Friday, November 18, 2016

Weekly Commentary: As Exciting as the 1930s

“One trouble with every inflationary creation of credit is that it acts like a delayed time bomb. There is an interval of indefinite and sometimes considerable length between the injection of the stimulant and the resulting speculation. Likewise, there is an interval of a similarly indefinite length of time between the injection of the remedial serum and the lowering of the speculative fever. Once the fever gets under way it generates its own toxics.” “The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover - The Great Depression 1929-1941”

There are few apt comparisons to today’s extraordinary backdrop. Late in the “Roaring Twenties” period offers the closest parallel – the global nature of vulnerabilities and faltering booms; policymaker confusion and increasing ineffectiveness; fundamental deterioration in the face of impenetrable speculative impulses. It was by 1929 deeply embedded in speculator psyche that the enlightened Federal Reserve would never allow a market or economic collapse.

Top Federal Reserve officials (Yellen, Dudley, Bullard) this week suggested that Trump policies specifically target productivity. It must be a tough pill to swallow for the Fed to admit that their policies have succeeded in stimulating Credit growth and record securities prices, while coming up dreadfully short with respect to productivity gains.

By the late 1920s it had become an objective of the Federal Reserve to stimulate productive Credit. While there was deepening concern for market speculation, the weakened economic backdrop had the Fed determined to support ongoing Credit expansion.

An increasingly entrenched speculative Bubble had over years fomented financial and economic fragilities. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve’s focus on the increasingly vulnerable economy worked to underpin speculator enthusiasm. Even as the fundamental backdrop turned alarming, a manic inflationary psychology grew only more powerfully entrenched in the marketplace. In the end, efforts to promote productive Credit fatefully prolonged the life of “Terminal Phase” Bubble excess.

November 13 – Bloomberg: “China’s new home sales growth slowed in October from a year earlier, suggesting the push by policy makers to rein in runaway prices is getting traction. The value of homes sold rose 38% to 941 billion yuan ($138bn) last month from a year earlier… The increase compares with a 61% gain the previous month. Slower home sales have helped moderate credit growth. New medium- and long-term household loans, mostly residential mortgages, stood at 489.1 billion yuan in October, down from 571.3 billion yuan in September…”

Chinese policymaking – confronting the Fed’s late-twenties (and Japan’s late-eighties) dilemma – badly flounders. Timid efforts to rein in its apartment Bubble were ineffective. This led to bolder moves to tighten mortgage Credit, which ironically spurred a speculative rotation and resulting equities Bubble. When the stock market Bubble burst, reflationary efforts then stoked spectacular real estate (mortgage Credit and prices) inflation. More recent efforts to cool the housing Bubble fueled major blow-off speculative excess throughout the Chinese bond market. Efforts to bolster a waning economic boom will see record Credit expansion this year approaching $3.0 TN.

It’s this global perspective of ongoing rapid Credit and unwieldy liquidity expansion in the face of waning economic prospects that helps explain the Trump Market Phenomenon. Only time will tell if President Trump is the second coming of Ronald Reagan. It’s worth noting that 10-year Treasury yields were around 12% for the Reagan inauguration (on the way to almost 16% by Sept. ’81). While starting to trend lower, CPI was still running about 10%. The S&P500 was trading at 135, just starting to crawl out of a prolonged bear market.

I’m all for responsible deregulation in the real economy. The financial sector is a different story. Count me skeptical that there will be some incredible wave of financial deregulation that will spur the golden age of financial stocks and a prosperity renaissance. The Reagan era of deregulation coincided with momentous financial innovation.

We’re now into the third decade of what has been a period of monumental financial innovation. It’s worth noting some key sector metrics from the now multi-decade financial transformation. When President Reagan came into office, the Fed’s balance sheet (from Z.1) was at $174 billion – compared to Q2 2016’s $4.524 TN. Money Market fund assets were only $76 billion (vs. $2.703 TN); Mutual Funds $656 billion (vs. $13.209 TN); Closed-End & Exchange-Trade Funds $7 billion (vs. $2.491 TN); GSE’s assets $175 billion (vs. $6.568 TN); Agency- & GSE-Backed Mortgage Pools $100 billion (vs. $1.844 TN); Asset-backed Securities $0 (vs. $1.285 TN); REITs $3 billion (vs. $1.021 TN); Security Brokers/Dealers $78 billion (vs. $3.117 TN); Funding Corps $3 billion (vs. $1.618 TN); Fed Funds & Security Repos $152 billion (vs. $3.769 TN).

Even more amazingly, Total Debt Securities have inflated from $2.0 TN to $40.581 TN. Outstanding Treasury Securities have grown from $736 billion to $15.385 TN. Agency- and GSE-Backed Securities from $191 billion to $8.324 TN. Total Mortgages have increased from $1.458 TN to $13.974 TN. Corporate & Foreign Bonds have expanded from $511 billion to $12.030 TN, with Corporate Equities ballooning from $1.495 TN to $36.112 TN.

Notably, Household Net Worth stood at $8.9 TN, or about 300% of GDP, to end 1980. By the end of Q2 2016, Household Net Worth had inflated to $85.3 TN, or near a record 463% of GDP. While continued craziness can be expected to dominate the prolonged Terminal Phase of this multi-decade Bubble, I highly doubt we’re at the cusp of some deregulation-induced financial resurgence. Been there; done that.

When analyzing today’s markets, we need to keep a few things in perspective. One, global central bankers continue to provide market liquidity (QE) to the tune of about $2.0 TN annualized. Second, Chinese Credit is expanding at a record pace of about $3.0 TN annualized, with significant ongoing “capital” flight. Years of this unprecedented liquidity backdrop have fundamentally altered the way markets function (as we’ve again been reminded).

Over the past three months, 10-year Treasury yields have surged 82 bps (to 2.36%). UK yields have jumped 90 bps, and Canadian yields have advanced 54 bps (1.57%). German yields have risen 35 bps (27 bps), while French yield have jumped 62 bps (75bps). Italian yields have surged 102 bps (2.09%).

In the face of surging yields, U.S. stocks have run to record highs. Most global equities indices rallied as bond prices sank. However, without the $2.0 TN of ongoing QE the world would be much less hospitable. Instead of the typical bond-induced de-risking/de-leveraging episode pressuring stocks and risk assets more generally, a very different dynamic has evolved: Rising bond yields instead spur a frantic rotation into equities. QE has numbed fear, while impelling speculation.

Let’s take this one step further. When it became apparent that a Trump win would not trigger the anticipated intense bout of “Risk Off,” markets immediately erupted into a speculative melee. Where were the shorts trapped? What stocks, sectors and markets? Where were the hedge funds over- and underweight? How were the long/short funds positioned? What about the quants and CTAs? Risk parity? What ETFs would be liquidated? Most importantly, how to quickly get in front of the wave of (self-reinforcing) finance that would be rotating out of the old favorites and into newly fashionable sector ETFs?

November 14 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “On the day Donald Trump won the presidency and the two days after last week, investors poured the most money into stock-based exchange-traded funds that they have in nine years… In the week leading up to the election, short-term money was scrambling to hedge for a Trump victory, and the momentum hit a crescendo after the election and in the immediate aftermath. Equity-based ETFs took in $22.6 billion, or about 1.6% of total assets, from Tuesday through Thursday, according to… TrimTabs.”

November 16 – Bloomberg (Luke Kawa): “In the week following the election, the Financial Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund amassed $4.9 billion of inflows — a record, and more than it accumulated in the past three years. This ETF has stakes in major U.S. financial institutions… President-elect Donald Trump's victory has spurred a steepening of the yield curve fueled by rising term and inflation premiums, as investors move to price-in both his fiscal policies and the vast amount of uncertainty surrounding them.”

There’s an astounding amount of “money” on the move throughout the now colossal ETF complex. Inflows of $22.6 billion in three days? Three years of flows into a popular financial ETF in a single week? And the bull story holds that after Trillions flowed into bond funds (and bond proxies), the great rotation will now see at least a Trillion flow into popular equity ETFs. Buy now to ensure one gets ahead of the great wall of liquidity about to inundate the market.

Incredibly, weak bond prices have become key to the equities bull story. And with equities bubbling, monetary policy now arouses little angst. The market almost celebrates that the Fed will raise rates next month. Fears of a Fed-rate hike induced EM tantrum are these days nonexistent.

With $2.0 Trillion of QE greasing the wheels of speculation, market participants glare at faltering EM bonds and see a more terrific rotation to “core” (king dollar) equities. Yields are recently up more than 100 bps in Mexico and Brazil, and only somewhat less in Turkey, Malaysia, Indonesia, Poland, Hungary and elsewhere. Yields were up another 20 bps this week in Malaysia, 28 bps in the Philippines and 13 bps in Mexico. EM currencies have been under intense pressure. This week saw the Colombian peso drop 4.7%, the Turkish lira 3.6%, the Polish zloty 2.9%, the Malaysian ringgit 2.8%, the Czech Koruna 2.5%, the Hungarian forint 2.5%, the Bulgarian lev 2.5% and the Romanian leu 2.4%. And few these days see any reason not to pile into U.S. financial and industrial stocks.

Not only have U.S. equities become firmly detached from reality, market participants are clearly in the mood to disregard risk. Look beyond the near-term and one sees a very different world upon the conclusion of the QE experiment. At the minimum, it’s a highly uncertain global financial and economic backdrop. Not only will bubbling equities be pulling “money” from faltering bond funds. Booming stocks would also likely accelerate what has been a slow-motion “tightening” cycle. In the meantime, king dollar will spur the next phase of the EM bursting Bubble. There is simply way too much complacency with regard to troubling developments unfolding in global bond markets, China, Japan, Europe and EM.

November 18 – CNBC (Berkeley Lovelace Jr.): “Donald Trump's controversial top advisor Steve Bannon said the Trump administration would build an entirely new political movement, one greater than the ‘Reagan revolution’… ‘The conservatives are going to go crazy,’ Bannon said. ‘I'm the guy pushing a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan. With negative interest rates throughout the world, it's the greatest opportunity to rebuild everything. Ship yards, iron works, get them all jacked up. We're just going to throw it up against the wall and see if it sticks. It will be as exciting as the 1930s, greater than the Reagan revolution — conservatives, plus populists, in an economic nationalist movement

If “negative interest rates throughout the world” is the key to the new Administration’s economic plans, they’d better not waste any time. Many would surely like to call a mulligan on the previous eight years of experimental QE. There’s endless things to spend near-zero interest borrowings on – new infrastructure among them. Just rebuild everything – like China.

