Friday, August 14, 2020

Weekly Commentary: Safe Haven Treasuries Not So Safe

A “sloppy” auction saw 30-year Treasury yields surge 21 bps this week to 1.45%, an almost seven-week closing high.  Ten-year Treasury yields jumped 14 bps to 0.71%, while benchmark MBS yields rose 17 bps to 1.38%.  But how about in dollars?  The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) lost 3.9% for the week.  Is a so-called “safe haven” losing almost 4% in a single week really a safe haven?  Sure, Treasury yields could decline more from current historically low levels.  But this week confirmed the risk versus reward calculus for owning Treasury bonds these days is unattractive.

Corporate bonds somewhat outperformed but posted losses for the week nonetheless.  The iShares Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (LQD) fell 2.4%, and the iShares High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG) declined 1.3%.  We’ll see if this week’s reversal leads to any slowdown in the wall of “money” flooding into bond funds.

Perhaps of more consequence, the spectacular EM bond (price) “melt-up” came to a rather abrupt halt this week.  Brazil’s 10-year (real) yields surged 51 bps to 7.27% - trading this week to the highest yields since April.  Local currency Eastern European bonds were under notable pressure, with yields surging 30 bps in Romania, 16 bps in Hungary and 11 bps in Czech Republic. India’s 10-year yields rose 11 bps to 5.95% - the high since May.

Dollar-denominated EM yields abruptly reversed higher as well. Brazil’s 10-year yields surged 25 bps to 3.61%, with Mexico’s yields up 23 bps to 2.93%, Russian yields up 10 bps to 2.16%, and Indonesian yields up 10 bps to 2.12%.

Rising yields were a global phenomenon.  European – “core” and “periphery” -  yields surged higher, led by nine bps increases in German (negative 0.42%) and French (negative 0.13%) 10-year yields.  Greek yields rose 12 bps (1.13%), and Italian yields gained six bps (0.99%).  Portuguese (0.37%) and Spanish (0.36%) yields both rose eight bps. UK yields rose 10 bps to 0.24%.

Japanese JGB yields rose four bps to 0.45%, matching the highest yields since March. Yields rose eight bps in Singapore to 0.88% and seven bps in Australia to 0.93%.   

At $6.911 TN, the Fed’s balance sheet is little changed over the past three months.  Granted, Fed Credit is up $3.167 TN, or 85%, over the past year.  But perhaps Fed liquidity effects have begun to wane somewhat. Meanwhile, there’s absolutely no end in sight for the unprecedented supply of new fixed-income securities (Treasuries and corporates).  

August 14 – Bloomberg (Brian Smith): “With dealers calling for $30bn to price along with an already robust visible pipeline, 2020 U.S. investment-grade new issue volume is set to break 2017’s FY volume record early next week. High-grade new issue supply is up 76% YoY and less than $10bn away from breaking the new issue volume record of $1.333trl set in 2017. What started as a defensive cash grab - buoyed by the Fed’s backstop - has morphed into an opportunity to refinance, pre-fund or even add incremental debt.”

August 12 – Bloomberg (Max Reyes and Gowri Gurumurthy): “Junk-rated companies have borrowed $274.8 billion in 2020, exceeding the sum of cash raised during all of last year… The record comes after the high-yield market saw the best returns since 2011 in July, attracting hefty inflows as investors continue to hunt for yield…”

Along with never-ending supply, perhaps bond markets are also beginning to sense fledging inflation risk.  July CPI and PPI readings both posted upside surprises.  At 0.6%, consumer prices doubled estimates – and have quickly reversed the negative CPI prints from March and April.  July producer prices also doubled estimates at 0.6%, posting the strongest monthly gain since October 2018.

Data out of China were also concerning.  Challenging the bullish recovery narrative, July Retail Sales were down 1.1% (versus estimates of a small increase).  This put year-to-date sales 9.9% below comparable 2019.  July auto sales were up 16.4% for the month, though year-to-date sales were still down 12.7%.  July airline passenger numbers were 34.1% below July 2019.  Also noteworthy, July lending and money supply growth came in below estimates.

China’s Aggregate Financing expanded a weaker-than-expected $243 billion during July.  This was down from June’s $494 billion.  Year-to-date (seven months), Aggregate Financing expanded a record $3.240 TN.  This was 42% ahead of growth from 2019 ($2.29 TN) and 70% above the comparable 2018 expansion ($1.91 TN).  Over the past year, Aggregate Financing expanded $4.633 TN, or 12.9%. It’s worth noting bonds are the fastest expanding components within Aggregate Financing.  Outstanding Corporate Bonds were up 21.1% y-o-y, with Government Bonds rising 16.5%.

Bank Loans expanded $142 billion, down from June’s $261 billion.  This was about 20% below forecasts and 6% below July 2019.  It was also the weakest lending since February.  Yet year-to-date Bank Loan growth of $1.882 TN ran 22% ahead of comparable 2019 (25% above comparable 2018).  Bank Loans were up 13.0 year-over-year ($2.76 TN), with two-year growth of 27.2% and five-year growth of 84.1%.

Consumer Loans expanded a weaker-than-expected $109 billion, down from June’s $141 billion.  Yet July Consumer Loan growth was 48% ahead of net lending from July 2019.  Consumer Loans were up 14.3% year-over-year, 33% in two years, 58% in three years and 135% in five.

August 14 – Bloomberg: “After receiving dozens of phone calls and text messages from banks touting cheap, unsecured and easy-to-get consumer loans, Eric Zhang visited one of China’s largest lenders in June and borrowed 400,000 yuan ($57,600) at an interest rate of 4%. But there was a catch -- he had to sign a letter promising the money wouldn’t be invested in property or stocks. That didn’t stop Zhang. A few days later, he’d found a merchant who helped him make a fake purchase and move the cash to his brokerage account. ‘I don’t think the bank can track the money and identify its real use,’ said Zhang, who works at a… private equity firm. ‘It’s a great trade for me,’ he said, after seeing his fresh stock investments surge 6% in one month.”

Bank lending to corporations (“Non-Financial Corporations”) dropped to $38 billion from June’s $133 billion – the weakest expansion since October’s $18 billion.  July is typically slow for corporate lending.  Corporate bond issuance dropped from June’s $49 billion to $34 billion, also the weakest expansion since October. 

August 11 – South China Morning Post (Georgina Lee): “Chinese banks’ net profits dropped a combined 24% during the second quarter, compared with a year earlier as banks grappled with bad loans caused by the coronavirus pandemic. The industry’s net profit stood at 426.7 billion yuan (US$61.4bn), down from 559 billion yuan during the same period a year ago. Profits were 29% down from the 600 billion yuan recorded in the first quarter… The fall in second-quarter profitability was sharper than expected, said some analysts, caused mainly by banks making higher provisions for loan losses. The industry’s loan loss ratio rose to 3.54%, up 0.04 percentage points from the first quarter. The non-performing loan (NPL) ratio for the industry rose to a 10-year high, at 1.94%, up from 1.91% at the end of the first quarter.”

China’s M2 money supply declined $136 billion during July, the first contraction since October.  This followed June’s staggering $500 billion M2 surge.  M2 expanded $2.00 TN year-to-date (seven months), or 11.7% annualized.  M2 was up $2.965 TN year-over-year, or 10.7%. M2 was up 19.7% in two years, 30.5% in three and 57% over five years.

Beijing is in a tricky spot –  a quite tenuous balancing act.  While there are fears of waning domestic and international demand, speculative market Bubbles (stocks and apartments) are a major cause for concern. With system Credit (“Aggregate Financing”) up an unprecedented $4.6 TN over the past year, China’s Bubble Economy and Market Structures have turned only more unwieldy. July’s data support the view of a cautious Chinese consumer bereft of pre-COVID confidence.  

And speaking of confidence… Booming markets have assumed endless on-demand U.S. fiscal and monetary stimulus.  And this might actually hold true – in crisis environments.  When markets are flying, politics make quite a resurgence.  And there are reasons Fed officials have become such strong proponents of fiscal stimulus:  at this point they appreciate monetary stimulus comes with major risks, certainly including more destabilizing Bubble excess and worsening inequality.  Along with pivotal elections (with all the potential for fiasco) only about 80 days away, market fun and games are officially on borrowed time.

For the Week:

The S&P500 added 0.6% (up 4.4% y-t-d), and the Dow gained 1.8% (down 2.1%). The Utilities fell 2.6% (down 6.0%). The Banks rose 2.0% (down 30.4%), and the Broker/Dealers gained 1.8% (up 1.7%). The Transports surged 3.6% (up 0.5%). The S&P 400 Midcaps increased 0.6% (down 5.5%), and the small cap Russell 2000 gained 0.6% (down 5.4%). The Nasdaq100 added 0.2% (up 27.8%). The Semiconductors advanced 1.0% (up 19.0%). The Biotechs fell 2.2% (up 9.6%). With bullion dropping $90, the HUI gold index sank 5.8% (up 36.5%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 0.0875%. Two-year government yields increased two bps to 0.145% (down 142bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields rose six bps to 0.295% (down 140bps). Ten-year Treasury yields jumped 14 bps to 0.71% (down 121bps). Long bond yields surged 21 bps to 1.45% (down 94bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields rose 17 bps to 1.38% (down 133bps).

Greek 10-year yields jumped 12 bps to 1.13% (down 31bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields rose 8 bps to 0.37% (down 7bps). Italian 10-year yields gained six bps to 0.99% (down 43bps). Spain's 10-year yields rose eight bps to 0.36% (down 11bps). German bund yields jumped nine bps to negative 0.42% (down 24bps). French yields rose nine bps to negative 0.13% (down 25bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread little changed at 29 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields jumped 10 bps to 0.24% (down 58bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index advanced 1.0% (down 19.3%).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index surged 4.3% (down 1.6% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields rose four bps to 0.05% (up 6bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 gained 1.5% (down 17.0%). The German DAX equities index rose 1.8% (down 2.6%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index jumped 2.9% (down 25.1%). Italy's FTSE MIB index rose 2.6% (down 14.8%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index declined 1.4% (down 12.4%), while Mexico's Bolsa rallied 2.5% (down 10.6%). South Korea's Kospi index gained 2.4% (up 9.5%). India's Sensex equities index slipped 0.4% (down 8.2%). China's Shanghai Exchange added 0.2% (up 10.2%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index recovered 2.2% (down 5.6%). Russia's MICEX equities index jumped 3.0% (up 0.5%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $6.482 billion, and junk bond funds posted positive flows of $1.542 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped eight bps to 2.96% (down 64bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates added two bps to 2.46% (down 61bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates declined were unchanged at 2.90% (down 45bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates up five bps to 3.17% (down 89bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week gained $8.9bn to $6.911 TN, with a 49-week gain of $3.189 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit expanded $3.167 TN, or 85%. Fed Credit inflated $4.100 Trillion, or 146%, over the past 405 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt billion last week declined $0.8bn to $3.408 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $60bn, or 1.7%, y-o-y.

M2 (narrow) "money" supply declined $26.6bn last week to $18.260 TN, with an unprecedented 23-week gain of $2.752 TN. "Narrow money" surged $3.337 TN, or 22.4%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $7.2bn. Total Checkable Deposits surged $120.5bn, while Savings Deposits sank $144.8bn. Small Time Deposits fell $10.2bn. Retail Money Funds added $0.6bn.

Total money market fund assets fell $20.8bn to $4.555 TN. Total money funds surged $1.200 TN y-o-y, or 35.8%.

Total Commercial Paper declined $8.9bn to $1.010 TN. CP was down $125bn, or 11.0% year-over-year.

Currency Watch:

For the week, the U.S. dollar index declined 0.4% to 93.096 (down 3.5% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Mexican peso increased 1.8%, the Norwegian krone 1.7%, South African 1.4%, Canadian dollar 0.9%, Swedish krone 0.7%, euro 0.5%, Swiss franc 0.4%, Brazilian real 0.4%, British pound 0.3%, Australian dollar 0.2%, and Singapore dollar 0.1%. For the week on the downside, the  New Zealand dollar declined 1.0% and the Japanese yen 0.6%. The Chinese renminbi increased 0.25% versus the dollar this week (up 0.19% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

August 11 – Wall Street Journal (Kirk Maltais): “The raw ingredients for goods including chocolate and clothes have rebounded after their pandemic-fueled declines, lifted by supply constraints and investors’ bets that a recovering economy will boost consumer demand. Cocoa, coffee and other soft commodities trading on the Intercontinental Exchange have bounced back from their lows earlier this year and now number among the world’s best-performing major assets. In the past month alone, cocoa futures have risen 15% to $2,448 a metric ton and coffee futures have climbed 14% to $1.11 a pound. Cotton and sugar futures have also surged in recent months and are up 11% and 20%, respectively, since May 1.”

The Bloomberg Commodities Index increased 0.5% (down 12.5% y-t-d). Spot Gold fell 4.4% to $1,945 (up 28.1%). Silver dropped 4.7% to $26.258 (up 46.5%). WTI crude gained 79 cents to $42.01 (down 31%). Gasoline rallied 3.1% (down 26%), and Natural Gas jumped 5.3% (up 8%). Copper jumped 3.2% (up 3%). Wheat rose 2.8% (down 9%). Corn surged 5.4% (down 13%).

