End of Days

The one thing about which we’re sure
Is risk assets lost their allure
It’s not clear quite yet
How big a reset
Is coming, and what we’ll endure


Now, I don’t think its end of days
And this could be quite a short phase
But don’t be surprised
If answers devised
Result in a lack of real praise

Chaos continues to reign in the markets as volatility across all asset classes has risen substantially.  Perhaps the best known indicator, the VIX, is back at levels seen last during the Covid pandemic.  Remember, the VIX is a compilation of the implied volatility of short-term equity options, 1mo – 3mo.  While markets can technically be volatile moving in either direction, the VIX has earned the sobriquet of ‘fear index’ as equity volatility most typically rises when stock markets fall.  As you can see from the below chart, the movement has not only been large, but very quick as well.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

The key thing to remember is that while volatility levels can rise very quickly, as the chart demonstrates, their retracement can take quite a long time to play out.  Part of that is that even when things start to calm down, many investors and traders are worried about getting burnt again, so prefer holding options to underlying cash positions.  At least until the time decay becomes too great.  My point is that look for trepidation amidst the trading community and markets in general for a while yet, even if by Friday, the tariff situation is made perfectly clear.  Of course, with that as background, we cannot be surprised that the Fear & Greed Index has made new lows.

Source: cnn.com

However, arguably of more concern is the price action in US Treasuries, which despite the havoc in the market, are not playing their historical safe haven role.  Instead, Treasury bond yields are rising, actually trading as high as 4.50% around midnight last night although they have since retraced a bit.  The bond market has a generic volatility index as well, the MOVE index, and it, too, is trading at very high levels, the highest since the GFC.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

In many ways, this is of much greater concern to markets, as well as both the Treasury and the Fed.  The 10-year US Treasury is the benchmark long-term rate for the entire world.  A rise in the MOVE index may indicate that there is something wrong with the bond market and its inner workings, or it may be an indication that inflation expectations are rising quickly.  Whatever the reason, you can be certain the Fed is watching this far more carefully than the VIX.

I have heard two explanations for the bond market’s recent performance as follows:  first, there are those who are saying that China is selling its Treasury bonds and using the dollar proceeds to buy gold.  Now, while their holdings have been slowly shrinking, they still have just under $800 billion, so that is a lot of paper and would clearly have an impact.  The thing about this thesis is we will be able to determine its reality when China next reports their reserve numbers next month.  

The other explanation rings truer to me and that is the bond basis trade may be unwinding.  Briefly, the bond basis trade is when investors, typically hedge funds, arbitrage the difference in price between cash Treasury bonds and Treasury bond futures on the exchange.  The current positioning is these funds are long cash and short futures, and since it is a basis trade, they typically lever it up significantly, with leverage ratios of up to 100x I understand.  The total size of this trade is estimated at > $1 trillion.  Now, if this arbitrage disappears, or these funds are forced to liquidate this strategy quickly, it could be a real problem for the Treasury market.  

Ever since the GFC and the Dodd-Frank legislative response, banks no longer carry large bond risk positions and are not able to absorb large transactions seamlessly.  During Covid, you may remember that Treasury yields were all over the map, crashing and then exploding higher one day to the next, and that was caused by this basis trade unwind.  Back then, the Fed purchased nearly $1.7 trillion in QE to stabilize the market, and by all accounts, the basis trade was half the size then that it is now.

Remember, too, arguably the most important part of the Fed’s mandate is to maintain Treasury bond market stability.  Without this, the US will not be able to fund its debt and deficits.  So, whatever your view of how Chairman Powell may respond to the tariff story, which seems to be patience for now, if the bond market starts to break, you can be sure the Fed will step in.  QT will reverse to QE in a heartbeat as they offset the impact of this position unwinding.  If that is the case, I anticipate we will see further weakness in equities and the dollar, while gold will truly shine both literally and figuratively.  I’m not saying this is what is going to happen, just that this explanation makes more sense to me.  

Ok, now that tariffs have officially kicked in as of midnight last night, let’s see how markets are responding this morning.  Most equity markets continue to struggle after yesterday’s disappointing US session, where higher opens eroded all day with the major indices all closing on their session lows.  This bled into Asia where Japan (-3.9%) gave up most of yesterday’s gains although both China (+1.0%) and Hong Kong (+0.7%) held up well amid government support.  As to the rest of the region, Taiwan (-5.8%) was worst off, but other than Thailand and the Philippines, both of which managed gains, every other index was lower, often sharply.  In Europe, the realization of the tariffs is hurting with declines of -3.0% to -4.0% across the board.  As to the US futures market, at this hour (7:25), all three major indices are lower by at least -1.0%.

Bond yields are all over the place this morning with Treasuries (+8bps) continuing their recent climb amid the fears discussed above.  However, in Europe, things are such that German yields (-1bp) are doing fine while UK Gilts (+9bps) are suffering along with Treasuries.  The rest of the continent, save the Netherlands, has also seen yields rise, but much less, between 2bps and 5bps.  Overnight, JGB yields were unchanged as players are uncertain as to the next steps by the BOJ there.

In the commodity market, oil (-5.6%) is once again under major pressure.  This feels like a confluence of both technical factors (the price has broken below long-term support at $60/bbl and is now testing for lows) and fundamental factors, with OPEC raising output and the mooted recession likely to reduce demand.  Interestingly, lower oil prices are a tremendous geopolitical weapon for the US as both Russia and Iran are entirely reliant on them for financing their activities.  As to the metals complex, gold as regained its luster (sorry 😁) rallying 2.8% and well above the $3000/oz level.  This has taken silver (+3.1%) and copper (+3.5%) along for the ride.  It seems to me the copper story is not in sync with the oil story as a recession would likely drive copper prices lower, but that is this morning’s movement.

Finally, the dollar is softer again this morning with the euro (+0.8%) trading through 1.10 and the yen (+1.0%) back below 145.00.  It’s interesting because there was a story last night about how the new Mr Yen, Atsushi Mimura, was speaking to the BOJ amid concerns that the yen has been too volatile.  However, to my eye the movement has been relatively sedate, strengthening gradually and still, as can be seen in the chart below, substantially weaker than for the many years prior to the Fed beginning to tighten policy in 2022.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

The other noteworthy move is CNY (+0.5%) which after slipping to levels not seen since 2007, has retraced somewhat.  If Treasury bonds are not seen as haven assets for now, the dollar has further to fall.

On the data front, the FOMC Minutes at 2:00pm are released, but given all that has happened since then, it is hard to get excited that we will learn very much new.  We also see EIA oil inventories with a modest build expected, but this market seems likely to have adjusted those numbers outside any forecasting error bars.

The tariff story will continue to drive markets for now as investors try to determine the best way to protect themselves until things settle down.  And things will settle down, but when that will happen is the $64 trillion question.  FWIW, which is probably not much, my sense is that we have a few more weeks of significant chop, as we await clarity on the tariff policy (meaning its goals).  I still believe there will be a number of deals that will reduce the initial numbers, but the ultimate goal is to isolate China.  It is going to be messy for a while yet.  As to the dollar through all this, my sense is lower, but not dramatically so.

Good luck

Adf

Tariff’s Predations

The White House said seventy nations
Are seeking to have conversations
With President Trump
Avoiding the thump
That comes amid tariff’s predations


But China is not on the list
As Xi claims that he’ll raise his fist
To “fight to the end”
And try to defend
His nation from being dismissed

Last week, risk was anathema to one and all.  President Trump’s tariffs were upending the world economy, recession was coming to the US, and possibly the world.  I couldn’t help but be reminded of this classic on the potential outcomes.  

Leading up to the tariff announcements, nations around the world were puffing out their metaphorical chests and claiming all the things they would do to respond.  But the reality is that as I have repeatedly said, the US is the consumer of last resort, and most nations cannot afford to lose access without significantly damaging their own economies.  As such, it is not that surprising that such a long list of nations has reached out immediately, indicating a willingness to change their own policies in order to prevent these tariffs.  Arguably, China is the one outlier here, with President Xi claiming they will “fight to the end” in this trade war.

Already, a number of nations have promised to reduce their tariffs on US goods to 0.0% if that is what is required, although thus far, the President has not accepted those deals.  It is a fair question to ask what he is seeking, since apparently, it is not simply free access.  Granted, there are also numerous non-tariff barriers that are in play, and perhaps he is focused on those as well.  Or perhaps he really is looking at tariffs as a key revenue source and doesn’t want to give up that revenue opportunity.  Or perhaps he is simply waiting for enough nations to bend the knee before one large announcement when all these deals are accepted.  The latter idea would be in keeping with the idea that he is trying to isolate China.