But too much was borrowed and spent on stock buybacks, M&A and all varieties of financial engineering. The experiment has left the global economy maladjusted and vulnerable. Bonds have been the centerpiece of a historic speculative Bubble throughout global securities markets. It would be comforting to believe that inflation is dead and buried, and that global QE can expand $2.0 TN annually forever, and that Chinese Credit expansion can grow year-after-year to eternity.

Yet that’s just not the way unsound finance works. We’ve experienced a multi-decade Credit inflation of epic proportions. At this juncture, I would bet on consequences coming home to roost - rather than unending free money (to finance economic renaissance) as far as the eye can see. And, while we’re pondering the future, let’s hope for something other than “As Exciting as the 1930s.”

For the Week:

The S&P500 gained 0.8% (up 6.7% y-t-d), and the Dow added 0.1% (up 8.3%). The Utilities were unchanged (up 6.8%). The Banks rose another 3.7% (up 17.3%), and the Broker/Dealers surged 5.1% (up 13.2%). The Transports jumped 3.2% (up 17.9%). The broader market again outperformed. The S&P 400 Midcaps advanced 2.7% (up 14.8%), and the small cap Russell 2000 jumped 2.6% (up 15.8%). The Nasdaq100 gained 1.2% (up 4.7%), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index rose 1.7% (up 12%). The Semiconductors surged 4.2% (up 31.5%). The Biotechs slipped 0.2% (down 11.6%). Though bullion was down $20, the HUI gold index recovered 1.1% (up 63.8%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 43 bps. Two-year government yields jumped 15 bps to 1.07% (up 2bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields surged 24 bps to 1.80% (up 5bps). Ten-year Treasury yields rose 20 bps to 2.35% (up 10bps). Long bond yields increased nine bps to 3.03% (up one basis point).

Greek 10-year yields declined 10 bps to 6.93% (down 39bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields surged 37 bps to 3.82% (up 130bps). Italian 10-year yields gained another seven bps to 2.09% (up 50bps). Spain's 10-year yields jumped 12 bps to 1.59% (down 18bps). German bund yields declined four bps to 0.27% (down 35bps). French yields added a basis point to 0.75% (down 24bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened another five to 48 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields rose nine bps to 1.45% (down 51bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index gained 0.7% (up 8.5%).

Japan's Nikkei 225 equities index jumped 3.4% (down 5.6% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields gained six bps to 0.02% (down 24bps y-t-d). The German DAX equities index was little changed (down 0.7%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index slipped 0.2% (down 9.7%). Italy's FTSE MIB index dropped 3.3% (down 24.1%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index rallied 1.3% (up 38.3%). Mexico's Bolsa dropped 1.4% (up 3.2%). South Korea's Kospi dipped 0.5% (up 0.7%). India’s Sensex equities index fell 2.5% (up 0.1%). China’s Shanghai Exchange was little changed (down 9.8%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index increased 0.6% (up 5.5%). Russia's MICEX equities index added 0.3% (up 15.7%).

Junk bond mutual funds saw outflows surge to $2.28 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates surged 37 bps to a near 2016 high 3.94% (down 3bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates rose 25 bps to 3.14% (down 4bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-yr fixed rates up 28 bps to 4.01% (up 4bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week expanded $5.1bn to $4.420 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $41bn (0.9%). Fed Credit inflated $1.609 TN, or 57%, over the past 210 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt recovered $8.0bn last week to close to a six-year low $3.119 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $189bn y-o-y, or 5.7%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply last week fell $20.6bn to $13.163 TN. "Narrow money" expanded $926bn, or 7.6%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $0.5bn. Total Checkable Deposits declined $47.4bn, while Savings Deposits jumped rose $17.7bn. Small Time Deposits were little changed. Retail Money Funds expanded $9.0bn.

Total money market fund assets added $3.3bn to a 10-week high $2.686 TN. Money Funds declined $25bn y-o-y (0.9%).

Total Commercial Paper gained $4.7bn to $912bn. CP declined $153bn y-o-y, or 14.4%.

Currency Watch:

November 16 – Bloomberg (Jessica Brice and Isabella Cota): “At the beginning of the year, most currency forecasters agreed: The peso was grossly undervalued. Estimates compiled by Bloomberg at the time put it on course for the biggest gain among major currencies… Yet as 2016 draws to a close, the peso isn’t an emerging-market standout. Instead it’s the world’s worst performer. Battered by events far beyond its borders—such as the U.K.’s Brexit referendum—the currency tumbled 6% against the U.S. dollar this year through Nov. 8. And then Donald Trump was elected president of the U.S. Overnight, the peso plunged more than 13%, surpassing 20 per dollar for the first time. Mexico’s peso was worth less than a nickel. It will likely end the year posting its fourth annual decline.”

The U.S. dollar index jumped 2.2% to 101.21 (up 2.6% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Mexican peso increased 1.0%, the Brazilian real 0.6% and the Canadian dollar 0.3%. For the week on the downside, the Japanese yen declined 3.8%, the Australian dollar 2.8%, the euro 2.5%, the Danish krone 2.4%, the Norwegian krone 2.4%, the Swiss franc 2.2%, the Swedish krona 2.2%, the British pound 2.0%, the New Zealand dollar 1.7%, the South Korean won 1.7%, the Singapore dollar 1.0%, and the South African rand 0.6%. The Chinese yuan declined 1.1% versus the dollar (down 5.7%).

Commodities Watch:

The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index gained 2.4% (up 15.4% y-t-d). Spot Gold declined 1.6% to $1,208 (up 13.8%). Silver sank 4.1% to $16.65 (up 21%). Crude rallied $2.28 to $45.69 (up 23%). Gasoline rose 2.6% (up 5%), and Natural Gas rallied 8.3% (up 22%). Copper gave back 1.2% (up 16%). Wheat jumped 5.5% (down 10%). Corn rose 3.9% (down 2%).

China Bubble Watch:

November 15 – Bloomberg: “Add another credit indicator to the financial warning signs flashing in China. The adjusted loan-to-deposit ratio, which includes a range of off-balance sheet items and is an indicator of the banking system’s ability to weather stress, climbed to 80% as of June 30, according to S&P Global Ratings. For some smaller lenders, the ratio has already topped 100%... S&P’s adjusted measure is rising much faster than the official loan-to-deposit ratio as banks pile into off-balance sheet lending, sidestepping government efforts to rein in credit.”

November 13 – Dow Jones: “Growth in housing sales stayed steady in China in the first 10 months of year, but slowed for the month of October alone, after a slew of cities cracked down on their overheated property markets. Housing sales rose 42.6% in the first 10 months of the year from the same period a year earlier…”

Europe Watch:

November 18 – Financial Times (Mehreen Khan): “Italian government bonds are set to suffer their worst month since the height of the eurozone crisis as nerves build in the run up to crucial referendum next month. Italy’s 10-year bond yield has risen 49 bps this month, as most polls show prime minister Matteo Renzi is set to be on the losing side of a vote on constitutional reform in another sign of rising anti-establishment sentiment in the continent. It marks the biggest sell off in Italian benchmark debt since May 2012.”

November 18 – Bloomberg (Chiara Albanese and Giovanni Salzano): “The final rush of public opinion polls before Italy’s referendum next month showed voters are leaning toward turning down the constitutional reforms. Four polls published Friday showed the ‘No’ camp in the lead, in a trend that has been predominant for several weeks. As of Saturday, there will be a blackout period making it illegal to publish public opinion polls on the Dec. 4 vote.”

November 16 – Reuters (Jamie McGeever): “The euro zone has withstood several crises since 2008 that have thrown the 19-nation bloc's very existence into doubt, centered on its fractured economy, bond market, banking system and, of course, Greece. But for financial markets, the biggest test may be to come and some investors are dusting off strategies on how to navigate an unraveling of the euro zone - or even the European Union itself - and the turbulence that would unleash. Elections in France, Germany and The Netherlands next year, as well next month's Italian constitutional referendum, are flashpoints that could ignite brewing political discontent across the continent.”

November 17 – Reuters (Michelle Martin and Joseph Nasr): “The European Union is in danger of breaking apart unless France and Germany, in particular, work harder to stimulate growth and employment and heed citizens' concerns, French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said in the German capital… Valls said the two countries, for decades the axis around which the EU revolved, had to help refocus the bloc to tackle an immigration crisis, a lack of solidarity between member states, Britain's looming exit, and terrorism.”

November 18 – CNBC (Silvia Amaro): “The President of the European Central Bank has highlighted his concerns over how much the region's economies rely on accommodative monetary policy. Mario Draghi told the European Banking Congress… that the recent increase in prices is mainly driven by the low financing conditions, and as such, the ECB is ready to continue with the current monetary policy stance. ‘Despite the uplift to prices provided by the gradual closing of the output gap, a sustained adjustment in the path of inflation still relies on the continuation of the current, unprecedented financing conditions… It is for this reason that we remain committed to preserving the very substantial degree of monetary accommodation, which is necessary to secure a sustained convergence of inflation towards level below, but close to, 2% over the medium-term,’ Draghi said.”

November 18 – Bloomberg (Nicholas Comfort and Steven Arons): “The European Central Bank’s corporate bond purchases have sliced into debt-trading volumes and caused investors to misjudge the risk of some credit holdings, according to Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer John Cryan. ‘The impact of buying up corporate bonds is that we see, in our bank, bond-trading volumes down something like three-quarters,’ Cryan said... ‘And there has absolutely been no price discovery now in corporate bonds, so we don’t really know the price of credit, which is a dangerous situation.’”

November 14 – Reuters (Silvia Aloisi and Stephen Jewkes): “Ailing Italian lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena on Monday announced the terms of a planned debt-to-equity conversion, a key plank of a rescue scheme aimed at averting the bank being wound down. The bank said the voluntary debt swap offer would target 4.289 billion euros ($4.6bn) of subordinated bonds… The debt-to-equity swap is a crucial leg of a 5 billion euro ($5.4bn) rescue plan aimed at meeting regulators' concerns about the bank's capital position and bad loans.”

