Whenever CNY has depreciated it always means deflation in the world because weak Chinese currency makes Chinese exports cheaper and hence falling CNY means falling GOLD prices….
More important than “currency wars”, file this one away in the something-big-changed-recently drawer
Page Industries (India franchise of Jockey’s brand)historical Revenue
I know it is difficult to predict the markets.….so not making any bold claims with this graph but why don’t you paste it next to your screen and we will compare the notes in couple of years
Fed Trapped in a Rate-Cutting Box: It’s the Debt Stupid
Martin Armstrong writes….The way the Fed was originally designed allowed it to stimulate the economy by purchasing corporate paper directly, which placed it in a better management position. Buying only government paper from banks who in turn hoard the money fails. As Larry Summers admitted, they have NEVER been able to predict a recession even once.
The Fed lowered rates during every recession to no avail just as the ECB has moved to negative rates without success. The central banks are trapped and they are quietly asking for help from the politicians which will never happen.
This inversion is getting serious. I don’t envy the Fed’s choice right now: Live with an inverted yield curve or defend rate cuts with inflation near 2% and unemployment at historic low.
Global coordinated easing… Fed: easing. ECB: easing. BOE: easing. BOJ: easing. Australia: easing. New Zealand: easing. Brazil: easing. Russia: easing. India: easing. China: easing. Hong Kong: easing. Korea: easing. Indonesia: easing. South Africa: easing. Turkey: easing.
“We would expect any near-term rally to be no more than a head fake, and think that any such rally would be best treated as an opportunity to sell in preparation for the second wave of volatility that we expect will arrive in late Aug or early Sept”
Government Bond- Negative yielding crosses $15 trillion
We will either look back at this period as the new normal or an insane period of irrationally low inflation expectations.
Junk Bond
Spreads on US junk bonds widened yesterday by the most since 2011. Important to watch, since it highlights how quickly the credit risk in high-yield bonds can re-price amid a deteriorating backdrop (On an absolute basis the most since Aug. 2011; percentage basis most since 2007.) Lisa Abramowicz
“Midcycle adjustment” seems off the table. Markets expect another four Fed rate cuts in the coming 12mths
The investing environment just
keeps becoming more challenging. Consider the following words from the most
powerful central banker in the world after cutting the much discounted 25 bp
Fed Rate.
Fed
Chairman Powell after cutting 25 bp– 31st July 2019
“I don’t know what’s going to
happen. Could be just an insurance cut only, “I didn’t say just one rate
cut …not a long cutting cycle, “rates could go back up.”
If that were not enough, I got
this ominous sounding newsflash from my favorite strategist Russell Napier via The
Solid Ground
The entire July up- move in US markets was washed out between 31st July and 1st August due to a nervous sounding Fed Chairman with a helping hand from President Trump’s tweet on China Tariff. The chart below shows the current state of market which is not driven by fundamentals but more by emotions
And right on time volatility went up with VIX (US equity volatility) up almost 5% in July and another 20% in first 2 days of august.
Equity Markets
Global markets were still up marginally with FTSE up 2.2% in July helped by falling sterling which was down to 2 year low against USD
Crazy Bond markets
Bond markets continued their rally with pile of negative yielding bonds touching USD 14 trillion.
Recession Watch
The two closely watched indicators – Dr. Copper and the US yield curve – raised the recession bell. The metal with PhD has dropped to 2y low while US 2s/10s spread on a course to inversion.
Gold as a recession
indicator
Gold for me is a “Hedge against Political Stupidity” and these days all lousy monetary or fiscal policies are tied to the political environment.
In July, gold price reached an all- time high in Indian Rupee, Aussie Dollar, Canadian Dollar, Euro and Sterling.
The State of Global
Economy
Beyond a taste of market this is how global economy is doing and it is not a pretty picture.
Market outlook.
Short Term outlook.
Dollar, Dollar and US Dollar. We are in uncharted territory over here and although the global Data continues to be weak , the US economic data is still mixed to strong. I believe that US will continue to attract capital flows from rest of the world and any deep correction in US equities will be an opportunity to but US equities and specifically DJIA ETF. Treasuries are massively overbought and have become a consensus trade, hence investors should wait for a reversal to take a fresh look. Precious metals are showing strength inspite of a strong dollar which suggest this rally has legs. Finally, volatility expanded to my desired levels and I will wait for it to retrace to add to the long volatility position as we are entering into a seasonally weak and volatile period for the markets
Long Term Outlook
I came across a thought-provoking piece on Investment Thesis for the 2020’s from Louis Gave of Gavekal.