These are just three possibilities of the many, and nobody other than President Trump himself knows how this will end up.  I find it encouraging that Treasury Secretary Bessent is leading the discussions with Japan, a key ally and trade partner, as I have great faith in his understanding and abilities.  However, in the end, it is the President’s decision so…who knows?

Of course, the end of last week brought mayhem to risk markets with equities around the world falling sharply in price.  While there had been numerous voices explaining that equity valuations in the US were far too high and unsustainable, many of those same voices were screaming the loudest at the repricing.  But, as I said yesterday, markets have a great deal of trouble trading in that manner for too long as traders and investors simply get tired and stop trading at all.  

But what was interesting was that US markets turned around after the incredibly weak opening in futures markets Sunday night, and closed mixed on the day, with the NASDAQ actually managing a tiny gain.  I’m not sure exactly what to ascribe as the cause of that reversal, maybe bargain hunters, maybe short covering, or maybe much of the forced selling from margin calls had been completed.  In the morning, there was a rumor that Trump would delay the imposition of tariffs by 90 days, but that was squelched very quickly.  You can see that price action on the chart below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

The bounce, though, is continuing and we saw substantial rebounds overnight throughout Asia as well as in Europe this morning and with US futures pointing higher as well.  As much fear as was felt on Friday, it seems just the opposite today.  Interestingly, the Fear & Greed Index is still sitting at its all-time lows of just 4 as of this morning.  Perhaps that is the indicator driving the buying.

Source: cnn.com

To recap, many nations are offering to change their tariff policies with the US, although none of those offers have yet been accepted.  Tariffs are due to be enacted starting tomorrow, and there is still a great deal of concern around, but equity markets worldwide are rebounding from their worst levels.  For anyone who thought markets made sense, I dare you to put this puzzle together!

But let’s see how big the bounces were.  Tokyo (+6.0%) exploded higher, recouping much of Friday’s losses, although still down net since this began.  Surprisingly, China (+1.7%) and Hong Kong (+1.5%) showed much less bounce, although they didn’t fall as sharply either.  However, I have to assume that President Xi cannot be very happy as the Chinese plunge protection team was active last night, buying more than $5.7 billion in ETF’s to support the market and there was verbal support as well from the government.  Too, the yuan is sliding more aggressively but we will cover that below.  As to the rest of Asia, the picture was mixed with Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore falling sharply while India, Australia and New Zealand all had nice bounces.  

In Europe, there is a rebound as well, albeit not so dramatic with the FTSE 100 (+1.9%) leading the way and the DAX (+1.4%) and CAC (+1.3%) having solid sessions.  One of the offers was from the EU, saying they will take the tariffs on manufactured goods to 0.0% if the US would reciprocate, although that offer was not accepted, at least not yet.  US futures are all firmer this morning, up between 1.25% and 2.0% at this hour (7:15).  I think the message here is that nobody really knows anything else yet, and short-term trading is the driver.

In the bond market, there was a massive reversal yesterday with Treasury yields spiking more than 30bps from bottom to top during the session and closing near the highs. (see below)

Source: tradingeconomics.com

We saw similar price action throughout European sovereigns as well, although the rise was not quite as dramatic, a bit more than 20bps in German bunds although 30bps in UK gilts.  This morning, however, after all that price movement, yields are within 1bp of yesterday’s closing levels as traders and investors try to figure out what to do next.  JGB yields did rally 16bps yesterday, which given their level, was commensurate with the Treasury movement.  Arguably, looking at the chart above, what we have seen is a reset to pre-tariff levels.

In the commodity markets, oil (+0.25%) managed to close above $60/bbl, although the trend there remains lower in my eyes.  I have had a bearish overall view on oil for more than a year as I explained back in January 2024 that there was plenty of oil around, and  it was political decisions that was restricting its availability, not physical ones.  As such, it is no surprise to me that the trend here is lower, especially with President Trump’s energy policy to drill, baby, drill, and OPEC increasing production as well.  It is hard to get excited about major price rises here.  Meanwhile, gold (+1.0%) and silver (+1.0%) are rebounding, with gold back above the $3000/oz level after its short profit taking foray below that key psychological level.  Copper is still under pressure as the growth story remains uncertain, at best, for now.

Finally, the dollar is a bit softer this morning, but with some notable exceptions.  While G7 currencies are all firmer, ranging from NZD (+1.1%) down to NOK (+0.1%) and everything in between, in the EMG bloc, CNY (-0.25%) is back to the weakest levels (dollar strength) since early January and prior to that since September 2023.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Xi is now caught in a tough spot as given the US tariffs, which total to about 104% on Chinese imports, the natural response is to allow the yuan to depreciate.  However, he has made a big deal about the yuan being a stable store of value, so if he lets it slide, that will undermine that argument.  My money is on a weaker CNY going forward.  Elsewhere in Asia, KRW (-0.6%) and INR (-0.4%) led the way lower.

On the data front, the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index was released at a softer than expected 97.4 this morning, but there is nothing else on the calendar other than an afternoon speech by SF Fed president Daly.  

It cannot be a surprise that we had a rebound from last week’s dramatic declines.  The question, of course, is have we now seen the bottom.  My take is that is not the case, and while we may hold tight for a few sessions, further declines are still in the offing.  At least absent a major change where Mr Trump announces that he has accepted the reduction in tariffs elsewhere around the world.  Remember, even after the declines, US equities are still richly valued.  As to the dollar, that is a much harder question, and I sense that there will be much more idiosyncratic movement rather than bloc dollar movement going forward.

Good luck

Adf

Hair All on Fire

There once was a group of old men
Who spoke via paper and pen
Last week, this odd choir
With hair all on fire
Explained that the world would soon end
 
I wonder if this week we’ll learn
This group now has nought left to burn
If so, we may find
That all of mankind
Could yet weather any downturn

 

I have no idea how this is going to play out and truthfully neither does anybody else.  While I am happy to admit that fact, my sense is others will not be so forthcoming.  President Trump made clear that he wanted to change the way things are done.  He was explicit in his efforts to rearrange the global trading system, and by extension the global economy, so that it was less punitive to American businesses.  At least in his mind.  

I think the other thing to remember is he was elected by Main Street, not Wall Street.  The MAGA movement was originally composed of small-town folks who had not benefitted from the financialization of the economy that really accelerated with the GFC.  And most of these folks don’t look at the stock market every day, nor the bond market nor the value of the dollar in the FX market.  They do see the price of gasoline at the pump, and the price of groceries in the store, but otherwise, market activity is not a primary focus.

I mention this because I think it is critical to remember Trump’s primary audience if we are to understand why he is doing what he is doing.  Bill Ackman screaming on X is not the president’s concern.  Redeveloping the US manufacturing base is his goal.

Now, will his actions lead to that outcome?  There are many naysayers and most of them write for major news outlets or are politically motivated (isn’t that the same thing?).  But remember, Trump doesn’t have to run for office again.  I suspect the fact that the Senate passed their version of the “big, beautiful bill” for taxes and the budget last week was of far more interest to the President than the fact that Senator Chuck Schumer is calling his actions reckless.  

My point here is to highlight that all those who believe that President Trump will succumb and change his stance because equity prices have fallen are still not listening to the man.

Speaking of prices at the pump, there was news last week that was missed by many, if not most, people, and that is likely to have a significant impact on oil prices.  It turns out, that in the wake of the tariff announcements, OPEC explained they would be increasing production by 411K bbl/day beginning in May with potentially larger increases going forward.  It appears that the loss of market share is becoming untenable in their eyes, and so they are on their way to regaining that, even if prices are to decline further.  

There are some who speak of a deal with President Trump, who you may recall has been seeking to lower oil prices, and I suppose that is quite possible.  But, regardless of the driving force behind the action, as my friend Alyosha on Substack explains eloquently, it is quite possible that we are entering a new regime in oil prices.  This chart from his most recent Substack posting is instructive.  

In essence, his theory, which this chart describes, is we may well be heading into a new long-term range of oil prices that is far below what we have been used to, especially since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  Remember, if energy prices decline, that reduces cost pressures for the entire economy.  And here we are this morning with oil (-4.0%) breaking below $60/bbl and down -10% in the past month.  Despite all the headlines that tariffs are going to raise prices, this is something that will clearly offset any general rise in price pressures.

But markets are still digesting the tariff news and are not happy about it.  Apparently, several nations have reached out to the president to discuss what can be done to address this change in tariff behavior, including the UK, Japan and Taiwan.  As a negotiating tactic, it strikes me that Trump will not want to waver if he is to achieve better trade deals for the US.  And while he may be subject to the slings and arrows of a negative press in the US, there is nobody on the planet who is more capable of absorbing those and continuing on his merry way.