Coronavirus Watch:

August 11 – Associated Press (Mark Stevenson, Nicky Forster and Michelle R. Smith): “It took six months for the world to reach 10 million confirmed cases of the coronavirus. It took just over six weeks for that number to double. The worldwide count of known COVID-19 infections climbed past 20 million on Monday, with more than half of them from just three countries: the U.S., India and Brazil… The average number of new cases per day in the U.S. has declined in recent weeks but is still running high at over 54,000, versus almost 59,000 in India and nearly 44,000 in Brazil.”

August 13 – Bloomberg (Bibhudatta Pradhan and Ragini Saxena): “Several Indian ministers in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s cabinet have tested positive for Covid-19 in the past few days, underscoring the spread of the virus in the world’s second most populous nation. Five ministers including Modi’s key aide and minister for internal security Amit Shah have contracted the virus which has infected nearly 2.4 million Indians. The south Asian nation has the highest death toll after U.S., Brazil and Mexico. Some of the ministers, including Shah, are in hospitals while others are recovering at home.”

Market Instability Watch:

August 12 – Associated Press (Stan Choe, Alex Veiga and Christopher Rugaber): “The stock market is not the economy. Rarely has that adage been as clear as it is now. An amazing, monthslong rally means the S&P 500 is roughly back to where it was before the coronavirus slammed the U.S, even though millions of workers are still getting unemployment benefits and businesses continue to shutter across the country. The S&P 500… ended Wednesday at 3,380.35 after briefly topping its closing record of 3,386.15 set on Feb. 19. It’s erased nearly all of the 34% plunge from February into March… The U.S. and global economies have shown some improvements since the spring, when business lockdowns were widespread, but they are nowhere close to fully healed… Many industries, such as airlines, hotels and dining, could take years to recover from the damage. The Federal Reserve and the U.S. government get a lot of the credit for the rally after pouring trillions of dollars into the economy.”

August 13 – Financial Times (Colby Smith): “The US government faced lacklustre demand for its latest record auction of long-dated Treasury bonds, marking one of its first mis-steps in funding historic spending packages passed by US legislators since March. On Thursday, the Treasury department struggled to offload $26bn of 30-year bonds at record-low interest rates. Instead, the bonds were sold at a yield of 1.4%, more than 0.02 percentage points above market expectations at the time of the auction deadline. Investors submitted bids for 2.14 times the amount on offer, the lowest bid-to-cover ratio for 30-year bonds since July 2019…”

August 12 – Financial Times (Mamta Badkar and Eric Platt): “Small and medium-sized US companies suffered a complete wipeout in profits in the second quarter because of the Covid-19 crisis, in sharp contrast to large multinationals that emerged from the most intense phase of the pandemic in better shape. As the earnings season draws to a close, companies within the Russell 2000 stock index — the small-cap benchmark — have reported an aggregate loss of $1.1bn, compared to profits of almost $18bn a year earlier… Meantime, the much bigger companies within the benchmark S&P 500 index have posted a 34% aggregate drop in earnings, to $233bn.”

August 10 – CNBC (Kate Rooney): “Robinhood joined the rest of brokerage industry by publishing monthly trading data... The start-up trounced them all — at least by one metric. Robinhood saw 4.3 million daily average revenue trades, or DARTS, in June… This is the first time the start-up has shared monthly totals. Robinhood’s debut total was higher than all of the major incumbent brokerage firms, and more than E-Trade and Charles Schwab combined.”

August 10 – Blooomberg (Paula Seligson and Gowri Gurumurthy): “Ball Corp. sold $1.3 billion of junk bonds at record-low yields amid a rally triggered by the Federal Reserve’s historic support for the market and heavy inflows into funds that buy the risky debt. The aluminum packaging company priced the 10-year notes at a 2.875% yield… That’s the lowest-ever for a U.S. junk bond with a maturity of five years or longer… The debt deal comes amid a surge in issuance from high-yield borrowers seeking to cut interest expense on existing debt as yields approach unprecedented lows of 4.95%. They closed Friday at 5.31%.”

August 9 – Bloomberg (David Gaffen): “Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicted a deeper depreciation for the Turkish currency and warned that ‘with August illiquidity ahead of us, risks of another discontinuous move in local assets are rising.’”

Global Bubble Watch:

August 7 – Financial Times (Joe Rennison): “Central bankers have spent years warning of the perils of excess corporate debt. But their solution to this year’s coronavirus storm in financial markets has led to even more of it. It is the Catch-22 of post-2008 policymaking, and of now post-pandemic policymaking, too. To stave off a debt crisis, monetary policymakers create conditions that allow companies to borrow even more, increasing the potential severity of the next crisis. No central banker wants to encourage excessive borrowing but, equally, no central banker wants to stand by while companies default, increasing unemployment and throttling economic growth. ‘The chosen solution to a debt crisis is more debt,’ said Hans Mikkelsen, a credit strategist at Bank of America. ‘There is no escaping it. You cannot cut it back unless you can create a tremendous amount of economic growth to offset it. There is nothing the central banks can do.’”

August 12 – CNBC (Saheli Roy Choudhury): “As Latin America continues to battle the coronavirus outbreak, some economies in the region could see a ‘record-breaking contraction’ not seen since World War II, according to… Goldman Sachs.  Latin America and the Caribbean have become a new global epicenter of the pandemic, and the United Nations warned several countries in the region are ‘now among those with the highest per capita infection rates worldwide.’ Countries like Brazil, Mexico, Peru, Colombia and Chile are among the ten worst-affected, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. More than 100,000 people have died from Covid-19 in Brazil alone.”

August 12 – Financial Times (Delphine Strauss): “The UK economy suffered a bigger slump than any other major European economy in the second quarter, shrinking by a fifth and falling into its deepest recession on record. Official data… showed that gross domestic product fell more than 20% quarter on quarter, with widespread contractions across all sectors.”

August 13 – Reuters (Joseph Sipalan): “Malaysia’s economy shrank by 17.1% in the second quarter from a year earlier, its worst contraction in over two decades, as strict coronavirus measures at home and abroad slammed consumer spending and exports… The downturn was far worse than the 10.0% decline forecast…”

August 8 – Reuters (David Gaffen): “The world’s five largest oil companies collectively cut the value of their assets by nearly $50 billion in the second quarter, and slashed production rates as the coronavirus pandemic caused a drastic fall in fuel prices and demand. The dramatic reductions in asset valuations and decline in output show the depth of the pain in the second quarter.”

Trump Administration Watch:

August 12 – Reuters (Steve Holland and Susan Heavey): “President Donald Trump accused congressional Democrats… of not wanting to negotiate over a U.S. coronavirus aid package because he was refusing to go along with ‘ridiculous’ spending requests unrelated to the pandemic. Trump’s comments came after top Republican and Democratic negotiators traded blame for a five-day lapse in talks over relief legislation.”

August 8 – Financial Times (Emma Newburger and Jacob Pramuk): “President Donald Trump… signed a series of executive orders expanding coronavirus economic relief to Americans struggling during the pandemic. The president’s four orders extend unemployment benefits, provide a payroll tax holiday, defer student loan payments through 2020 and extend the federal protections from evictions. Trump’s orders will quickly face a legal challenge, as continuing the programs would require federal funding, which Congress controls.”

August 10 – Wall Street Journal (Eric Morath): “The federal government spent nearly $250 billion on extra $600-a-week unemployment benefits from early April to the end of July… Workers who permanently lost their jobs, were furloughed or had their hours cut were able to tap $600 in federal unemployment benefits on top of the amount they qualified for from the state, under a relief law Congress passed and President Trump signed in March. The benefits expired on July 31. Mr. Trump on Saturday signed an executive order that would replace the larger payments with $300 a week in enhanced unemployment benefits, and called on states to provide another $100 a week.”

August 11 – Reuters (Susan Heavey): “U.S. President Donald Trump… said his relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping has frayed in the wake of the novel coronavirus pandemic and that he has not spoken to his Chinese counterpart in a long time. ‘I used to have a very good relationship with him… I had a great relationship with President Xi. I like him, but I don’t feel the same way now.’”

August 10 – Financial Times (Demetri Sevastopulo): “When US secretary of state Mike Pompeo last month declared in a speech that China was intent on ‘hegemony’, it was yet another sign of how much has changed since Donald Trump wrote in a tweet in March about his ‘respect’ for president Xi Jinping. As the pandemic has devastated the US economy, imperilling his re-election, Mr Trump has ditched his reluctance to taking a harsher stance on Beijing, as he increasingly blames the Chinese government for what he calls the ‘China virus’.  His decision to make China a bogeyman in the 2020 US presidential race has opened the door for security hawks to push policies to clamp down on threats from Beijing that Mr Trump previously ignored. But some officials privately say that they are also racing to enact tough policies in case Mr Trump ends up losing to Joe Biden in November.”

August 10 – Bloomberg (Alexandre Tanzi): “President Donald Trump’s decision to extend a student-loan freeze will take away a financial risk for tens of millions of U.S. households, who now won’t have to resume paying back about $1.2 trillion of debt until at least 2021. The measure, one of four executive actions Trump took on Aug. 8, keeps both repayments and the accumulation of interest on hold through the end of this year.”

August 7 – Wall Street Journal (Bob Davis): “The Trump administration’s cascade of actions taken against Beijing represent a new chapter in U.S.-China relations, one marked by increasing confrontation and few efforts to de-escalate the tensions. Business leaders, scholars and others involved in U.S.-China relations say that while the administration’s moves clearly have an electoral component—the president is campaigning on being tough on China—they go well beyond the 2020 election. Previous confrontations between the two nations have been limited as they sought to put business and economic relations first. But U.S. business no longer has the sway it once had in getting Beijing and Washington to back off.”

August 10 – Reuters (Jeff Mason, Andrea Shalal and Alexandra Alper): “U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin… said companies from China and other countries that do not comply with accounting standards will be delisted from U.S. stock exchanges as of the end of 2021. Mnuchin and other officials recommended the move to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission last week to ensure that Chinese firms are held to the same standards as U.S. companies, prompting China to call for frank dialogue.”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

August 12 – Reuters (David Lawder): “The U.S. federal budget deficit fell to $63 billion in July, half the amount of a year earlier and down from $864 billion in June, as a delayed July 15 tax payment deadline boosted revenues and coronavirus aid outlays shrank sharply… The July deficit brought the fiscal year-to-date deficit to $2.81 trillion, compared to $867 billion for the comparable period of 2019 and doubling the 2009 full-year record deficit of $1.4 trillion.”

August 12 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “U.S. consumer prices increased more than expected in July, but high unemployment is likely to keep inflation under control, allowing the Federal Reserve to continue pumping money into the economy… The… consumer price index rose 0.6% last month after rebounding 0.6% in June. In the 12 months through July, the CPI accelerated 1.0% after climbing 0.6% in June. Economists… had forecast the CPI rising 0.3% in July…”

August 11 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “U.S. producer prices rebounded more than expected in July, but the overall trend in producer inflation remained subdued amid signs the economy’s recovery from the COVID-19 recession was faltering. The… producer price index for final demand increased 0.6% last month after falling 0.2% in June. In the 12 months through July, the PPI dropped 0.4% after declining 0.8% in June.”

August 13 – CNBC (Jeff Cox): “First-time claims for unemployment insurance last week fell below 1 million for the first time since March 21 in a sign that the labor market is continuing its recovery from the coronavirus pandemic. The total claims of 963,000 for the week ended Aug. 8 was well below the estimate of 1.1 million from economists… That represented a decline of 228,000 from the previous week’s total.”

August 12 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Two straight weeks of record low mortgage rates brought consumers back to their lenders, but rates may now be reversing course… Mortgage applications to purchase a home rose 2% for the week and were a strong 22% higher than the same week one year ago.”

August 10 – Bloomberg (Reade Pickert and Katia Dmitrieva): “The pandemic-induced downturn initially had hints of being the sharpest but shortest U.S. recession on record. Now there are increasing signs of economic scarring that resemble past slumps. Beneath a headline number showing a better-than-expected gain in July jobs, the government’s employment report contained indications of underlying weakness. Payrolls remain 13 million below pre-pandemic levels and the number of people out of work for 15 weeks or longer more than doubled from the prior month, to 8 million.”

August 11 – Bloomberg (Madeleine Ngo): “Big companies are going bankrupt at a record pace, but that’s only part of the carnage. By some accounts, small businesses are disappearing by the thousands amid the Covid-19 pandemic, and the drag on the economy from these failures could be huge. This wave of silent failures goes uncounted in part because real-time data on small business is notoriously scarce, and because owners of small firms often have no debt, and thus no need for bankruptcy court.”

August 13 – Bloomberg (Sally Bakewell): “Unprecedented government stimulus has allowed more companies to borrow at lower rates than ever before. Yet amid the credit boom, smaller firms that power America’s economic engine are often being shut out, hamstringing the recovery just as it begins. The Federal Reserve’s pledge to use its near limitless balance sheet to buy corporate bonds has aided stricken airlines, oil drillers and hotels. It’s also helped companies from Alphabet Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. to Visa Inc. and Chevron Corp. access some of the cheapest financing ever seen. All told, firms have sold about $1.9 trillion of investment-grade debt, junk bonds and leveraged loans this year… But for companies not large enough to tap fixed-income markets, the outlook is much more dire. Banks are tightening conditions on loans to smaller firms at a pace not seen since the financial crisis, while many direct lenders that have traditionally focused on the middle market are pulling back or turning to bigger deals instead.”