November 17 – Reuters (Marc Jones): “Italy will not bend its budget plans to meet European Commission demands, an economic adviser to the country's prime minister Matteo Renzi said... Italy and five other countries are at risk of breaking European Union budget discipline rules with their 2017 draft budgets…”

Brexit Watch:

November 15 – Reuters (Guy Faulconbridge): “Britain has no overall strategy for leaving the European Union and splits in Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet could delay a clear negotiating position for six months, according to a leaked Deloitte memo… The document was written by consultants at Deloitte and leaked to The Times newspaper… It casts Britain's top team in a chaotic light: May is trying to control key Brexit questions herself while her senior ministers are divided and the civil service is in turmoil.”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

November 18 – Bloomberg (Wes Goodman and Anchalee Worrachate): “Bonds around the world headed for their steepest two-week loss in at least 26 years as President-elect Donald Trump sends inflation expectations surging. The Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index has fallen 4% in the period through Thursday. It’s the biggest two-week rout in the data, which go back to 1990.”

November 16 – Financial Times (Mehreen Khan and Thomas Hale): “Global inflation expectations have soared to their highest level in 12 years according to a survey of fund managers, raising fears the world economy could be heading into a period of ‘stagflation’. In the wake of the election of Donald Trump as US president and a sell-off in sovereign bonds, investors surveyed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch reported their highest inflation expectations since 2004… With the new Republican president sent to splurge on tax cuts and higher government spending, 85% of money managers said they expected a pick up in inflation from the 70% reported last month.”

November 13 – Wall Street Journal (Timothy W. Martin, Georgi Kantchev and Kosaku Narioka): “Central bankers lowered interest rates to near zero or below to try to revive their gasping economies. In the process, though, they have put in jeopardy the pensions of more than 100 million government workers and retirees around the globe. In Costa Mesa, Calif., Mayor Stephen Mensinger is worried retirement payments will soon eat up all the city’s cash. In Amsterdam, language teacher Frans van Leeuwen is angry his pension now will be less than what his father received, despite 30 years of contributions. In Tokyo, ex-government worker Tadakazu Kobayashi no longer has enough income from pension checks to buy new clothes. Managers handling trillions of dollars in government-run pension funds never expected rates to stay this low for so long. Now, the world is starved for the safe, profitable bonds that pension funds have long needed to survive.”

November 16 – Bloomberg (Sarah McGregor): “China’s holdings of U.S. Treasuries declined to the lowest level in four years, as the world’s second-largest economy runs down its reserves to support the yuan. The biggest foreign holder of U.S. government debt had $1.16 trillion in bonds, notes and bills in September, down $28.1 billion from the prior month… That’s the lowest level since September 2012. The portfolio of Japan, the largest holder after China, fell for a second straight month, down $7.6 billion to $1.14 trillion. The Treasury holdings of oil-producing Saudi Arabia declined for an eighth straight month, to $89.4 billion.”

November 16 – Wall Street Journal (Peter Grant): “Defaults are rising in a key corner of the commercial real-estate debt market just as borrowing costs are set to jump, raising the likelihood of a slowdown of the $11 trillion U.S. commercial property sector in 2017. A financial crisis-era regulation is about to take effect that is expected to make some commercial real-estate borrowing more expensive and complicated, analysts said… More than 5.6% of some $390 billion worth of commercial property mortgages that have been packaged into securities was more than 60 days late in payment in September, according to Moody’s… That was up from a 4.6% delinquency rate earlier this year.”

November 14 – Bloomberg (Phil Kuntz): “The market value of the world’s negative-yielding bonds plunged 14% last week to $8.7 trillion as investors dumped government debt at a record clip after Donald Trump’s upset win stoked speculation that his ambitious fiscal plan would flood the market with new Treasuries and boost inflation.”

November 17 – Financial Times (Eric Platt): “Global debt issuance surpassed $6tn this week, buoyed by a deluge of corporate bond sales after the US election, Dealogic data shows. Bond offerings stand roughly 9% below the record $6.6tn of debt sold over the course of 2006… Debt offerings are up 8% from a year earlier and stand at least 2% above of every year through November 16.”

Global Bubble Watch:

November 17 – Financial Times (Eric Platt): “The pace of global debt sales this year is running at a record level, surpassing $6tn this week, as companies from Pfizer to MasterCard rush to lock in borrowing costs on fears that a Donald Trump stimulus package will send interest rates even higher. A flurry of new sales this week caps a tumultuous period for bond investors, who are counting more than $1.5tn of losses, as yields have jumped on sovereign and corporate debt following Mr Trump’s victory last week.”

November 13 – Financial Times (Robin Wigglesworth): “The election of Donald Trump represents a ‘tectonic shift’ for global economics and politics, and will help kill the three-decade bond market rally, according to Henry Kaufman, the original ‘Dr Doom’. The former Salomon Brothers chief economist gained his gloomy moniker by correctly calling the last bond bear market in the 1970s, and is now predicting another one, as Mr Trump will probably fire a massive slug of inflationary government spending and reshape the Federal Reserve in a hawkish way in the coming years. ‘We have already seen a burst higher in long-term interest rates … I would say the secular trend is going to be upwards now,’ he told the FT. ‘Secular swings are hard to forecast, but the secular sweep downwards in interest rates is over, and we are about to have a gentle swing upwards.’”

November 13 – Financial Times (Nicholas Megaw): “Sluggish economic growth and a shift to fiscal stimulus measures such as those proposed by Donald Trump are bad for global creditworthiness, Moody’s has warned, as it reported that the proportion of countries with a ‘negative’ credit outlook has climbed to its highest level since 2012. Some 26% of countries rated by Moody’s now have a ‘negative’ outlook, up from 17% at the end of last year. In its annual Global Sovereign Outlook report, the ratings agency said the global outlook for sovereign ratings for the next 12 to 18 months is negative, blaming a combination of low growth, spending plans that will increase public debt, and ‘rising political and geopolitical risks’.”

November 18 – Financial Times (Nathalie Thomas): “The number of companies that have defaulted on theirs bonds has notched up to 146 for the year so far, the highest level seen at this point in the calendar since the financial crisis, according to… Standard & Poor’s. The US oil and gas sector accounts for the largest number of defaults by industry, as they continue to struggle in a climate of weak oil prices…”

November 13 – Bloomberg (Alex Sherman and Jonathan Browning): “Chinese buyers keen to continue 2016’s rapid dealmaking under a Donald Trump presidency are being given one piece of advice: Wait and see. Bankers and lawyers are already counseling some Chinese clients to hit the pause button until Trump clarifies his stance on cross-border deals for U.S. targets, according to three advisers to Chinese clients… Acquisitive Chinese companies have led a blockbuster year of dealmaking in 2016, accounting for about $225 billion of overseas purchases this year…”

November 17 – Bloomberg (Katya Kazakina): “Claude Monet’s grain stack painting fetched a record $81.4 million for the artist on Wednesday after a 14-minute bidding war. The 1891 canvas, ‘Meule,’ lifted Christie’s Impressionist and modern art evening sale to $246.3 million, a 69% jump from the similar auction a year ago. Christie’s also held a special auction last year of 20th century art, ‘The Artist’s Muse,’ which hauled in almost half a billion dollars.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

November 17 – Bloomberg (Kevin Buckland and Shigeki Nozawa): “U.S. mortgage rates skyrocketed to a 10-month high as investors reacted to Donald Trump’s presidential election win by pulling money out of the bond market, driving up yields that guide home loans. The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was 3.94%, up from 3.57% last week and the highest since January…”

November 16 – Bloomberg (Vince Golle): “Mortgage applications in the U.S. slumped last week after the sharpest increase in borrowing costs since mid-2013, signaling tougher sledding for the housing market. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s index of purchase and refinancing applications dropped 9.2% in the period ended Nov. 11 to 436.3, the lowest level since January. The average rate on a 30-year fixed loan soared 18 bps, the most since June 2013, to 3.95%.”

November 17 – Bloomberg (Sho Chandra): “U.S. new-home construction jumped to a nine-year high in October as an outsized advance in the number of apartment projects accompanied a strong pickup for single-family housing. Residential starts surged 25.5% to a 1.32 million annualized rate, the fastest since August 2007 and exceeding the highest projection in a Bloomberg survey…”

November 14 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “More selling in U.S. bond markets Monday pushed mortgage rates to a psychological breaking point. The average contract rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage hit 4%, according to Mortgage News Daily… Rates have now moved nearly a half a percentage point higher since Donald Trump was elected president. ‘The situation on the ground is panicked. Damage control,’ said Matthew Graham, chief operating officer of Mortgage News Daily. ‘People were trying to lock loans quickly last week and are now facing a tough choice to lock today or hope for a bounce. Many hoped for a bounce last week heading into the long weekend and we obviously didn't get it.’”

November 15 – Bloomberg (Matt Scully): “A group of online consumer loans that were packaged into bonds is going bad faster than lenders and bond underwriters had expected, the latest sign that some startups that aimed to revolutionize the banking industry underestimated the risk they were taking. Delinquencies and defaults are reaching key levels known as ‘triggers’ for at least four different sets of bonds. Breaching those levels will force lenders or underwriters to start paying down the bonds early. Avant Inc. and its underwriters, for example, are going to have to begin to repay three of its asset-backed notes…”

November 16 – Reuters (Dave McKinney): “The financial condition of Illinois’ five state pension systems worsened during 2016 with unfunded liabilities growing to a record-setting $129.8 billion… The nearly 17% surge was the result of lowered long-range investment return assumptions by four of the five pension systems and poor investment returns during 2016… The combined funded ratio of the five pension systems dropped from 41% in fiscal 2015, a level that put Illinois in a tie with Kentucky for the lowest-funded state pension system in the country. Illinois’ new funded ratio now stands at 37.6%...”

November 14 – CNBC (Arjun Kharpal): “Apple iPhones and other U.S. goods could suffer sales hits in China if President-elect Donald Trump goes through with his ‘naïve’ plan of slapping a large import tariff on Chinese products, a state-backed newspaper warned… During his election campaign this year, Trump spoke of a 45% import tariff on all Chinese goods… Should any such policy come into effect, China will take a ‘tit-for-tat approach’, according to an opinion piece in the Global Times, a newspaper backed by the Communist party. ‘A batch of Boeing orders will be replaced by Airbus. U.S. auto and iPhone sales in China will suffer a setback, and U.S. soybean and maize imports will be halted. China can also limit the number of Chinese students studying in the U.S.,’ the Global Times article read.”