Louis’ investment thesis for the 2020s is bold and likely at odds with anyone who has been lulled into the idea that cycles are antiquated. Those still inclined to believe that history does in fact repeat itself will find ample evidence in the article below that actual results often differ from popular beliefs when it comes to the long-term game of investing. https://blog.evergreengavekal.com/an-investment-thesis-for-the-2020s/
AN INVESTMENT THESIS FOR THE 2020s By Louis-Vincent Gave
Is long term success in investing more easily achieved by picking winners, or by avoiding losers? Arguably, the second path takes a lot less work. The table below illustrates the point nicely; it lists the world’s 10 biggest companies by market capitalization at the beginning of each decade since 1980. In 1980, the broad consensus was that “democracy inherently promotes inflation.” According to the prevailing belief of the day, politicians would always try to buy votes with unsustainable public spending, while central bankers would be unable to withstand pressure from governments twisting their arms to fund the ever-growing budget deficits. As a result, the only stocks worth holding were of companies with real assets, and especially commodity producers. At the time, energy names made up almost a third of the MSCI World index, and six of the world’s top 10 companies.
Remember when Japan was
the future?
After his decade-long beach holiday, our outperforming investor would have
returned to the office in 1990 only to be told that if he did not learn
Japanese, then there would be no job for him in the coming years. Japan’s
superior management techniques and bank-led financing model would ensure that
Japanese corporates would take over the world. Given this consensus, it was no
surprise that in 1990, eight of the top 10 companies in the world were
Japanese, and six of those eight were banks. How could you lose money owning
Japanese banks when Japan was set to take over the world?
Still, if our investor had
decided to underweight Japan (which by January 1990, made up 45% of the MSCI
World index), then once again he could have afforded to head for the beach for
the entire following decade.
Coming back in 2000, our
investor would have found a market segmented between attractively-valued “old
economy” stocks, and “new economy” stocks valued on previously unheard of
measures such as “price to eyeballs”. These new economy stocks, in media,
telecoms and technology, made up more than a third of the MSCI World. Yet
again, if our courageous investor chose to ignore the hype, he could have gone
on holiday for another 10 years.
Returning in 2010, he
would have found that the prevalent belief was that it was actually China that
was going to take over the world. And China’s insatiable thirst for commodities
meant that the world not only faced “peak oil”, but peak copper, peak nickel,
and perhaps even peak coal. By that point, five of the world’s top 10 companies
by market capitalization were involved in digging stuff out of the ground
while, for the first time, three of the world’s top 10—PetroChina, ICBC and
CCB—were not only state-owned companies, but state-owned companies of a
nominally communist government which a generation earlier had been gunning down
its own students on the streets of its capital. Freshly returned from the
beach, our investor might have found this odd, and might reasonably have
decided to deploy his capital elsewhere.
Back from the beach once
again
All of which brings us to today and the approaching end of the current decade.
Once again, our fantasy investor will be coming back from the beach to review
the beliefs underpinning today’s bull market. And he will find that:
In spite of central banks’ best efforts, deflation is here to stay, forever.
The global growth environment remains lackluster, and the risk is that it will deteriorate from here. As a result, you need to “pay up” for what little growth you can find. And the only obvious area where you can find growth is in technology, partly because so many tech companies enjoy quasi-monopoly situations thanks to scale and network effects. In fact, being a massive company is no longer a hindrance to growth, because you can now operate on a global scale and capture monopoly rents.
In today’s world, what matters is no longer the ownership of physical assets (such as copper mines, oil wells or railway lines) but the ownership of intellectual property.
Even though the US government is running a budget deficit of over 5% of GDP in the 10th year of an economic expansion, the US is by far the cleanest dirty shirt in a world rapidly moving ex-growth. That means you need to overweight not only US equities but the US dollar too.
As these beliefs have
taken hold of investors’ psyches, asset prices, interest rates and exchange
rates have adjusted in consequence—to the point where eight of the top 10
companies in the world are now American (I exclude Berkshire Hathaway, as it is
more an investment conglomerate than a typical company) and seven out of the 10
are technology stocks. Beyond the top 10, the US is now 56% of the MSCI World,
the market cap of the entire European banking sector is less than the market
cap of JP Morgan, and the daily trading volume of Amazon often surpasses the
daily volume on the Hong Kong stock market.
All this might make
sense, and perhaps in 10 years, our beach-loving investor will come back to a
world in which all the top 10 stocks are US tech companies, and where the US
accounts for 65% of the MSCI World. But I doubt it, for the following reasons:
One of the key reasons for the high turnover in the world’s top 10 companies from decade to decade is that size and growth are usually hard to reconcile (only Exxon has consistently stayed in the list, and then only by merging with Mobil at the nadir of the energy cycle; though Microsoft deserves an honorable mention for its third consecutive decade in the top 10). This is almost a hard rule of capitalism. The bigger the organization, the more bureaucratic it will tend to become, the more entrenched in its ways, and the less likely to take risks and so deliver the outsized growth investors anticipate. Elephants and hippos are very resilient, but they are neither as fast, nor as agile, as cheetahs or leopards.
With size usually comes much greater government scrutiny, if only because governments are jealous of their power and do not like to see corporate chieftains get too big for their boots. On this front, it is interesting to note that “big tech”companies are currently lined up in the sights of either the US FTC or Department of Justice, or the European Commission. Beyond this, the tech sphere has now been designated as a main battlefield in the unfolding US-China cold war, a designation which, all else being equal, is hardly bullish technology.