Ok, let’s see the damage wrought in the overnight markets, where adjustments are still being made.  Before we start, though, remember, US share prices were at extremely high valuations prior to all this with just seven companies representing nearly one-third of the value of the S&P 500.  The common refrain was that these conditions could not be maintained forever.  That refrain was correct, but the speed of the adjustment has clearly been more rapid than many had hoped expected.  The below reading of the Fear and Greed Index speaks for itself.  But remember, this is seen as a contra-indicator, where extreme fear is seen as a buying opportunity.

Source: cnn.com

Ok, now to markets.  The nearly -6% declines across the board in the US on Friday have been followed by even large declines in Asia, with the Nikkei (-7.8%), Hang Seng (-13.2%) and CSI 300 (-7.1%) all suffering greatly.  Taiwan (-9.7%) and Singapore (-7.6%) were the other largest movers with the rest of the region declining on the order of -4.0% give or take a bit.  In Europe, the losses are not quite as severe, with declines on the continent averaging -6.2% or so and UK shares slipping “just” -4.8%.  interestingly, US futures, which had been down as much as a further -6.0% in the early part of the overnight session, have rebounded slightly and now (5:40) sit lower by around -3.4% or so.  It appears we are seeing the first nibbles of value buyers.

Bond yields continue to decline as the flight to the relative safety of government debt is rampant.  While Treasury yields (-4bps) are only a bit lower, in Europe, German bunds (-12bps) and French OATs (-8bps) are leading the way.  Recession concerns have risen everywhere, with the punditry now highly convinced a recession is a given and the only question is whether or not this will turn into a depression.  That feels premature to me, but I’m just a poet.  As to JGB yields, they, too, have tumbled further as funds flow back to Japan, and are down a further -8bps this morning, now yielding just 1.09%, a far cry from the 1.60% level just two weeks ago.

I’ve already discussed oil so a look at metals shows gold (-0.3%) consolidating last week’s declines and still above $3000/oz.  My take is gold’s decline was a result of equity losses and margin calls being covered by gold positions.  I do not believe the barbarous relic has seen its highs.  As to the other metals, silver (+2.3%) is bouncing this morning, although it did fall more than 10% in the past week, and copper (-1.4%) is under increasing pressure on the weakening economic growth story.

Finally, the dollar is all over the map, showing net strength this morning, but weaker vs. the two main havens, JPY (+0.55%) and CHF (+0.9%).  Interestingly, the euro is unchanged on the day as it appears traders cannot decide who will be more greatly impacted, the US or Europe.  But otherwise, the dollar is generally firmer with NOK (-1.75%) suffering alongside oil, MXN (-1.5%), ZAR (-1.3%) and CLP (-1.7%) all feeling the pressure from the tariffs.  Other G10 currencies are softer, but not as dramatically, with AUD and NZDZ (both -0.5%) and CAD (-0.3%) moving more in line with a normal session.  While we have gotten used to the idea that the dollar rallies on a risk-off thesis, given the nature of this particular version of risk-off, I have a feeling the dollar’s gains may be capped.  However, my previous thesis on the declining dollar is much harder to discern given the changing nature of economic outcomes.

As an aside, the Fed funds futures market is now pricing a 50% probability of a Fed cut in May and a total of 113bps of cuts by the end of 2026.  However, this will all depend on the evolution of things going forward, and, similar to the fear and greed index above, may represent an extreme view right now.

On the data front, Friday’s better than expected NFP data was lost in the shuffle.  The front of this week doesn’t have much although we do get CPI on Thursday.

TodayConsumer Credit$15.2B
TuesdayNFIB Small Biz Optimism101.3
WednesdayFOMC Minutes 
ThursdayInitial Claims224K
 Continuing Claims1915K
 CPI0.2% (2.6% Y/Y)
 Ex food & energy0.3% (3.0% Y/Y)
FridayPPI0.1% (3.3% Y/Y)
 Ex food & energy0.3% (3.6% Y/Y)
 Michigan Confidence54.7

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It’s hard for me to believe the FOMC Minutes will matter much given all that has transpired since then.  We do hear from seven more Fed speakers this week, but their comments have been swallowed by the ether as none of them, Chairman Powell included, has any inside track as to how things will evolve going forward.  

My experience is that markets have a great deal of difficulty remaining in max fear mode for very long as it is simply too tiring for market participants.  I don’t ever recall seeing the fear and greed index at 4, even during Covid (it is only about 12 years old), but my take is we are likely to see at least a respite here, before any significant further declines in risk assets.  As to the dollar, if that is the case, I expect it will cede some of its recent gains, at least vs. the EMG bloc.  

Good luck (we all need it!)

Adf

Squealed Like Stuck Pigs

What many just don’t comprehend
Is tariffs are not near the end
Of policy changes
As Trump rearranges
The world into foe and to friend
 
And while Wall Street squealed like stuck pigs
Trump’s boosters just don’t give two figs
They’re willing to try
The Trump calculi
If they see it hurts the bigwigs

 

I’m old enough to remember when Nonfarm Payrolls were the most important thing to market participants regardless of the asset class.  Ahh, those were the days.  It is remarkable that across major business headlines, I haven’t seen anything discussing the release for later this morning.  Don’t misunderstand me, I’m not upset about that fact, I think there has been far too much focus on that data point for far too long, but I am surprised.  This may be the best indicator that we are in a new regime for finance and economics.  It appears that most of the things the analyst community used to consider important are now merely afterthoughts.

I thought the WSJ had the most consequential article in this morning’s ‘paper’ asking, who is going to buy the $400 billion of stuff that China makes that will no longer be price competitive in the US?  They weren’t mentioned explicitly, but I imagine that Temu and Shein are both going to find their business models significantly impaired.  But will other “free trading’ nations allow all that stuff across their borders tariff free?  The Chinese mercantilist model was built with the idea that if they could produce stuff more cheaply than other nations, whether through subsidy or efficiency, other nations would welcome that stuff.  It remains to be seen how well that model holds up given the changes wrought by President Trump.

On a different note, I have read many comparisons of yesterday’s market declines to the March 2020 Covid panic, but my take is it is far more akin to the September 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse, at least from the tone of the market.  Covid was an exogenous event while Lehman and the tariffs were home-made.  The issue with the GFC and the current time was/is that they are systemic alterations which means that things will be different going forward in finance and economics.  Covid clearly changed our lives based on the government response, but it didn’t change the way markets behaved.  

At this point, there is no indication that President Trump is going to change his tune, and why would he? Again, amongst the key financial market goals he and Secretary Bessent have touted were a reduction in 10-year yields, lower by 75bps since inauguration, (✔️), a reduction in the price of oil, lower by $14/bbl or 18%,  (✔️) and a lower dollar relative to other currencies lower by 6.5%,(✔️).  Ask yourself, do you really think they are unhappy with the current situation?

I have no idea how things will play out from here, and in reality, neither does anybody else.  Reliance on models that were built with past assumptions does not inspire confidence.  As well, we have barely seen the response to these tariffs, although just moments ago China indicated they would be imposing 34% tariffs on all US goods entering their country.  But anybody who believes they know the end game is delusional.  This is the beginning of the change, and there will be much more to come across many different aspects of the economy and markets as the year progresses.  Interesting times indeed.

With that in mind, let’s see how day two of the new world order is playing out (and to think, there were all those conspiracy theories about a new world order before, but this was not what they had in mind.)  Green is a hard color to find on screens again today as after yesterday’s rout in US markets, the follow-through in Asia was almost complete.  Indonesia (+0.6%) managed a gain somehow, but every other major market declined, some quite substantially.  Singapore (-3.0%), Thailand (-3.6%) and Tokyo (-3.1%) were the biggest losers, but shares everywhere fell with most declining more than -1.0% on the session.  Interestingly, European shares are having a much worse session today than yesterday with Italy’s FTSE MIB (-7.1%) leading the way although Spain’s IBEX (-5.5%), the DAX (-4.5%), CAC (-3.8%) and FTSE 100 (-3.5%) are not exactly loving life today either.  As to US futures, they are pointing much lower again today, -3.0% or so for all the major indices.

Bonds, however, are in great demand with yields virtually collapsing as investors seek anyplace that is not equities to find shelter from this storm.  Treasury yields have fallen a further 15bps this morning and you can see in the chart below, just how large this decline has been.  In fact, yields have almost retraced to the level just before the Fed started cutting rates last September!

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But bonds everywhere in the world are in demand with yields on European sovereigns lower by between -7bps (Italy and Greece) and -15bps (Germany) as credit quality has also entered the picture there.  Finally, JGB yields have also tumbled, down -18bps overnight, as Japanese investors flee global markets and bring their money home.