November 16 – Bloomberg (Elizabeth Dexheimer): “House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling said he’s willing to tweak his plan to overhaul the Dodd-Frank Act before reintroducing it to Congress early next year. The committee is ‘interested in working on a 2.0 version,’ Hensarling said… ‘Advice and counsel is welcome.’ The Texas Republican’s comments come amid speculation that his Choice Act could serve as a blueprint for how Donald Trump overhauls financial reforms enacted after the 2008 economic crisis. During the event, Hensarling said the committee has been in ‘fairly constant dialogue’ with Trump’s transition team about his legislation…”

November 14 – New York Times (Matthew Goldstein): “The presidential campaign that just ended was notable for a lack of debate about housing — in particular the uneven state of the United States mortgage market nine years since the start of the financial crisis. Neither… Trump nor … Clinton spent much time discussing housing policy… And neither candidate laid out a plan for dealing with the two biggest engines in the mortgage market — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — which remain under a controversial federal government conservatorship. Laurie Goodman, a longtime housing industry guru on Wall Street and now with a Washington research organization, said she did not think federal legislators would make it a priority to address the fates of Fannie and Freddie — two government-sponsored entities that were rescued by the Treasury eight years ago with a $187 billion taxpayer bailout.”

Federal Reserve Watch:

November 17 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “Fed Chair Janet Yellen on Thursday made her strongest comments to date in favor for a policy tightening in December, telling Congress an increase could be ‘appropriate relatively soon’… ‘Were the FOMC to delay increases in the federal funds rate for too long, it could end up having to tighten policy relatively abruptly to keep the economy from significantly overshooting both of the Committee's longer-run policy goals" on inflation and jobs, Yellen said. "Moreover, holding the federal funds rate at its current level for too long could also encourage excessive risk-taking and ultimately undermine financial stability.’”

Japan Watch:

November 17 – Bloomberg (Kevin Buckland and Shigeki Nozawa): “The Bank of Japan said no bids were placed at its first operations when it offered to buy bonds at a fixed rate, a tool it introduced when deciding in September it would seek to control the yield curve. Japanese government bonds advanced on Thursday as the central bank said it would carry out two operations… Each received zero bids… A selloff in Japanese bonds had threatened to test Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s determination to keep yields stable with unlimited debt purchases -- a weapon he had so far kept in reserve.”

November 14 – Reuters (Leika Kihara): “Japanese policymakers are starting to see fiscal stimulus as the most likely next step to spark economic growth given the central bank's dwindling monetary ammunition and uncertainty over the agenda of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump. The market turbulence caused by Trump's victory has unnerved policymakers, and offers an opportunity for lawmakers favoring bigger fiscal spending to press their case, with another supplementary budget for this year a possible first step… ‘Fiscal reform is important, but it's true uncertainties surrounding Japan's economy are increasing. That's why it's very important to come up with an effective fiscal policy,’ said Masahiko Shibayama, an adviser to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.”

EM Watch:

November 17 – Bloomberg (Nacha Cattan and Eric Martin): “Mexico’s central bank raised borrowing costs for the fourth time this year after Donald Trump’s election dragged the peso to never-before-seen levels of more than 20 per dollar, boosting the risk of faster inflation. Policy makers increased the key rate a half point to 5.25% Thursday, the highest level since 2009.”

November 17 – Bloomberg (Anirban Nag and Anto Antony): “From keeping Indian defense jets on the ready to transfer cash from mints, to banks knocking on the doors of religious institutions to access smaller change, Indian ingenuity is being stretched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s cash ban to crackdown on unaccounted money. India’s cash economy has been thrown into turmoil since Modi announced last week that 500 and 1,000 rupee notes would cease to be legal tender and would have to be deposited at banks by year-end, leaving about one-seventh of currency in circulation… Unaccounted money makes up nearly a fourth of the economy.”

November 17 – Reuters (Rodrigo Viga Gaier and Alonso Soto): “The former governor of Rio de Janeiro state was arrested… as part of a corruption investigation linked to a World Cup project and other works worth billions of dollars, in a blow to Brazil's ruling party that may fuel political instability. Federal prosecutors accused Sergio Cabral, 53, of leading a criminal organization that took 224 million reais ($66 million) in bribes from construction firms in exchange for infrastructure contracts from 2007 to 2014…”

Leveraged Speculator Watch:

November 15 – Bloomberg (Phil Kuntz): “About five years ago, Kentucky started investing some of its public-employee pension money with hedge funds. Sure, fees were high but the funds came with the lure of high returns and could serve as a buffer if the market tanked. By early November, Kentucky officials had had enough. They voted to start yanking $800 million from hedge funds… Disappointing returns were certainly a factor. But another reason was the public’s perception of hedge funds as highly risky and run by guys with penthouses and yachts, said David Peden, chief investment officer for Kentucky’s $16 billion portfolio. That was poison at a time when taxpayers were being asked to fork over more to close a 60% gap in pension liabilities… Kentucky is one of the latest among America’s biggest investors -- pensions, endowments and foundations -- that are souring on hedge funds after a 15-year romance.”

November 14 – New York Times (Alexandra Stevenson): “Every five minutes a satellite captures images of China’s biggest cities from space. Thousands of miles away in California, a computer looks at the shadows of the buildings in the images and draws a conclusion: China’s real estate boom is slowing. Traders at BlackRock, the money management giant, then use the data to help choose whether to buy or sell the stocks of Chinese developers. ‘The machine is able to deal with some of the very complex decisions,’ said Jeff Shen, co-chief investment officer at Scientific Active Equity, BlackRock’s quantitative trading, or quant, arm… The future star of the hedge fund industry is not the next William A. Ackman, Carl C. Icahn or George Soros. Rather, it is a computer like the one at Scientific Active Equity, which sifts through data like satellite images from China every day.”

Geopolitical Watch:

November 17 – Reuters (Greg Torode): “A U.S. congressional panel has warned of an ‘alarming’ rise in China's interference in Hong Kong, noting fears over the former British colony's continued role as a global financial hub. In its annual report to Congress on Wednesday, the bipartisan U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission highlights the ‘chilling’ abduction and detention of five booksellers based in Hong Kong as well as pressure on media and academic freedoms.”

November 16 – Reuters (Denny Thomas and David Lawder): “U.S. lawmakers should take action to ban China's state-owned firms from acquiring U.S. companies, a congressional panel charged with monitoring security and trade links between Washington and Beijing said… In its annual report to Congress, the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission said the Chinese Communist Party has used state-backed enterprises as the primary economic tool to advance and achieve its national security objectives.”

Friday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Trump-Trade Rally Pushes Dollar to Weekly Surge as Bonds Slump

[Bloomberg] Puerto Rico Board Warns Deep Debt Cuts Needed to Steady Island

[Bloomberg] Fight Over Puerto Rico Debt Heats Up as Creditors Fire Back

[CNBC] ‘The conservatives are going to go crazy’ — Trump’s top advisor lays out his vision for shaking up America

[WSJ] Dollar’s Rapid Gain Triggers Angst in Emerging Markets

[WSJ] Next Wild Card for Markets: Italy’s Constitutional Referendum

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Friday's News Links

[Bloomberg] Dollar Extends Trump-Trade Rally as Gold Declines With Stocks

[Reuters] Rising U.S. yields help dollar to 13-1/2 year high, Asian shares slip

[Bloomberg] Global Bonds Poised for Biggest Two-Week Loss in Quarter Century

[Bloomberg] Final Polls Show Renzi’s Referendum Heading for Defeat in Italy

[CNBC] Equity fund flows surge as bond and EM funds bleed in the week following Trump’s victory

[Bloomberg] It’s Friday, So Asian Central Banks Are Back in Currencies

[Reuters] Exclusive: China ready to slow yuan descent, worried about capital outflows - sources

[Bloomberg] Hensarling Could Be Wall Street’s Best Hope or Worst Nightmare

[CNBC] Draghi says that withdrawal of QE relies on 'durable' pick-up in inflation

[Bloomberg] Cryan Says Credit Risk Is Being Misjudged Due to ECB Purchases

[Bloomberg] Rise of Populism Tops Anxiety List at Frankfurt Banking Meeting

[CNBC] 200 years of US interest rates on one chart

[Bloomberg] Global Trade Is Slowing

[FT] Global corporate defaults year to date reach highest level since 2009

[FT] Pace of global debt sales hits record level

[WSJ] Selloff Pulls Japanese Bond Yields Further Above Zero

[FT] Italian 10-year bonds on course for worst month since 2012

Thursday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Asia Stocks Set for More Gains Amid Stronger Dollar After Yellen

[Bloomberg] Treasury Yields Reach Year’s High as Fed on Track for Rate Hike

[Reuters] Wall street stocks lifted by data, earnings Yellen remarks

[Bloomberg] Mexico Raises Overnight Rate After Trump’s Win Wallops Peso

[Reuters] Mexico central bank hikes rate after Trump win, peso still weakens

[Bloomberg] The Air Has Come Out of One of 2016's Most Popular Trades

[Bloomberg] 2017 May Be Japan's 'Year of the Taper'

[NYT] Across China, Walmart Faces Labor Unrest as Authorities Stand Aside

[WSJ] Fed Rate Rise Could Come ‘Relatively Soon’ as Data Point to Stronger Economy

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Thursday's News Links

[Bloomberg] U.S. Stocks Little Changed After Yellen Testimony, Economic Data

[Bloomberg] Treasuries Decline After Yellen Testimony; Crude Oil Advances

[Bloomberg] Yellen Says Fed Interest Rate Hike Could Come ‘Relatively Soon’

[Reuters] U.S. consumer prices post largest gain in six months

[Bloomberg] Jobless Claims in U.S. Decline to Lowest Level in Four Decades

[Bloomberg] Housing Starts in U.S. Surged to a Nine-Year High in October

[Bloomberg] BOJ First Unlimited Bond Buys Get No Bids After Yields Retreated

[WSJ] Theranos Whistleblower Shook the Company—And His Family

[Bloomberg] U.S. Mortgage Rates Soar to 10-Month High After Trump Bond Rout

[CNBC] Yellen takes hot seat in middle of first congressional debate on Trump stimulus

[Reuters] ECB minutes firmly point to Dec for decision over asset buys

[Reuters] Mexico central bank may deliver big rate hike after peso's Trump tumble

[Bloomberg] The Strange Consequences of India's Unprecedented Banknote Ban

[Time] First Brexit, Then Trump. Can Italy Avoid a Populist Uprising in Crucial Referendum?