August 9 – CNBC (Annie Nova): “Amid one of the worst downturns in U.S. history, nearly 80% of credit card holders say they’re worried they won’t be able to continue making even the minimum payments on their debt.  The figure comes from a survey by CreditCards.com, which found millennial card holders (91%) are most at risk of missing payments. Meanwhile, 1 in 4 people say the pandemic has pushed them to take on more credit card debt.  Most of the relief measures delivered to Americans in the first stimulus package have dried up, even as the coronavirus pandemic shows no sign of abating.”

August 12 – Wall Street Journal (Kate Davidson and David Harrison): “Spending cuts by state and local governments grappling with the coronavirus pandemic pose a headwind to the U.S. economic recovery as lawmakers consider how much federal aid to provide. State and local governments reduced spending at a 5.6% annual rate in the second quarter as they laid off workers and pulled back on services to offset plunging tax revenues. More cuts are on the way. Moody’s Analytics estimates that without additional federal aid, state and local budget shortfalls will total roughly $500 billion over the next two fiscal years. That would shave more than 3 percentage points off U.S. gross domestic product and cost more than 4 million jobs, said Dan White, head of fiscal policy research at Moody’s.”

August 13 – Wall Street Journal (Scott Calvert): “Most U.S. cities say continuing economic damage from the coronavirus pandemic will leave them in worse financial shape in the coming year than they were earlier in the crisis, raising the odds of deeper municipal layoffs and service reductions… Nearly 90% of the 485 cities polled by the advocacy group National League of Cities said they will have a harder time meeting the needs of their communities in fiscal 2021 than in the prior fiscal year, the highest share since the depths of the 2007-09 recession. In 2019, just 24% of finance officers reported that their city was less able to meet fiscal needs, compared with the previous year… Municipal budget officials on average anticipate that general fund revenues for fiscal year 2021 will come in 13% below 2020 levels…”

August 10 – Associated Press (Geoff Mulvihill): “State and local government officials across the U.S. have been on edge for months about how to keep basic services running while covering rising costs related to the coronavirus outbreak as tax revenue plummeted. It’s now clear that anxiety will last a lot longer. Congressional talks over another coronavirus relief package have failed, with no immediate prospects for a restart. The negotiation meltdown raises the prospect of more layoffs and furloughs of government workers and cuts to health care, social services, infrastructure and other core programs. Lack of money to boost school safety measures also will make it harder for districts to send kids back to the classroom.”

August 9 – Wall Street Journal (Janet Adamy): “The economic hit of the coronavirus pandemic is emerging as particularly bad for millennials, born between 1981 and 1996, who as a group hadn’t recovered from the experience of entering the workforce during the previous financial crisis. For this cohort, already indebted and a step behind on the career ladder, this second pummeling could keep them from accruing the wealth of older generations.”

August 11 – Bloomberg (Eliza Ronalds-Hannon): “Frackers are failing by the dozens, spurring an unusual problem for their suppliers: What to do with thousands of tons of sand parked in hopper cars on America’s railroads. A case in point is Covia Holdings Corp., which received a lecture from Judge David Jones at a bankruptcy hearing last month about the obligation to safely dispose of more than 4,000 leased rail cars, each carrying about 100 tons of superfine frac sand. Most of it is now worse than worthless -- almost no one wants the mineral, and Covia is burning cash on rail car leases, maintenance and storage costs…”

August 12 – Bloomberg (Oshrat Carmiel): “Manhattan apartment rents plunged last month by the most in nearly nine years. That’s only one sign of weakness for the borough’s leasing market. By almost every measure, the news is dismal for landlords, who are trying to keep units filled amid a global pandemic that’s sparked an urban exodus. July’s vacancy rate climbed to a record of 4.33%, according to… Miller Samuel Inc. and Douglas Elliman Real Estate. There were 13,117 apartments listed for rent at the end of the month, the most in data going back to 2006.”

August 10 – Wall Street Journal (Karen Langley): “Shares of home builders have been on a tear since the stock market bottomed in late March… The S&P 500’s home-building subindustry index… is up 23% this year and closed Monday at its first record in 15 years.”

August 8 – Reuters (Jonathan Stempel): “Berkshire Hathaway… announced a $9.8 billion writedown and 10,000 job losses at its Precision Castparts aircraft parts unit, as the coronavirus pandemic caused widespread pain at Warren Buffett’s conglomerate.”

Fixed Income Watch:

August 12 – Bloomberg (Joanna Ossinger): “The standoff in Washington over the flow of stimulus money to state and local municipal governments is adding more risk to U.S. credit markets, according to Morgan Stanley… State and local government budgets have been severely damaged by the Covid-19 pandemic due to lost tax revenue and rapidly rising expenses, and that may have ramifications for investors, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management strategists Scott Helfstein and Monica Guerra wrote… ‘Though municipal budgets are strained, muni bond yields have reached historic lows due to constructive seasonals and risk-off sentiment… Failure to secure aid for state and local governments presents downside risk for bonds of low credit quality at a time when investors are willing to move down the credit curve.’”

August 9 – Bloomberg (Christopher Maloney): “A deluge of supply has inundated the agency mortgage-bond market this year, as a plunge in lending rates triggered a wave of homeowner refinancings. But there are signs that relief may be forthcoming. Gross supply as of the end of June has already reached $1.2 trillion, a torrid pace considering the last decade has averaged $1.3 trillion per annum… Federal Reserve policy… has certainly been a contributing factor. The Fed has bought mortgages at a blistering pace. Between March 16 and the end of June, the bank added almost $788 billion to its balance sheet. As total gross supply from March through June was $905 billion, this helped sector spreads tighten back to levels seen before the pandemic.”

August 11 – Wall Street Journal (Cezary Podkul): “Thousands of commercial-mortgage borrowers have been struggling to meet payments on their loans in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. But there might be another reason so many are falling behind: aggressive lending practices that overstated borrowers’ ability to repay. A study of $650 billion of commercial mortgages originated from 2013 to 2019 found that even during normal economic times, the mortgaged properties’ net income often falls short of the amount underwritten by lenders. The underwritten amount should be a conservative estimate of how much a property earns. Instead, the actual net income trails underwritten net income by 5% or more in 28% of the loans, according to the study of nearly 40,000 loans by two finance academics at the University of Texas…”

August 11 – Reuters (Yoruk Bahceli): “Universities… have gone on a borrowing spree in the bond markets this year that outpaces a rise in companies’ bond sales… Bond issuance by universities is only a tiny part of the global bond market, but sales by universities worldwide are more than double full-year 2019 levels at $11.4 billion in the year to date, Dealogic data shows. In comparison, global debt issuance by companies is at around 75% of 2019 volumes, based on Dealogic data.”

China Watch:

August 10 – Bloomberg: “China said it will sanction 11 Americans in retaliation for similar measures imposed by the U.S…, but the list doesn’t include any members of the Trump administration. Those sanctioned include Senators Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Tom Cotton and Pat Toomey…”

August 10 – Wall Street Journal (John Lyons and Joyu Wang): “China’s campaign to quash dissent in Hong Kong accelerated with the arrest of pro-democracy media baron Jimmy Lai, sending an ominous signal about the future of a free press and the new limits on those challenging Beijing’s tightening grip on the former British colony. Mr. Lai was among 10 swept up Monday, including Agnes Chow, a 23-year-old politician who is well known for helping to lead pro-democracy protests, in the latest move by authorities to enforce a new national security law imposed by the mainland on Hong Kong.”

August 11 – Reuters (Yoruk Bahceli): “New bank lending in China fell more than expected in July from the previous month, but broad credit and liquidity growth quickened as the central bank sought to support a gradual economic recovery. Chinese banks extended 992.7 billion yuan ($142.82bn) in new yuan loans in July, down sharply from 1.81 trillion yuan in June and falling short of analysts’ expectations… Household loans, mostly mortgages, fell to 757.8 billion yuan in July from 978.8 billion yuan in June, while corporate loans dipped to 264.5 billion yuan from 927.8 billion yuan.”

August 12 – Reuters (Cheng Leng, Lusha Zhang and Ryan Woo): “China’s banking industry is expected to dispose 3.4 trillion yuan ($489.91bn) of bad loans in 2020 to contain financial risks in an economy weakened by COVID-19, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. ‘The sector will further step up bad loan disposals in 2021, as some of the problems will be exposed next year due to delayed loan payments,’ Xinhua quoted Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC)…” 

August 12 – Wall Street Journal (Lingling Wei): “For decades, Chinese leaders embraced foreign investments and exports to power China’s economy. Now, with the world in recession and U.S.-China tensions deepening, President Xi Jinping is laying out a major initiative to accelerate China’s shift toward more reliance on its domestic economy. The new policy is gaining urgency as Chinese companies… face increasing resistance in foreign markets, Chinese officials say. In a series of speeches to senior government officials since May, Mr. Xi has trotted out the new strategy, translated as ‘domestic circulation,’ prioritizing domestic consumption, markets and companies as China’s main growth drivers. Investments and technologies from overseas, though still desirable, would play more of a supporting role.”

August 11 – Bloomberg: “First the pandemic and now floods are slashing the spending power of Chinese households this year, as stagnant incomes and rising costs undermine the strength of the domestic recovery. That trend may also be worsening China’s already severe income inequality… The median disposable income -- about $1000 per quarter -- actually fell as the virus lockdowns hit, and the fact that it’s recovering slower than the mean likely indicates a widening gap with wealthy Chinese. On top of that, food prices are rising faster as the pandemic has slowed imports and flooding in central China damaged food crops and transport links.”

August 11 – Reuters (Yilei Sun and Brenda Goh): “China’s auto sales in July climbed 16.4% from a year earlier, the fourth consecutive month of gains as the world’s biggest vehicle market comes off lows hit during the country’s coronavirus lockdown. Sales rose to 2.11 million vehicles in July but are still down 12.7% for the year to date at 12.37 million vehicles…”

August 12 – Reuters (Stella Qiu and Brenda Goh): “China’s aviation regulator said… that passenger numbers in July fell 34.1% from a year earlier. That marked a recovery from a year-on-year decline of 42.4% in June.”

August 9 – Financial Times (Sun Yu): “Chinese rating agencies have upgraded a record number of local government bond issuers even as fiscal income plunged after the coronavirus outbreak, in a move analysts say could lead to a wave of defaults. The corporate credit ratings of 100 local government financing vehicles, the main lenders behind China’s infrastructure building boom, have been raised since January, according to Wind… This marks a sharp rise, with just 17 reporting a rise in the previous ten years combined. The shift comes despite local governments reporting a 7.9% drop in revenues in the six months ending in June. Rating agencies attributed the stronger credit score to LGFVs’ solid financial performance at the end last year and discounted the pandemic because it was unclear what long-term effect it would have on the economy.”

August 14 – Reuters (Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao): “Not yet 30, Beijing office worker Li thought she was already on her way up China’s private property ladder with two apartments bought and rented out. Then came the new coronavirus, jobless tenants leaving town and a rent falloff. She’s one of millions of Chinese landlords who have bought apartments to let in a highway to the country’s growing middle class, many now facing a first slump in rental income… Rents in 20 major cities fell 2.33% in July from the same month year earlier, according to property data provider Zhuge House Hunter - the fourth consecutive month of decline in a market that’s been buoyant for years.”

August 12 – Reuters (Samuel Shen, Cheng Leng and Ryan Woo): “It’s not a good sign for any economy when debt collectors are booming and in China right now, the industry is on a hiring spree. Whole Scene Asset Management, a debt recovery firm based in the southern province of Hunan, plans to double staff numbers to 400 people this year as it expands into new cities. ‘Debt collection companies have been mushrooming,’ said company founder Zhang Haiyan. ‘And with bad loans growing this year, everyone is adding new hands.’”

August 13 – Bloomberg: “China’s multi-year clampdown on its peer-to-peer lending industry has whittled the number to just 29 platforms, down from about 6,000 at its peak… The crackdown, which is likely to be completed at the end of this year, has left investors with more than 800 billion yuan ($115bn) in unpaid debt from failed platforms…”

August 12 – Financial Times (Christian Shepherd, Wang Xueqiao and Thomas Hale): “Beijing is on alert for flooding as China struggles with a series of severe weather events that are driving up food prices and threatening its economic recovery from coronavirus. The Beijing municipal government, worried over a repeat of 2012 when flash floods killed about 80 people — some of whom drowned in their cars in underpasses, has shut parks, advised residents to avoid unnecessary travel and cancelled flights from its Daxing airport.”

EM Watch:

August 13 – Bloomberg (Cagan Koc and Constantine Courcoulas): “Turkey’s central bank offered the nation’s lenders funding through a more expensive channel in the latest effort to reverse declines in the lira without raising its key interest rate. Policy makers… conducted a 20 billion-lira ($2.7bn) one-month repo auction through what they call the conventional method. The average simple rate for lenders that received funding was 10.96%, 271 bps higher than the central bank’s benchmark.”