The current macro view is that global growth will remain decent but unexciting, and that deflation will continue to rule the roost. This could well turn out to be a case of investors projecting the recent past far into the future, even as the underlying macro conditions are evolving. As we move from a globalizing world to a deglobalizing world, as the US and European governments switch from tight fiscal policies to counter-cyclically very loose fiscal policies, and as an unprecedented productivity boom in the extraction of commodities starts to fade into the rear view mirror, the macro environment could turn out to be rather different.
This brings me back to
the table on the first page, and the acknowledgment that for a bull market to evolve
into a bubble—and let’s face it, bubbles are where the fun is—there needs to be
an over-riding idea to unite investors into a single, common faith. Famously,
investors are motivated by two emotions: greed and fear. And in a bubble, greed
can have two drivers, but fear only one—giving rise to three different types of
bubble.
Greed, driven by an expansion of capitalism into new territories (the South Sea Company, the Mississippi Company, the expansion into the American West, Japan, China etc.). Gavekal calls these “Ricardian” bubbles. Usually in Ricardian expansions, “value” investors do quite well.
Greed, driven by new technologies (railways, radio, the internet, smartphones, big data etc.). Dubbed by Gavekal “Schumpeterian” bubbles, these are a personal favorite, as they allow for large expansions in capital spending and progress for humanity. In Schumpeterian bubbles “growth” investors tend to outperform.
Fear-induced bubbles, driven by the notion that “there won’t be enough for everyone”. In times of such “Malthusian” thinking, investors in commodities tend to outperform.
How big can a Schumpeterian bubble blow?
Investors today are betting on the continuation of the Schumpeterian bubble. As
tech companies move into finance, as the fortunes poured into health research
reap a new harvest of breakthroughs, as our dependence on fossil fuels for
transport and energy disappears, as robots eliminate mindless work, the
consensus is that we will genuinely move into a brave new world of ever better
modern conveniences. But while this sounds attractive and exciting, we should
remember that multi-year investment trends are like very big dogs: they seldom
live past their first decade. Instead, the historical precedents would suggest
that the top 10 companies of 2030 are more likely to reflect either the growth
of capitalism into new territories (India? Latin America? China? South East
Asia?) or the fear that there won’t be enough for everybody.
On this point, the Mayans used to believe that history was made up of recurring cycles of 52 years; a notion which fits nicely with the popular belief that people avoid making their parents’ mistakes, only to repeat their grandparents’ errors. So perhaps in 2030 the market will be primed for a return of the belief that democracy can only lead to inflation, as politicians chase votes with barely-dry cash?
Gold Closing the week above $1400 (and even better $1450) would put us in what I see as a new phase (or zone on my chart below). Zone 6 will bring another phase of anticipation. A break above that would give us a clear run to the old highs and beyond. https://twitter.com/Northst18363337
Market achieved one more feat.. except that we don’t know what it means anymoreThe German yield, the mother of all Eurozone yield curves, is now completely negative! yes till 30 years…..No Germans are not spending more…..yes Germans are still saving at negative rates and finally Germans cannot afford houses anymore because Germany is having a housing bubble. what did you expect? rates will turn negative and smart guys will not buy Tangible assets
If you are a contrarian and believe that German yield curve will steepen, the smart guys at Lyxor have a designed especially for you. Don’t worry, to amplify your experience they will lever this ETF to give you 7 times the gains of underlying asset.
US markets are just correcting and the final top is not in and you know why?…despite the extreme amount of corporate leverage and the low quality of corporate credit, junk spreads remain near all-time lows.”
ARK Invest is an Investment Management firm that focuses solely on disruptive innovation in order to identify large-scale investment opportunities in niche markets such as Robotics, Fintech, Artificial Intelligence, Blockchain and more. The company has a handful of ETFs in which it actively manages in order to provide investors exposure to major themes that offer higher growth and a lower correlation vs the broader market.
They bifurcate some of the hottest industries and trends in the economy into exchange-traded funds, which allows us to easily analyze price data at a more granular level. For example, if I want to know how Companies focused on Robotics or 3D Printing are doing, I do not have to go out and research these areas to find the individual companies to analyze – I can simply pull up a price chart of their Industrial Innovation ($ARKQ) or 3D Printing ($PRNT) ETFs.
Today we’re going to take a look at the Ark Genomic Revolution Multi-Sector ETF, $ARKG. Many believe that DNA sequencing and genomics will drastically change the way we practice Healthcare in the future.
Indian Residents are allowed to invest in this ETF through LRS
WSJ: “Families Go Deep in Debt to Stay in the Middle Class”
This is a great chart on growth of assets and Liabilities. I think this will be true for lot of developed countries.
Lagging indicator
“This chart plots the CCI’s monthly readings back to 1977. The highest readings occurred in early 2000, at the top of the internet bubble. I need not remind you what came next.” (link: https://on.mktw.net/2SY8ubU) on.mktw.net/2SY8ubU