[Reuters] Italy won't bend budget plan for EU, says Renzi advisor

[Reuters] Brazil arrests former Rio governor in corruption probe: police

[Reuters] Leverage levels hit post-crisis high in Europe's loan market

[Bloomberg] Monet Painting Sells for Record $81.4 Million at Christie’s

[FT] US and EM investors take opposing bets on Trump’s presidency

[FT] Renminbi fixed weaker for record-equalling 10th straight day

[FT] Global bond issuance still hot despite market turbulence

[Reuters] Europe at risk of collapse; France, Germany must lead - French PM

[Reuters] China's interference in Hong Kong reaching alarming levels: U.S. congressional panel

Wednesday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] BOJ Announces First Unlimited Bond Purchases After Yields Jumped

[Reuters] Dow, S&P drop as financials' rally ebbs, tech boosts Nasdaq

[Bloomberg] Dollar Posts Longest Winning Streak Since 2012 as Fed Hike Seen

[Bloomberg] Investors Just Flooded Into Financials at the Fastest Weekly Pace Ever

[Bloomberg] Hensarling Says He’s Willing to Tweak Dodd-Frank Overhaul Plan

[CNBC] Goldman Sachs sees Trump leading to more aggressive Fed, 'ambiguous' growth outlook

[Bloomberg] China Holdings of U.S. Treasuries Decline to Lowest Since 2012

[Reuters] Euro crisis over? 2017 politics could be markets' biggest test yet

[Reuters] Illinois' unfunded pension liabilities reach $130 billion: study

[CNBC] Pay more, get less: Americans have the worst health among 10 wealthy nations

[Reuters] Exclusive: Central America to seek Mexico's support after Trump win

[WSJ] The $19.8 Trillion Hurdle Facing Higher U.S. Inflation

[WSJ] Bond Selloff Highlights Liquidity Shortage, Changing Strategies

[WSJ] Yuan’s Slide May Have More to Do With Economics Than Donald Trump

[WSJ] In Trump’s China, Industrial Subsidies Loom Large

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Wednesday's News Links

[Bloomberg] U.S. Stocks Retreat With Bonds on Trump-Fed Nexus; Dollar Gains

[Bloomberg] Government Bonds Fall Worldwide on Trump-Fed Nexus; Oil Declines

[Reuters] Asia shares win reprieve as bond rout pauses for now

[Bloomberg] Fed Rate-Hike Odds Approach 100% in Anticipation of Trumpenomics

[Bloomberg] U.S. Mortgage Applications Gauge Slumps to Lowest Since January

[Bloomberg] Another Financial Warning Sign Is Flashing in China

[Bloomberg] What a Trump-Branded Federal Reserve Might Look Like

[Bloomberg] How Hedging and a Certain Someone Upended the Year of the Peso

[Reuters] U.S. panel says China state firms should be banned from buying U.S. companies

[Bloomberg] The Best and Worst Countries to Be a Rich CEO

[WSJ] Trouble Brewing in Commercial Real Estate

[FT] Global inflation expectations soar to 12-year highs after Trump – BAML survey

[FT] Ray Dalio warns on new era of globalisation in retreat

Tuesday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Asian Stocks Advance With South Korea’s Won as Trump Shock Fades

[Reuters] Wall Street rises, lifted by technology and energy stocks

[Bloomberg] Bonds Rise With Emerging Markets After Trump Selloff; Oil Surges

[Bloomberg] Oil Jumps Most in Seven Months as OPEC Members Seen Pushing Deal

[Bloomberg] Germany Threatens to Abandon Basel Talks If Demands Not Met

[CNBC] Trump digs in for major U.S. trade reset with the world

[NYT] Fannie and Freddie’s Status Continues to Provoke Criticisms

[WSJ] What Surging Interest Rates Mean for Your Credit Cards, Auto, Student and Home Equity Loans

Monday, November 14, 2016

Tuesday's News Links

[Bloomberg] Bonds Rise With Emerging Markets After Trump Selloff; Oil Surges

[Bloomberg] Asian Currencies Tumble to Seven-Year Low Amid Stock Outflows

[Reuters] Asia stocks under pressure as dollar hovers near 14-year high

[Bloomberg] German Bonds Outperform in Selloff as Safe Status Remains Intact

[Bloomberg] Retail Sales in U.S. Jump More Than Forecast in Broad Advance

[Bloomberg] Spike in Mortgage Rates Throws a Wrench Into U.S. Housing Market

[Dow Jones] Fed''s Lacker: Fiscal Stimulus ''Would Bolster Case for Raising Rates'' 

[Reuters] Italy polls get worse for Renzi as referendum nears

[Bloomberg] German Cooling, Italy Rebound Keep Euro-Area Growth at 0.3%

[Bloomberg] Dollar Is New Fear Index as Easing Renders VIX Useless, BIS Says

[Bloomberg] U.S. Consumers Are Increasingly Defaulting on Loans Made Online

[Bloomberg] Negative-Yielding Bonds Plummet to $8.7 Trillion After Trump Win

[Reuters] Britain's Brexit plan? There is no plan, leaked memo says

[Bloomberg] Hedge-Fund Love Affair Is Ending for U.S. Pensions, Endowments

[WSJ] Junk Bonds Sound an Alarm in Stocks

[FT] 10-year JGB yield trades above zero for first time since September

[FT] Corporate bond sell-off tests investor appetite

[WSJ] As Japan’s 10-Year Bond Yield Turns Positive, BOJ’s Experiment Is Tested

[Reuters] Hong Kong court, in line with China ruling, bars pro-independence lawmakers

[Bloomberg] Populism Takes Over the World

Monday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Selloff in Bonds, Emerging-Market Assets Deepens as Dollar Gains

[Reuters] Wall Street ends flat as financials' rise offsets tech drop

[Bloomberg] Bond Rout Lifts U.S. Yields to 2016 High on Trump Stimulus Bets

[CNBC] Rates on US Treasury bills rise to highest in 8 years

[Reuters] Monte dei Paschi debt swap targets bonds for up to 5.3 bln euros

[Reuters] Italy bears brunt of year's biggest bond rout

[Bloomberg] China's Central Bank Faces Trump Headache

[Bloomberg] Bond Rout Eats Into the One Remaining Valuation Case for Stocks

[CNBC] Trump's victory has set off a stampede into stock ETFs

[CNBC] Panic in housing market as Trump effect pushes mortgage rates to 4%

[Bloomberg] Hedge Funds Added Tech Stocks Ahead of Trump Victory Sell-Off

[NYT] The Next Generation of Hedge Fund Stars: Data-Crunching Computers

[WSJ] Government Bond Rout Deepens on Trump’s Economic Plans

[WSJ] These Five Bonds Are Getting Killed in Today’s Market

[FT] Renminbi trading band set at weakest level since 2008

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Monday's News Links

[Bloomberg] Bonds Bloodied as Trump Spending Plans Spur Dollar, Copper Gains

[Reuters] Dollar soars as U.S. yields spike; shares divided

[Dow Jones] 10-year Treasury Yield Reaches Its Highest Level In A Year

[Bloomberg] Emerging-Market Losses Deepen as Dollar Gains; ETF Outflows Rise

[SCMP] Chinese yuan tumbles to a seven-year low as dollar surges

[Bloomberg] Dollar Rises to Nine-Month High as Trump Seen Spurring Inflation

[Bloomberg] Bond Vigilantes to Trump: Be Careful, It Could Get Painful

[CNBC] China fires its first warning shot, warning iPhone sales will suffer if Trump starts a trade war

[Bloomberg] Chinese Bonds Headed for Longest Run of Losses in Three Years

[Bloomberg] China Home Sales Value Rose 38% in October From Year Earlier

[Dow Jones] China Housing Sales Rise 42.6% in Jan-Oct

[Bloomberg] China’s Economy Holds Ground as Housing Curbs Start to Bite

[Reuters] As BOJ wanes, Japan sees fiscal stimulus as likely next step

[Bloomberg] China Pumps the Brakes on U.S. Dealmaking After Trump Win

[WSJ] The Mortgage Market Is Changing Fast

[WSJ] Era of Low Interest Rates Hammers Millions of Pensions Around World

[FT] Moody’s warns on global sovereign credit outlook

Sunday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Asian Futures Outside Japan Tip Stock Losses; Mexican Peso Jumps

[Reuters] Oil prices extend declines on oversupply worries

[Bloomberg] Exports Drive Japan’s Economy to Unexpectedly Strong Growth

[Bloomberg] It’s Not Just Deutsche Bank; German Banking Gloom in Four Charts

[Reuters] 'Trump Thump' whacks bond market for $1 trillion loss

[Bloomberg] Brexit Threatens to Ignite European Skirmishes Over EU Budget

[FT] $200bn drained from equity funds since start of 2016

Sunday's News Links

[Bloomberg] Emerging-Market Rout Extends to Gulf Stocks on Trump Policy Risk

[Bloomberg] Iran Pumps More Oil as Saudi Minister Calls for OPEC Output Cuts

[Reuters] Investors dodge China's whack-a-mole outflow curbs

[Reuters] Prosecutors to question South Korean president over political scandal

[FT] Investor repositioning under Trump — the big questions

Friday, November 11, 2016

Weekly Commentary: What a Week

The S&P500 jumped 2.3% Monday in what appeared growing confidence that Hillary Clinton was on the verge of becoming the next POTUS (buoyed by Director of the FBI Comey’s statement). It’s worth noting that Monday trading saw both the Financials (XLF) and the Industrials (XLI) jump 2.5%, only to be bettered by the Biotechs’ (BTK) 4.1% surge. EM equities (EEM) rose 3.6% Monday. Election day trading was then relatively quiet, with the S&P500 adding 0.3% Tuesday.

After closing Tuesday’s session at 2,135.50, S&P 500 futures jumped to 2,151 in evening trading on exit polling and early reports from Florida that appeared favorable for Clinton. Futures, however, reversed course as it became increasingly apparent that Donald Trump was performing better than expected, especially in Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. By midnight on the East Coast, S&P futures were “limit down” 5%. DJIA futures had reversed a full thousand points, and Nasdaq futures had fallen almost 6%.

The huge move in U.S. equity futures was outdone by a stunning 14% collapse in the Mexican peso. In a span of a couple hours, the U.S. dollar/Mexican peso moved from 18.205 to a record high 20.78. After trading near 17,400 (futures) in overnight trading, the DJIA closed Wednesday’s session up 257 points (1.4%) to 18,590. Financial, industrial and biotech stocks, in particular, were in melt-up mode. The Banks (BKX) closed Wednesday trading up 4.9% - then added another 3.8% Thursday, before ending the week up 12.7%. The Broker/Dealers (XBD) surged 5.9% and 3.7%, with a gain for the week of 14.8%. Again not to be outdone, the Biotechs (BTK) spiked 9.2% higher Wednesday and 17% on the week. The Industrials (XLI) gained 2.3% both on Wednesday and Thursday, closing out the week 8.1% higher.

