s one TN (euro). ECB assets are now at 4.687 TN ($5.230TN). There were the Long-Term Refinancing Operations (LTRO), Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT), and Quantitative Easing (QE). ECB assets surged 2.6 TN euros during the 2015 QE program that ran through the end of 2018. After a brief hiatus, the restart of QE (20 billion euro monthly) was announced in September.

Draghi will forever be known for “whatever it takes…” (“...and believe me, it will be enough”). He is hailed as having saved the euro. The dire consequences of a collapsing monetary union certainly afforded him extraordinary leeway. When the euro stabilized, he then leaned on the ECB’s inflation mandate to basically do whatever he wanted. Similar to central bankers around the world, global disinflationary forces associated with globalization, manufacturing over-investment, technological advancement, and changes in the nature of output (i.e. digitization) were used to justify unrelenting monetary stimulus and policy experimentation. When these inflation mandates were created, did anyone ever contemplate that they would be justification for creating Trillions of new “money” through the monetization of government bonds and other securities?

Central banking has a long history of prudence and conservatism. After all, risks associated with bold measures and experimentation are too great: inflation, Bubbles, wealth redistribution, loss of trust, wars and so on. The role of central banks should be well contained; the scope of mandates limited in nature. Allow central bankers to drift into the domain of bolstering securities markets and you’re asking for trouble. Any “buyer of last resort” crisis-period operation should be concluded at the earliest available juncture. Never promise a market backstop. Efforts to use inflating securities markets as a mechanism for system reflation – to boost spending, borrowing, investment and incomes – is fraught with great risk. And to have a central bank assume the role of savior for an ill-conceived monetary union guarantees precarious runaway monetary inflation.

There were momentous unintended consequences when Dr. Bernanke in 2008 unleashed his monetary experiment. Mario Draghi was a paramount one. I doubt Draghi would have even been considered for the ECB’s top post if not for Bernanke’s radical stimulus gambit. With the guardian of the world’s reserve currency having flung open the doors to rank inflationism, traditional central bankers in Germany were blown back on their heels. All the uncertainty and confusion created an opening. Articulate, diplomatic and with deep experience (including a stint as Goldman Sachs vice chairman and managing director), the smooth Italian fatefully overcame opposition from the sound money Germans to win the job.

For posterity, a few headlines. “Mario Draghi, Hailed as the Euro’s Savior, Leaves With the ECB Divided” (Wall Street Journal). “How Mario Draghi Brought Determination to Calm Market Turmoil” (Financial Times). “Mario Draghi Reaches the End of His Fight to Save the Euro” (Bloomberg). “Mario Draghi Leaves Europe Near Recession, in a Deflation Trap – and Out of Ammunition” (UK Telegraph). And my personal favorite from Axios: “ECB Head Mario Draghi Saved by the Bell as the Eurozone’s Mess Escalates.” A more forward-looking headline: “Lagarde Will Seek to Heal ECB Policy Split with Review Plan.”

Question: “What advice are you giving to Christine Lagarde – that you can tell us about anyway?”

Draghi: “…No advice is needed. She knows perfectly well what she has to do. By the way, she has a long period of time ahead during which she will have to form her own view, together with the Governing Council, about what to do.”

Bernanke and Yellen left Chairman Powell in a difficult predicament. It was up to him to move forward with a much delayed “normalization” (brought to a screeching halt in less than a year). Draghi has essentially set a policy course that will run much beyond the end of his term. There are no expectations for any so-called “normalization.” Negative deposit rates will continue indefinitely, as will QE. No difficult decisions anywhere on the horizon. The Governing Council will surely present a unified front. Christine Lagarde will have an easy time of it – that is, until trouble strikes.

The “ammo” issue will not be going away. The entire world will deeply regret having disregarded the sordid history of inflationism. And that has been the momentous unintended consequence of Bernanke and Draghi’s grand monetary experiment: once you travel down the path of using monetary stimulus to reflate financial and economic systems, there will be no turning back.

I don’t believe Draghi saved the euro – he merely postponed monetary breakdown. In so many ways, delaying the day of reckoning only makes things (much) worse. The world over the past couple weeks has experienced riots in an expanding number of countries – including Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq, Spain, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador and Hong Kong. Wait until the global Bubble bursts. Similarly, wait as it expands further, with wealth inequalities mounting and social and geopolitical stress festering.

It’s crazy that central bankers have expended such precious resources to sustain the unsustainable. What does the ECB have remaining in its arsenal to expend when the next crisis erupts? One thing: Trillions of QE. And markets are perfectly aware of this reality, which explains the historic speculative Bubble that has engulfed eurozone and European bonds. European yields have been a major force pulling international bond markets along for the ride - and why not? The next crisis will be global, with the ECB’s Trillions of QE joined by Trillions from the Fed, BOJ, PBOC, BOE, SNB and the rest.

It’s fitting that Mario Draghi’s final meeting in charge of the ECB came with the S&P500 trading right at all-time highs, while Italy’s two-year bond issue was oversubscribed with a yield of negative 0.11%. And then there was the announcement of the U.S. fiscal deficit of almost $1 TN, despite decent growth, unemployment at a 60-year low and historically low funding costs.

There are scores of developments that were only possible because of the superhuman feats of “Helicopter Ben” and “Super Mario.” Paul Krugman has referred to Draghi as “the greatest central banker of modern times.” I’ll assume Dr. Bernanke is a close runner-up.

