The market is getting a flashback to past bond routs seen in much of 2022, and fall of 2023. This time, its happening despite inflation stabilizing around 3% and with the Fed no longer in its higher for longer stance. Instead of being led by a weak short end with higher for longer fears, now its being led by the long end with Trump induced supply concerns about lots of coupon bond issuance, tariffs, and more tax cuts.
I remember back in October 2023 when the 10 year was approaching 5%, Rick Santelli of CNBC suddenly went crazy and talked about 13% 10 year yields as if he was being time transported back into the early 1980s. Yields topped out soon afterwards and went straight down for 2 months.
While we don't have the Rick Santelli contrarian indicator this time around, I am getting similar vibes about investors' opinion on the bond market, without a lot of fundamental changes.
Sure, Trump will threaten and probably slap on some tariffs, but that increase on prices on imported goods will be offset to some degree by less consumption in services and non-imported goods. I would be more worried about a resurgence of inflation if China and the emerging markets were suddenly running hot, with commodity prices surging higher and the dollar much weaker. I just don't see why anyone would get excited about the current inflation picture.
As for growth, I just don't see a sudden surge in the global or the US economy that would justify a big bond market selloff. That strong nonfarm payrolls number doesn't tell you much. You saw a bunch of hot nonfarm payrolls numbers in 2023 and they were wholesale revised in 2024. The NFP data collection process is broken and its a dinosaur which doesn't give you an accurate picture. Based on worker behavior, they are clearly less confident about the labor market, as you see much fewer job quits. They all say that deregulation and Trump bump for the economy will increase growth in the US, but there is nothing concrete to those proclamations. Its parroted commentary from the investor community that induces people to sell bonds.
This particular bond selloff has less merit than the one you saw for much of 2022 and fall of 2023. First, the Fed has actually cut 100 bps, so you have a yield curve that is upward sloping, which makes it more attractive and positive carry for leveraged funds to buy longer maturity Treasuries. Second, Trump will be looking to replace Powell and appoint a much more dovish Fed chair for 2026, so its unlikely that you will see a selloff in bonds catalyzed by front end weakness like much of the past 2.5 years. Third, with reverse repos outstanding down to much lower levels, the end of QT is coming sometime this year. Lastly, the idea that tariffs are bad for bonds isn't proven, and its unlikely to be the case because tariffs are a tax on consumption, which will hurt growth, which is arguably the more important factor for bond prices than cost push inflation.
That being said, I would prefer to buy stocks than bonds in the current environment because this belief that Trump policies are bad for the bond market can go on for several more weeks until its disproven later in the year.
I just can't picture an end to this grand bull market in US stocks ending on yields going up. The much more likely scenario is that growth and earnings disappoint, and you get a selloff in stocks based on growth fears, not inflation/higher yield fears.
Back to the stock market. The COT data as of 12/31/2024 shows asset managers purging more of their net long positioning, selling 57,000 more ES contracts to get down to a net long position last seen in early November, and early September, before the FOMC 50 bps rate cut and the Presidential election. It reminds me of the asset managers reducing their large net long positions in the 2nd half of 2021, as the SPX was in the last innings of its rally.
You finally saw an increase in the put/call ratio on Thursday and Friday, as investors finally started buying puts. ISEE index dropped down sharply last week, to levels last seen in October. A lot of the froth has come out of the speculative names as well, especially the quantum stocks that got hammered last week.
Last week was wild, and didn't get bulls much time to sell the rally, once again, even less time than the brief rally around Christmas. Thus, I missed the graceful exit and unfortunately didn't cut losses on the way down. I'm not holding a big position, but I don't intend to add to it as there could be one more move lower towards SPX 5700 on this down wave.
Not much to do here, I will hold on to the long position, and ride it out here, I do expect a rally soon, and it could be a lasting bottom if you see some panic and capitulation this week.