Note to The Donald: what goes up, also comes down

Dear President-elect, the trouble with claiming responsibility for an expanding economy and rising stock market, is that people will also blame you when they tank.  And tank they will inevitably; especially when like now, prices have risen for an extended duration on reckless leverage to historic over-valuations.

Broker-dealer, long-always asset manglers learn this lesson every cycle, at least once.  Riding risk up is easy as pie, it’s exposure to the mean reversion that kills. But I am sure the Donald will be quick to cite his failures and take responsibility when the next recession and bear market hits, right?  Mea culpa tweets coming?

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Watching the Trump bump for signs it may dump

Risk markets have roared since November on hopes of quick fiscal stimulus courtesy of Trump & co and high frequency traders gunning for light-speed.  We note that Canada elected our new government more than a year ago on similar promises and so far Infrastructure delays keep Canada’s spending lagging behind budget plans.  Devising, approving, structuring and executing fiscal stimulus is hard to do well, and no quick turnaround for large economies, even when accomplished.  This is especially true where a country is already heavily indebted and governments have to borrow tons more to pay for planned spending.  In such cases, negative not positive growth multipliers, are more likely than not, in the end.  That’s just the math.

Lest we forget, having governments bail out reckless borrowers and lenders is how our financial leaders opted to staUS govt share of consumer debtll the 2008-09 great recession and we are all paying the price.  This chart of US government’s share of consumer credit via auto, student and housing debt underwriting shows the pattern since the last recession.  Most major economies in the world did variations of the same.  All to spare institutional lenders from suffering the defaults they deserved.

Today those with savings to lose, must stay lucid and realistic and discern hyperbole from overly confident politicians, business execs and risk-sellers, from the cyclical big picture for markets and the economy.  A few updated charts from my partner Cory Venable offer some overview.

First, the US 10-year Treasury Yield is here since 1988.  After rallying back to resistance since the fall, we remain at least so far, still in a downtrend, as deflationary forces are formidable, entrenched and indeed the historic norm outside of war times.  The investment grade bond bull was wounded the past few months–but may not be dead yet.

10 year yield Jan 11 2017

A similar story is told here in the price of copper (shown since 2007).  Trump rally notwithstanding, so far, deflationary trend remains unbroken.

copper Jan 11 2017

Next we have the great re-inflation narrative of global stock bulls, here captured in the FTSE All World Index since the US consumer credit bubble burst in 2007 (and the debts were downloaded onto government balance sheets).  Flopping wildly since 2014, this global index shows no breakout to refute the thesis that the cyclical –and perhaps secular top–of this leverage-mad era has already come and gone.

FTSE all world stock index
Lastly, we have the great commodity surrogate the Canadian dollar, here also since 2007. After peaking on the same infamous US consumer-credit-driven-demand-bubble into 2008, the loonie rallied on stimulus hopes into 2011 and then dove all the way into early 2016.  A secondary rebound stalled last summer, and since then, the C$ has not confirmed ‘Trumphoric’-faith in a new expansion cycle.  Not yet anyway.  Best to stay sober and alert.
FXC Jan 11 2017

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Earth to Trump: you want to be a respected leader? Act like one.

Donald Trump is certainly not the first President-elect to have business conflicts.  Although he surely has more than most. But there are well established ethical principles and rules to dramatically resolve them.  America should not settle for less from its new leader.  If Trump were a normal public official, there are several obvious changes we’d expect to hear forthwith.   See a list here:  Trump can resolve his business conflicts.  Let’s see if he does.  

 

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