I’m convinced China’s historic Credit Bubble would not have inflated to such extremes without unprecedented monetary stimulus from the Fed, ECB and BOJ. The Chinese banking system doesn’t inflate to $40 TN without China’s massive holdings of international reserves underpinning its currency. China’s currency doesn’t sustain its international value without devaluations in the world’s reserve currency, along with the euro and the yen. And it was all made possible by Team Bernanke and Draghi, with the resulting Chinese-led investment boom a major factor behind global downward pressure on technology and manufactured goods prices.

Consequences of unprecedented monetary stimulus are now used as justification for only more outrageous monetary stimulus. Sinking “real rates” – “the natural rate” – “r star” – the “neutral rate” – now apparently demand lower for longer (and more QE!). And markets appreciate that global central bankers are trapped – nowhere to go but ongoing aggressive stimulus. With a straight face, investment managers assert on Bloomberg and CNBC that Federal Reserve policy is “too tight.”

Even with the S&P at highs, unemployment at lows, financial conditions loose, and “money” growing crazily, the Fed apparently has no alternative but to cut rates for a third time in three months - to avoid at all cost the Scourge of Disappointing Markets. At the minimum, the Fed should signal it will now pause. Most view this as unlikely, as such a bold maneuver risks upsetting fragile markets (trading at record highs). It’s hard to believe the FOMC is comfortable having highly speculative markets dictate monetary policy, but it’s similarly difficult to see them willing to break this dynamic. Right, no appetite for rattling booming markets.

I’ll be really curious to see how history views this cast of characters. When asked about his future, Draghi said “ask my wife.” I’ll assume he’ll follow in Dr. Bernanke’s footsteps – rake in millions. It’s an absolutely wonderful time to be an ex head of one of the world’s major experimental central banks. Such powerful incentives to keep the game going – Bubbles inflating. “‘Never Give Up!’ Draghi Tells Lagarde as He Leaves ECB,” read a Reuters headline.

For the Week:

The S&P500 rose 1.2% (up 20.6% y-t-d), and the Dow added 0.7% (up 15.6%). The Utilities increased 0.6% (up 22.0%). The Banks surged another 3.7% (up 22.1%), and the Broker/Dealers rose 1.7% (up 10.6%). The Transports jumped 3.3% (up 18.4%). The S&P 400 Midcaps gained 1.2% (up 17.8%), and the small cap Russell 2000 jumped 1.5% (up 15.6%). The Nasdaq100 advanced 2.0% (up 26.8%). The Semiconductors surged 3.7% (up 42.7%). The Biotechs jumped 2.7% (up 4.1%). With bullion jumping $15, the HUI gold index rose 2.8% (up 33.3%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 1.63%. Two-year government yields rose four bps to 1.62% (down 87bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields gained five bps to 1.62% (down 89bps). Ten-year Treasury yields rose four bps to 1.80% (down 89bps). Long bond yields gained four bps to 2.29% (down 73bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields jumped six bps to 2.78% (down 71bps).

Greek 10-year yields dropped 10 bps to 1.20% (down 320bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields added two bps to 0.22% (down 150bps). Italian 10-year yields increased three bps to 0.95% (down 179ps). Spain's 10-year yields rose three bps to 0.27% (down 114bps). German bund yields added two bps to negative 0.36% (down 60bps). French yields increased two bps to negative 0.06% (down 77bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread was unchanged at 30 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields declined three bps 0.68% (down 60bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index surged 2.4% (up 8.9% y-t-d).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index gained 1.4% (up 13.9% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields dipped one basis point to negative 0.14% (down 14bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 rose 1.5% (up 21.0%). The German DAX equities index jumped 2.1% (up 22.1%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index gained 1.1% (up 10.4%). Italy's FTSE MIB index advanced 1.3% (up 23.4%). EM equities were mostly higher. Brazil's Bovespa index jumped 2.5% (up 18.0%), and Mexico's Bolsa added 0.5% (up 4.2%). South Korea's Kospi index rose 1.3% (up 2.3%). India's Sensex equities index declined 0.6% (up 18.5%). China's Shanghai Exchange increased 0.6% (up 18.5%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index jumped 1.8% (up 9.8%). Russia's MICEX equities index surged 4.4% (up 21.3%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $3.133 billion, and junk bond funds posted inflows of $1.224 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates gained six bps to 3.75% (down 111bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates rose three bps to 3.18% (down 111bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates increased five bps to 3.40% (down 74bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates down a basis point to 4.11% (down 67bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week increased $23.5bn to $3.933 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $203bn, or 4.9%. Fed Credit inflated $1.122 Trillion, or 40%, over the past 363 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt rose $7.6bn last week to $3.420 TN. "Custody holdings" fell $14.7bn y-o-y, or 0.4%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply gained $15.2bn last week to a record $15.161 TN. "Narrow money" gained $922bn, or 6.5%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $1.8bn. Total Checkable Deposits jumped $56.8bn, while Savings Deposits fell $46.9bn. Small Time Deposits were little changed. Retail Money Funds increased $2.9bn.

Total money market fund assets rose $15.6bn to $3.486 TN. Money Funds gained $599bn y-o-y, or 20.7%.

Total Commercial Paper gained $8.6bn to $1.088 TN. CP was little changed year-over-year.