August 12 – Bloomberg (Selcuk Gokoluk and Asli Kandemir): “President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Turkey’s banks are ‘doing fine.’ But as the lira spirals ever lower, debt investors are taking a less sanguine view. The bonds of three Turkish lenders are trading at distressed levels, which shows the deteriorating opinion of investors on the ability of the companies to repay their obligations, even though the banks remain profitable and highly capitalized. That’s the same number of firms as serial-defaulter Argentina…”

Europe Watch:

August 10 – Financial Times (Mehreen Khan and Tommy Stubbington): “The EU’s plan to issue €750bn of bonds to fund its Covid-19 recovery poses no immediate threat to the bloc’s credit rating, according to the biggest agencies, despite big divisions between member states on how to pay the money back. The EU’s 27 governments agreed in July a landmark response to the coronavirus crisis by empowering the European Commission to raise €750bn of debt and to hand the proceeds to stricken economies in the form of loans and grants. The deal included a promise to explore new sources of income — such as a European digital tax or levy on carbon imports — to pay back the EU’s biggest ever exercise in joint borrowing. But governments are divided over the levies.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

August 9 – Wall Street Journal (Simon Constable): “The stock-market volatility in the first half of 2020 should have been a near-perfect period for ‘long-short’ mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to make a killing. Unfortunately, less than one in three such funds made money for investors during this tumultuous period.”

Geopolitical Watch:

August 12 – Reuters (Robert Muller): “China’s global economic power makes the communist country in some ways a more difficult foe to counter than the Soviet Union during the Cold War, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on a visit to the Czech Republic… Pompeo called on countries around Europe to rally against the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which he said leverages its economic might to exert its influence around the world. ‘What’s happening now isn’t Cold War 2.0,’ Pompeo said in a speech to the Czech Senate. ‘The challenge of resisting the CCP threat is in some ways much more difficult.’ ‘The CCP is already enmeshed in our economies, in our politics, in our societies in ways the Soviet Union never was.’”

August 11 – Financial Times (Kathrin Hille): “US health secretary Alex Azar has raised the possibility of a trade deal with Taiwan during a historic visit to the country this week in remarks that are likely to trigger protests from Beijing. Wrapping up the three-day trip…, during which he met President Tsai Ing-wen, her national security adviser and foreign and health ministers, Mr Azar said his talks had touched upon a ‘bilateral trade arrangement’. ‘The purpose of my visit is to highlight the deep partnership and friendship between Taiwan and the US,’ Mr Azar said…”

August 13 – Financial Times (Kathrin Hille): “China’s military said… it conducted exercises near Taiwan ‘to safeguard national sovereignty’ in the face of rising US diplomatic exchanges with Taipei, underlining mounting tensions in the region. The comments came a day after Alex Azar, US health secretary, became the most senior Washington cabinet official to visit Taiwan since 1979 and marked a rare example of Beijing giving a political reason for a military exercise. ‘Recently, certain large countries are incessantly making negative moves regarding the Taiwan issue and sending wrong signals to the ‘Taiwan independence’ forces, seriously threatening peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,’ Colonel Zhang Chunhui, spokesman of the People’s Liberation Army’s Eastern Theatre Command, said…”

August 12 – Reuters (Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard): “Taiwan unveiled a T$42.1 billion ($1.4bn) increase for next year’s planned defence spending…, as China announced details of its latest combat drills near the democratic island. China has stepped up its military activity near Taiwan, which it regards as a breakaway province. On Monday, Taiwan said Chinese fighters briefly crossed the sensitive median line of the Taiwan Strait, the same day U.S. health chief Alex Azar met President Tsai Ing-wen in Taipei. China had denounced Azar’s trip.”

August 10 – Reuters (Yimou Lee): “U.S. Health Secretary Alex Azar attacked China’s response to the coronavirus pandemic… and said that if such an outbreak had emerged in Taiwan or the United States it could have been ‘snuffed out easily’… ‘The Chinese Communist Party had the chance to warn the world and work with the world on battling the virus. But they chose not to, and the costs of that choice mount higher every day,’ Azar said in Taipei…”

August 11 – Reuters (Doina Chiacu): “U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said… he was ‘deeply troubled’ by reports of the arrest of Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai ‘under Hong Kong’s draconian National Security Law.’ …‘Further proof that the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) has eviscerated Hong Kong’s freedoms and eroded the rights of its people,’ Pompeo said… Separately, White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien said…: ‘We are deeply troubled by the arrest of Jimmy Lai.’”

August 11 – Financial Times (Christian Shepherd and Xinning Liu): “When Chinese diplomats began spreading conspiracy theories in March suggesting that the US army had brought coronavirus to China, the claims looked set to derail an already acrimonious relationship between Beijing and Washington. But in recent weeks, despite rounds of US sanctions…, Beijing has struck a more conciliatory note. ‘China is always ready to work with the United States,’ Zhao Lijian, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson and a previous proponent of theories linking the US military to the outbreak of Covid-19 in Wuhan, told reporters…”

August 8 – Financial Times (Michael Stott): “Home to almost half of the world’s new cases of coronavirus, Latin America is a long way from winning the war against Covid-19. But there is already one victor in the region: China. Beijing has moved swiftly in Latin America to donate medical equipment and supplies, offer technical help and express solidarity. Its ambassadors have flooded social media with messaging about Chinese co-operation and solidarity, eclipsing the US, the region’s traditional power. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, capped Beijing’s efforts with a virtual video conference for his Latin American and Caribbean counterparts last week, offering $1bn in loans to help buy a Chinese-made vaccine once it becomes available and calling for closer relations with the region, a key supplier of food and metals, post-pandemic.”

August 13 – Reuters (Sally Bakewell): “A sharp escalation in tensions with the United States has stoked fears in China of a deepening financial war that could result in it being shut out of the global dollar system - a devastating prospect once considered far-fetched but now not impossible. Chinese officials and economists have in recent months been unusually public in discussing worst-case scenarios under which China is blocked from dollar settlements, or Washington freezes or confiscates a portion of China’s huge U.S. debt holdings. Those concerns have galvanised some in Beijing to revive calls to bolster the yuan’s global clout as it looks to decrease reliance on the greenback. Some economists even float the idea of settling exports of China-made COVID-19 vaccines in yuan, and are looking to bypass dollar settlement with a digital version of the currency.”

August 11 – Bloomberg (Debby Wu): “A key supplier to Apple Inc. and a dozen other tech giants plans to split its supply chain between the Chinese market and the U.S., declaring that China’s time as factory to the world is finished because of the trade war. Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. Chairman Young Liu said it’s gradually adding more capacity outside of China, the main base of production for gadgets from iPhones to Dell desktops and Nintendo Switches. The proportion outside the country is now at 30%, up from 25% last June. That ratio will rise as the company -- known also as Foxconn -- moves more manufacturing to Southeast Asia and other regions to avoid escalating tariffs…”

August 8 – Financial Times (Joe Rennison): “Companies could shift a quarter of their global product sourcing to new countries in the next five years, according to a new study which warns that rising threats to supply chains are taking a heavy toll on profits.  Goods worth $2.9tn-$4.6tn, or 16-26 per cent of global exports in 2018, are in play, the McKinsey Global Institute estimates... Cost considerations and government pressures to become more self-reliant could see more than half of pharmaceutical and apparel production move to new countries, it adds.”

August 14 – Reuters (Daren Butler): “A Greek and a Turkish warship were involved in a mild collision on Wednesday during a standoff in the eastern Mediterranean, in what a Greek defence source called an accident but Ankara described as a provocation.”

August 13 – Financial Times: “Tensions between Nato allies France and Turkey have sharply intensified after Paris deployed naval vessels to the eastern Mediterranean in support of Greece, which is embroiled in a confrontation with Ankara over oil and gas exploration in disputed waters off Cyprus. Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Greece’s prime minister, warned… of ‘the risk of an accident with so many military assets gathered in an enclosed space [the eastern Mediterranean]’. The spark that ignited the latest flare-up was Turkey’s decision to pursue its claim to possible offshore oil and gas reserves by sending the survey ship Oruc Reis into disputed waters -accompanied by Turkish warships — on an exploration mission.”


Friday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500 ends almost flat as record remains elusive

[Reuters] Trump says ready to move on coronavirus aid, blames Democrats for holdup

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: NY to allow bowling alleys and museums to reopen; California tops 600,000 cases

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Berkshire Makes a Bet on Gold Market That Buffett Once Mocked

[Reuters] 'Canary in the coal mine': Greenland ice has shrunk beyond return, study finds

[Bloomberg] High-Priced S&P 500 Stumbles on the Brink of Making History

[FT] Europe’s ‘last dictator’ in a brutal fight for survival

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Friday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street retreats as China data disappoints

[Reuters] World shares sink as data points to tepid economic revival

[Reuters] Dollar steadies, index heads for worst weekly run in decade

[Reuters] Euro zone bonds sell-off stops; inflation expectations at six-month highs

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Congress leaves without passing relief bill; Fauci concerned with U.S. outbreak

[CNBC] Retail sales for July rose 1.2% vs. 2.3% estimate

[Reuters] U.S. consumer sentiment holds steady in early July

[AP] Home prices climb to record in pandemic as buyers seek space

[AP] US productivity rises 7.3%, biggest increase since 2009

[Reuters] China's economic recovery underwhelms as consumer comeback stays elusive

[Reuters] China's July retail sales unexpectedly slip, factory output growth steady

[Reuters] For China's landlords, rent-to-riches dreams fade in red flag for fragile economy

[CNBC] Empty apartments in Manhattan reach record high, topping 13,000

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Turkish Gold Fever Spurs Dollar Oddity Unseen in Erdogan Era

[Reuters] Malaysia's economy shrinks 17.1% in Q2, worst contraction in over 20 years

[Bloomberg] China Home-Price Growth Slows in July Amid Fresh Wave of Curbs

[Bloomberg] China’s Peer-to-Peer Lending Purge Leaves $115 Billion in Losses

[Reuters] Greek and Turkish warships in 'mini collision': defence source

[WSJ] Muni Defaults Surge, but Yields Don’t Follow

[WSJ] ‘Long-Short’ Funds Missed Their Moment

Thursday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500 ends down slightly after flirting with record levels again

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Gold, Silver Jump After Swings Amid Weak Dollar and Economic Woe

[CNBC] Coronavirus stimulus stalemate could drag on for weeks as Congress leaves town

[Reuters] U.S. hits fiscal cliff with jobs, economic recovery in the balance

[Reuters] Trump holds up coronavirus aid to block funding for mail-in voting

[Reuters] Mexican central bank cuts rates to 4.5%, but pace of cuts might slow

[CNBC] Here’s how Robinhood is raking in record cash on customer trades — despite making it free

[Bloomberg] Borrowing to Buy Stocks Pushes Up China’s Record Household Debt

[WSJ] A Deadly Coronavirus Was Inevitable. Why Was No One Ready?

[FT] US Treasury forced to pay up to fund record stimulus

[FT] Europe credit investors go ‘all in’ rather than fight banks

[FT] Turkey’s finance minister concedes economy at risk of shrinking


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Thursday's News Links

[Reuters] Wall Street set to edge up as weekly jobless claims drop

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Gold Advances After Wild Swings as Investors Weigh Next Steps

[CNBC] U.S. weekly jobless claims fell to 963,000, first time below 1 million since mid-March

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] A $2 Trillion Credit Boom Leaves America’s Smaller Firms Behind

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: U.S. records over 1,500 new deaths, for the deadliest day since May

[Reuters] In China, fears of financial Iron Curtain as U.S. tensions rise

[Reuters] China's banking sector expected to dispose $490 billion of bad loans in 2020: Xinhua

[Reuters] China's July air passenger numbers fall 34.1% year-on-year: regulator

[CNBC] Latin America will see ‘record-breaking contraction’ as the coronavirus shatters their economies, Goldman says

[Reuters] Taiwan to boost defence spending 10% in face of China pressure

[Bloomberg] Manhattan Apartment Rents Plunge 10% in Pandemic-Fueled Exodus

[Bloomberg] Turkey Boosts Funding Costs to Avoid Outright Rate Hikes

[Bloomberg] Modi’s Key Ministers Hit by Coronavirus as Pandemic Grips India

[WSJ] Most U.S. Cities Expect Next Fiscal Year to Get Worse, Survey Finds

[FT] Can Spacs shake off their bad reputation?

[FT] China holds military exercises near Taiwan in warning to US 

[FT] France stokes Turkey tensions by sending military craft to waters off Cyprus

Wednesday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500 finishes within points of record high close

[CNBC] Stock futures hold steady after S&P 500 closes just under a record

[Reuters] Trump calls Democratic demands 'ridiculous' as blame traded over virus aid stalemate

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Pandemic relief negotiations at a standstill; U.S. case numbers warped by data gaps

[CNBC] Accuracy of U.S. coronavirus data thrown into question as decline in testing skews drop in new cases

[AP] How can Wall Street be so healthy when Main Street isn’t?