Arguably, though, the biggest move has been in oil (-6.9%) which is now down to levels not seen since it was rebounding from Covid inspired lows back in 2022.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

I would contend this is almost entirely a recession fear, lack of forward demand story, although I believe OPEC+ is still planning on reducing its production cuts as the year progresses.  I imagine the latter is subject to change based on the economic outcomes.  In the metals markets, gold (+0.15%) after a sell-off yesterday, is consolidating for now.  Given the amount of leverage that abounds and given that when margin calls come, folks sell what they can, not what they want to, I suspect much of gold’s selling yesterday was forced rather than based on fear.  Rather, I suspect gold will outperform as it maintains its ultimate haven status.  The same, though, is not true for other metals with silver (-1.5%) and copper (-4.2%) both sharply lower this morning.  Certainly, in copper’s case, given the increased recession fears, it can be no surprise that its price is declining.

Finally, turning to the dollar, after a sharp decline yesterday, largely across the board, this morning the picture is a bit more mixed with a rebound against some currencies (AUD -3.0%, NZD -2.5%, SEK -1.7%, NOK (-2.1% although also inspired by oil’s precipitous decline.). However, both the yen (+1.0%) and Swiss franc (+1.25%) are continuing to display their haven attributes, while the euro (-0.1%) seems caught in the middle.  In the EMG bloc, though, the dollar is quite solid this morning with MXN (-1.9%), ZAR (-1.7%) and CLP (-1.0%) all falling.  Of note, CNY (0.0%) has barely moved throughout the entire process.

As I mentioned above, today we do see the NFP report, although my take is a strong report will be ignored as old regime, while a weak report will be ‘proof positive’ a recession is near.  Here are the expectations as of this morning:

Nonfarm Payrolls135K
Private Payrolls127K
Manufacturing Payrolls4K
Unemployment Rate4.1%
Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (3.9% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours34.2
Participation Rate62.4%

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Will the data really matter?  I don’t think so, at least not to policy makers as they realize (I hope) the world today is different than when this data was collected.  At this point, the market is now pricing in a full 75bps of rate cuts by year end from the Fed with a ~30% probability of a cut early next month.  But Powell and company don’t have any idea how this will play out either.  I fear that we are in a market situation where volatility is the dominant theme, in both directions.  Remember, Donald Trump is best thought of as the avatar of volatility.  He has earned that nickname.  This is why I harp on maintaining hedges, the world is a tricky place.

Good luck and good weekend

Adf

Quite Miffed

By now, each of you is aware
More tariffs, the Prez did declare
Some nations will scream
While others will scheme
To Trump, though, in war all is fair
 
The market reaction was swift
With equities in a downshift
While Treasuries rallied
Pure gold, lower, sallied
And everyone worldwide’s quite miffed

 

Once again, President Trump did exactly what he told us he was going to do from the start.  He applied reciprocal tariffs on virtually every nation in the world, although at a rate claimed to be ~50% of their tariffs on the US, (as calculated by the White House and which included quotas and non-tariff barriers as well.)  In addition to Israel, which pledged to reduce tariffs to 0% on US goods if the US would do the same, it appears Canada has also agreed that deal.  I expect that we will hear different responses from nations all around the world, but remember, the one thing the president has made clear is that retaliation by other nations will be met with a significantly higher response from the US.  I expect that smaller nations may find themselves in very difficult straits, although larger ones have more potential to respond.  But, in the end, the US remains the consumer of last resort, and every nation on the list realizes that losing the US market will not help their economies.

The market response was immediate with US equity futures plummeting on the open of the evening session and sharp declines in Asian equities as well.  Treasury yields fell along with the dollar, while gold after an initial rally, reversed course and is now lower on the day as well.

Analysts around the world are out with early forecasts of the “likely” impacts of these tariffs although I would take them with a grain of salt.  Remember, analyst macro models have been pretty useless for a while, ever since the underlying conditions changed as I described earlier this week, so it is not clear to me that applying broken models to a new event is likely to offer accurate estimates of future activity.  However, there is a pretty clear consensus, which is that inflation is going to rise while economic activity is going to decline, probably into a recession.  Personally, I am confused by this analysis as every one of these analysts continues to believe that a recession drives prices lower and reduces inflation, but I’m just reporting on what I have seen.

If pressed, I expect that we will see several nations reduce their tariff structures in response to this, similar to Canada and Israel, and US tariffs will decline there as well.  Other nations will dig in their heels and trade activity between the US and those nations will decline.  But I will not even hazard a guess as to which nations will do what.  Political pain is a funny thing, and different leaders respond differently.

My sincere hope is that now that the tariffs have been imposed, we can move on with our lives and discuss other issues because frankly, I am really tired of this topic.

Masked by the tariff mania was news that the US Senate has moved forward on its budget resolution bill which if passed and combined with the House, will allow the process to start to legislate for fiscal year 2026.  Both versions maintain the 2017 tax cuts, both seek unspecified spending reductions and while each has a different price tag, my take is this process will be completed before too long.  It would truly be miraculous if Congress actually submitted department spending bills on a timely basis, rather than the omnibus bills that have been the norm for quite a while.  That would be true progress in how the government works.

Anyway, let’s see where things stand this morning.  The one thing we know is that despite President Trump’s constant discussion on tariffs, market participants were not prepared.  Ironically, yesterday saw modest gains in US equity indices but as of now (6:40) US futures are sharply lower (NASDAQ -3.8%, SPX -3.6%, DJIA -2.6%).  Of course, the damage has been significant everywhere with equities lower worldwide.

In Asia, Vietnam (-7.2%) was the worst hit index, actually the worst in the world, as tariffs there rose to 46%.  Given Vietnam has been a way station for exports from China to the US, I expect that we will see some swift action by the government there to address the situation.  But elsewhere in Asia, while the losses were universal, they were not as bad as might be expected.  Tokyo (-2.6%) led the way lower with Chinese shares (Hang Seng -1.5%, CSI 300 -0.6%) also falling, but not collapsing.  Korea (-0.8%) and India (-0.4%) fell but were also not devastated.

In Europe, though, the pain is more consistent and larger, net, than Asia as per the below snapshot from Bloomberg.  This will be the most interesting thing to watch as there has been a great deal of huffing and puffing about a response, but will European nations, who sell a great deal into the US, risk a worse outcome, or will they reduce their own tariffs?

Something else that has declined sharply is bond yields around the world.  Treasury yields are lower by a further -6bps, and that is the basic decline seen across Europe as well.  Asia saw even greater drops in yields with JGB’s (-12bps) breaking the trendline that had been in place since the BOJ first started hiking rates last year and Governor Ueda made clear his intention to continue to do so.  

Source: tradingeconomics.com

It appears that investors are anticipating a global recession, at least based on the movements in government bond yields around the world.

In the commodity space, oil (-4.7%) has reversed much of its recent gains as the recession narrative has eclipsed the Iran war/sanctions narrative.  However, despite the sharp decline, oil remains nearly $3/bbl above the lows seen at the beginning of March, just one month ago.  In the metals market, gold, which initially traded to new highs on the tariff announcement reversed course about lunchtime in Asia and is now down by more than -2.0%.  My take is this is a short-term impact as investors sell liquid assets with gains to cover margin calls, rather than any negative feelings about gold in the wake of the news.  Instead, I suspect that the barbarous relic will regain its footing shortly as the ultimate haven asset in difficult times, and clearly many now see difficult times ahead.  Silver (-3.9%) and copper (-0.4%) are also softer, much more on the economic concerns than the risk concerns.

Finally, the dollar, shockingly, is broadly lower this morning.  While we have been consistently informed that a very clear response to the US imposing tariffs would be other currencies weakening vs. the dollar to offset the impact, apparently that model is also broken.  Versus it’s G10 counterparts, the dollar is under severe pressure today.  EUR (+1.75%), JPY (+1.7%), CHF (+2.1%), SEK (+2.1%) and even NOK (+1.1%) despite the collapse in oil prices, have all moved to within 1% of the dollar’s lows seen last September.  But to keep things in perspective, I don’t know that I would call the dollar “weak” here.  The below chart of DXY shows that even over the past 20 years, the dollar has been MUCH lower and only spent a relatively small amount of time above current levels.  

Source: Koyfin.com

Interestingly, other than the CE4, which track the euro closely, most EMG currencies have not seen the same boost vs. the dollar, although most are somewhat higher.  MXN (+0.6%), KRW (+0.6%) and INR (+0.5%) have all gained modestly.  ZAR (0.0%) and CNY (-0.2%) are the only currencies that have bucked the trend and followed the economic theory.  