Currency Watch:

The U.S. dollar index recovered 0.7% to 97.831 (up 1.7% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Brazilian real increased 2.7%, the South African rand 1.1%, the South Korean won 0.7%, the Canadian dollar 0.5%, the Mexican peso 0.2% and the Singapore dollar 0.1%. On the downside, the British pound declined 1.2%, the Swiss franc 1.0%, the euro 0.8%, the New Zealand dollar 0.5%, the Australian dollar 0.5%, the Norwegian krone 0.4%, the Swedish krone 0.4% and the Japanese yen 0.2%. The Chinese renminbi increased 0.23% versus the dollar this week (down 2.65% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

The Bloomberg Commodities Index gained 1.1% this week (up 3.3% y-t-d). Spot Gold added 1.0% to $1,505 (up 17.3%). Silver jumped 2.6% to $18.035 (up 16.1%). WTI crude surged $2.88 to $56.66 (up 25%). Gasoline rose 3.1% (up 26%), while Natural Gas declined 0.9% (down 22%). Copper gained 1.5% (up 2%). Wheat dropped 2.7% (up 3%). Corn fell 1.1% (up 3%).

Market Instability Watch:

October 21 – Bloomberg (Tracy Alloway and Stephen Spratt): “JPMorgan… says the money-market stress that sent short-term borrowing rates surging last month is likely to get much worse despite the Federal Reserve’s attempts to inject billions of dollars into the financial system… JPMorgan says it’s not convinced the Fed has resolved the issues in the funding markets, according to a note from analysts led by Joshua Younger… ‘Given the benefits of our newfound perspective, we recommend viewing these moves as highlighting the limitations of the Fed’s chosen solution to their operational issues… With year-end coming up, this is all likely to get much worse, in our view, before it gets better.’”

October 19 – Financial Times (Chris Flood): “Bond funds holding assets worth about $1.7tn could face difficulties in repaying investors promptly if volatility increases, according to the IMF, which warned that problems in fixed-income markets could potentially destabilise the global financial system. The warning coincides with mounting fears that a dangerous pricing bubble has developed in fixed-income markets where bonds worth $15tn — about a quarter of the debt issued by governments and companies globally — are trading with negative yields. Negative yields imply that prices have risen so high that investors will get back less than they paid, via interest and principal, if they hold the bond to maturity. Creditors, in effect, pay to hold debt. This bizarre reversal of normal practice has triggered alarm bells because bonds are a core holding for institutional investors worldwide.”

October 24 – Wall Street Journal (Mike Bird): “China’s property developers have used falling U.S. interest rates this year to issue swaths of dollar debt. Yet the state of the country’s housing market—now past its prime—suggests investors would do well to steer clear. Developers in Hong Kong and mainland China account for 41% of the net issuance in Asian dollar-denominated bonds included in the ICE Bank of America Merrill Lynch Asian Dollar index this year, rising to 67% in the high-yield segment, where they now make up almost half of the total market. Even investors who haven’t opted to take direct exposure to the sector may now find it creeping into their portfolios: 14.1% of the same broad Asian Dollar Index is now made up of Chinese and Hong Kong property bonds, up from 11.2% at the end of 2018… Average yields on high-yield Chinese bonds broadly have fallen considerably this year, to around 8.4% from a high of 11.7% as recently as November 2018…”

October 22 – Financial Times (Robert Smith): “The longer that central banks have tried to pump up the economy by keeping interest rates low, the staler the jokes about ‘the formerly high-yield bond market’ have grown. The term was originally coined to make a virtue of a negative. Bankers began calling debt from companies with less than pristine credit ratings ‘high yield’ — instead of the more pejorative term, ‘junk’ — to emphasise their chunky coupons. Ever since the European Central Bank began buying investment-grade rated corporate bonds three years ago, however, as part of a general effort to boost growth and inflation, high-yield bonds have often belied their name… Still, it is striking to see just how tiny yields on some European junk bonds have become. Crown Holdings on Tuesday raised what many onlookers believe is the lowest yielding junk bond ever seen in Europe, raising €550m of four-year debt at just 0.75%.”

Trump Administration Watch:

October 19 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “The U.S. government ended fiscal year 2019 with the largest budget deficit in seven years as gains in tax receipts were offset by higher spending and growing debt service payments… It is the first time since the early 1980s that the budget gap has widened over four consecutive years… The U.S. budget deficit widened to $984 billion, which was 4.6% of the nation’s gross domestic product. The previous fiscal year deficit was $779 billion, with a deficit-to-GDP-ratio of 3.8%. Total receipts increased by 4% to $3.5 trillion but outlays rose by 8.2% to $4.4 trillion.”

October 24 – Reuters (Susan Heavey): “An initial pact on U.S-China trade will include much of a scrapped May deal’s agreement regarding intellectual property and will target enforcement mechanisms, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said…, adding that he hopes the Chinese negotiate in ‘good faith.’ ‘The good news about this phase one ... is it adopted virtually the entire chapter in the deal last May that they reneged on for IP,’ Navarro told Fox Business… ‘Practically it means, if they steal our IP we’ll be able to take retaliatory action without them retaliating.’”