[Reuters] Analysis - China's debt collectors flourish as consumers flounder in a COVID-hit economy

[Reuters] Special Report: Last doctor standing - Pandemic pushes Indian hospital to brink



Wednesday Afternoon Links

[Reuters] Tech stocks boost S&P 500 closer to record high

[Reuters] Gold fights back after steep decline as slowdown fears persist

[Reuters] White House, Democrats show no sign of budging on U.S. coronavirus aid

[Reuters] U.S. July deficit falls to $63 billion on delayed tax payments

[Reuters] Economic clout makes China tougher challenge for U.S. than Soviet Union was - Pompeo

[Reuters] U.S. health chief, visiting Taiwan, attacks China's pandemic response

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Wall Street Fears This Stock Rotation Is Another False Dawn

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Morgan Stanley Wealth Sees Risks in Credit on U.S. Stimulus Woes

[Bloomberg] Small Businesses Are Dying by the Thousands — And No One Is Tracking the Carnage

[FT] Coronavirus makes for a brutal quarter for smaller US companies

[FT] UK economy suffers worst slump in Europe in second quarter


Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Wednesday's News Links

[Reuters] Global stocks shake off stimulus doubts, gold goes wild

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Gold’s Wild Ride Continues as Prices Bounce Back

[Reuters] U.S. consumer prices accelerate in July

[CNBC] Another record low mortgage rate juiced weekly demand, but rates are suddenly rising now

[Reuters] Trump says 'great' bond with China's Xi changed after COVID-19

[Bloomberg] China’s Days as World’s Factory Are Over, IPhone Maker Says

[Bloomberg] Turkish Bank Bonds Trading in Distress Defy Erdogan’s Optimism

[WSJ] Coronavirus-Hit State Budgets Create a Drag on U.S. Recovery

[WSJ] Federal Reserve’s Covid Response Fuels Private-Equity Debt Boom

[WSJ] Commercial Properties’ Ability to Repay Mortgages Was Overstated, Study Finds

[WSJ] China’s Xi Speeds Up Inward Economic Shift

[FT] US risks China’s ire by raising prospect of Taiwan trade deal 

[FT] China treads cautiously in the face of US sanctions

[FT] Beijing on flood alert as rains hamper China’s economic recovery

Tuesday Evening Links

[Reuters] S&P 500, Dow snap seven-day winning streak as concern mounts over stimulus deal

[Reuters] Stocks off highs on stimulus concern; gold, silver tumble

[CNBC] McConnell urges White House, Democrats to restart coronavirus relief negotiations

[Reuters] White House, congressional Democrats go fourth day without coronavirus talks

[AP] Worldwide virus cases top 20 million, doubling in six weeks

[Bloomberg] China’s Poor Squeezed by Surging Food Prices and Stagnant Wages

Monday, August 10, 2020

Tuesday's News Links

[Reuters] U.S. S&P500 heads for record high as stimulus bets lift world stocks

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Stocks Jump Worldwide While Dollar Drops With Gold: Markets Wrap

[Reuters] U.S. producer prices beat expectations in July

[Reuters] Facing pandemic squeeze, universities hit bond markets for cheap cash

[Reuters] China's new bank loans fall more than expected but broad credit growth quickens

[Reuters] China auto sales surge in July, log fourth straight month of gains

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Russia plans phase three trials of world’s first approved vaccine, offers little safety data

[Reuters] Pompeo deeply troubled by Hong Kong tycoon arrest

[Reuters] Taiwan tells visiting U.S. official China seeks to turn it into next Hong Kong

[Bloomberg] China’s Credit Growth Slows in July as Stimulus Pared Back

[Bloomberg] U.S. Junk Bond Market Sets Record-Low Coupon in Relentless Rally

[WSJ] Employers Cast Wary Eye on Trump Payroll-Tax Deferral

[WSJ] From Cocoa to Coffee and Sugar, Soft Commodities Stage Simultaneous Rally

[WSJ] Home-Building Stock Index Reaches First Record in 15 Years

[FT] Bolsonaro and the generals: will the military defend Brazil’s democracy?

[FT] EU’s top credit rating can survive €750bn stimulus, say agencies

Monday Evening Links

[CNBC] Stock futures flat in overnight trading after Wall Street notches seventh straight day of gains

[Reuters] Asian stocks set for cautious start amid renewed U.S.-China tensions

[Reuters] U.S. governors question cost of Trump COVID-19 aid plans, urge talks to continue

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Mnuchin says relief deal could come this week; TSA screenings return to March levels

[AP] No federal relief leaves states, cities facing big deficits

[Reuters] Chinese firms that fail U.S. accounting standards to be delisted as of 2022: Mnuchin

[CNBC] Robinhood reports more monthly trades than rivals Charles Schwab, E-Trade combined

[WSJ] Federal Government Sent Workers Nearly $250 Billion in $600-a-Week Jobless Aid

[WSJ] Jimmy Lai’s Arrest Signals New Limits for Hong Kong Dissent

Monday Afternoon Links

[Reuters] Wall Street mixed with stimulus in focus; Dow hits over five-month high 

[Reuters] Mnuchin sees possible virus aid deal, but no talks set with Congress

[Reuters] Oil climbs on Chinese factory data, U.S. stimulus hopes

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Mnuchin says relief deal could come this week; TSA screenings return to March levels

[Reuters] Global coronavirus cases hit 20 million: Reuters tally

[Reuters] Turkey's Erdogan hopes market interest rates will fall further

[Reuters] Special Report: Lebanon’s power struggle – why a failing state can’t get the lights on

[Bloomberg] Trump’s Student-Loan Order Keeps $1.2 Trillion of Debt on Ice

[Bloomberg] China Hits U.S. Officials With Sanctions, Avoids Top Trump Aides

[WSJ] The No-Win School Reopening: One Superintendent’s Dilemma

[FT] China hawks latch on to Trump’s campaign against Beijing

[FT] Banks face toughest test since financial crisis

Sunday, August 9, 2020

Monday's News Links

[Reuters] Shares edge up as positive China industrial data outweighs trade jitters

[MarketWatch] Gold rises as China-U.S. tensions escalate

[Reuters] Oil climbs on positive China data, rising demand

[Reuters] Pelosi, Mnuchin open door to narrower COVID-19 aid through 2020

[Reuters] China's factory deflation slows in July as recovery gains strength

[CNBC] Coronavirus live updates: Bill Gates says U.S. has ‘mind-blowing’ testing problems

[Reuters] U.S. farmers leave fields fallow as COVID-19 wrecks crop prospects

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Turkey Lowers Key Banking Ratio to Slow Credit as Lira Falls

[Reuters] Hong Kong tycoon Jimmy Lai arrested under security law, bearing out 'worst fears'

[Reuters] China sends fighter jets as U.S. health chief visits Taiwan

[Bloomberg] Sharp, Short U.S. Recession Giving Way to Longer-Term Scarring

[WSJ] Millennials Slammed by Second Financial Crisis Fall Even Further Behind

[WSJ] China Imposes Sanctions on 11 Americans Over Hong Kong

[FT] Heightened US-China tensions rein in gains for global stocks



Sunday Evening Links

[Reuters] Asian shares on backfoot as focus shifts to U.S. stimulus, China tensions

[CNBC] Stock futures slip after Trump signs orders extending coronavirus relief

[Reuters] Dollar tries to keep rally alive in a short market

[AP] Trump end run around Congress raises questions on his claims

[CNBC] Millions of Americans are worried they won’t be able to make even the minimum payments on their credit cards

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Lowest Mortgage Rates Ever Spur Historic Jump in Bond Supply

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] U.S.-China Tensions Halt Rally in Emerging Market Currencies

[Yahoo/Bloomberg] Simon Property Weighs Empty Mall Spaces as Amazon Centers: DJ

[Bloomberg] Three Risks Weighing on Emerging Markets All Start With T

[FT] Chinese rating agencies in record boost of local government vehicles


Sunday's News Links

[CNBC] Trump signs measure to provide extra $400 in weekly unemployment benefits

[AP] Trump orders encroach on Congress’ powers, invite challenges

[AP] US reaches 5 million confirmed coronavirus cases

[Reuters] U.S. health chief arrives in Taiwan on trip condemned by China

[Reuters] Oil giants' production cuts come to 1 million bpd as they post massive writedowns

[Reuters] Lebanese call for an uprising after protests rock Beirut

[Bloomberg] Goldman Sees Weaker Lira, Warns on Risks of ‘Discontinuous Move’

[FT] China cleans up in Latin America as US flounders over coronavirus



Saturday, August 8, 2020

Saturday's News Links

[CNBC] Trump signing orders aimed at extending some pandemic relief after Congress fails to reach a deal

[Reuters] Trump vows to suspend U.S. payroll tax after coronavirus aid talks with Congress break down

[Politico] How politics, personalities and price tags derailed Covid relief talks

[AP] Schools face big virus test as students return to classroom

[CNN] The latest on the coronavirus pandemic

[Reuters] Coronavirus punishes Warren Buffett, as Berkshire Hathaway takes big writedown

[Reuters] Police fire tear gas at Beirut protesters angry over explosion

[WSJ] Trump Prepares Executive Actions as Coronavirus-Aid Talks Stall

[WSJ] New Chapter in U.S.-China Ties Marked by Confrontation

[FT] Hong Kong and China hit back at US sanctions

[FT] Central bankers are caught in a leverage trap

[FT] Global threats are reordering supply chains, says report




Weekly Commentary: Global Lender of Last Resort

Understandably, attention remains focused on the dominant U.S. tech stocks, record highs in Nasdaq, sector rotation opportunities, and the Robinhood phenomenon. It’s a mania, after all. There are as well stimulus negotiations and the administration’s determination to pound away at China – non-bullish developments too easily disregarded.

Crisis memories and concerns, meanwhile, fade with astonishing alacrity. These days, attention has shifted completely away from the global financial “plumbing” that became utterly clogged up in March. Did central banks successfully flush through the issue, or has the matter instead been left to swell into an only more problematic future blockage?

Fortunately, there are some determined financial journalists still pursuing one of the more significant stories of our lifetimes. There was Monday’s article from Bloomberg’s Rich Miller and Jesse Hamilton: “Fed Is Headed for a Clash With Hedge Funds, Other Shadow Banks.” Also Monday, from The Wall Street Journal’s Serena Ng and Nick Timiraos: “Covid Supercharges Federal Reserve as Backup Lender to the World.”

August 3 – Bloomberg (Rich Miller and Jesse Hamilton): “The Federal Reserve and other central banks are heading for a collision with shadow lenders -- the firms with a sinister nickname that are increasingly dominating global finance. Even as policymakers struggle to reopen their economies in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, they’ve launched a review of what went wrong with markets in March, when a worldwide dash for cash by investors nearly crashed the financial system and forced unprecedented rescue actions by central banks. Their focus is on loosely regulated money market and hedge funds, mortgage originators and other entities. Already, some watchdogs have pointed to highly leveraged trades involving U.S. Treasuries as one source of the turmoil. ‘In many cases they have reached systemic importance,’ Bank for International Settlements General Manager Agustin Carstens said of the non-banks. He added that it’s time to move toward more regulation. There’s a lot at stake should the scrutiny lead to tougher oversight. The alternative financiers are major providers of credit to households and companies, making their smooth functioning critical to the health of financial markets and the economy.”

March’s financial dislocation – a frightening “seizing up” of global markets – corroborated the global Bubble thesis. International data along with myriad anecdotes over recent years have pointed to an unprecedented post-crisis expansion of global leveraged speculation. March saw the powerful explosion of de-risking/deleveraging swiftly bring global finance to its knees.

It was integral to my analysis that the Fed’s restart of QE last September – so-called “insurance” stimulus – stoked “terminal phase” speculative excess at home and abroad. The above Bloomberg article references the Bank of International Settlements’ (BIS) 2020 Annual Economic Report. I’ve extracted below:

BIS: “As a precursor to this episode, dislocations in the US repo market in September 2019 involved much the same players, with dealer balance sheet constraints again being a contributing factor. Back then, repo demand from hedge funds to maintain arbitrage trades between bonds and derivatives contributed to a repo funding squeeze. With dealer banks holding already large US Treasury positions, reluctance to accommodate the higher demand for repo funding compounded the shortage and led to a sharp spike in the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR). The Federal Reserve had to step in to provide ample repo funding and absorb Treasury collateral from the market.”

BIS: “The severe [March] dislocation in one of the world’s most liquid and important markets was startling. It reflected a confluence of factors. A key driver was the rapid unwinding of so-called relative value trades, which involve buying Treasury securities funded using leverage through repos while at the same time selling the corresponding futures contract. Investors, typically hedge funds, employ such strategies to profit from differences in the yield between cash Treasuries and the corresponding futures. Given that these price discrepancies are typically small, relative value funds amplify the return (and, by extension, losses) using leverage.”

An even greater dislocation erupted in international markets for dollar-denominated bonds and dollar-related derivatives. This followed years of unprecedented growth in dollar debt globally, along with corresponding levered speculation in these instruments (and related derivatives).

BIS: “Over the past two decades, the use of the US dollar in global financial transactions has ballooned. US dollar liabilities of non-US banks outside the United States grew from about $3.5 trillion in 2000 to around $10.3 trillion by the end of 2019. For non-banks located outside the United States, they have grown even more rapidly and now stand at roughly $12 trillion, almost double what they were a mere decade ago. There is also a significant amount of off-balance sheet dollar borrowing via FX derivatives, primarily through FX swaps. Funding pressures therefore tend to show up in these markets.”

