pull down to refresh

Interesting letter from Lyn Alden: touches on the SOFR and Repo action of the last week, but not too much.
Thus, my base case is that we will find ourselves in a structural environment where debasement keeps occurring, but absolute hurdle rates and costs of capital are no longer declining (i.e. no more lower-lows in interest rates), and thus valuations for equities, houses, and other assets will have less of a structural tailwind behind them.
I instead expect a more gradual increase in the Fed’s balance sheet after a period of flatness. Certain shocks or events could lead me to adjust that view, but with the visibility I have now, that’s what I think is the highest probability outcome. We could perhaps call this the “The Gradual Print”, which is a friendly play on Larry Lepard’s book, The Big Print
This divergence is a common symptom of fiscal dominance and/or inflation.
It occurs similarly in emerging market recessions, where the economy is broadly weak but there’s enough debasement going on to push their stock prices up in their own currency. Usually in those environments, their stocks are doing poorly in dollar or gold terms, but doing well relative to the local currency.
The United States, when it operates in a state of fiscal dominance, is basically “emerging market lite”. In other words, it displays some emerging market characteristics, albeit wrapped in the less extreme wrapper of a developed market.
And so, for example, we see the S&P 500 doing fine in dollar terms but rolling over relative to gold for several years now, in what is becoming the fourth big stock-vs-gold bear market in modern US financial history. Basically, the S&P 500 to gold ratio over the past 5+ years looks roughly like we’d expect in a weak consumer sentiment environment, because that effectively filters out the dollar’s debasement from the equation.
Generally like Lyn, but she's seeming a little narrative trapped and maybe has a touch of TDS, and pretty much ignoring everything that's happened (and signaled) over the year.
Seems to be true of most macro commentary accounts with a large following... Grug brains just wants to hear "printer go brrr" so they eat this shit without question.
costs of capital are no longer declining ... no more lower-lows in interest rates
The neutral rate is dropping off a cliff, and Fed rates accordingly, and the long end is keeping up
gradual increase in the Fed’s balance sheet after a period of flatness
It hasn't been flat, its been shrinking relative to the size of the economy, it can increase nominally but still be shrinking relatively
inflation
This whole year has been disinflation
the economy is broadly weak
No evidence of, capex is up 15% YoY and usually an early indicator
stock prices up in their own currency
Yet PE is down 13% YoY
rolling over relative to gold
That's war footing in geopolitcs, not a dollar supply vs. liabilities story, if anything it's a de-leveraging
Gold isn't even up to it's pre-covid levels in stonk terms, and doesn't have PE or dividends that increased over that time.
Could go more into the differences between fiscal stimmies circa 2020-21 vs. what's unfolding today with SLR, de-regulation, tariff effect on forex, and literally everything else that effects monetary velocity
Printing is just half the picture, there needs to be dollar destruction to force the printing, and a lot of printing, LOTS of printing, can be offset with dollar destruction as we've been seeing.
reply
17 sats \ 0 replies \ @Taj 19h
reply
No mention of China which now dominates global manufacturing and trade in commodities plus leading in most high tech and strategic infrastructure development areas like robotics, PVs, EVs, nanotech, drones, high speed rail, shipping, nuclear power, hydro power, wind power, solar power, LEDs and generally energy sector power generation and efficiency. There is no longer smog in China as EVs replace fossil fueled vehicles. China has won the trade war and with its strategic domination in rare earths refining the USA cannot fight a war without Chinas support and ongoing supply of rare earths for military purposes- support that has already been cut. The end of western civilisations global domination has happened already but these moron commentators just ignore it because they are fixated on the neoliberal obsession with financialisation and they cannot see that what really matters is producing things that people want and need- and China leads in that now, globally.
reply
There is no longer smog in China
Are the organ transplants still cheap?
reply
she's such a contrarian!
While I continue to expect bonds to lose purchasing power, it likely won’t be as rapid as the prior five years have been, and it’s less of an obvious “short bonds, long stocks” trade going forward. And yet that’s the current narrative, because it’s the trailing price behavior.
reply
Neoliberalism-
Knowing the price of everything and the value of nothing.
The fruits of neoliberal financialisation which has killed the productive economy and handed the real economic power to China which now makes everything.
reply