October 23 – New York Times (Ana Swanson): “The Trump administration is divided over how aggressively to restrict China’s access to United States technology as it looks for ways to protect national security without undercutting American industry. President Trump and many of his top advisers have identified China’s technological ambitions as a national security threat and want to limit the type of American technology that can be sold overseas. But a plan to do just that has encountered stiff resistance from some in the administration, who argue that imposing too many constraints could backfire and undermine American industry. The debate underscores the extent to which Mr. Trump’s trade fight with China has left many issues unresolved. The president announced plans this month to sign a ‘Phase 1’ trade agreement that would require China to buy more farm products and agree to some technology protections in exchange for a pause in new American tariffs.”

October 21 – Reuters (Susan Heavey): “White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow on Monday expressed optimism about ongoing U.S.-China trade talks, and said that tariffs scheduled for December could be withdrawn if negotiations continue to go well. The talks, which are expected to continue with calls this week, were ‘looking pretty good,’ Kudlow said…”

Federal Reserve Watch:

October 24 – Wall Street Journal (Michael S. Derby): “The Fed’s expanded offerings of liquidity to the financial system saw strong demand Thursday from eligible banks. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York intervened twice Thursday morning with what is called an overnight repurchase-agreement operation and via a 14-day repo operation. The New York Fed had said Wednesday it was raising its minimum offerings for overnight repos to $120 billion from a minimum of $75 billion, with the next two-term repo operation increased to $45 billion from a minimum of $35 billion. The Thursday term repo saw dealers submit $62.15 billion in securities and the Fed take in $45 billion in Treasurys, agency and mortgage securities. The overnight operation was also well bid, with dealers offering and the Fed taking $89.154 billion in securities. The Thursday overnight repo operation was much bigger than the one-day operation Wednesday, where the Fed added $49.845 billion in one-day liquidity.”

October 22 – Financial Times (Colby Smith): “The Federal Reserve could soon own 12% of the market for US Treasury bills, according to Oxford Economics… Earlier this month the Fed announced it would buy $60bn of Treasury bills… each month until the end of the second quarter of next year. When the Fed buys bills to expand its balance sheet, it credits commercial banks with an equal amount of reserves. The intervention aims to replenish those reserves to a level where even a spike in demand for cash will not send short-term borrowing costs significantly higher… In order to get reserves back to the roughly $1.5tn level it says is adequate for the system to run smoothly by early 2020, the Fed needs to buy approximately $300bn of the shorter-dated debt.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

October 22 – Wall Street Journal (Sam Goldfarb): “An array of business challenges is hitting low-rated companies across the U.S. economy, driving selling in the bottom tier of the corporate-debt market that contrasts with gains in stocks and other riskier assets. In recent months, consumer demands for wireless phones and high-speed internet have helped push one landline telecom company, Windstream Holdings Inc., into bankruptcy protection and another, Frontier Communications Corp., into restructuring talks with its creditors. Meanwhile, competition from cheap natural gas and renewable-energy sources has caused at least seven coal producers to file for chapter 11 protection over the past year. Opioid lawsuits and the threat of legislation that would curb surprise medical bills have exposed vulnerabilities at some highly leveraged health-care companies. Retailers continue to be pressured by the shift to online shopping. And a wave of financial distress has again hit the oil patch due in part to persistently low commodity prices.”

October 21 – Wall Street Journal (Gunjan Banerji): “Stocks and bonds have staged a rare simultaneous ascent, logging the best performance in a quarter-century. The S&P 500 has advanced 20% in 2019, while Treasurys have rallied. The last time the benchmark stock index rose more than 10% while the Treasury yield fell more than a percentage point in the first three quarters of the year was in 1995, according to Dow Jones Market Data. That trend continued as the fourth quarter kicked off… In data going back to 1984, the S&P 500, crude oil and gold have never jumped at least 10% together through the first three quarters of the year while the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell more than 1 percentage point…”

October 21 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang and Sarah Ponczek): “High on the list of things bulls dread this earnings season is that it become the scene of a big downward cut in next year’s estimates. It happened last year, helping foment the worst fourth quarter of the bull market. And though it’s very early, it’s happening now. Despite a week of decent results, analysts last week chopped estimates for combined S&P 500 earnings in 2020 by almost $1, to $178.40 a share. Down 0.5%, the decline was the biggest for any week since January…”

October 22 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “U.S. home sales fell more than expected in September as the market continues to struggle with a dearth of properties for sale, especially for cheaper homes. The National Association of Realtors said… existing home sales fell 2.2% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.38 million units last month, reversing two straight months of gains. August’s sales pace was upwardly revised to 5.50 million units… There were 1.83 million homes in the market last month, a decline of 2.7% compared to a year ago. It was the fourth consecutive month of year-on-year inventory declines.”

October 23 – Bloomberg (Prashant Gopal): “Home prices in the U.S. are up 25% in five years, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller index. Unlike during the property fever of the 2000s, new construction has been slow, so policymakers and even employers are reaching for ways to make housing affordable. There’s a similar trend in global cities.”

October 24 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “Sales of new U.S. single-family homes fell in September as low inventories continue to weigh on sales even as prices saw the biggest monthly fall in five years. …New home sales declined 0.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 701,000 units last month, matching expectations… The median new house price fell 8.8% to $299,400 in September from a year ago.”

October 23 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Mortgage rates have been on a roller coaster in recent months, and last week’s climb caused a drop in mortgage demand. Mortgage application volume fell 11.9% compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index… Mortgage applications to purchase a home, which are less sensitive to weekly rate moves, fell 4% for the week but were 6% higher compared with the same week one year ago.”

