Have you noticed CaptainMidnight has been posting lots of Fed analyses lately?...
Originally Posted by lustylad
Where is this "Midnight" character to whom you refer? AWOL? In a witness protection program?
(Actually, rumor has it that he noticed it was hotter'n hell outside and thought the time favorable for a couple of short vacations in cooler parts of the country!)
OK, here goes:
A couple of months ago I posted that Milton Friedman, very late in life, said the Fed had begun acting like a "drunk in the shower" -- quickly and repeatedly turning the knobs back and forth between too cold and too hot, startling himself a number of times in the process. (This was in response to the Greenspan Fed's overreactions in the early '00s.)
Now we have the Fed, acting very late in the cycle, initiating a sharp reversal of QE along with pushing up the funds rate.
The current narrative is that they're heading for 3.25%-3.5% (at least) over the next 12-15 months.
My first contrarian take is that they'll get nowhere near 3.5% without pivoting again. (Remember 2018-19?)
I believe that the economy is much worse than most of the talking heads on the bubblevision channels would have you believe.
The ISM manufacturing new orders index contracted sharply, indicating rapidly waning demand.
Treasuries rallied hard after these reports, pushing the 10-year UST all the way down to 2.88.%
The GDPNow and Nowcast models quickly shifted from slightly less pessimistic forecasts to -2.1 Q2 real GDP. That's on top of a negative Q1, so that means two consecutive quarters.
My second contrarian take is that policymakers are in the process of trading in the unloved, rickety old inflation jalopy for a new high-performance recessionmobile.
First, look at an M2 money aggregate chart. After rocketing from about $15.5 trillion at the outset of the pandemic to almost $22 trillion in March 2022, M2 been on a gentle downslope for three months.
Meanwhile, copper has fallen about 27% from its cycle high and is now at an 18-month low. Wheat is down 28% from its peak, while corn and soybeans are down double digits. Additionally, the trade-weighted dollar strengthened over 9% in the first half of the year.
Now comes the "bullwhip effect."
I mentioned this concept in one of these threads recently and noticed that Michael Burry (of
The Big Short fame) wrote about it just a few days ago:
https://www.yahoo.com/video/michael-...125206248.html
All this is why I think it's more likely than not that the bear market has much further to go.
Right now, the S&P 500 is down just a smidgen more than 20% from its peak. The market has yet to price in a recession; even a moderate one.
Remember the bear market following the beginning of the dot-com deflation in 2000? After an initial fall of 25+% and the inception of a Fed easing cycle, the market ground its way steadily down, down, down for all of 2001 and three quarters of 2002 -- eventually dropping another 20+%.
That might not happen this time, as every bear market and every recession is different. But given the lofty status of peak valuations, this is certainly something to think about.
(Aside from references to this forum, the above is my first cut at commentary I plan on submitting tomorrow. Please add whatever you think is appropriate and point them out if I've made any obvious errors. I think I do need to clean up some of the fucked-up syntax!)
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