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Turbulence Ahead! Big Ups and Bigger Downs to Come. There are no straight roads to economic ruin. One reader asked me after yesterday’s article on the historic market meltdown whether I thought the stock market would bounce back up to nearly make a full recovery. I responded as follows:
In a video interview with Adam Taggart below, Lance Roberts makes a number of interesting points here about the continuing stock meltdown and volatility he sees ahead where he expects major ups and downs through, at least, October or November. I expect the same thing. So a rebound today would not surprise me at all … as up is part of volatility. One note I’ll disagree with in the video is Lance’s claim that, “Sure, the Sahm Rule says we are already in a recession but these things actually take time. There is a lag until a recession is declared.” That misses the point. When a recession is officially declared (always months after the recession began), the start of the recession is always retrodated by, at least, a half year. In other words, the timing of when the declaration is officially made is irrelevant to when the recession actually began. We are in recession now, even if it takes officials months to make a declaration. The Sahm Rule, which has never been even minutely wrong since the 70s, strongly confirms this (and only wrong by a few months in its timing once or twice prior to that, going all the way back to the crash of ‘29 and the Great Depression.) Besides the lag time, the GDP/inflation figures that officials are using to quantify recession in this election year are so obviously rigged, just as Lance and Adam talk about with respect to the government job numbers (another discussion that makes the video worthwhile), that I doubt the National Bureau of Economic Research, which officially declares recessions, will ever declare this recession until the pig is so obvious to everyone they finally have to admit it or look like disgruntled pigs in lipstick, themselves. Going up the down staircaseIn the realm of economics, there are always ups along the down staircase. Regarding the market’s ups, downs and rebounds, Wolf Richter said about yesterday’s market meltdown:
Exactly. (And he uses such Midwestern polite language.) I’ve said that many times here, too: “There are no straight lines in economics or markets.” It wouldn’t be human nature if people, coming to a view adjustment on something as painful as a recession, didn’t panic first and then catch hold of themselves as Wolf Richter describes for the “fear index” and settle down to a dull fear:
Another writer at Bloomberg described the near certainty of a market rebound todayand what comes next as follows:
We shouldn’t be surprised at all to see the market bounce around eratically, recovering a lot of lost ground … or, in the very least, see it attempt to do that today. It’s what the market typically does, especially when it has been overflowing with irrational bullish sentiment of many months that takes awhile to get tapped out.
That is exactly the scenario for stocks that Lance Roberts suggests in the video, too. It is also exactly what we saw during the dot-com bust, which I’ve claimed this bust is likely to look like: Look at how long it took for that market crash to play out. From the start of 2000 all the way to 2003. There were some horrendous plunges along the way, some attempted recoveries, a couple of major back-to-back “bear-market rallies” and then a lot more ups and downs on the way down the staircase. That, of course, was without the kind of massive Fed and government rescues that began in the next Fed-fueled crisis, known as the Great Recession, where I finally decided to start writing about this stuff. All of that Fed interference only makes it more complicated because the Fed has trillions of dollars in firepower, as we’ve seen, to try to jack things up. That much hot-air, balloon-inflating money is not likely to go unfelt. So, yes, the Nikkei took its biggest plunge yesterday since the “Black Monday” crash of ‘87, but it also achieved its biggest rise today since 2008. The point of the articles quoted above, and the video with Lance Roberts is that this is no surprise. It is what should be expected. The road down, even though you can see there were a few elevator trips down in the dot-com bust, mostly looks like a steep waterfall of rapids, versus a plunge over a cliff; but there is a lot more down than up as things unwind on the down staircase. It is economic/market climate change Whether stocks frost over or not (because a stock market crash was never specifically part of my predictions for 2024, though I have certainly seen it as likely), the point I was making yesterday is that the massive change in market dynamics reveals the extent to which the blinders came off about recession and some of the fantasy about soft landings disintegrated. It’s what happens when people who are living in delusions about their economic environment are suddenly faced with frigid reality. That makes it a different world now in terms of mass perception than where the world sat in hope-filled delirium a week ago. One of the big unwinds that is happening because of fears that the Fed is about to start cutting rates, is the largest global carry trade in history:
This carry trade between currencies, wherein one borrows in one currency and buys in another, became particularly strong between the Japanese Yen and US dollar; so, a big part of the market’s reaction to recessionary news was a rapid unwinding of those trades, which are not expected to perform well if Japan continues to be as hawkish as it just was while the Fed shifts back to a looser monetary stance of cutting interest rates. Zero Hedge, yesterday, referred to this rush out of the Yen-Dollar carry trade being run in stocks and bonds as the “Japanic.” Already investment folks are begging for bailout types of measures (a little extra largesse to carry the carry trades through the transition to tighter central-bank policy so as not to bust banks and brokers, etc.):
These are new risks building in one-sided markets where a sudden change in Fed policy, such as the emergency rate cuts market participants started begging for yesterday, will upset trades that depended for their success on the Fed’s tighter policies. So, heads will get broken, especially if the Fed shifts at emergency speed, forcing rapid offloading of certain bets, which is the fear that comes with sudden realization that recession has, for months, been crouched right at our doorstep. This, of course, is why we have the Federal Reserve—to maul things around with massive creation of money, followed by massive monetary reduction, and to lower interest to absolute zero then raise interest and then lower it again in ways that assure longterm, massive bubble formations followed by rapid bubble implosions. You can’t argue with me on that. It HAS to be why we have them because that is exactly what they’ve been doing for the last two-plus decades, and we keep them employed! They have clearly made business cycles far more erratic, spasmodic and exaggerated than we ever used to see. So, that must be what they were created for. It is certainly what they aim for and achieve on a predictable basis. And we give them control over our national currency and the ability to make massive incomes for themselves in exchange for them helping us like this. Share if you care to help keep the Fed on its toes and off yours. Subscribe if you want to help fight the Fed but don’t have time to engage the battle directly.
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