Turning to the data, this morning brings the weekly Initial (exp 225K) and Continuing (1860K) Claims as well as the Trade Balance (-$123.5B) at 8:30.  Then at 10:00 we see ISM Services (53.0).  The thing about this data is it ought to have no impact whatsoever as last night’s tariff announcements completely changed the playing field.  So whatever things were, they are not representative of the future, at least the near future.  There are also a couple of Fed speakers, but again, there is no way they can determine how they will react until the real economic effects of these tariffs start to play out.

There have been many analysts who continue to believe that President Trump will not be able to tolerate a substantial decline in the equity market despite the fact that he has not discussed it at all, and he, along with Treasury Secretary Bessent have consistently said their goal is a lower yield on 10-year Treasuries.  Well, they are getting their wish right now, regardless of the reason.  

The president has done virtually everything he said he was going to do regarding the border, government efficiency and now tariffs.  There are many skeptics who believe that he is out to force economic change on the backs of the bottom 90% of earners to benefit himself and others in the top 1%.  But he has consistently said his goal is to help the middle class.  His view of reindustrialization and more self-sufficiency while reduced international adventures continues to be the driving force of his policies.  There is no reason to believe he is going to change that view.  Do not look for a reversal of what he has done simply because the S&P 500 declines.  I think the trend is going to be for the dollar to continue to decline along with interest rates, while commodities rally.  Equity markets are going to be a tale of two markets, likely with previous highflyers suffering and previously overlooked companies benefitting.  

The world is changing a lot, so the best thing you can do is maintain your hedges to mitigate the impact.

Good luck

Adf

Fast or Slow Death?

As markets all take a deep breath
Concerns are that, just like Macbeth
The President will
The ‘conomy kill
The question is, fast or slow death?

 

Personally, I am hopeful that we can stop discussing tariffs after today.  It’s not that they will decrease in importance, but they will no longer be the primary topic.  Instead, they will be a secondary explanation for anything that anybody decides is wrong with the economy, or the country or the world.  Recession? Tariffs are the cause.  Inflation? Tariffs are the cause.  War? Tariffs are the cause.  Duke loses in the semis?  Tariffs are the cause.  

FWIW, which is probably not that much, my view is the market has absorbed this conversation and the correction we have seen over the past weeks in the equity market is the result of growing expectations of much slower growth or a recession.  Arguably, the biggest concern should be that US equity markets continue to trade at historically rich valuations and any negative catalyst can serve to both depress future expectations and compress multiples, and that’s how you get large equity market declines.

The thing about the tariff story is that while later today we will all find out the details, the actual impacts will take months, at least, to be determined.  For instance, the story that Israel has just decided to drop all tariffs on US made products, thus avoiding them on Israeli products is something I suspect we may see more frequently than now assumed.  Perhaps there would be no greater irony for all the naysayers than if this ‘end of free trade’ moment actually inspired a significant reduction in tariffs around the world as nations seek to retain access to the US.  I’m not saying this will be the case, but given the US is the consumer of last resort, running a nearly $1 trillion trade deficit, pretty much every other nation relies on the US as a market for some portion of their production.

Along these lines, I must ask, why is it that other nations, who apply tariffs and other non-tariff barriers like quotas or regulatory restrictions, to US products do so if tariffs are such a great evil?  Apparently when the French, for example, seek to protect their industries and farmers, it is healthy for the economy, but when the US does, it is world-ending.  Just sayin’

So, is the dip now to be bought?
Or are things still overly fraught?
The overnight session
Did naught for that question
As no one knows what Trump has wrought

Since there are literally no other stories to discuss regarding finance and markets right now, let’s turn to the overnight and see how markets are behaving in the runup to the Liberation Day announcement.  Yesterday’s mixed, but mildly positive, session in the US led to a mixed session in Asia with no real trend.  Even within a nation (Nikkei +0.3%, TOPIX -0.4%) there was no clarity.  Chinese shares were basically flat, Korea and Singapore fell while India and Malaysia rallied.  No movements approached even 1.0% so it is probably fair to say we didn’t learn anything.  However, European bourses are under pressure across the board this morning led by the DAX (-1.3%) and FTSE 100 (-0.9%).  Clearly, there is significant concern that the US tariffs, which are set to come into force immediately upon their announcement, will have a significant negative impact on European companies.  Certainly, German auto makers, who rely greatly on the US market, are likely to be negatively impacted, but as I said, it remains to be seen what actually occurs.  I guess considering that European shares have been performing well of late, with gains on the order of 10% or more YTD, some investors have decided to take their money and run.  

source: tradingeconomics.com

Meanwhile, US futures are pointing lower at this hour (7:10) down about -0.5% across the board.

In the bond market, while there is a lot of huffing and puffing that tariffs will be inflationary, yields are sliding this morning with Treasury yields (-2bps) declining to their lowest levels since last October, and a similar amount to most European sovereigns.  I suppose bond investors are more concerned over the mooted recession than the inflationary impact of tariffs.  Too, JGB yields slid -3bps, back to their lowest level in a month as questions remain about the BOJ’s future path as well as Japanese growth prospects in the new trade regime.

Turning to commodities, oil (-0.35%) has slipped a bit further but remains well up on the week as a story regarding the US moving more military assets toward the Middle East from Asia makes the rounds.  We cannot forget that President Trump has already initiated secondary sanctions on Venezuelan crude, and threatened to do so on Russian crude if Putin doesn’t agree to the ceasefire.  Meanwhile, Iran is always in Trump’s crosshairs while they remain a perceived threat to go nuclear.  As to the metals markets, gold (+0.1%) continues to edge higher with any pullbacks both short term and modest.  One look at the chart below shows how many more green days there have been than red ones over the past 6 months.  I see nothing to stop this trend.  As to the other metals, they are higher this morning and continue to trade well overall.  I believe the case can be made that going forward, commodity markets, and the shares of companies in the space, are set for some real outperformance in the new world order.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is mixed as well, with some widely disparate movements seen.  For instance, NZD (+0.9%) is having a good day, perhaps because direct trade with the US is di minimus, or perhaps because it has been weakening so much for the past 6 months, down nearly 10% even after today’s rally, over that period, that it is a simple bounce.  At the same time, ZAR (-1.0%) is sliding despite the ongoing gold rally, although there are growing concerns over the outcome of the budget there and how it will be funded and impact the economy.  But in truth, as I look across the board, there are probably more currency gainers than losers this morning, which ironically is exactly the opposite of the forecast impact of tariffs by the US.  Just remember, as Yogi Berra allegedly explained, “in theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, in practice there is.” Detailed market outcomes based on economic theories rarely hold up.

On the data front, this morning brings ADP Employment (exp 105K) and Factory Orders (0.5%, 0.7% ex-Transport) as well as the EIA oil inventories.  Yesterday afternoon’s API inventories showed a large build, but expectations are for draws today.  We also hear from Adriana Kugler, Fed governor, but ironically, all the Fed talk is now about tariffs and not about monetary policy.

Today is a crapshoot, with no way to even guess how things will evolve.  Also, beware the initial reaction as it may not represent a new view, but rather the unwinding of current positions.  Until further notice, though, I still think the dollar has a slow decline in its future.

Good luck

Adf

Stress and Dismay

The only discussion today
Is how badly tariffs will weigh
On stocks and on growth
As certainly both
Will feel some more stress and dismay
 
But hopefully, once they’re in force
It will change the pundits’ discourse
‘Cause I’m sick and tired
That it’s now required
We all, tariffs, hate or endorse

 

A funny thing happened on the way to the market collapsing yesterday, especially given the early morning portents, and that is the market didn’t collapse at all.  Equities opened lower and rallied all day with the Dow even having a quite respectable 1% gain when all was said and done.  I think the lesson that needs to be taken from this is markets have a tendency to get ahead of the news and reversals are pretty frequent.  In fact, this is a perfect example of ordinary market behavior, a sharp move in one direction is suddenly reversed for no obvious reason.  Certainly, there was nothing said or done yesterday that seemed a specific catalyst for a short-term rebound.  That, my friends, is simply how markets work.

However, for now, with tomorrow being President Trump’s “liberation day” when tariffs will be announced, they remain the major story across both financial markets and political narratives.  As I sit here in the cheap seats, observing the back and forth, what has become abundantly clear is that the politicization of economic actions is the true reality.  Yesterday I highlighted the difference between Democrat and Republican views on future inflation.  Reading through the commentary on X, as well as stories in Bloomberg and the WSJ, I think this is the same situation, with Democrats certain tariffs will be the downfall of the economy and lead to rampant inflation, while Republicans believe they will help the nation recapture lost manufacturing capacity.  Personally, I’m just looking forward to moving on to a different story as we have been discussing tariffs for more than two months straight and it is tiresome.