BIS: “A significant portion of the international use of major reserve currencies, such as the US dollar, takes place offshore. Dollar liabilities (ie loans and debt securities) on the balance sheets of banks and non-banks outside the United States amounted to over $22 trillion at end-2019. On top of this, off-balance sheet US dollar obligations incurred via derivatives such as FX swaps were even larger, with estimates ranging up to $40 trillion. An FX swap allows an agent to obtain US dollars on a hedged basis, which is functionally equivalent to collateralised borrowing.”

With “non-bank” dollar-denominated liabilities having doubled over the past decade to $12 TN – and FX swaps expanding to an estimated $40 TN – you’re talking massive proliferation of “offshore” dollar obligations. March’s “seizing up” confirmed that way too much speculative leverage had accumulated internationally. This helps explain why massive ($3 TN) Federal Reserve liquidity injections were required to reverse de-risking/deleveraging dynamics. As the BIS stated: “With the GFC [great financial crisis] as precursor, the role of the Federal Reserve as a Global Lender of Last Resort has been further cemented.”

August 3 – Wall Street Journal (Serena Ng and Nick Timiraos): “When the coronavirus brought the world economy to a halt in March, it fell to the U.S. Federal Reserve to keep the wheels of finance turning for businesses across America. And when funds stopped flowing to many banks and companies outside America’s borders—from Japanese lenders making bets on U.S. corporate debt to Singapore traders needing U.S. dollars to pay for imports—the U.S. central bank stepped in again. The Fed has long resisted becoming the world’s backup lender. But it shed reservations after the pandemic went global. During two critical mid-March weeks, it bought a record $450 billion in Treasurys from investors desperate to raise dollars. By April, the Fed had lent another nearly half a trillion dollars to counterparts overseas, representing most of the emergency lending it had extended to fight the coronavirus at the time. The massive commitment was among the Fed’s most significant—and least noticed—expansions of power yet.”

The Fed’s interventionist leap into corporate bonds and ETFs clearly exerted profound market impact. Suddenly, the Fed was viewed as providing a direct liquidity backstop, boosting the attractiveness (and prices!) of corporate Credit and fixed-income ETFs in particular. Not generally as appreciated – yet arguably more momentous – the Federal Reserve's aggressive liquidity measures and expansion of swap lines with the international central bank community were seen as creating a liquidity backstop for the massive offshore markets for dollar-denominated instruments (bonds and derivatives).

In both domestic corporate Credit and international finance, Fed and central bank measures reversed de-risking/deleveraging dynamics. At home and abroad, speculative flows resumed, financial conditions loosened, debt issuance mushroomed, and markets recovered. Global finance - markets and policymaking - became only more closely synchronized. As noted by the BIS: “It established the Fed as global guarantor of dollar funding, cementing the U.S. currency’s role as the global financial system’s underpinning.”

It is a central tenet of Bubble Analysis that “things get crazy at the end of cycles.” The confluence of late-cycle excess/fragility along with aggressive policy interventions (meant to hold crisis at bay) fosters a precarious dynamic of emboldened speculators operating in ultra-loose financial conditions. Especially after the Fed expanded its balance sheet by a few Trillion in not many weeks, confidence became stronger than ever in the central bank mantra of “whatever it takes” to sustain inflating market prices. Speculative Melt-Up.

There is today no doubt in the marketplace that the Fed, in the event of market instability, would quickly replay March’s crisis operations. Markets see nothing inhibiting Fed intervention measures. The sanguine view holds even for the Federal Reserve’s extraordinary international crisis operations. From the above WSJ article: “The risks to the Fed are minimal given that it is dealing with the most creditworthy nations and the most advanced central banks.”

Last week’s CBB attempted to explain how the unsound U.S. Bubble Economy structure ensured massive ongoing fiscal and monetary support. From an international financial markets perspective, Bubble Market Structure will also require unrelenting monetary stimulus – zero rates, open-ended QE, international swap arrangements, and other crisis-fighting tools.

Over the past two months, the Swiss franc has gained 5.5% versus the dollar. The euro is up 4.4%. The Dollar Index has sunk to a two-year low. Gold is up about $350, or 20%, in two months. Silver has surged almost 70%. And despite surging risk markets, safe haven 10-year Treasury yields sank 30 bps in two months to record lows.

Are the safe havens signaling acute fragility in this global Bubble of leveraged speculation and the inevitability of only more aggressive Federal Reserve balance sheet growth “as global guarantor of dollar funding”? Understandably, Fed officials must remain quite alarmed by the scope of March’s market dislocation – and even more so by the prospect of operating as lender of last resort for dysfunctional and chaotic global securities, funding and derivatives markets.

Bloomberg: “The tumult highlighted the vulnerabilities of non-banks, Fed Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles wrote in a July 14 letter to central bank chiefs and finance ministers of leading nations. As head of the Financial Stability Board, he’s promised to deliver a report on the mayhem to leaders of the Group of 20 nations by November.”

The Bloomberg article also quoted Janet Yellen calling for new Dodd-Frank legislation. I’ve pulled her more complete quote from a recent Brookings Institute event, “A Decade of Dodd-Frank” (quoted by doddfrankupdtate.com): “When we do recover, I think we should reflect on the lessons from the crisis. I personally think we need a new Dodd-Frank. We need to change the structure of FSOC (Financial Stability Oversight Council) and build up its powers to be able to deal more effectively with all of the problems that exist in the shadow banking sector. I think the structure is inherently flawed. I think the agencies need a definite financial stability mandate.”

Chair Yellen should have been more focused on the Fed’s financial stability mandate. The global “shadow bank” Bubble inflated tremendously under her watch, fueled by the Yellen Fed’s misguided postponement of policy normalization. Bubble fragilities then quashed Powell’s normalization plans. It was clear some years back that Dodd-Frank had worked to hasten the expansion of “off-shore” non-bank Credit excess and leveraged speculation.

And from Federal Reserve governor Lael Brainard: “I absolutely think the kinds of risk that Janet talked about in the nonbank financial sector were not only predictable but well-documented and can be subject to an expansion of the regulatory perimeter… I do think that very quickly, once we have come through this very challenging moment, it will be time to look back and make the necessary changes to those areas where the work of financial reform is incomplete. And to be fair, there will always be new areas.”

The Fed recognizes it has a huge problem. And much like President Trump’s calculated attacks on China, the markets believe the Fed might talk tough with respect to “shadow bank” excesses but would never risk measures that might destabilize fragile global markets. We’re now less than three months from election day. Ebullient markets can for now assume comfort with a President Biden. But if the Democrats complete a full sweep, expect impetus for a new Dodd-Frank with a focus on reining in the hedge funds and “shadow banks” more generally.

For now, bubbling stocks and corporate Credit focus on short-term prospects for ongoing momentum. Safe havens, meanwhile, have become fixated on the inevitability of crisis and mayhem. And while most dollar-denominated EM bonds remain in speculative melt-up mode, Turkey is back in crisis. The Turkish lira dropped another 4.2% this week to an all-time low versus the dollar (down 18.3% y-t-d). Turkey’s 10-year dollar bond yields jumped 17 bps to a 10-week high 7.48%. Offshore lira borrowing rates surged to 1,000% annualized this week, as Turkey’s markets approach the breaking point (facing huge dollar debt maturities with rapidly depleting international reserves).

BIS: “The Fed’s aggressive overseas lending has injected it into the world of foreign policy: Not every country gets equal access to the Fed’s dollars. Turkey, for example, has appealed unsuccessfully for dollar loans from the Fed to support its sinking currency…”

The dollar has a long history as “the world’s reserve currency.” Over the past decade, it also became the prevailing currency for a historic Bubble in global leveraged speculation. I’m sticking with the view that the global Bubble has been pierced (analogous to subprime in Spring 2007). The U.S. flooded the world with dollar balances – freely used for leveraged speculation in higher-yielding dollar-denominated EM debt. EM central banks would then predictably “recycle” these Bubble Dollars right back into U.S. securities markets. It was miraculous, went to egregious excess, and is now winding down.

We saw in March that this process badly malfunctions in reverse. And while Trillions of central bank liquidity sparked a market rally, I expect the next phase of global deleveraging to commence in the coming months. There is a long list of vulnerable countries that accumulated too much debt – too much denominated in dollars. It's worth noting that the Brazilian real declined 4.0% this week, with the Chilean peso down 3.8%, the South African rand 3.2%, and the Colombian peso 1.1%.

It’s not difficult to envisage a scenario where the Fed finds itself stuck deep in geopolitical muck. Pressure to lend to our allies and avoid the others – a process that would accelerate the transformation to a more bi-polar world. I’ve for a while now pondered the relationship between the Fed and PBOC when things turn sour for Washington and Beijing. There are enormous amounts of dollar-denominated debt in China and Asia – too much held by leveraged speculators.

The bursting of the global dollar debt Bubble will likely coincide with a major deterioration in the dollar’s value as the world’s reserve currency. And this seems like a pretty good explanation for surging precious metals prices. Markets these days see nothing that could keep the Fed from aggressively employing endless QE necessary to sustain market Bubbles. There are myriad complexities and challenges being ignored today by the risk markets.


For the Week:

The S&P500 jumped 2.5% (up 3.7% y-t-d), and the Dow rose 3.8% (down 3.9%). The Utilities gained 1.2% (down 3.5%). The Banks surged 3.9% (down 31.7%), and the Broker/Dealers jumped 4.2% (down 0.1%). The Transports surged 5.8% (down 3.0%). The S&P 400 Midcaps jumped 4.0% (down 6.0%), and the small cap Russell 2000 surged 6.0% (down 6.0%). The Nasdaq100 advanced 2.1% (up 27.6%). The Semiconductors rose 2.0% (up 17.8%). The Biotechs added 0.4% (up 12.0%). Though bullion rose another $60, the HUI gold index was little changed (up 45.0%).

Three-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 0.0875%. Two-year government yields increased two bps to 0.13% (down 144bps y-t-d). Five-year T-note yields rose three bps to 0.23% (down 146bps). Ten-year Treasury yields gained four bps to 0.57% (down 135bps). Long bond yields rose four bps to 1.24% (down 115bps). Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields declined three bps to 1.21% (down 150bps).

Greek 10-year yields dropped eight bps to 1.01% (down 43bps y-t-d). Ten-year Portuguese yields fell five bps to 0.30% (down 15bps). Italian 10-year yields sank eight bps to 0.93% (down 48bps). Spain's 10-year yields dropped six bps to 0.28% (down 19bps). German bund yields increased two bps to negative 0.51% (down 32bps). French yields declined two bps to negative 0.21% (down 33bps). The French to German 10-year bond spread narrowed four to 30 bps. U.K. 10-year gilt yields rose four bps to 0.14% (down 68bps). U.K.'s FTSE equities index rallied 2.3% (down 20.0%).

Japan's Nikkei Equities Index recovered 2.9% (down 5.6% y-t-d). Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields slipped a basis point to 0.01% (up 2bps y-t-d). France's CAC40 gained 2.2% (down 18.2%). The German DAX equities index rallied 2.9% (down 4.3%). Spain's IBEX 35 equities index gained 1.1% (down 27.2%). Italy's FTSE MIB index rose 2.2% (down 17.0%). EM equities were mixed. Brazil's Bovespa index was little changed (down 11.1%), while Mexico's Bolsa rallied 2.7% (down 12.7%). South Korea's Kospi index surged 4.5% (up 7.0%). India's Sensex equities index gained 1.2% (down 7.8%). China's Shanghai Exchange advanced 1.3% (up 10.0%). Turkey's Borsa Istanbul National 100 index sank 5.9% (down 7.3%). Russia's MICEX equities index rose 2.1% (down 2.4%).

Investment-grade bond funds saw inflows of $7.208 billion, and junk bond funds posted positive flows of $4.389 billion (from Lipper).

Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates sank 11 bps to 2.88% (down 72bps y-o-y). Fifteen-year rates fell seven bps to 2.44% (down 61bps). Five-year hybrid ARM rates declined four bps to 2.90% (down 46bps). Bankrate's survey of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-year fixed rates unchanged at 3.12% (down 88bps).

Federal Reserve Credit last week declined $14.3bn to $6.902 TN, with a 48-week gain of $3.180 TN. Over the past year, Fed Credit expanded $3.161 TN, or 84.5%. Fed Credit inflated $4.091 Trillion, or 146%, over the past 404 weeks. Elsewhere, Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt billion last week added $1.2bn to $3.409 TN. "Custody holdings" were down $65bn, or 1.9%, y-o-y.
M2 (narrow) "money" supply fell $31.9bn last week to $18.286 TN, with an unprecedented 22-week gain of $2.779 TN. "Narrow money" surged $3.383 TN, or 22.7%, over the past year. For the week, Currency increased $7.3bn. Total Checkable Deposits rose $9.6bn, while Savings Deposits dropped $40.4bn. Small Time Deposits declined $6.3bn. Retail Money Funds slipped $2.2bn.

Total money market fund assets increased $5.2bn to $4.575 TN. Total money funds surged $1.239 TN y-o-y, or 37%.

Total Commercial Paper declined $1.0bn to $1.018 TN. CP was down $121bn, or 10.7% year-over-year.