As exuberance took over, the broader market dramatically outperformed. The small caps (RTY) traded higher all five sessions this week, with Wednesday’s 3.1% rise the strongest in a noteworthy 10.3% weekly advance. The mid-caps (MID) gained 1.9% Wednesday and 5.7% for the week. The DJIA traded to a record high this week, with the S&P500, small caps and mid-caps just shy of all-time highs

There are different perspectives through which to interpret this week’s extraordinary market action. The bullish viewpoint will take a casual look at U.S. stock performance and see overwhelming confirmation that the bull trend remains intact. And with news and analysis, as always, following market direction, rather quickly we’re deluged with material professing a bullish outlook courtesy of a Trump Presidency and Republican House and Senate. Apparently the country is now on the verge of a major infrastructure investment program, positive healthcare reform, corporate tax reform, and a dismantling of Dodd-Frank financial regulation (for starters). In particular, a focus on infrastructure and de-regulation implies a Trump Administration lot likely to place confrontation with the Yellen Federal Reserve (or the securities markets) high on their priority list.

From my perspective, it was anything but a so-called “bullish” week. I saw alarming evidence of dysfunctional markets. There was also further confirmation of a bursting bond Bubble. Indeed, there was strong support for the view of a faltering global securities Bubble – even in the face of surging U.S. stock prices.

Let’s return to election late-night. I doubt traders and the more sophisticated market operators will easily forget what almost transpired. It’s worth noting that while S&P500 futures and the Mexican peso were collapsing, the Japanese yen was in melt-up. In just over two hours, the dollar/yen moved from 105.47 to 101.22 – an almost 4% move. Meanwhile, EM and higher-yielding currencies were under intense selling pressure – the Brazilian real, South African rand, Turkish lira, Colombian peso, Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar (to name a few). At the same time, gold surged from $1,270 to $1,338. Crude sank 4%. Global markets were on the brink of a serious speculative de-leveraging episode.

There had been significant hedging across global markets going into the U.S. election. Especially after Monday, the markets viewed a Trump win a low probability. With markets shaky of late, along with an approaching historic political event, enormous derivative positions had accumulated in various markets. In the event of a surprising outcome, those that had written (sold) market “insurance” would be forced to aggressively (“dynamically”) hedge their losses by selling/shorting into already weak markets – perhaps even with major markets highly illiquid (or already halted limit down).

When a marketplace significantly hedges against a perceived low-probability event – and the unexpected actually occurs – contemporary markets face dislocation. Markets simply can’t hedge themselves. To offload risk, someone has to be on the other side of hedging trades – and these days that someone generally has a sophisticated trading model requiring selling/shorting to build positions capable of generating the necessary cash-flow to offset derivative losses. Significant derivative-related selling risks a ('87 “Black Monday”) portfolio insurance debacle of selling betting selling, begetting illiquidity and panic.

Tuesday’s election outcome was at the cusp of creating a very serious test for global derivatives markets. It was not, however, meant to be, as another one of those well-timed miraculous reversals transformed potential panic selling into manic buyers’ panic. Instead of those on the wrong side of derivative trades forced to sell into illiquid markets, it became a frenzy of bearish hedges and speculations unwinds. Another memorable short squeeze.

It’s no coincidence that this week’s melt-up was most acute in sectors that were 2016 underperformers - and generally under-owned (financials, biotechs and industrials). Moreover, many of this week’s top performing stocks were heavily shorted. To be sure, there is no quicker way to trading profits than to jump on a bearish theme that suddenly has a plausible bullish story. It’s spectacular Buyers’ Panic as the desperate shorts, the opportunistic “wise guys” and the trend-following/performance-chasing Crowd brawl over a limited supply of available securities. A destabilizing (downside) systemic liquidity event was avoided Wednesday, which ensured sporadic upside dislocations in various stocks, sector ETFs and “king dollar” more generally.

November 9 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang): “You need to go all the way back to the dark days of 2008 to find a stock market reversal to rival that of the last 12 hours, in which S&P 500 Index futures erased a 5% loss triggered by Donald Trump’s surprise presidential election win. Bigger turnarounds only happened three times before, twice in the final months of 2008 and the other in October 1987…”

It’s no coincidence that Wednesday’s wild reversal ranks right up there with three previous major volatility events – two in late 2008 and the other in October 1987. Fragile fundamental underpinnings foster unstable market dynamics – i.e. significant shorting, hedging and speculation. And there’s no more breathtaking market advance than a major bear market rally.

It’s also worth noting that the favored technology stocks underperformed this week. The Morgan Stanley High Tech Index actually declined 1.5% post-election (up 1.6% for the week). The Nasdaq 100 (NDX) fell 1.1% post-election (up 2.0% for the week). The favorite – and previously outperforming – Utilities dropped 4.2% this week.

It’s such an extraordinary backdrop. I believe the pierced global Bubble continues to flounder, but the policy responses of $2.0 TN annual global QE, near zero rates and record Chinese Credit growth have created major Bubble Anomalies. Surely, all the QE-related global liquidity excess has created aberrant market behavior (on full display this week).

On the one hand, central bank liquidity backstops have thus far allayed fears of “Risk Off” de-leveraging quickly evolving into a systemic liquidity event. On the other, the massive pool of global speculative finance (including hedge funds, ETFs, SWF and trend-followers more generally) foments a liquidity backdrop with extraordinary flow volatility between various sectors and markets. Underlying market instability has made it difficult for fund managers perform (absolute and relative to indices). In particular, this backdrop has ensured that hedges don’t perform well at all. Intense performance pressure then makes it imperative both to rotate quickly into the outperformers and to avoid missing general market rallies.

While resilient U.S. stock prices captured bullish imaginations, this week saw global bond markets get rocked. If not for QE, I believe surging yields and attendant de-leveraging would have spelled major problems for securities markets more generally. Instead, too much speculative “money” chases the outperforming stocks, sectors, asset classes and countries. Importantly, this week’s exuberance at the U.S. “Core” came at the expense of a vulnerable “Periphery.”

Mexico was close to meltdown. The Mexican peso sank 8.7% this week to a record low. Mexican 10-year dollar bond yields surged 74 bps to 3.98%, with peso bond yields surging 95 bps to a multi-year high 7.25%. Mexican stocks dropped 3.7%. The Mexico ETF (EWW) sank 17.9% post-election, with a 12.2% loss for the week. Gold dropped 5.9% this week, while Copper surged 10.8%. Despite all the focus on inflation, crude declined 1.5% to a multi-week low.

EM came under intense selling pressure starting Wednesday. The EEM ETF sank 7.8% post-election (down 3.8% for the week). In the currencies this week, the South African rand fell 5.3%, the Brazilian real 4.9%, the Polish zloty 4.6%, the Hungarian forint 3.6%, the Russian ruble 3.3%, the Romanian leu 3.0% and the Turkish lira 2.8%. China's currency declined 0.8% vs. the dollar, the biggest weekly decline since January.

In EM equities, Brazil’s Bovespa index dropped 3.9%, the Argentine Merval 3.5%, India’s Sensex 2.5%, Indonesia’s Jakarta Composite 5.2%, South Korea’s Kospi 0.9%, Taiwan’s TAIEX Index 2.1% and Thailand’s Thai 50 1.4%.

Yet the bursting Bubble thesis saw the clearest confirmation in surging global bond yields. EM bonds were just clobbered. Brazil real bond yields jumped 67 bps to 12.02%, with yields up 30 bps in Colombia (7.55%) and 47 bps in Argentina (16.07%). Eastern Europe bonds were also under pressure. This week saw yields surge 27 bps in Poland (3.32%), 32 bps in Hungary (3.38%) and 28 bps in Romania (3.33%). Russian ruble yields surged 43 bps to a five-month high 8.88%. Turkey’s 10-year bond yields jumped 31 bps to a 10-month high 10.10%. South African yields surged a notable 50 bps to a five-month high 9.15%. Yields surged 58 bps in Indonesia to a four-month high 4.12%. Malaysian yields jumped 25 bps to 3.88%. EM ETFs saw outflows of $1.8 billion over the past week, reducing y-t-d flows to $26.3bn (from Bloomberg). It was a rout.

“Developed” bonds didn’t fare much better. Australian ten-year yields surged 22 bps to 2.56%, the high since April. New Zealand yields jumped 26 bps (3.03%) and South Korea’s rose 22 bps (1.94%). Canadian 10-year yields rose 20 bps to a six-month high 1.43%.

European bonds were under heavy selling pressure. German 10-year yields rose “only” 18 bps, as spreads widened significantly throughout the Eurozone. French yields surged 28 bps, Netherlands 21 bps, Spain 21 bps and Portugal 19 bps. Ominously, Italian yields jumped 27 bps, back above 2% for the first time since July 2015. The Italian to German 10-year bond spread widened to a two-year high 171 bps.

Perhaps ominous as well, 10-year Treasury yields surged 37 bps this week to 2.15%, the high since January. Long-bond yields rose 38 bps to an almost 2016 high 2.94%. It was a case of so-called “risk-free” securities showing their true colors. The TLT (Treasury ETF) dropped 7.4% this week, wiping out most of its 2016 return. The popular AGG (IShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF) and BND (Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF) dropped 1.8% and 1.9%. Corporate high-yield (HYG) and investment-grade (LQD) EFTs this week declined 1.8% and 2.3%, respectively.

Headlines from the FT: “What is the Trump Reflation Trade?” and “’Trumpflation’ Risk Rattles Bond Markets.” From Bloomberg: “Goldman Warns Bond-Market Carnage Threatens Global Reflation.” “Bonds Plunge by $1 Trillion This Week as Trump Seen Game Changer.” And from the Wall Street Journal: “The All-Powerful Bond Market Is Getting Rocked by Trump.”

I guess we’re now in the political “honeymoon” period, one I fear will be short-lived. It would be more gratifying to be optimistic. But watching the global bond Bubble begin to unravel leaves me apprehensive. I fear this week’s wild market instability could portend some type of financial accident. There were some large losses suffered throughout the markets this week.

Inflationary biases were already percolating before the election. It’s worth noting that M2 “money” supply expanded $941bn, or 7.7%, over the past year. The Fed – and global central bankers – have brought new meaning to “behind the curve.” And as speculative markets trade inflation’s revival, the job of the Fed (and global central bankers) becomes a whole lot more challenging. Do they raise rates to help dampen fledgling inflation psychology and support faltering bond markets? Or, instead, will the prospect of a real central bank tightening cycle further weigh on bond market confidence? Hard to imagine halcyon markets in a world devoid of QE and near-zero rates.