Here’s the one thing of which I am confident, however, and that is nobody has any idea what the impacts will ultimately be on either markets or the economy.  I maintain that pretty much every model that has been in use for the past two decades, all of which were developed based on data during a period of low inflation and declining interest rates as well as significant increases in central bank provided liquidity, no longer work.  After all, those underlying conditions no longer exist.  Inflation remains much higher than during the pre-pandemic decades;

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Interest rates are much higher;

Source: fred.stlouisfed.org

And central banks have been reducing net liquidity for some time now (think QT). 

Source: tradingeconomics.com

So, if all the underlying conditions have changed, it seems unlikely that the models based on those conditions will add much value.  After all, nobody really knows how elastic prices are for any given goods directly, nor how willing companies will be to sacrifice margin to maintain sales.  As such, forecasting short-term movements is a mugs’ game here.  In fact, yesterday’s price action is a perfect example of how things are not necessarily how they appear.

With that in mind, let’s see how yesterday’s risk reversal in US equity markets fed into the rest of the world.  Asian equities saw a wide range of price action overnight.  While Japan, Hong Kong and China were all tantamount to unchanged, Korea (+1.6%) and Taiwan (+2.8%) saw significant bounces while India (-1.8%) fell after concerns that President Trump’s mooted additional sanctions on any nation that buys Russian oil hit home as India buys, I read, 44% of their oil from Russia.  Meanwhile, in Europe, screens are green this morning with gains across the board of between 0.7% and 1.0%.  This is despite weaker PMI data, with every nation in Europe reporting a sub 50 manufacturing number.  However, inflation fell a tick more than expected with Core falling to 2.4% and headline down to 2.2% and this has encouraged traders to believe that the ECB will be cutting again later this month despite some commentary to the contrary from several ECB members.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:15) they are pointing lower by about -0.4% across the board.  

In the bond market, 10-year yields continue to slide around the world with Treasuries (-5bps) falling back to their lowest level in a month and prior to that since early December.  Too, European sovereigns are seeing yields fall sharply, with declines of between -6bps and -10bps as the combination of slowing inflation and weak PMI data has overwhelmed the previous concerns about German defense spending.  In fact, that is a story we have not heard in a while, eh?  Last week, that was the end of European bond markets, today it is ancient history!

Turning to commodities, oil (+0.1%) is consolidating after a sharp $2/bbl rise yesterday that was fomented by Trump’s threats to both Russia and Iran (he threatened to bomb them if they didn’t renounce their nuclear ambitions).  The thing about oil’s price action is since late 2022, it has remained in a trading range of $65/$80 more or less, so despite the large move yesterday, I would argue no new ground has been covered.  Certainly Trump’s efforts to open up more area for drilling is likely to weigh on prices over time, but over what timeframe remains to be seen.  As it is a day ending in “y”, gold is higher again, this morning by 0.3%, but there is no indication this trend is running out of steam.  The remarkable thing is the steadiness of the move.  However, the other two major metals, silver (-0.35%) and copper (-0.3%) have slipped a bit this morning.

Finally, the dollar remains confused.  Versus the euro (-0.25%) it is stronger, but versus the CHF (+0.25%) and JPY (+0.5%) it is weaker.  Now, you might say that is a sign of a risk-off trade, but equity markets are rallying in Europe along with bonds.  So, is this a move to havens or risk?  The biggest mover this morning is CLP (-0.9%) but it has been one of the biggest gainers YTD, so with copper soft, this looks a lot like some profit taking.  Otherwise, movements of +/- 0.2% are the order of the day.

Here’s a crazy theory, perhaps President Trump is seeking to drive the economy weaker in order to force the Fed to cut rates.  After all, that appears to be the Fed’s bias, but recent inflation data has made them uncomfortable to do so.  If Trump can drive up Unemployment, maybe it does the trick!

Ok, let’s see the data the rest of the week as yesterday’s Chicago PMI (47.6) while modestly better than expected really didn’t seem to matter that much.

TodayISM Manufacturing49.5
 ISM Prices Paid65.0
 JOLTS Job Openings7.63M
WednesdayADP Employment105K
 Factory Orders0.5%
 -ex Transport0.7%
ThursdayInitial Claims225K
 Continuing Claims1860K
 Trade Balance-$123.0B
 ISM Services53.0
FridayNonfarm Payrolls128K
 Private Payrolls110K
 Manufacturing Payrolls1K
 Unemployment Rate4.2%
 Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (3.9% Y/Y)
 Average Weekly Hours34.2
 Participation Rate62.4%

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In addition to all this, we hear from six Fed speakers including Chairman Powell Friday morning at 11:30am.  For today and tomorrow, tariffs will be the primary story, although it is not clear it is the primary driver.  However, once they are announced, I expect we will move onto the next big thing, although I have no idea what that will be.  But the one thing on which we can count regarding President Trump is there will be another big thing.  Stay hedged is all the advice I can give because uncertainty is extremely high.

Good luck

Adf

Nobody Knows

The punditry’s now out in force
As they hope, their views, we’ll endorse
When tariffs arrive
On Wednesday they’ll strive
To claim they were right, but of course
 
The problem is nobody knows
Exactly what Trump will propose
So, models will fail
While Trump haters wail
More chaos is all that he sows

 

Well, folks, it’s month and quarter end today and many are decrying that President Trump’s policies have derailed the bull market in risk assets.  And they are almost certainly correct.  Yet, at the same time, there has been a broad recognition across a wide spectrum of analysts and politicians that the situation he inherited was unsustainable.  Whether the 7% budget deficits, the $36+ trillion in government debt or the ongoing inflationary pressures, the only people who were happy were those who saw their equity portfolios rise against all odds.  (I guess the gold holders have been pretty happy too, in fairness.)

However, the underlying reality of a situation is rarely enough to alter a good story, or a story that somebody wants to tell.  For instance, the Michigan Consumer Survey was released on Friday, and it fell more than expected to a reading of 57.0, its lowest reading since July 2022, when inflation was peaking.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But the story that has been getting all the press is the extraordinary rise in inflation expectations.  As you can see below, both 1-year (blue line) and 5-year (grey line) have risen sharply in 2025.  Conveniently for the mainstream media this has been blamed on President Trump’s policies given their efforts to discredit everything the president does.

However, the Michigan Survey, while having a long pedigree, isn’t that large a survey.  As such, it is possible that non-economic factors may be impacting the results.  For instance, when the survey is taken, the respondents’ political leanings are asked as well.  Now, take a look at the data when split by political views as per the below.  Perhaps, we need to take this survey with a grain or two of salt as it appears the question may be seen as a way to express one’s opinion about the current administration rather than unbiased views of future inflation.

This is especially true when we look at other measures of expected inflation, like the NY Fed’s Consumer inflation survey shown below with the green line compared to that Michigan survey in red.

Source: zerohedge.com

My point is, we need to be careful to notice the non-economic factors that enter into things like expectations surveys.  As well, the idea that inflation expectations are a critical driver of future inflation, although a staple of current central bank thinking, does not have much empirical backing.  For instance, my friend Mike Ashton, the Inflation Guy™, explained in this article way back in 2015, that inflation expectations do not have much empirical proof of effectively forecasting future inflation.  But perhaps, if you don’t believe him, you will consider a scholarly paper by a Fed economist, Jeremy Rudd, written in 2021 that is pretty damning with respect to the idea that the Fed relies on this data as part of their policy toolkit.  

In the end, the one truism of which I am highly confident is that pretty much all the models that have been utilized for the past twenty plus years are no longer reflective of the reality on the ground today.  Not just for inflation, but for growth and trade and every other aspect.  President Trump has not merely upset the applecart; he has broken it into pieces and burned them all to cinders.  All the fiscal problems mentioned above are still extant, but President Trump appears set on changing them in the direction desired by almost all mainstream economists.  They don’t like his methods, but it’s not clear how changes of this magnitude can be made smoothly.  So, perhaps the proper question is just how rough things are going to be.  If the overnight session is any indication, they could get pretty rough.

The dominant feature today
Is fear is what’s now holding sway
As markets decline
More pundits consign
The blame on Trumps tariff pathway

Investors have risk indigestion this morning, as their appetite to own equities anywhere in the world has significantly diminished.  After a rough week ending session on Friday in the US, equity markets in Asia have almost universally declined led by Tokyo (-4.05%) but with sharp declines seen in Korea (-3.0%), Taiwan (-4.2%), Australia (-1.75%), Malaysia (-1.45%) and Thailand (-1.5%).  Chinese (-0.7%) and Hong Kong (-1.3%) shares also fell, although perhaps not quite as far as others.  The entire conversation today is about President trump’s promise to impose tariffs around the world on Wednesday, with many analysts trying to estimate what damage will occur despite no clarity on the size and breadth of the tariffs.  But investors have decided that havens are a better place to hide for now.