October 24 – Reuters (Lindsay Dunsmuir): “New orders for key U.S.-made capital goods fell more than expected in September and shipments also declined, a sign that business investment remains soft amid the continuing fallout from the U.S.-China trade war. …Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, which are seen as a measure of business spending plans on equipment, fell 0.5% last month on weak demand for transportation equipment, motor vehicle parts and computers and electronic products.”

October 19 – New York Times (Noam Scheiber): “At first glance, it may seem like a paradox: Even as the economy rides a 10-year winning streak, tens of thousands of workers across the country, from General Motors employees to teachers in Chicago, are striking to win better wages and benefits. But, according to those on strike, the strong growth is precisely the point. Autoworkers, teachers and other workers accepted austerity when the economy was in a free fall, expecting to share in the gains once the recovery took hold. In recent years, however, many of those workers have come to believe that they fell for a sucker’s bet, as they watched their employers grow flush while their own incomes barely budged.”

October 23 – Reuters (David Randall): “U.S. companies are responding to the lowest unemployment rate in almost 50 years by increasing their focus on automation in order to maintain healthy margins as labor costs tick higher, a Reuters analysis of corporate earnings transcripts shows. The attempt to save money through technology does not come down to just installing more robots in factories. Instead, companies appear to be confronting the lack of low-cost workers by investing in software and machines that can perform tasks ranging from human resources management to filling prescriptions.”

October 25 – Bloomberg (Adam Tempkin): “A growing percentage of Santander Consumer USA Holdings Inc.’s subprime auto loans are turning out to be clunkers soon after the cars are driven off the lot. Some loans made last year are souring at the fastest rate since 2008, with more consumers than usual defaulting within the first few months of borrowing, according to analysts at Moody’s... Many of those loans were packaged into bonds. Santander Consumer is one of the largest subprime auto lenders in the market.”

October 23 – Bloomberg (Reade Pickert): “The economy has added millions of jobs and pay gains have accelerated in recent years, but Americans aren’t crazy about their work. A poll released Wednesday showed just 40% of employed Americans say they’re in good jobs, versus 44% in mediocre jobs and 16% in bad jobs. How respondents ranked the quality of their job had a strong correlation with their quality of life: Seventy-nine percent of workers in good jobs report a high quality of life, versus only a third of those in bad jobs.”

October 22 – Reuters (Dominic Roshan): “U.S. companies’ borrowing to spend on capital investments rose 18% in September from a year earlier, the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) said… Borrowings rose 9% from the previous month. ‘Consumer spending continues to fuel the economy, notwithstanding signs of caution and concern raised by some over the impact of trade frictions with China, a pull-back in the U.S. manufacturing sector and recent geopolitical events in Syria, Hong Kong and elsewhere,’ ELFA Chief Executive Officer Ralph Petta said…”

China Watch:

October 25 – Bloomberg (Carolynn Look and Jenny Leonard): “China fired back at Vice President Mike Pence’s criticism on human rights, calling his speech ‘lies’ and chiding him for ignoring U.S. problems like racism and wealth disparity. Pence… gave a long-anticipated speech in which he criticized China’s actions against protesters in Hong Kong while calling for greater engagement between the world’s two biggest economies. He said the U.S. stands with demonstrators in Hong Kong and accused Beijing of curtailing the rights and liberties of the city’s residents. Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for China’s foreign ministry, blasted Pence’s ‘arrogance’ and said no force would stop the country’s progress. She accused him of seeking ‘to disrupt China’s unity or internal stability’ and called Hong Kong, Taiwan and the far west region of Xinjiang ‘internal affairs.’ ‘The U.S. has already abandoned and cast aside its morality and credibility,’ Hua said. ‘We hope these Americans can look at themselves in the mirror to fix their own problems and get their own house in order.’”

October 21 – Reuters (Ben Blanchard): “China and the United States have achieved some progress in their trade talks, Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng said…, and any problem could be resolved as long as both sides respected each other. No country can prosper without working with other nations, Le said… The world wants China and the United States to end their trade war, he said. That required openness rather than a ‘de-coupling’ of countries or a new Cold War.”

October 21 – Bloomberg (Elena Popina and Tian Chen): “China’s central bank used open-market operations to inject the largest amount of cash into the banking system since May, as upcoming corporate tax payments tighten liquidity conditions. The People’s Bank of China on Tuesday net injected 250 billion yuan ($35bn) via seven-day reverse repurchase agreements…”

October 20 – Reuters (Yawen Chen and Ryan Woo): “New home prices in China grew at a steady pace in September, with fewer cities reporting price gains, a relief for policymakers who remain wary of high debt and bubble risk and are refraining from stimulating the sector as the economy cools… Average new home prices in China’s 70 major cities rose 0.5% in September from August… Home prices in September rose 8.4% from a year earlier, slowing from an 8.8% gain in August, and the slowest since September last year.”

October 20 – Bloomberg: “China’s home-price growth slowed for a fourth month in September, as cash-strapped developers cut prices to speed up sales… Prices in the secondary market, which is free from government intervention, suggest the slowdown may be more even more pronounced. Twenty-eight cities saw a drop in secondary house prices, the most in 3 1/2 years…”

October 20 – Reuters (Ryan Woo): “Many privately held firms in Shandong, China’s third-biggest province by economic output, are struggling to repay short-term debt due to declining industry fundamentals, entangled cross guarantees and ill-managed investments, S&P Global Ratings said. China’s slowing economy and enforcement of environmental protection rules have pressured the profitability and cash flow of Shandong companies in over-capacity sectors including oil refining, petrochemicals, steel, aluminium and textiles, S&P said.”