Actually, bond trading is bringing back unpleasant memories of early 1994. Yet 2009-2016 Bubble excess makes 1991-1993 looks pretty inconsequential. And this time it’s global. Systemic. Look closely this week and one can see some weak links: Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia, Poland, Hungary, Argentina, EM generally, Ireland and Italy. Italian bond yields are all the way back to 2%. It’s worth recalling that they traded at 7% in early-2012.


For the Week:

The S&P500 jumped 3.8% (up 5.9% y-t-d), and the Dow surged 5.4% (up 8.2%). The Utilities dropped 4.2% (up 6.8%). The Banks advanced 12.7% (up 13.1%), and the Broker/Dealers jumped 14.8% (up 7.7%). The Transports rose 6.2% (up 14.2%). The broader market was exceptionally strong. The S&P 400 Midcaps gained 5.7% (up 11.8%), and the small cap Russell 2000 surged 10.2% (up 12.9%). The Nasdaq100 added 1.8% (up 3.5%), and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index increased 1.6% (up 10.1%). The Semiconductors rallied 4.3% (up 26.2%). The Biotechs spiked 17.1% higher (down 11.4%). With bullion sinking $77, the HUI gold index fell 17.1% (up 62.1%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 47 bps. Two-year government yields rose 14 bps to 0.92% (down 13bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields surged 33 bps to 1.56% (down 19bps). Ten-year Treasury yields jumped 37 bps to 2.15% (down 10bps). Long bond yields surged 38 bps to 2.94% (down 8bps).

Greek 10-year yields dropped 59 bps to 7.03% (down 29bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields rose 19 bps to 3.45% (up 93bps). Italian 10-year yields surged 27 bps to 2.02% (up 43bps). Spain's 10-year yields gained 21 bps to 1.47% (down 30bps). German bund yields rose 18 bps to 0.31% (down 31bps). French yields surged 28 to 0.74% (down 25bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread widened 10 to 43 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields jumped 23 bps to 1.36% (down 60bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index added 0.6% (up 7.8%).

Japan's Nikkei 225 equities index rallied 2.8% (down 8.7% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields rose three bps to negative 0.04% (down 30bps y-t-d). The German DAX equities index rose 4.0% (down 0.7%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index declined 1.7% (down 9.5%). Italy's FTSE MIB index recovered 3.0% (down 21.5%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index fell 3.9% (up 37%). Mexico's Bolsa dropped 3.7% (up 4.7%). South Korea's Kospi slipped 0.1% (up 1.2%). India’s Sensex equities fell 1.7% (up 2.7%). China’s Shanghai Exchange gained 2.3% (down 9.7%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index rallied 1.2% (up 4.8%). Russia's MICEX equities index jumped 3.5% (up 15.4%).

Junk bond mutual funds saw outflows of $669 million (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates increased three bps last week to a five-month high 3.57% (down 41bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates rose five bps to 2.89% (down 31bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-yr fixed rates down a basis point to 3.73% (down 26bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week expanded $2.0bn to $4.415 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit contracted $38.5bn (0.9%). Fed Credit inflated $1.604 TN, or 57%, over the past 209 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt fell $9.0bn last week to another six-year low $3.111 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $192bn y-o-y, or 5.8%.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply last week rose $26.4bn to a record $13.183 TN. "Narrow money" expanded $941bn, or 7.7%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $2.8bn. Total Checkable Deposits declined $17.3bn, while Savings Deposits jumped $36bn. Small Time Deposits were little changed. Retail Money Funds expanded $5.4bn.

Total money market fund assets gained $5.9bn to a 10-week high $2.683 TN. Money Funds declined $31.1bn y-o-y (1.1%).

Total Commercial Paper was little changed at $908bn. CP declined $141bn y-o-y, or 13.4%.

Currency Watch:

The U.S. dollar index jumped 2.2% to 99.06 (up 0.4% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the British pound increased 0.6%. For the week on the downside, the Mexican peso declined 8.7%, the South African rand 5.3%, the Brazilian real 4.9%, the Japanese yen 3.3%, the Norwegian krone 2.8%, the New Zealand dollar 2.7%, the Danish krone 2.6%, the euro 2.6%, the Singapore dollar 2.1%, the Swiss franc 2.0%, the South Korean won 1.7%, the Australian dollar 1.7%, the Swedish krona 1.6% and the Canadian dollar 1.0%. The Chinese yuan declined 0.8% versus the dollar (down 4.7% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index added 0.6% (up 12.7% y-t-d). Spot Gold sank 5.9% to $1,228 (up 16%). Silver fell 5.8% to $17.37 (up 26%). Crude declined another 66 cents to $43.41 (up 17%). Gasoline dropped 5.3% (up 3%), and Natural Gas fell 5.1% (up 12%). Copper surged 10.8% (up 18%). Wheat declined 2.7% (down 14%). Corn fell 2.4% (down 5.2%).

China Bubble Watch:

November 11 – Reuters (Kevin Yao): “Chinese banks extended 651.3 billion yuan ($95.56 billion) in new yuan loans in October, below analysts' expectations and down sharply from 1.22 trillion yuan in September. Broad M2 money supply (M2) grew 11.6% from a year earlier, the central bank said on Friday, slightly above forecasts. Outstanding yuan loans grew by 13.1% by month-end on an annual basis.”

November 7 – Wall Street Journal (Saumya Vaishampayan and Lingling Wei): “The specter of capital flight is back in China. More money is leaving the world’s No. 2 economy again, threatening Beijing’s strategy of letting its currency weaken in a controlled fashion. In the latest evidence of a surge in outflows, China’s foreign reserves plunged $45.7 billion in October from the previous month to $3.12 trillion… That is the largest drop since January, suggesting that outflows could be edging back up to the record-breaking levels of late last year and early this year. As much as $78 billion may have left China in September, according to Goldman Sachs…, the largest amount since the $100 billion-plus the firm estimates left the country in December and again in January.”

November 10 – Reuters (Elias Glenn): “Regulators in China have told banks new home mortgage loans in November must be below those issued in October, Shanghai Securities Journal reported…, as Beijing looks to curb rising leverage in the housing sector. Mortgages accounted for 35% of loans in the first half of 2016, but analysts estimate that jumped to 71% in July and August as frantic buying kick in thanks to rapidly rising prices. China's banking regulator previously asked lenders to step up risk management of property loans amid record gains in house prices that have raised concerns of price bubbles and ballooning debts. China's new home prices rose in September at the fastest rate on record… Outstanding mortgage loans to individuals rose 33.4% to 17.93 trillion yuan ($2.65 trillion) from a year ago by the end of September…”

November 6 – Bloomberg: “The push by China’s policy makers to rein in property bubbles looks to be getting traction, according to early indicators from the nation’s biggest cities. Beijing home sales volume plunged 41% year-on-year last month while Shanghai’s slumped 18%, …after new purchase restrictions and tightened mortgage lending. Transactions fell 50% in smaller cities. Now policy makers must balance deflating property prices with safeguarding the expansion.”

November 7 – Bloomberg: “China’s policy makers are playing catch-up as investors get more creative in evading capital controls. The authorities are taking a series of steps to plug loopholes, such as a potential plan to curb transactions that use the bitcoin digital currency to take funds out of the country, as well as a statement from UnionPay Co. limiting mainlanders from using its cards to buy insurance in Hong Kong. These add to more traditional measures, including an order seen as asking mainland banks to reduce foreign-exchange sales… ‘The People’s Bank of China is doing this now because data show capital outflow pressures remain significant and there are no signs of a reversal,’ said Ken Cheung, a currency strategist at Mizuho Bank… ‘It looks like the government will block outflow channels as and when they find them. This will slow the yuan’s internationalization and discourage foreign investment due to concern money will get locked up once invested.’”

November 7 – Financial Times (Gabriel Wildau): “China’s securitisation market has blossomed this year as authorities embrace financial innovation, with bankers packaging an eclectic mix of assets from dance ticket revenues to bridge tolls. Beijing approved the country’s first securitisation deals in 2005, but the programme was halted in 2008 after regulators observed the damage wreaked by risky mortgage securities in the US. The programme was revived in 2012, starting primarily with vanilla assets such as corporate loans, home mortgages and auto loans. This year, activity has shifted to corporate receivables, and issuance has soared. Banks and non-financial companies together completed 384 securitisation deals in the first nine months of 2016, up from 327 deals for all of 2015… Non-bank deals have accounted for 284 of this year’s total. In value terms, deals totalled Rmb584bn ($86bn) through the end of September, close to 2015’s full-year… ‘Almost every conceivable asset from anyone can be securitised. This makes the market far more diverse than in the US and Europe,’ says Pang Yang, chief executive of China Securitization Analytics… ‘For many companies, this is the only way they can raise capital at the moment.’”

November 8 – Bloomberg: “China’s $3.2 trillion corporate bond market is already starting to reel from rising interbank borrowing costs, and the traditional year-end funding crunch hasn’t even started yet. The yield premium for five-year AA rated notes over the sovereign climbed 10 bps in October as money market rates surged to an 18-month high. Worse may be yet to come as lenders tend to hoard cash for year-end regulatory checks, prompting the overnight repurchase rate fixing to rise in December in four of the past five years, including a 33 bps jump in the last month of 2015… Any disruption in the market could make it harder for companies to refinance as 4.1 trillion yuan ($605bn) of bonds coming due next year.”

November 7 – Bloomberg: “China’s passenger-vehicle sales climbed for an eighth consecutive month as consumers rushed to buy small-engine autos ahead of a tax cut due to expire at year-end, boosting deliveries at local carmakers… Retail sales of cars, sport utility and multipurpose vehicles increased 20% to 2.22 million units last month…”

November 8 – Bloomberg: “China’s exports fell for a seventh month, leaving policy makers reliant on domestic growth engines to hit their economic expansion goals. Overseas shipments dropped 7.3% from a year earlier in October in dollar terms. Imports slipped 1.4%. Trade surplus widened to $49.1 billion. A depreciation of about 9% in the yuan since August 2015 has cushioned the blow from tepid global demand, but failed to give shipments a sustained boost. Rising input costs and surging wages have flattened exporter profit margins…”

November 7 – New York Times (Paul Mozur): “In August, business groups around the world petitioned China to rethink a proposed cybersecurity law that they said would hurt foreign companies and further separate the country from the internet. On Monday, China passed that law — a sign that when it comes to the internet, China will go its own way. The new rules… are part of a broader effort to better define how the internet is managed inside China’s borders. Officials say the rules will help stop cyberattacks and help prevent acts of terrorism, while critics say they will further erode internet freedom. Business groups worry that parts of the law — such as required security checks on companies in industries like finance and communications, and mandatory in-country data storage — will make foreign operations more expensive or lock them out altogether.”