European bourses are also sharply lower, although more in the -1.7% to -2.0% range, with every major index in Germany, France, Spain and Italy down by those amounts.  There continues to be a great deal of discussion amongst the European leadership about how they will respond to the mooted tariffs, but of course, like everybody else, they have no idea exactly what they will be.  As to US futures, at this hour (6:45) the picture is grim with declines between -0.6% (DJIA) and -1.3% (NASDAQ).  Right now, the only people who are happy are those holding puts.

Of course, in this risk-off environment, it should be no surprise that bond yields have slipped a bit as, at the margin, investors are flocking to own Treasuries (-5bps) and European sovereigns (Bunds -3bps, OATs -2bps, Gilts -4bps).  Even JGBs (-5bps) saw yields decline last night with any thoughts of the BOJ hiking rates in the near term fading away completely.  

On the other hand, commodities are finding a lot more interest this morning with gold (+1.15%) leading the way higher and proving itself to continue to be one of the most consistent safe havens available.  Interestingly, oil (+0.5%) is rallying this morning despite a number of Wall Street analysts upping their estimate of the probability of a US recession.  However, offsetting the potential future demand weakness is the news that President Trump is “pissed off” at Vladimir Putin for his ongoing aggression in Ukraine and seeming unwillingness to move to a ceasefire.  This has raised the specter of further sanctions on Russian oil output, potentially reducing supply.  As well, the Trump administration continues to tighten the noose on both Iranian and Venezuelan oil sales, so potentially reducing supply even further.  I guess this morning, the supply story is bigger than the demand story.

Finally, as we turn to the currency markets, the dollar is generally firmer this morning, although by widely varying amounts depending on the currency.  For instance, in the G10, NOK (-0.75%) is the laggard despite oil’s gains, followed by AUD (-0.6%) and NZD (-0.55%), with all three of these being major commodity producers at a time when commodities are doing well.  As to the rest of this bloc, JPY (+0.35%) is off its best levels, but behaving as a haven, and the others are just marginally changed from Friday’s closing levels.  In the EMG bloc, ZAR (+0.25%) is the exception this morning, clearly benefitting from gold’s ongoing run to new all-time high prices, but otherwise, most of these currencies are modestly softer (MXN -0.2%, PLN -0.2%, KRW -0.25%).

Speaking of currencies, though, there is an article on this morning’s Bloomberg website that is worth reading, I believe, for everyone involved in the FX market.  The gist of the article is something that I have been discussing for the past several years, the fact that market liquidity here, despite the extraordinary volumes that trade on average each day (currently estimated by the BIS at $7.5 trillion across all FX products) is not nearly as deep as might be anticipated.  

My observation from my time on bank desks was that while there was a great deal of electronic flow, likely driven by HFT firms seeking to extract the last tenth of a pip out of thousands of transactions, when a real client, generally a corporate, had a need to do something specific to address a business need, and that amounted to more than $100 million equivalent, the liquidity situation was far more suspect. 

My personal theory was as follows: bank consolidation reduced the net amount of risk-taking appetite as larger banks did not increase their risk-taking commensurate with the reduction that occurred by small banks being gobbled up.  Combining this with the introduction of high-frequency trading firms in the business, who had no underlying client base to whom they owed a price, and therefore, could turn off their machines in a difficult market, further reducing liquidity, led to a situation where liquidity was a mile wide and an inch deep.  My point is for all the corporates out there who have significant transactions to execute, you must carefully consider the best way to approach the situation to avoid a potentially significant increase in execution costs.

Turning to the data, before we look at this week, which ends with NFP, a quick word on Friday’s core PCE data, which came in at a hotter than expected 0.4% taking the YY number to 2.8%.  The Fed cannot be happy with this outcome as a quick look at the recent readings makes it hard to accept inflation is continuing its decline from the 2022 highs.  Rather a look at the below chart, at least to my eye, shows me a stability in Core PCE of somewhere between 2.5% and 3.0%, well above the Fed’s target range, and hardly a cause to cut rates further.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As this note has already gotten a bit longer than I like, I will list the week’s data tomorrow but note that Chicago PMI (exp 45.4) is the only noteworthy data point to be released today.  

Absent a complete reversal of Trump’s tariff plans, I see nothing positive on the horizon for risk assets, and expect that equities will maintain, and probably extend the overnight losses while gold and bonds both rally, at least for now.  As to the dollar, my take is it will not benefit universally in this risk-off scenario, although there are currencies that will clearly suffer.  Remarkably, despite the performance of Aussie and Kiwi overnight, I do believe the commodity bloc has the best prospects for now.

Good luck

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Aren’t Just Rumors

Give plaudits to President Xi
Who’s trying to show it is he
That’s offering deals
To help grease the wheels
Of trade, which he claims will be free
 
The problem is Chinese consumers
Have not been in very good humors
And history shows
The Chinese impose
Restrictions that are aren’t just rumors

 

Market activity can well be described as lackluster, with equity indices generally slipping lower while bond markets wobble and the dollar retraces some of its recent losses.  In fact, the only markets really showing a trend right now are gold (+0.4%), silver (-0.1%) and copper (-0.2%), all of which have rallied sharply over the past month and year.  Obviously, the major discussion point is President Trump’s tariff policy and how that will impact economies around the world.  Recent focus has been on how other nations will respond with a variety of poses taken by different leaders, from conciliatory to combative.

So, it is with great interest that we see another impact of the Trump administration, the sight of China’s communist party leader, Xi Jinping, trying to convince foreign company CEO’s that investing in China is a good deal.  A lead article in Bloomberg this morning describes a large gathering in China where President Xi hosted CEO’s of numerous companies from around the world in an effort to portray China’s policies as investment friendly.

This makes sense given the trend in foreign direct investment toward China over the past years.  As can be seen in the chart below from the Bloomberg article, it has not been a pretty sight.  And remember, this all occurred before President Trump was elected.  Clearly, there were concerns prior to Mr Trump escalating the trade conflicts with the US.  

I find it somewhat ironic, though, that Xi is trying to promote Chinese policy as an island of stability in the world.  Consider how he has capriciously destroyed the private education market, or even the tech market until reversing course after the DeepSeek announcement, all while the housing market continues to implode.  Given the rest of the world has lost patience with China’s mercantilist policies and the flood of cheap goods they produce with government support, I am at a loss to understand the appeal of investing in China.  Using it as an export base is a nonstarter, and history has shown that nearly every foreign company that looked at China’s population as a great untapped market for their products has been hugely disappointed.  The exceptions are the luxury goods makers, where the global brand and cachet were too strong for domestic competitors to overcome.  But that is a small segment of the market.  

Instead, the usual outcome is forced technology transfer which results in a state-supported competitor for their products around the rest of the world.  I am confident there will be companies that choose to invest, if for no other reason than to curry favor with Xi and open the doors to further potential sales, but the trend of late is not promising.  Ultimately, property laws and their enforcement are the keystone for inward investment into any nation and China has no history of treating foreign companies fairly, or domestic ones for that matter.

But really, the flow of direct market news and economic data has been secondary with far more political news leading conversations.  The impact of tariffs on economic activity and inflation, as well as on market performance remains unclear with arguments being made on both sides as to potential benefits or detriments.  FWIW, which is probably not much, my take is the impacts will be very unevenly spread, and how that impacts broad based numbers is unknowable at this time.  I fear we will all need to be reactive for now, although for those with outstanding exposures, there is no better argument for maintaining robust hedge ratios given the overall uncertainty.

Ok, let’s take a look at the overnight action in markets.  After yesterday’s US declines, we saw much of Asia follow suit with Tokyo (-1.8%) particularly hard hit as PM Ishiba thought that he was making headway with President Trump but found out that Japanese auto manufacturers were going to be subject to those tariffs as well.  Adding to the pressure were the “Minutes” from the last BOJ meeting which implied further rate hikes are on the horizon. Both Hong Kong (-0.65%) and China (-0.45%) also slipped and, in fact, almost every major market in Asia (Korea, India, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand) also fell, some quite sharply.  Apparently, Xi’s efforts at creating that stability haven’t yet been successful.  