October 21 – Wall Street Journal (Jacky Wong): “A twist on traditional bank deposits has become wildly popular in China. Authorities are reining it in, once again treating the financial system’s symptoms without addressing the disease. The country’s banking regulator laid out tighter rules… on regulating so-called structured deposits, which amounted to 10.8 trillion yuan ($1.5 trillion) as of September. Yields on such deposits are linked to the prices of other assets from foreign currencies to commodities so they could potentially offer higher returns than conventional deposits. The amount outstanding had doubled since the end of 2016, outpacing 27% growth in traditional deposits overall. The new rules will make it harder for customers to put money into such deposits while creating more stringent criteria on who can offer them… Smaller banks will be particularly hard hit by the latest crackdown. Two-thirds of structured deposits in China are with them—some 8.2% of deposits…”

October 22 – Bloomberg (Manuel Baigorri): “China Inc. is struggling to offload overseas businesses and the accompanying debt in an increasingly volatile market. In just a few weeks, companies from yacht makers to luxury clothing and pizza outlets -- acquired by Chinese firms in recent years -- have either scrapped planned initial public offerings or sought alternatives to reduce their debt piles. Ferretti SpA, the Italian superyacht maker controlled by China’s SHIG–Weichai Group, shelved its planned Milan listing last week… Shandong Ruyi Technology Group Co., which spent over $4 billion on purchases including U.K. trench coat maker Aquascutum, introduced a local state-owned firm as its second-largest shareholder amid rising pressure to repay debt. Chinese firms started selling off assets two years ago when the government tightened curbs on capital outflows and stepped up scrutiny on foreign acquisitions…”

October 20 – Reuters (Aislinn Laing and Natalia A. Ramos Miranda): “China’s defence minister, Wei Fenghe, said… that resolving the ‘Taiwan question’ is his country’s ‘greatest national interest’, and that no force could prevent China’s ‘reunification’. Separatist activities are doomed to failure, Wei said... Tensions between China and Taiwan have ratcheted up ahead of the self-ruled island’s presidential election in January. Taiwan is China’s most sensitive territorial issue. ‘China is the only major country in the world that is yet to be completely reunified,’ Wei said.”

Central Banking Watch:

October 24 – Financial Times (Ayla Jean Yackley): “Turkey’s central bank… cut its benchmark interest rate by 2.5 percentage points, deeper than economists had expected, citing an improving inflation outlook.”

October 23 – Reuters (Dave Sherwood): “Chile´s central bank… slashed its benchmark interest rate to 1.75% from 2%, its third major rate cut since June, as protests over economic inequality rocked the South American nation.”

October 21 – Bloomberg (Dana Khraiche): “Lebanon’s central bank will slash $2.9 billion from the country’s local-currency interest payments and commercial lenders will pay a one-time tax under a government plan to wipe out the budget deficit almost entirely next year. Lebanon’s prime minister, finance minister and central bank governor will see the program through, the secretary general of the council of ministers, Mohammad Makiyeh, said in a televised news conference…”

Brexit Watch:

October 24 – Reuters (Kate Holton, Elizabeth Piper and Kylie MacLellan): “Prime Minister Boris Johnson called on Thursday for a general election on Dec. 12 to break Britain’s Brexit impasse, conceding for the first time he will not meet his ‘do or die’ deadline to leave the European Union next week. Johnson said in a letter to opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn he would give parliament more time to approve his Brexit deal but lawmakers must back a December election, Johnson’s third attempt to try to force a snap vote.”

October 24 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge and Michel Rose): “The United Kingdom will ultimately leave the European Union on the terms of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s deal, a senior Downing Street source said on Thursday, as EU leaders mulled offering London a three-month flexible Brexit delay. More than three years after voting 52%-48% to be the first sovereign country to leave the European project, the United Kingdom is waiting for the EU to decide how long the latest delay to Brexit should be.”

Europe Watch:

October 24 – Market Watch (Steve Goldstein): “The German economy is continuing to struggle…, with the difficulties of its export-oriented base extending to the service sector as global trade dries up. The IHS Markit flash German manufacturing PMI inched up to 41.9 in October from September’s decade-worst 41.7… The flash German services PMI meanwhile fell to a 37-month low of 51.2 in October from 51.4.”

EM Watch:

October 23 – Financial Times (Michael Stott): “Troops on the streets in Chile. Riots in Ecuador. Street protests in Argentina. Populism on the march in Brazil and Mexico. Bolivians burning ballot boxes. Political turmoil in Paraguay and Peru. While each of the crises breaking out across Latin America has some unique characteristics, there is one overarching reason: this is the world’s worst-performing region in terms of economic output. ‘Latin America is just not growing,’ said Shannon K O’Neil, senior fellow for Latin American Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations… ‘So the pie for everyone to share is not getting any bigger . . . It is not about ‘are they going left or right’ — even the best politicians are finding that there is not a lot to hand out, there is not a lot to work with.’ Chile is perhaps the best example of this phenomenon. Although it is one of Latin America’s best economic performers this year and frequently cited as a model of good macroeconomic policy, the capital Santiago experienced its worst violence in three decades last weekend as citizens vented their anger at entrenched wealth inequality and the high cost of living.”