November 7 – Reuters (Venus Wu): “More than 1,000 Hong Kong lawyers dressed in black marched through the heart of the city in silence on Tuesday to condemn a move by China that effectively bars two elected pro-independence lawmakers from taking their seats in the legislature. The former British colony returned to China in 1997 under a ‘one country, two systems’ agreement that ensured its freedoms, including a separate legal system. But Beijing has ultimate control and some Hong Kong people are concerned it is increasingly interfering to head off dissent.”

Europe Watch:

November 9 – Bloomberg (Anooja Debnath): “The anti-establishment whirlwind is headed for Italy now that it has sent Donald Trump to the White House. Italian government bonds slid in the wake of Trump’s stunning victory, reflecting worries that Prime Minister Matteo Renzi will lose a referendum on political reform, scheduled for Dec. 4. ‘If protest votes are ‘a thing,’ then the next opportunity for the electorate to express how fed up they are with conventional politics’ is for the Italians, Kit Juckes, …strategist at Societe Generale SA, wrote…”

November 7 – Reuters (Francesco Canepa): “The most prominent hawk on the European Central Bank's board defended the bank’s ultra-loose monetary policy on Monday, but added that she was skeptical of further interest rate cuts or other forms of easing. Sabine Lautenschlaeger's comments were likely to be read as an indication she might oppose extending the ECB's monthly bond-buying program much beyond its March deadline - a decision the ECB will make at its meeting in a month's time.”

November 11 – Reuters (Kevin Yao): “Germany's financial watchdog warned against a loosening of post-financial crisis bank regulations... Felix Hufeld, president of Germany's top financial regulator Bafin, made the call at an industry conference days after the election of Donald Trump, who has said he would scrap some financial rules to help U.S. businesses if he became president… ‘Barely 10 years after the start of the financial crisis I once more hear the bugle calls of deregulation,’ Hufeld said…”

Fixed-Income Bubble Watch:

November 10 – Financial Times (Elaine Moore): “Donald Trump has come under criticism for his lack of specifics on policy in the campaign. But in his victory speech after his upset in the US presidential election, he made one very specific promise: to invest in American infrastructure. ‘We are going to fix our inner cities and rebuild our highways, bridges, tunnels, airports, schools, hospitals,’ Mr Trump said. ‘We’re going to rebuild our infrastructure, which will become, by the way, second to none. And we will put millions of our people to work as we rebuild it.’ By singling out a public works programme, the president-elect has raised expectations in bond markets of government stimulus that would not only raise debt levels but spur growth and inflation — testing a three-decade rally that drove yields to record lows.”

November 10 – Wall Street Journal (Christopher Whittall and Sam Goldfarb): “A selloff in government bonds picked up more momentum Thursday, spreading across the world as investors reacted to the prospect of increased fiscal stimulus under a Donald Trump presidency. Investors are now asking whether Mr. Trump’s victory marks a turning point for fixed-income markets that have been on lengthy bull run. In recent trading, the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was 2.118%... That came on the back of the biggest one-day jump in the 10-year yield in over three years Wednesday.”

Global Bubble Watch:

November 9 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang): “You need to go all the way back to the dark days of 2008 to find a stock market reversal to rival that of the last 12 hours, in which S&P 500 Index futures erased a 5% loss triggered by Donald Trump’s surprise presidential election win. Bigger turnarounds only happened three times before, twice in the final months of 2008 and the other in October 1987…”

November 10 – Bloomberg (Lilian Karunungan and Anooja Debnath): “Investors saw $337 billion wiped off the value of securities that comprise an index of global bonds in a single day Wednesday following Donald Trump’s election as President, the flipside of global upswing in stocks and commodities. While Trump’s spending plans have pushed equities, raw materials and the dollar higher, bonds have declined on speculation he’ll need to sell more debt and on concern faster growth will lead to a surge in inflation, which erodes the value of fixed-income securities. The selloff deepened on Thursday, pushing 10-year Treasuries down for a fourth day and sending yields in Italy to the highest level since September 2015.”

November 6 – Financial Times (Mary Childs): “The exchange-traded fund industry has ballooned to more than $3.2tn in assets, surpassing the $2.97tn held in hedge funds, as investors pile into low-cost offerings to capture the multiyear market rally. Scepticism about the high-fee hedge fund industry has grown from its years of underperforming benchmarks, leading investors to migrate to cheaper options such as ETFs. These products have proved popular in large part because of their low fees… and the fact they are treated differently for tax purposes, enabling them to avoid capital gains distributions.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

November 7 – Reuters (Eliza Ronalds-Hannon and Liz McCormick): “Barack Obama will go down in history as having sold more Treasuries and at lower interest rates than any U.S. president. He’s also leaving a debt burden that threatens to hamstring his successor. Obama’s administration benefited from some unprecedented advantages that helped it grapple with the longest recession since the 1930s. The Federal Reserve kept rates at historically low levels, partly by becoming the single biggest holder of Treasuries. The U.S. could also rely on insatiable demand from international investors, led by China deploying its hoard of reserves. Global buyers added $3 trillion of Treasuries, doubling ownership to a record.”

November 8 – Wall Street Journal (Aaron Back): “After the auto-lending boom of recent years, signs of trouble are starting to pop up. Total auto loans outstanding in the U.S. reached $1.1 trillion in the second quarter… Auto-loan originations in the period were $149 billion, close to the record $151 billion in the third quarter of last year. There are two major risks: One is that borrowers will prove less creditworthy than expected, giving rise to defaults and write-offs. The second is that used-car prices will fall by more than lenders anticipated… There were worrying signs on both fronts Monday. Auto and consumer lender OneMain Holdings said it now expects its net charge-off ratio to rise to 7.2% to 7.6% in 2017... Its shares fell by nearly 39% on Tuesday. Separately, rental car giant Hertz Global Holdings took a $39 million charge to its estimate of the residual value of its car fleet. Its shares fell by 23% on Tuesday.”

November 7 – New York Times (Leslie Picker): “Wall Street bonuses are expected to decline for the third consecutive year, reflecting a period of busted mergers, limited trading activity and muted hedge fund returns. The payouts are projected to be from 5 to 10% lower this year, according to an annual report… by Johnson Associates… Bonuses fell about the same amount last year from 2014.”

Federal Reserve Watch:

November 9 – Wall Street Journal (Kate Davidson and Jon Hilsenrath): “The central bank has been insulated from congressional critics for the past eight years by an Obama administration that quietly supported its aggressive efforts to spur economic growth. In Donald Trump, the Federal Reserve will face a president who has expressed varying views about its policies… in addition to divergent views about Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen. Mr. Trump’s comments in the final days of his campaign suggested he might not feel bound by the tradition of recent presidents staying mum on monetary policy. He might also be willing to work with the GOP-controlled Congress to rewrite the laws governing the Fed’s structure and disclosures, possibly embracing proposals central bank officials have seen as threats to their policy-making independence.”

Leveraged Speculator Watch:

November 11 – Bloomberg (Taylor Hall): “Ray Dalio’s $150 billion Bridgewater Associates has received approval to invest in China’s onshore bond market… The world’s largest hedge fund manager will trade the fixed-income securities via the China Interbank Bond Market through the firm’s All Weather product structure, making them the first global hedge fund manager approved to access and trade the CIBM…”

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Friday's News Links

[Bloomberg] Stocks, Bonds, Commodities Slump as Traders Weigh U.S. Election

[Bloomberg] Trump Butterfly Effect Routs Currencies, Bonds as Copper Surges

[Bloomberg] Carry Trades Collapse as Emerging-Market Yield Advantage Shrinks

[Bloomberg] Italy’s Bonds Tumble as Trump Win Boosts Referendum Concern

[Reuters] Asian shares stumble as soaring U.S. bond yields fuel outflow worries

[Bloomberg] China’s Yuan Set for Steepest Weekly Loss Since January Turmoil

[Bloomberg] Rupiah Plunges Most Since 2011 Prompting Central Bank to Step In

[Bloomberg] Bonds Plunge by $1 Trillion This Week as Trump Seen Game Changer

[Bloomberg] Copper Explodes Above $6,000 With Prices Set for Best Week Ever

[Bloomberg] Fischer Says Fed Getting Close to Reaching Goals, Raising Rates

[Reuters] China Oct new yuan loans 651.3 bln yuan, below forecasts

[Reuters] China's household debt a growing risk to economy

[Bloomberg] These Charts Show the Huge Stampede out of Emerging Markets

[Dow Jones] Bundesbank''s Weidmann Urges Calm After Trump Election

[Reuters] German watchdog warns against financial deregulation after Trump win

[WSJ] The All-Powerful Bond Market Is Getting Rocked by Trump

[Financial Times] Fuse is lit on bond markets time-bomb

[FT] The sell-off in EM FX just got real

[WSJ] New Populism and Silicon Valley on a Collision Course

[WSJ] Farmland Prices Fall in Much of Central U.S.

[Reuters] China's Xi vows zero tolerance for separatist movements

Thursday Evening Links

[Bloomberg] Emerging Asia Currencies Drop as Fed Rate-Hike Bets Sink Bonds

[Bloomberg] Dow Average Rallies to Record as Treasuries Slide on Trump Bets

[Bloomberg] Tech Stocks Are Getting Crushed

[FXStreet] Brazilian real tumbles to lowest since June

[Bloomberg] Wells Fargo Leads Banks Up as Trump Win Seen Curbing Warren

[Bloomberg] Trump Rotation Has Small Caps Beating S&P 500 Most in Five Years

[Bloomberg] Trump’s Transition Team Pledges to Dismantle Dodd-Frank Act

[Bloomberg] Warren Says She Would Work With Trump on Bank-Industry Policies

[Bloomberg] Wall Street Hopes Trump Makes Structured Finance Great Again

[Bloomberg] Trump Outlines Health-Care Plan, Including Repealing Obamacare

[Reuters] Investors, economists brace for new dangerous game: parsing Trump's words

[Reuters] From avocados to autos, Mexican businesses fear tough times with Trump