In Europe, red is also the dominant color with most continental bourses lower by around -0.6%, also on the tariff story.  The one exception here is the UK, which released a passel of data showing growth was modestly firmer than expected at 1.5% led by Retail Sales growing 1.0%, rather than declining by -0.3% as expected.  As to US futures, at this hour (7:15) they are pointing slightly lower, about -0.2%.

In the bond market, yields are backing off around the world with Treasuries (-3bps) lagging European price action where sovereigns have seen yields decline between -4bps and -6bps.  Even JGB yields have slipped -4bps.  In Europe, inflation data from France and Spain came in softer than expected which has encouraged the move there, and we even heard arch ECB hawk, Robert Holzmann, explain that funding defense spending via bond purchases (i.e. QE) was viable.

In the commodity markets, oil (-0.2%) which rallied yesterday to touch the elusive $70/bbl level is slipping back a bit, but the trend remains clearly higher as per the below.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, in the currency markets, the dollar is firmer once again with modest rallies vs. the euro (-0.3%) and pound (-0.2%) as well as strength against the Scandies (SEK -0.6%, NOK -0.3%).  However, the picture in the EMG bloc is more mixed with ZAR (+0.35%) showing strength alongside gold’s rally, and INR (+0.2%) bucking the trend after having agreed to reduce tariffs on US products.  Throughout the rest of the bloc, there has been generally little change.

Turning to the data this morning, there is plenty that will be keenly watched.  Personal Income (exp 0.4%), Personal Spending (0.5%) and the PCE data (headline 0.3%, 2.5% Y/Y and core 0.3%, 2.7% Y/Y) all get released at 8:30.  Then at 10:00 we see Michigan Sentiment (57.9) and you can be sure people will be talking about the Inflation Expectations piece (1yr 4.9%, 5yr 3.9%), especially if it syncs with their narrative.  There are two more Fed speakers, Governor Barr and Atlanta Fed president Bostic, but nothing any Fed speaker has uttered has mattered at all, maybe since Trump was inaugurated.

My read on overall sentiment is that investors are wary of the future, but not yet ready to abandon the stocks only go up narrative.  Regarding the dollar, the recent trend remains modestly lower, as per the below, but it is hard to get excited about large moves, at least for today.  Again, Trump clearly wants it lower and seems likely to get his way, at least to some extent.  The one thing I truly do like is commodities, which I believe will remain well bid overall.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Good luck and good weekend

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The Fools

In April, it starts with the Fools
But two days thereafter the rules
For importing cars
To where Stars and Bars
Fly will change with tariffs as tools
 
For Europe, the pain will be keen
At least that’s what most have foreseen
And poor crypto bros
Will find their Lambos
May soon cost a price quite obscene

 

While the political set continues to harp on the “Signal” story, markets really don’t care about political infighting between the parties.  Rather, their focus is keenly attuned to President Trump’s confirmation that starting on April 3rd, there will be a 25% tariff imposed on all imported autos from everywhere in the world.  This is particularly difficult for European auto manufacturers as they produce a far smaller proportion (VW 21%, BMW 36%, Mercedes 41%) of their vehicles in the US than do the Japanese (Honda 73%, Toyota 50%, Nissan 52%), although the Koreans will be impacted as well (Hyundai/Kia 33%).  Ironically, according to Grok, where I got all this information, GM only produces about 54% of their vehicles sold in the US, in the US, with the rest coming from Canada and Mexico.  As an aside, Tesla produces all their vehicles in the US.

Particularly hard hit are the specialty manufacturers like Porsche, Ferrari and Lamborghini, which produce none of their vehicles in the US.  Of course, given the price points of these vehicles, my sense is it may not really hurt their sales as if you are spending $250k on a car, you can likely afford to spend $312.5k as well.  In fact, in a funny way, these tariffs may enhance the Veblen effect where people will brag about paying the higher price as it puts it out of reach of more people.

Nonetheless, the action merely confirms that President Trump is very serious with respect to changing the world’s trading model.  I saw something interesting this morning in that Paul Krugman, who made his name, and won his Nobel Prize, based on work regarding international trade and was the prototypical free trader, has adjusted his views after recognizing that nations need to maintain some manufacturing capabilities for security reasons.  I assure you, if Krugman, who has been a vocal liberal critic of every Republican idea for the past twenty years, agrees with this policy, it will be very difficult for anyone to reject it.

In a perfect world (globo economicus?) free trade accrues benefits to all.  But we don’t live in that world and national priorities often supersede these issues.  The pandemic highlighted the weaknesses that the US had developed in its ability to manufacture key items necessary for its continued economic and defense survival. And remember this, for the world at large, their idea of free trade is they should be able to sell whatever they grow/manufacture into the US with no barriers, but US manufacturers need to be subject to barriers in order to protect other nations’ favored industries and companies.  That world is now history with new rules being written every day and most of them by Donald Trump.

So how have markets responded to this tariff confirmation?  Not terribly well.  Yesterday’s US equity selloff was pretty significant led by the NASDAQ’s -2.0% decline.  In Asia, the Nikkei (-0.6%) also sold off as did Korea (-1.4%), Taiwan (-1.4%) and Australia (-0.4%).  On the other hand, both China (+0.3%) and Hong Kong (+0.4%) managed a better session, seemingly as a rebound against declines in the previous session with the only news showing that Chinese industrial profits fell by -0.3% compared to a Y/Y decline of -3.3% in December.  However, a quick look at a chart of this data for the past five years tells me they need to seasonally adjust it in order to get something meaningful, so I don’t think it really impacted markets.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

As to European shares, it should be no surprise that the tariff announcements have negatively impacted shares there with declines of between -0.2% (Spain) and -0.7% (Germany).  US futures though, at this hour (7:00) are little changed on the session.

In the bond market, Treasury yields continue to creep higher, up another 3bps this morning and back to levels last seen a month ago.  This cannot be helping Secretary Bessent’s blood pressure, although he very clearly has a plan in mind.  There is much stagflation discussion in the markets by the punditry as they assume tariffs will slow growth and raise prices and bonds are not the favored investment in that scenario.  Meanwhile, European sovereign yields are all sliding this morning, largely down -2bps, amid growth concerns on the back of the tariff announcements.  The one exception here is UK Gilts (+7bps) as the UK Budget announcement indicated slightly more gilt issuance would be necessary to fund the government’s spending plans.  However, there is a growing concern over the financial management of the Starmer government overall.

In the commodity markets, oil (-0.35%) is slipping from yesterday’s closing levels and continues to flirt with the $70/bbl level but has not been able to breech it since late February.  Apparently, there are questions as to whether the auto tariffs will reduce demand.  Personally, I would think it is the opposite as more older, less fuel efficient cars will remain on the road here.  As to gold (+1.0%) after a several day pause, it appears that it is resuming its very strong trend higher.  You know what we haven’t heard about lately?  Ft Knox auditing.  I wonder if that is getting arranged or is now so old a story nobody cares.  Silver (+1.0%) is along for the ride although copper (-0.4%) is taking a breather after a breathtaking run to new all-time highs this year.  Look at the slope of the copper chart and you can see why it is pausing, at the very least.

Source: tradingeconomics.com’

Finally, the dollar is broadly softer this morning, with the euro, pound and Aussie all gaining on the order of 0.3%.  As well, NOK (+0.3%) is firmer after the Norgesbank surprised some and left rates on hold with a relatively hawkish message about the future.  But there is weakness vs. the greenback around with JPY (-0.3%), MXN (-0.3%) and INR (-0.2%) all leaning the other way.  Another tariff related story is that India is planning to cut its tariffs in half for the US, a very clear victory for President Trump. 

On the data front, this morning brings the weekly Initial (exp 225K) and Continuing (1890K) Claims data as well as the third and final look at Q4 GDP (2.3%).  Part of the GDP data is Real Final Sales (4.2%) which is a key indicator for what happens here given consumption represents ~70% of the economy.  We do hear from Richmond Fed president Barkin this afternoon, but right now, Fed speakers are speaking into the void.

International statecraft continues to be the underlying thesis of global relations and President Trump’s goals of reshoring significant amounts of manufacturing and jobs along with it is still the primary driver.  There has been far less talk of the Mar-a-Lago Accord as that seems to be losing its luster.  If countries adjust their trade policies, Trump will continue in this direction.  While that may include short-term economic weakness and some pain, for both the economy and the stock markets, there is no indication, yet, he is anywhere near blinking.  One thing to keep in mind is that an overvalued stock market can correct by prices falling sharply, but also by prices stagnating for a long time while earnings catch up and multiples compress.  We may very well be looking at the latter scenario, so no large gains nor losses, just choppy markets going forward.  As to the dollar, lower still seems the direction of travel overall from current levels, but probably in a very gradual manner.

Good luck

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