October 22 – Bloomberg (Divya Patil): “A health check on India’s shadow banks shows the crisis in the industry is far from over. Indicators from liquidity to share performance show weakness… In recent weeks, another financier defaulted, it got harder for investors to cut losses in the sector’s debt and a mortgage lender altered financing plans due to waning appetite for shadow bank bonds. Banking system liquidity stayed lower last month, the premium that investors demand to hold shadow lender bonds over sovereign notes remained elevated and a custom gauge of shares of 20 financial firms and other companies impacted by the crisis was stagnant.”

October 22 – Bloomberg (Saritha Rai): “The dust had barely settled at Infosys Ltd. when Asia’s No. 2 software services firm once more found itself grappling with a potential leadership crisis. For the second time in about as many years, the Indian icon synonymous with the country’s technological ascendancy is being forced to answer accusations of impropriety. In the most recent of a stream of grievances aired anonymously over past years, whistle-blowers accused Chief Executive Officer Salil Parekh of instigating employees to inflate profits, mis-represent the lucrativeness of deals, even of abusing travel privileges.”

October 23 – Bloomberg (Anurag Joshi and Rahul Satija): “Indian companies have defaulted on a record 76 billion rupees ($1.1bn) of local-currency and international bonds so far this year after the shadow bank crisis triggered a credit squeeze, and it doesn’t look like the worst is over. Those firms that delayed or missed debt payments in 2019 still have the equivalent of $17 billion of notes and loans outstanding including the defaulted securities…”

Japan Watch:

October 24 – Reuters (Daniel Leussink): “Japanese factory activity shrank at the fastest pace in over three years in October, largely hurt by slumping new orders and output, in yet another sign of broadening economic cracks in the face of slowing global demand and trade frictions… The Jibun Bank Flash Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) in October contracted at the quickest pace since June 2016, slipping to 48.5 on a seasonally adjusted basis from a final 48.9 in the previous month.”

October 20 – Reuters (Daniel Leussink): “Japan’s exports contracted for a 10th straight month in September, adding to speculation the central bank could ease monetary policy as soon as next week to support an economy hit by a slowdown in global demand… Exports in September slumped 5.2% from a year earlier…, dragged down by car and airplane parts to the United States and semiconductor production equipment to South Korea.”

Global Bubble Watch:

October 21 – CNBC (Yen Nee Lee): “Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of U.S. banking giant J.P. Morgan Chase, told CNBC-TV18 that lowering interest rates is not a game-changer in driving up borrowing and lifting economic growth. ‘I think when they did it earlier on, there was a notion that we are saving the European Union, the monetary union, which is one thing. I think as a permanent part of policy, it is a really bad idea. It has adverse consequences which we do not fully understand,’ he said… Dimon joins the ranks of an increasing number of business executives and economists speaking up against adopting such a policy for long, as central banks around the world try to boost growth by continuing to slash interest rates, some into negative territory.”

October 21 – Bloomberg (Hannah Levitt): “More than half of the world’s banks are already in a weak position before any downturn that may be coming, according to a report from… McKinsey & Co. A majority of banks globally may not be economically viable because their returns on equity aren’t keeping pace with costs, McKinsey said in its annual review of the industry… It urged firms to take steps such as developing technology, farming out operations and bulking up through mergers ahead of a potential economic slowdown. ‘We believe we’re in the late economic cycle and banks need to make bold moves now because they are not in great shape,’ Kausik Rajgopal, a senior partner at McKinsey, said… ‘In the late cycle, nobody can afford to rest on their laurels.’”

October 23 – Bloomberg (Jan-Henrik Foerster and Nabila Ahmed): “In the M&A world, autumn is rainmaking season. This year, it’s looking like a drought. Takeover volumes since the start of September have fallen to the lowest level in eight years… The U.S. Labor Day holiday is typically the start of fall dealmaking, so that’s left bankers to worry whether CEOs will be able to shrug off the year’s anxieties and again consider transactions… There have been about $201 billion in takeovers announced globally since Sept. 1, down 33% year-on-year. That’s the lowest level for that period since 2011… And it isn’t just autumn jitters. Global takeover volumes have fallen 12% since the start of the year, to $1.8 trillion, with communications, utilities, energy and financial services deals down sharply.”

October 20 – Bloomberg (Jason Scott): “China should put the brakes on its lending in the South Pacific to avoid lumping economically vulnerable nations with unsustainable debt, according to a report released by an Australian think tank. ‘The sheer scale of China’s lending and its lack of strong institutional mechanisms to protect the debt sustainability of borrowing countries poses clear risks,’ the Lowy Institute said in a report... ‘China cannot remain a major lender in the Pacific at the same scale as in the past without fueling significant’ dangers, it said.”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

October 20 – Wall Street Journal (Gunjan Banerji and Cezary Podkul): “In August, bond-ratings firms Moody’s Corp. and S&P Global Inc. predicted that Newell Brands Inc. would soon reduce its heavy debt load, allowing it to keep its coveted investment-grade bond rating. They made the same prediction in 2018. And in 2017. And in 2016. And in 2015, when the company announced a big merger that quadrupled its debt. Yet bond ratings for the maker of Rubbermaid containers and Sharpie markers haven’t budged… Amid an epic corporate borrowing spree, ratings firms have given leeway to other big borrowers like Kraft Heinz Co. and Campbell Soup Co., allowing their balance sheets to swell. ‘It’s pretty eye-popping if you’ve been doing this for 20-plus years, to see how much more leverage a number of these companies can incur with the same credit rating,’ said Greg Haendel, a portfolio manager at Tortoise… ‘There’s definitely some ratings inflation.’”