Currency Watch:

August 5 – Financial Times (Eva Szalay, Adam Samson and Ayla Jean Yackley): “The Turkish lira has come under renewed pressure against the dollar, a day after short-term borrowing costs signalled that the country’s money markets were starting to malfunction. Through most of June and July, Turkish authorities succeeded in pinning the dollar to less than TL6.85… But the lira weakened beyond that point last week… The lira’s latest tumble comes a day after the costs of borrowing the currency overnight skyrocketed close to the record intraday highs struck in March last year. The offshore overnight swap rate — the cost to investors exchanging foreign currency for lira over a set period — hit an annualised level of more than 1,000% on Tuesday from 30% the previous day, according to Refinitiv data.”

For the week, the U.S. dollar index was little changed at 93.435 (down 3.3% y-t-d). For the week on the upside, the Norwegian krone increased 0.7%, the South Korean won 0.5%, the Swedish krona 0.3%, the Canadian dollar 0.2%, the Australian dollar 0.2%, the Singapore dollar 0.1%, the euro 0.1%, and the Swiss franc 0.1%. For the week on the downside, the Brazilian real declined 4.0%, the South African rand 3.2%, the Mexican peso 0.4%, the New Zealand dollar 0.4%, the British pound 0.3% and the Japanese yen 0.1%. The Chinese renminbi increased 0.1% versus the dollar this week (down 0.07% y-t-d).

Commodities Watch:

The Bloomberg Commodities Index jumped 2.6% (down 12.9% y-t-d). Spot Gold rose 3.0% to $2,036 (up 34.1%). Silver surged 13.7% to $27.54 (up 54%). WTI crude gained 95 cents to $41.22 (down 33%). Gasoline rose 3.1% (down 29%), and Natural Gas surged 24.4% (up 2%). Copper dropped 2.6% (unchanged). Wheat sank 6.7% (down 11%). Corn fell 1.9% (down 17%).

Coronavirus Watch:

August 3 – Wall Street Journal (Walter Russell Mead): “Eight months after the novel coronavirus burst out of Wuhan, China, it has created unprecedented economic and social disruption, with economies cratering across the globe and more destruction to come. Tens of millions have lost their jobs, and millions more have seen their life savings disappear as governments forced restaurants, bars and other small businesses to shut their doors. Wealthy societies are able, for now, to print and pump money in hope of limiting the social and economic damage, but such measures cannot be extended forever. For the first time since the 1940s, political authorities around the world face a flood of economic and political challenges that could overwhelm the safeguards built into the system. In poorer countries, the situation is worse. The pandemic rages unchecked through countries like South Africa and Brazil, where low commodity prices, falling remittances and falling demand for industrial products are intersecting with capital flight to create an unprecedented economic shock. Countries like Lebanon and Ethiopia, facing grave crises before the pandemic, struggle to maintain basic order.”

August 2 – CNBC (Emma Newburger): “Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus task force coordinator, said… that the U.S. is ‘in a new phase’ of battling against the coronavirus pandemic and urged Americans to wear masks and follow social distancing guidelines. ‘What we are seeing today is different from March and April. It is extraordinarily widespread ... it’s more widespread and it’s both rural and urban,’ Birx said… ‘To everybody who lives in a rural area, you are not immune or protected from this virus,’ Birx said.”

August 2 – Associated Press (Lauran Neergaard): “Who gets to be first in line for a COVID-19 vaccine? U.S. health authorities hope by late next month to have some draft guidance on how to ration initial doses, but it’s a vexing decision. ‘Not everybody’s going to like the answer,’ Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, recently told one of the advisory groups the government asked to help decide. ‘There will be many people who feel that they should have been at the top of the list.’”

August 4 – Reuters (Benjamin Lesser, Dan Levine, Jaimi Dowdell and Andrea Januta): “The soaring number of COVID-19 cases in the United States has far outstripped many local health departments’ ability to trace the contacts of those infected, a step critical in containing the virus’ spread. With the pandemic claiming about a thousand American lives a day, many city and county departments say they lack the money and staff to expeditiously identify people who have been exposed… The United States badly lags other wealthy countries in contact tracing…”

August 3 – Reuters (Michelle Nichols): “U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned… the world faces a ‘generational catastrophe’ because of school closures amid the coronavirus pandemic and said that getting students safely back to the classroom must be ‘a top priority.’ Guterres said that as of mid-July schools were closed in some 160 countries, affecting more than 1 billion students, while at least 40 million children have missed out on pre-school. This came on top of more than 250 million children already being out of school before the pandemic…”

Market Instability Watch:

August 2 – Financial Times (Laura Pitel): “Speaking last month, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hailed a sharp fall in interest rates and praised measures taken to block ‘malicious’ attacks on the Turkish lira. Such steps, he said, were ‘strengthening the immune system of our economy against global turbulence.’ That could not be further from how most economists see the Turkish picture. The collapse in tourism as a result of the coronavirus pandemic has left a gaping hole in the country’s finances. Foreign investors have fled, pulling out a large volume of funds from the country’s local-currency bonds and stocks over the past 12 months. In the face of those outflows, the country has burnt through tens of billions of dollars of reserves this year in a bid to maintain an unofficial currency peg… But, in a sign that those efforts are floundering, the lira last week lurched towards a record low against the dollar even as authorities spent billions trying to defend it.”

August 1 – Financial Times (Richard Henderson): “A strong year for the largest five US stocks despite the worst recession the country has faced in decades has further expanded their influence on equity markets. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and Facebook now represent more than a fifth of the S&P 500. Not since the 1980s have the biggest five companies had such a large share of the index, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Max Reyes and Lyubov Pronina): “The biggest returns for U.S. junk bonds since 2011 are driving up demand among investors and sending money flowing into the debt securities. Retail funds that buy high-yield debt have already reached $4.2 billion in new money as of Monday, according to… Refinitiv Lipper. That is putting this week’s inflow on track to be among the ten highest on record…”

August 6 – Dow Jones (Alexander Osipovich): “Trading slivers of individual shares has become a fervent pursuit for thousands of individual investors, amplifying the 2020 rise of pricey yet popular stocks like Amazon.com Inc. and Tesla Inc. Fidelity Investments, which rolled out fractional trading to customers in January and February, says more than 340,000 of its accounts have placed a fractional trade… Interactive Brokers… says around 117,000 users have enabled fractional trading… Charles Schwab Corp. says more than 60,000 accounts have bought its ‘Stock Slices’ since it turned on the feature in June.”

Global Bubble Watch:

August 1 – Reuters (Andrew Galbraith): “Foreign investors made record net purchases of Chinese bonds traded through the country’s Bond Connect programme in July, boosted by record yield premiums over U.S. debt. Net inflows into Chinese bonds through Bond Connect… totalled 75.5 billion yuan ($10.83bn) in July…”

Trump Administration Watch:

August 7– Bloomberg: “With the stroke of a pen, Donald Trump made his strategic fight with China hit home for potentially billions of people -- generating confusion, panic and fear around the globe. The U.S. president’s move to ban the Chinese-owned TikTok and WeChat in just over six weeks from now sent shockwaves through the tech industry and the many American businesses who rely on the apps to sell goods in China. The decision also spurred alarm on Chinese social media, with WeChat users in the U.S. posting contact information so friends and family could reach them if the app disappeared.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Nick Wadhams): “Secretary of State Michael Pompeo signaled… that U.S. efforts to bar Chinese technology from U.S. computers and smartphones in the name of national security will extend well beyond the push to force a sale or shutdown of TikTok, as he promoted a ‘clean network’ initiative. Pompeo said the U.S. wants to see untrusted Chinese apps removed from app stores like those operated by Apple Inc. and Google. He also called for companies to limit their apps from phones made by Huawei Technologies Corp. and for ending the use of Chinese cloud providers. ‘We call on all freedom-loving nations and countries to join the clean network,’ Pompeo told reporters…”

August 3 – Wall Street Journal ( Liza Lin, Jing Yang and Eva Xiao): “Washington’s ultimatum to the Chinese owner of TikTok—sell the app’s U.S. operations or leave the country—is hardening long-held suspicions in China that the U.S. aims to sabotage the country’s efforts to grow its technology, while raising concerns about the precedent it could set for Chinese companies with global ambitions as U.S.-China relations unravel. After months in which TikTok owner Bytedance Ltd. fought to appease the Trump administration, Washington’s push for Bytedance to sell TikTok’s U.S. operations to Microsoft Corp. means China will likely lose control over its first true global internet sensation—one with ambitions of becoming a top-tier global technology giant—in its most important market.”

August 6 – Reuters (Andrea Shalal): “U.S. President Donald Trump… intensified his attacks on China for its handling of the novel coronavirus outbreak…, as his health secretary headed to Taiwan for a visit sure to irk Beijing… The Republican president… said it was a ‘disgrace’ that Beijing had limited the spread of the virus at home but allowed it to reach the rest of the world… ‘What China did is a terrible thing ... whether it was incompetence or on purpose,’ he said…”

August 6 – The Hill (Niv Elis): “President Trump said… he had reimposed aluminum tariffs on Canada, reigniting a point of contention that had been cleared up prior to the finalization of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, which went into effect in July. …Trump said he signed a proclamation earlier in the day to reimpose the tariff at its previous rate of 10 percent. ‘Canada was taking advantage of us, as usual, and I signed it, and it imposes — because the aluminum business was being decimated by Canada. Very unfair,’ Trump said.”

August 3 – Reuters (Doina Chiacu, Susan Heavey and Pete Schroeder): “White House trade adviser Peter Navarro suggested… that Microsoft Corp could divest its holdings in China if it were to buy the Chinese owned short-video app TikTok. ‘So the question is, is Microsoft going to be compromised?’ Navarro said in an interview with CNN. ‘Maybe Microsoft could divest its Chinese holdings?’”

August 3 – Reuters (Pete Schroeder): “The U.S. government should receive a ‘big percentage’ of the proceeds from any sale of the U.S. operations of TikTok to Microsoft, President Donald Trump said… Trump told reporters that the United States would make any sale of the Chinese-owned video app possible, and therefore deserves a share of the proceeds…”

Federal Reserve Watch:

August 2 – Wall Street Journal (Nick Timiraos): “The Federal Reserve is preparing to effectively abandon its strategy of pre-emptively lifting interest rates to head off higher inflation, a practice it has followed for more than three decades. Instead, Fed officials would take a more relaxed view by allowing for periods in which inflation would run slightly above the central bank’s 2% target, to make up for past episodes in which inflation ran below the target. ‘It would be a significant change in terms of how they are thinking about’ the trade-off between employment and inflation, said Jan Hatzius of Goldman Sachs. ‘A lot of those things look very different now from the way they looked a few years ago,’ he said.”

August 5 - Reuters (Jonnelle Marte): “The resurgence of coronavirus infections has muted the economic recovery and Congress needs to support the economy by continuing to provide enhanced unemployment benefits and aid to state and local governments, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan said… ‘I believe the economy needs a continuation of the unemployment benefits,’ Kaplan said… ‘It may not need to be in the same form as it currently is, but we need a continuation.’”

August 3 – Reuters (Ann Saphir and Lindsay Dunsmuir): “The U.S. economy, battered by a resurgence in the spread of COVID-19, needs increased government spending to tide over households and businesses and broader use of masks to better control the virus, U.S. central bankers said… ‘The ball is in Congress’ court,’ Chicago Fed President Charles Evans told reporters… ‘Fiscal policy is fundamental to a better baseline outlook, to a stronger recovery and getting the unemployment rate down, people back to work safely, and ultimately reopening the schools safely.’”

August 2 – Reuters (Tim Ahmann): “The U.S. economy could benefit if the nation were to ‘lock down really hard’ for four to six weeks, a top Federal Reserve official said…, adding that Congress can well afford large sums for coronavirus relief efforts. The economy, which in the second quarter suffered its biggest blow since the Great Depression, would be able to mount a robust recovery, but only if the virus were brought under control, Neel Kashkari, president of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, told CBS’ ‘Face the Nation.’”

U.S. Bubble Watch:

August 5 – CNBC (Alicia Adamczyk): “By the end of August, over 5 million Americans will be unable to cover their basic expenses for a full month without the extra $600 in enhanced unemployment insurance payments that lapsed last week, according to Morning Consult. Some 30 million Americans are currently collecting jobless benefits, and they can continue to do so through the end of the year. But the extra $600 a week from the federal government that was provided under the CARES Act expired last week. Without that money, 44% of those currently collecting UI benefits will now receive less than $800 per month…”

August 6 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “U.S. employers announced another 262,649 job cuts in July as the COVID-19 pandemic continued to weigh on demand, the latest indication that the labor market recovery is losing steam. The layoffs reported by global outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas… were up 54% from June.”

August 3 – Bloomberg (Kim Bhasin): “Every week seems to bring another round of retail bankruptcies… Over the weekend, Tailored Brands Inc. -- the owner of Men’s Wearhouse and JoS. A. Bank -- and department store Lord & Taylor filed for Chapter 11… The previous week, it was Ann Taylor and Lane Bryant parent Ascena Retail Group Inc. At least 25 major retailers have now filed for bankruptcy this year, with 10 of these coming over the last five weeks… ‘The common denominator is debt,’ said Simeon Siegel, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets. ‘At this point, now everyone has debt. Everyone took on massive amounts of liquidity.’”

