Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Smell a Rat

The stock market just doesn't seem to make much sense.  You have wild volatility in the bond market as financial crisis fears have changed market pricing for the next few months, from rate hikes to rate cuts.  The economically sensitive technology sector has taken the lead, based on some overzealous belief that its a safe haven as tech companies have lots of cash and low debt.  

It goes back to that gift that keeps on giving, the Covid stimulus, which was a huge boon for the wealthy and corporations, as they benefited greatly from fat PPP loans that were forgiven.  Corporations were also able to load up on low interest debt in 2020 and 2021, which set them up well for the next few years, locking in cheap funding.  The vast majority of the post Covid excess savings belongs to the wealthy, so they have lots of dry powder.  

It gives the top 10% very little incentive to sell stocks, because they already have a big cash hoard which is steadily getting bigger with nearly 5% interest on cash.  It doesn't matter what the bottom 90% do with their money, they don't have the firepower to move the SPX.  Only the top 10% do.  And the top 10% don't need to sell stocks because their balance sheet is stuffed with cash and low interest debt.  Here's a chart from a Next Economy substack post, (by the way, an excellent blog), showing the net financial position of households by income percentiles.  All the excess savings is in the top 20%, everyone else is below pre Covid levels. 

This most recent SIVB induced selloff just didn't have that staying power of those in 2022 because bonds rallied this time, which buffered a lot of portfolios against the volatility.  Anytime bonds rally in a stock market selloff, it provides a natural hedge for investors, and they have less fear and urgency to sell because their 60/40 stock/bond portfolio is not losing much.   Once the Fed stepped right in to bailout the banks, the banking crisis fears were overblown.  The Fed will always shows its true colors when the going gets tough.  Their main priority is to support growth/employment.  They love bailouts.  It makes them feel important and powerful.  They feel like a hero.  It pumps up their ego.  Inflation always takes a back seat in these situations.

Even though the Fed immediately brought in their bazooka to stop the panic, bank runs and banks going belly up make investors nervous, as they get 2008 flashbacks.  When investors are nervous, unless earnings are seriously getting hit, the headlines eventually fade away and stocks usually have a strong bounce back.  Based on leading indicators, earnings should go down rapidly in the 2nd half, so there could still be a couple of months of hopium for the bulls as they latch on to Fed pivot hopes. 

While financial contagion worries are prevalent, I don't think they are as important as everyone thinks, since the Fed WILL blow out any small fires with a firehose of liquidity.  The bigger problem, which will take some time to play out, is the deposit flight from the banks as the spread between bank savings rates and money markets funds are too big for even the lazy to ignore.  This fire can only be taken out by the Fed if they cut rates aggressively, which they don't seem too keen on doing at this juncture (expect that attitude to change in the summer).  

This exit from bank savings/checking to money markets will be a slow squeeze on the bank's main source of cheap funding (near zero rates), hurting profitability and reducing their ability to make loans.  The banks pull back on loan issuance and tighten credit to weather the storm.  That credit contraction will feed into the real economy over several months, so nothing dramatic in the short term, but it will be felt more and more later this year.  The banks were already tightening lending standards, as shown by the senior loan officer survey.  This will eventually cause less credit to flow, reducing economic activity, and leading to lots of layoffs. 

While its always alluring for bears to latch on to the big bang story of banks going under and a financial crisis, that's fighting the last war (2008), which the global central banks will not let happen, seeing how quick they are to bailout any systemically important bank/institution.  The less sexy bear thesis is an ordinary credit led contraction, where banks lend less money, investors hoard cash and hunker down, job losses pop up as the economy gets worse, earnings go down, reducing buybacks, taking away a key support for the stock market, and the excesses of the previous bubble get wrung out of the system as zombie companies die out in the first real recession in 14 years.  Instead of a big bang from a domino financial contagion event, the much more likely scenario is that of an old fashioned recession, this time with commercial real estate the weak point, along with manufacturing weakness.  It will be a slow bleed.  The economic data will get worse as the year goes on.  The main question is how bad does it get.  Many are predicting a mild recession.  But considering how much the Fed raised rates, and how long it has been since the last recession (2009), along with low organic growth, it would not surprise me if we get a deep recession this time.  

The SPX looks to have a short term ceiling at 4000, and a short term floor at 3900.  I am not going to play the range, but if I had to, I would rather be a buyer near the floor, than a seller near the ceiling.  I smell a rat in the stock market.  It seems like it wants to suck in the shorts, trapping them before eventually squeezing higher.  Its too resilient and it looks like it wants to go higher eventually after a bit more basing this week.  SPX 4150 by mid April would not surprise. 

9 comments:

OL DAWG said...

Sold QQQ May 5 303 Puts @ 7.70
Sold Meta May 5 200 Puts @ 13.90

OL DAWG said...

Long GOOGL May 5 102 Calls @ 4.45
Long LUMN May 19 2.50 Calls @ .35

OL DAWG said...

I don’t know what to say, really. Three minutes till the biggest trade of our professional lives all comes down to today. Now either we heal as a trader or we’re gonna crumble, inch by inch, trade by trade, 'til we’re finished.

We’re in hell right now, gentlemen, believe me. And, we can stay here -- get the shit kicked out of us -- or we can fight our way back into the light. We can trade outta hell one inch at a time.

Now, I can’t do it for you. I’m too old. I look around. I see these young faces, and I think -- I mean -- I made every wrong trade a middle-aged man can make. I, uh, I pissed away all my money, believe it or not. I chased off anyone who’s ever loved me. And lately, I can’t even stand the face I see in the mirror.

You know, when you get old in life things get taken from you. I mean that's...part of trading. But, you only learn that when you start losing stuff. You find out life is this game of inches. So is trading. Because in either game, life or trading, the margin for error is so small -- I mean one-half a step too late, or too early, and you don’t quite make it. One-half second too slow, too fast, you don’t quite catch the bounce.

The trades we need are everywhere around us.

They’re in every break of the game, every minute, every second.

On this trade, we fight for that dollar. On this trade, we tear ourselves and everyone else around us to pieces for that dollar. We claw with our fingernails for that dollar, because we know when we add up all those dollars that’s gonna make the fuckin' difference between winning and losing! Between livin' and dyin'!

I’ll tell you this: In any trade, it’s the guy who’s willing to die who’s gonna win that inch. And I know if I’m gonna have any life anymore, it’s because I’m still willin' to trade and die for that dollar. Because that’s what livin' is! The six dollars in front of your face!!

Now I can’t make you do it. You got to look at the guy next to you. Look into his eyes! Now I think you’re gonna see a guy who will go that dollar with you. You're gonna see a guy who will sacrifice himself for this trade because he knows, when it comes down to it, you’re gonna do the same for him!

That’s a trade, gentleman!

And, either we heal, now, as a trader, or we will die as shitty trader wannabes.

That’s trading guys.

That's all it is.

Now, what are you gonna do?

soong said...

Assets always free fall when every bears give up. I already gave up. Keep calm and Just watching market. After all, it's all decided.FATE don't give you the right to choose.

OL DAWG said...

QQQ needs to hold this 305 level or my googl position is toast.

WTF yesterday everyone is all bullish. After 1% down day everyone is bearish as fawk.

Fair weather friends. Like little 5 dollar whores chasing the latest pimp. Human psychology so fragile.

OL DAWG said...

Sold GOOGL May 5 102 Calls @ 4.75

OL DAWG said...

Long XLE May 5 81.5 Puts @ 2.84

OL DAWG said...

More LUMN May 19 2.50 calls @ .39

Anonymous said...

Sold XLE Puts @ 2.40

LOng SBNY @ .29