October 23 - Bloomberg Businessweek (Lisa Lee, Sally Bakewell and Katherine Doherty): “The collateralized loan obligation, or CLO, is one of those funky creations of Wall Street wizardry that have been around for decades. Just like its close cousin, the much-castigated collateralized debt obligation, it’s a tool used to package a bunch of high-risk debt together—mortgage bonds for CDOs, corporate loans for CLOs—so they can be easily sold to investors hungry for juicy returns. Unlike the CDO, the CLO made it through the financial crisis largely unscathed and has boomed in the decade since. Fueled by the unprecedented $3.5 trillion wave of private equity buyout deals during the past decade, and rock-bottom U.S. interest rates that only stoked investors’ willingness to gamble on riskier assets, the CLO market has more than doubled since 2010, to $660 billion. By providing abundant cheap funding to the less creditworthy end of the market, it’s helped grease the wheels of the longest economic expansion in U.S. history.”

October 20 – Wall Street Journal (Christopher M. Matthews): “Desperate for cash, shale companies are trying to court investors with a new and potentially risky financial instrument that resembles mortgage bonds. The companies are floating a type of asset-backed security that involves existing oil and gas wells. Producers transfer ownership interests in the wells to special entities that then issue bonds to be paid off by the output from the wells over time. Raisa Energy LLC, a Denver-based oil-and-gas company backed by private equity firm EnCap Investments LP, closed the first such offering in September and several others are planned… The bonds will pay nearly 6% interest on the best quality wells, the people said, with higher rates on riskier assets.”

October 19 – Bloomberg (Lisa Lee): “Leveraged loan investors are getting increasingly angsty, and their fear may be a harbinger of more pain coming in credit markets. Money managers are plowing into the least risky junk debt they can find while avoiding the junkiest. Since the start of October, lower rated B loans have dropped about 1%, while less risky BB rated loans have lost just 0.26% through Wednesday. An index of riskier loans is hovering near its lowest level relative to higher-rated loans since mid-2017, according to Credit Suisse… Leveraged loans of all stripes are performing worse than junk bonds, which have risen about 0.1% this month through Wednesday.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

October 20 – Bloomberg (Nisha Gopalan): “In its desperation to create more tech stars, South Korea’s government bears some of the blame for spreading moral hazard in the nascent local hedge-fund industry. Lime Asset Management Co., the country’s biggest hedge fund, has frozen $710 million in withdrawals and come under regulatory investigation while struggling to meet redemptions in a dangerously too-good-to-fail form of convertible bonds aimed at boosting tech startups. The government encouraged Lime and other funds to load up with such instruments, but they have found it extremely difficult to exit when a surge of investors have tried to pull out their money.”

Geopolitical Watch:

October 22 – Reuters (Darya Korsunskaya and Tuvan Gumrukcu): “Syrian and Russian forces will deploy in northeast Syria to remove Kurdish YPG fighters and their weapons from the border with Turkey under a deal agreed on Tuesday which both Moscow and Ankara hailed as a triumph. Hours after the deal was announced, the Turkish defense ministry said that the United States had told Turkey the withdrawal of Kurdish militants was complete from the ‘safe zone’ Ankara demands in northern Syria.”

October 19 – Reuters (Anne Marie Roantree and Marius Zaharia): “Police and pro-democracy protesters battled on the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday as thousands of people rallied in several districts in defiance of attempts by the authorities to crack down on demonstrators… Banks and other businesses linked to China were attacked and bonfires lit on Nathan Road, a main road running through the heart of the Kowloon peninsula. Police fired volleys of tear gas and baton charged demonstrators, and also hosed them down from water cannon.”

October 20 – Bloomberg (Juan Pablo Spinetto): “Latin America, the traditional poster child for political risk in financial markets, is back as a source of concern for investors. Chilean President Sebastian Pinera on Saturday became the second leader this month to declare a state of emergency, his hand forced by violent protests in South America’s wealthiest country after an increase in transportation costs. In Ecuador, unrest blew up after President Lenin Moreno ended fuel subsidies. Argentina, meanwhile, is back in the grip of capital controls after voters revolted against President Mauricio Macri’s budget-cutting agenda and handed his opponents a commanding lead ahead of presidential elections on Oct. 27.”

October 20 – Reuters (Aislinn Laing and Natalia A. Ramos Miranda): “Chile’s government will extend a state of emergency to cities in its north and south, President Sebastian Pinera said…, after at least seven people were killed amid violent clashes and arson attacks over the weekend. ‘We are at war against a powerful enemy, who is willing to use violence without any limits,’ Pinera said in a late-night televised statement at army headquarters…”

October 20 – Reuters (Samia Nakhoul and Laila Bassam): “Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri agreed on Sunday a package of reforms with government partners to ease an economic crisis that has sparked protests aimed at ousting a ruling elite seen as riddled with corruption and cronyism.”

October 21 – Reuters (Allison Martell): “Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau held on to his job in Monday’s election, securing his spot as one of the world’s few high-profile progressive leaders, but tarnished by scandal and with his power diminished.”