August 3 – Bloomberg (Jeff Feeley): “Lord & Taylor, known for its upscale fashions and extravagant holiday window displays, sought bankruptcy protection from creditors after a turnaround effort faltered amid the coronavirus pandemic. The oldest U.S. department store filed for Chapter 11 protection in Richmond, Virginia, on Sunday…”

August 2 – CNBC (Lauren Thomas): “High-end handbag maker Valentino is suing to get out of its lease on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, a vacated Barneys New York still sits empty on Madison Avenue just a block over, while bankrupted luxury department store chain Neiman Marcus is shutting its doors for good on Worth Avenue in Palm Beach. As the coronavirus pandemic brings tourism to a temporary standstill, leaves consumers holed up at home and puts millions out of work, America’s glitziest and most expensive retail districts are losing tenants, and rents are in a free fall.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Payne Lubbers): “The four largest U.S. banks had at least $151.5 billion of loans with payments in deferral at midyear as borrowers from small businesses to homeowners sought debt relief amid the coronavirus pandemic. Programs vary among banks and account types, with Bank of America Corp. offering deferrals of as long as 60 days on consumer credit cards, and JPMorgan… giving clients rolling, three-month deferrals for as much as a year on residential mortgages. The two lenders, along with Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co., disclosed deferral details in their second-quarter filings…”

August 5 – Associated Press (Paul Wiseman): “The U.S. trade deficit fell in June for the first time since February as exports posted a record increase, rising twice as fast as imports. The… gap between the value of what the United States buys and what it sells abroad fell 7.5% to $50.7 billion in June from $54.8 billion in May. Exports shot up an unprecedented 9.4% to $158.3 billion. Imports rose 4.7% to $208.9 billion… Compared to June 2019, total U.S. trade — exports plus imports — plunged 21.9% in June to $367.2 billion.”

August 4 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Nationally, home prices increased by 4.9% annually in June, a much greater gain than the 4.1% annual rise in May, according to CoreLogic. Prices climbed 1% month to month, which is the fastest monthly gain for June since 2013. Prices got a boost from record low mortgage rates… The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage jumped up to 3.24% at the start of the month, but then fell precipitously, ending June at 2.94%...”

August 5 – CNBC (Diana Olick): “Record low mortgage rates are clearly not as impressive as they used to be. Even with another new low set last week, mortgage application volume decreased 5.1% from the previous week… Mortgage applications to purchase a home also fell for the week, down 2%, but were 22% higher than a year ago.”

August 4 – Reuters (Lucia Mutikani): “New orders for U.S.-made goods increased more than expected in June, suggesting the manufacturing sector was regaining its footing, though rising COVID-19 cases threaten the tentative recovery. …Factory orders rose 6.2%, boosted by a surge in demand for motor vehicles, after rebounding 7.7% in May… Factory orders decreased 10.1% in the month from a year earlier.”

August 4 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang): “All the teeth-gnashing in Congress over tech’s endless ascent has done nothing to keep the big from getting bigger in the stock market, going by the Nasdaq 100’s last two sessions. New research says that as far as the economy is concerned, that’s fortunate… In a note titled ‘Stocks Are Too Big to Fail,’ Michael Kantrowitz, a strategist with… Cornerstone Macro, argued that psychology in the economy has rarely been fastened as tightly to equity gains as it is now. One example: consumer confidence is correlated to the S&P 500 more than any time in the past three decades.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Jack Pitcher): “The combined wealth of New York City residents shrank by an estimated $336 billion, or 13%, in the past year, exacerbated by the fallout from the coronavirus crisis in 2020. The decline… is the biggest in dollar terms among major U.S. cities during that period, according to… research firms Webster Pacific and New World Wealth. San Francisco, the nation’s second-wealthiest city, held up better, losing $105 billion, or 5% of wealth.”

Fixed Income Watch:

August 5 – Bloomberg (Emily Barrett and Jenny Leonard): “The U.S. government will push its fundraising to new extremes this quarter to cope with a budget deficit unseen since the country mobilized to fight World War II. The Treasury expanded its plans for borrowing at longer maturities in the coming months, saying Wednesday it will sell a record $112 billion of securities at next week’s so-called quarterly refunding of maturing Treasuries. Over the three months through October, it will boost its offering of notes and bonds by a total of $132 billion compared with the previous quarter, and rely more heavily on securities due in seven to 30 years. The latest deluge of debt sales exceeded most of Wall Street’s expectations, but it’s unlikely to overwhelm the market’s appetite.”

July 31 – Reuters (Eric Platt and Colby Smith): “Fitch cut its outlook on US debt…, warning that the rise in federal spending to deal with the coronavirus pandemic had led to a deterioration in public finances. The rating agency lowered its outlook on the US to ‘negative’ from ‘stable’, but affirmed its triple A rating, its top grade. Fitch analysts said they believed there were growing risks the US would be unable to curtail rising deficits as policymakers seek to jump-start economic growth.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Amanda Albright): “America’s municipal bondholders have never been paid so little for taking on so much risk. The yields on state and local government bonds have steadily dwindled over the past month, even as the resurgent coronavirus pandemic is threatening to prolong the deep recession that’s dealing a financial setback to borrowers in virtually every corner of the $3.9 trillion market. The oldest gauge of municipal yields, the Bond Buyer index of those on 20-year general-obligation bonds, now stands at 2.09%, the lowest since 1952.”

August 1 – Financial Times (Joe Rennison): “Investors in US junk bonds had their best month in nearly nine years in July, as continued market support from the Federal Reserve bolstered yield hungry investors’ confidence in more precarious companies. Rising prices and their flipside, falling yields, led to a 4.78% return for the asset class — the best outcome since October 2011… The average junk bond yield fell from 6.85% at the start of the month to 5.46% at the end, the biggest monthly drop since May 2009…”

August 3 – Bloomberg (Max Reyes): “The lowest-rated U.S. junk bonds left distressed territory for the first time since the pandemic after spreads on the securities fell beneath 1,000 bps on Aug. 3 The average spread over Treasuries for bonds in the Bloomberg Barclays CCC index tightened 16 bps to 996 bps, the lowest since Feb. 27. That marks an exit from a level typically associated with distress. The index move underlines a recovery for junk bonds that coincides with a broader rally in the credit market following unprecedented support from the Federal Reserve.”

China Watch:

August 4 – CNBC (Arjun Kharpal): “Chinese state media labeled the U.S. a ‘rogue country’ and dubbed the potential sale of social media firm TikTok to Microsoft as ‘theft,’ adding that Beijing could retaliate if a deal is sealed. Microsoft announced plans on Sunday to acquire TikTok’s business in certain markets — the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand.”

August 5 – Reuters (Cate Cadell and Ben Blanchard): “China on Thursday threatened to take countermeasures over a trip to Taiwan by U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar, as the Chinese-claimed island geared up for its highest-level U.S. official visit in four decades.”

August 5 – Bloomberg: “China’s banks need about $500 billion in fresh liquidity this month to roll over existing debt and buy government bonds, complicating the People’s Bank of China’s efforts to exit crisis measures. Monetary policy makers have been signaling for weeks that abundant funding made available to tide the world’s second-largest economy through the coronavirus slump will soon be reined in, mindful of rising debt risks. At the same time, over a trillion yuan in new government stimulus bonds are expected to be offered this month, putting the onus on the PBOC to ensure the financial system has sufficient cash to absorb them. It’s a tricky balancing act. If the central bank doesn’t inject enough liquidity or even drains it, then lenders will scramble for cash, driving up inter-bank rates and undermining the recovery. If it pumps in too much money, the surplus cash will likely find its way to frothy stock and property markets and add to the nation’s already massive debt pile.”

August 4 - South China Morning Post (Zhang Shidong): “Baoshang Bank, a key part of troubled magnate Xiao Jianhua’s business empire, collapsed, as big shareholder Tomorrow Group failed to repay billions of yuan in loans that were obtained through flawed corporate governance and mismanagement. The group illegally borrowed 156 billion yuan (US$22.3bn) from Baoshang Bank, which was taken over by the government last year, in the form of 347 loans through 209 shell companies from 2005 to 2019 and these subsequently became delinquent, Zhou Xuedong, head of the takeover team at the central bank, wrote… Baoshang Bank and Tomorrow Group were both controlled by Xiao, who is believed to be awaiting trial for bribery and manipulating stock prices. Tomorrow Group had an 89% stake in Baoshang Bank, a monopoly shareholding structure that brewed up the risk of weak corporate governance.”

August 4 – Reuters (Kevin Yao): “China is looking to reduce its reliance on overseas markets and technology for its economic development, government advisers say, as U.S. hostility and a global pandemic increase external risks that could hamper longer-term progress. The country’s leaders have proposed a so-called ‘dual circulation’ model of growth to steer the economy, the sources said, which would prioritise ‘internal circulation’ to boost domestic demand and be supplemented by “external circulation”… ‘The Chinese leadership raised the ‘internal circulation’ concept as the situation has become grim, although complete (reliance on) ‘internal circulation’ is unlikely,’ said a policy insider…”

August 4 – Reuters (Stella Qiu and Ryan Woo): “Growth in China’s services sector slowed in July from a decade high the previous month, as new export business fell and job losses continued…, pointing to cracks in the sector’s post-COVID recovery. The Caixin/Markit services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 54.1 from June’s 58.4, which was the highest reading since April 2010.”

August 4 – Bloomberg: “Vehicle sales advanced for a fourth straight month in China… Sales of passenger cars such as sedans and SUVs, as well as commercial vehicles, increased 14.9% in July from a year earlier to 2.08 million units, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said… From January to July, vehicle sales declined by 12.7% to 12.3 million units.”

EM Watch:

August 4 – Financial Times (Delphine Strauss): “A fresh mass outbreak of Covid-19 could increase the risks of an external debt crisis among emerging and developing economies which are vulnerable to sudden capital outflows, the IMF warned on… The economic impact of the pandemic has been especially acute for countries that rely on oil, tourism or remittances from migrant workers. Many of these countries faced a fall in their current account balances this year equivalent to more than 2% of gross domestic product… In its annual assessment of global imbalances, the fund said trade balance losses were likely to exceed 3% of GDP for oil exporters… In countries such as Costa Rica, Morocco and Portugal, losses of tourism proceeds could exceed 2% of GDP, while lower remittances would hit hardest in countries such as Guatemala, Pakistan and Egypt.”

August 5 – Wall Street Journal (Jared Malsin and Nazih Osseiran): “Everyday life in Lebanon was already unraveling. The economy was in free fall, a coronavirus outbreak was accelerating and power outages were plunging Beirut into darkness for hours at a time. Then came Tuesday’s catastrophic explosion, which in a few terrifying moments killed more than a hundred people, injured thousands and tore the heart out of this tiny nation’s capital city. Lebanon and its people have a long history of resilience—surviving years of brutal, sectarian civil strife, an invasion by Syria and a bruising war with Israel. But the country’s latest run of misfortune threatens to push it over the edge.”

August 4 – Wall Street Journal (Amrith Ramkumar): “Investors are bracing for more defaults and disruptions in emerging markets after Argentina’s deal with creditors highlighted the pandemic’s stress on many developing economies. The agreement to grant debt relief to Latin America’s third-biggest economy eased some concerns about a prolonged dispute between Argentina and its creditors. But it also underscored the hardship caused by the coronavirus in emerging markets. Ecuador and Lebanon have also sought concessions from creditors this year… Many of these emerging markets are saddled with billions of dollars in debt and rely on tourism and exports to support economic activity.”

Leveraged Speculation Watch:

August 5 – Bloomberg (Lu Wang and Melissa Karsh): “The relentless rally in American equities is emboldening hedge funds at a time their own clients are getting worried. Professional managers that make both bullish and bearish equity bets last month pushed their long positions on stocks up above their short ones by a ratio of almost 1.9-to-1, the highest reading in more than a decade, according to… Morgan Stanley’s prime brokerage unit.”

August 5 – Bloomberg (Melissa Karsh and Hema Parmar): “Renaissance Technologies, one of the industry’s best performing hedge fund firms, is down 13.4% this year in its biggest fund open to the public despite the surging U.S. stock market… The market-neutral Renaissance Institutional Diversified Alpha Fund fell 0.6% and the Renaissance Institutional Diversified Global Equities Fund rose 0.4% last month, according to a person familiar… They’re down about 20% and 18.6%, respectively, for the first seven months of 2020.”

Geopolitical Watch:

August 5 – CNBC (Huileng Tan): “Taiwan appears to be distancing itself from China in recent months, as military activities around the island intensify amid heightened U.S.-China tensions and the coronavirus pandemic. In late July, Taiwan’s legislature approved two proposals. One was to rename carrier China Airlines, and the other was to highlight the word Taiwan on passports, which are currently marked ‘Republic of China’ — Taiwan’s official name. In the last few months, China has stepped up its military and navy activity around the island, spurring Taiwanese Premier Su Tseng-chang to say late June that Beijing was ‘disturbing’ the island. Experts say China will likely intensify its efforts to isolate Taiwan internationally, and some expressed concerns there may be a risk of military conflict, particularly as the island is caught in the crosshairs of Sino-U.S. friction.”

August 6 – Reuters (Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart): “U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper expressed concerns about Beijing’s ‘destabilizing’ activity near Taiwan and the South China Sea in a call with Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe, the Pentagon said…, the first time the two are believed to have spoken since March. The call came as U.S.-China ties have rapidly deteriorated this year over a range of issues…”