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Is Today's Market Mania a Mega Meltdown? And how we narrowly averted what could easily have become a MAGA meltdown, as one man tried to steal the votes of millions. Fortunately, the Secret Service did "stop the steal."Yesterday, the Dow roared and soared, and today the Nasdaq screams and falls as money continues to roll rapidly out of high-tech growth stocks and into value stocks, almost as if forced at gunpoint to turn over the money. Today, the Nasdaq put in its worst performance in a year-and-a-half, while yesterday the Dow bested its own performance by more than it has in over a year. That kind of turnover is typically a sign that investors are seeing trouble for the economy and are gearing down. Perhaps, the stealth recession that no one wanted to believe in is becoming a little more apparent. And to think it was the artificial intelligence craze that had everyone saying this couldn’t possible be like the dot-com bust in 2000 because AI sets a whole new paradigm for business so that companies involved in AI will change the world. Well, so did the internet in 2000 and companies involved in the internet. As I pointed out awhile back more than once, that didn’t stop those companies that eventually went very, very well from falling off a cliff first as the frenzy funneled out of the market, crashing those stocks so hard it took many years for them to recover. We could be seeing the start of the same kind of long tumultuous slide here where, yes, some companies that are heavily involved on the leading edge of AI will do extremely well over the long term, but the earlier race by everyone to plunge in and consume those stocks was madness, and that mania has to get worked out of the market.
And Nvidia, the uncontested leader of the “Magnificent 7” plunged 6% today. So, yes, the biggest of big tech, having just become the biggest company in the world by value, can fall off the cliff with the rest of the market and even lead the way down when the mania finally melts down. Am I saying this is the point where the market crashes? Not with any certainty. This market has proved itself willing to return to its delusions many times over like a dog returns to its own vomit. However, I am saying this is the point that proves this market and high-tech AI stocks certainly CAN crash exactly like the market did in the infamous dot-com bust of 2000, and it kind of looks like it might be starting that plunge from its manic high now. If so, it might be too early for the Fed to save it—at least from its initial plunge—with a rate cut in September if Powell is at all serious (and remains serious) about the hopes he is waving in the air to enrich markets with their fumes. Powell knows it is too early to make a rate-cut decision now with really only a single blip down in inflation, though he optimistically tried to turn it into a three-month lowering average in order to make it sound more like a trend; but it was a three-month average where the downward movement came entirely in the final month. Not much of a trend! Of course, the market’s moves today could all be as benign as this:
Just profit-taking, but it is some pretty large profit taking, and looks more like a fearful rollover from high-performance to value. Still, it could be just profit taking … I suppose. Even though Powell isn’t going to change rates before September, he could try to move markets by jawboning them full of hopes about a coming rate cut. He’s done it before. The unified jawboning already beginsWe did get a little jawboning today to help the market out. The Fed’s Waller, who had recently said rate cuts were months away because he’d have to see more consistent moves down in inflation, now says the central bank is getting closer to when it will make that first rate cut. Well, of course, everyday it gets closer to someday when it will actually cut, so this seems like a statement intended to mean a little more than the obvious—intended, as it were, to deliver some hope to the stock market. Others at the Fed were suddenly all saying the same thing, having spent all their time saying the opposite thing in unison only a month ago:
A month ago, to a person, they all said rate cuts were going to be further off … until they got that down-blip in CPI for the latest month reported. Now, they sound like they are all in for a rate cut in September. Could that be because they fear they are really getting close to that point where we tip into recession? Here, the Sahm Rule that just beeped a recession warning and that is almost never wrong, could be coming into play in their minds, for it was written by one of their colleagues, meaning they are all familiar educated in it. (See: “What the Sahm Hill is Happening? Near-perfect recession siren is about to go off.”)
I believe there will be major surprises, and I’ve written a lot about that lately, so you can comb through recent articles to find out what forces are at play. I won’t repeat them here for the sake of all those who have heard them often enough.
I believe that is called “taking the win.” Only, is it a win? It may be premature to call it so. It most likely is premature.
I consider that one the most likely for the reasons I’ve been giving.
What can I say? They’re fickle. They get a single month where inflation moved to deflation by a miniscule amount and then average that across two months where it essentially didn’t move all all, and declare that a new trend because it’s spread across three months. In May Waller had said a rate cut was “several months away.” Now he says labor has entered “a sweet spot” where it is softening. (Never mind that last report where the labor market tightened back up.) At least, unlike Powell, he doesn’t try to stretch the one-month dip from inflation to deflation into a three month average, but says we’ve seen improvement in inflation over two months.
And that may be the same kind of wishful thinking as “inflation is transitory.” It sounds like they really want to get to where they can make a cut due to fear of recession. After all, when is even “two months” evidence that “is mounting?” That’s not much of a mount.
That would actually be one month of “consistency,” and one month of no change. Bond market proven to be the new dumb moneyFollowing the article about Waller’s comments, I’ve posted a headline to a really good article by Wolf Richter, who points out how dead-wrong the Treasury market (the supposed smart money) has been every time it has tried to price in and predict the next Fed rate cut during this cycle. He presents a string of failures from the new “dumb money.” I recommend reading it if you think the bond market knows anything these days. It doesn’t. All along the way, I’ve said, “No cut! No pivot!” Now, at last, we MAY be getting closer to when the Fed will cut. I haven’t quite decided if this is the turning point or not. Clearly the Fed wants to make it the turning point, but what I don’t know is whether the turn I’ve laid in for inflation to likely rise some more will happen before the Fed’s September meeting and force them to pull on the brake to their new rat-cutting ambitions, which I suspect have risen because they are starting to feel the stealth recession. An inch in timeFinally, as OpenAI CEO Sam Altman notes how an inch can change the course of the world history and nearly did (maybe half an inch) when a young gunman tried to steal the right to vote from millions of Americans, millions of Americans now say they fear the country is “sliding into chaos.”
An entire nation that leads the world sliding out of control is a very scary thing, and it only took a single bullet to make that point sink in. While I’m not a Trump supporter, it would have been a massive travesty if millions of voters had been defrauded of their right to vote for the candidate of their own choosing by the trigger finger of one man.
These are among the major reasons—the others being mostly economic, war, and some social—that I said 2024 would be the “Year of Chaos.” We saw one side commit acts of violence on January 6 when the ex-president tried to seize the election results in his own hand to make them—in congress—what he believed they would have been (but had no way of actually knowing); now we saw another individual try to take the election into his own hands, which would have truly defrauded people of their vote. Even 11% of Democrats believe Trump was “favored by divine providence or God's will." I’m not saying it was God’s vote for Trump, but I am certainly relieved the bullet missed, or it could have been the bullet that changed history for the worst, and history should not be changed by one man with a loaded gun outvoting the entire nation. That is far from what America is or ever was about. God bless America. I think he did, by sparing us from the shot heard ‘round the world, which could have brought real calamity to our present hair-trigger nation.
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