A Latent Grim Reaper

The zeitgeist, of late, has been leaning
Toward welcoming gov intervening
Because costs have soared
So, folks once abhorred
Like Socialists, seem more well-meaning
 
Perhaps, though, the story’s much deeper
And points to a latent grim reaper
Elites on one side
Claim Trump’s only lied
While Populists serve as gatekeeper

 

Quite frankly, I feel like markets have become very secondary to an understanding of what is happening in the economy, and while there is intrigue over who may be the next Fed Chair, and correspondingly, if Mr Powell will resign from the FOMC when his chairmanship is up, I believe that pales in comparison to much larger macroeconomic issues with which we all have to deal on a daily basis.  Once again, my weekend reading has highlighted two key pieces that I believe do an excellent job of explaining much of what is going on, not just in the economy, but in the streets.

Last week, I highlighted Michael Green’s piece regarding a new estimate of what the poverty line looks like, putting paid to the idea that the official government level of $31,500 is appropriate, and that in suburban NJ (Caldwell to be exact) it is more like $140K.  Now, you will not be surprised that his piece garnered a great deal of attention given its premise, but I will not go into that.  However, he did write a follow-up piece which is worth reading and where he discusses the reaction.  In brief, whatever number is correct, it is clear that $31.5K is laughably low.   Ultimately, I believe this work has quantified the concept of the “vibecession” which has been making the rounds for a while.  People are allegedly making a decent living and yet are living paycheck to paycheck because the cost of living (not inflation) has risen so remarkably over time and priced many folks out of previously ordinary levels of attainment.

Which brings me to the second key piece I read this weekend, this from Dr Pippa Malmgren, which does a remarkable job explaining how the nation (and not just in the US, but we are more familiar here) has (d)evolved into two groups; Elites and Populists.  The former are the old guard politicians (both Democrats and Republicans), the global organizations like the World Bank, IMF, UN and WEF, and more perniciously in my mind, the so-called deep state.  The latter are personified by President Trump, but include NYC Mayor-elect Mamdani, AfD in Germany, Marine LePen in France and Victor Orban in Hungary, and their followers, to name a few.

The frightening conclusion Dr Malmgren drew was that there is no ability for a nation to continue to operate successfully if the population is split in this manner, and that eventually, one side is going to wind up victorious.  I would say this is the very definition of the 4th Turning and we are living through it.

So, we must ask, what are the potential ramifications from a financial markets perspective with this backdrop?  I have repeatedly highlighted that the Trump administration is going to “run it hot” going forward, meaning the goal will be to increase nominal GDP fast enough to outweigh the inevitable rise in prices.  The idea is if incomes rise quickly enough, people will be able to tolerate rising prices more easily.  

But the one thing of which I am increasingly confident is that prices and their rate of change are going to rise under this scenario.  As central banks leave policy easy, or ease further in an effort to support their respective economies, that is going to be the outcome.  A look at the chart below from the FRED data base of the St Louis Fed shows there is a very strong relationship between CPI and nominal GDP.  In fact, I ran the numbers and the correlation for the past 75 years has been 0.975!  Prices are going to rise friends, alongside M2.

What does this mean?  It means that the debasement of fiat currency is going to continue apace and so commodities, notably precious metals, but also base metals and property are going to be recognized as better stores of wealth.  If you wonder why gold (+0.9%) and silver (+2.2%) are continuing to rocket higher, look no further than this.  What about equities?  For now, I expect they will continue to perform well as all that liquidity will be looking for a home although this morning, not so much as US futures are lower by -0.5% across the board.  Bonds?  This is a tougher call, and I suspect that the yield curve will steepen further as central banks press short rates lower, but inflation undermines long duration fixed income assets.  Finally, the dollar remains, in my view, one of the best of the fiat currencies, but like all of them, will continue to degrade vs. gold and hard assets.

Keeping that in mind, there are two other stories of note this morning, only one of which is impacting markets.  The non-impactful one is that apparently President Trump has selected Kevin Hassett, currently the White House Economic Council Director, as the man to succeed Jay Powell in the chair.  He is a long-time political operative with deep ties in Washington and I presume will get through the vetting and be confirmed on a timely basis.  As I wrote above, it is not clear to me the Fed matters as much as other things in the current environment, although we will continue to hear about it.  In this light, the Fed funds futures market is currently pricing an 87.5% probability of a 25bp cut next week and is back to a 58% probability of a total of 100bps of cuts by the end of 2026 as per the below from the CME.

The other story of note, this one definitely impacting markets, is the news that Ueda-san hinted more definitively at a Japanese rate hike later this month, with Japanese swaps market raising the probability of that hike to 80% from about 60% last week.  The knock-on effects were that 10-year JGB yields jumped 7bps, to 1.86%, their highest level since 2008 and as you can see from the chart below, continue to trend strongly higher.  Of course, given that inflation in Japan remains well above target, it is not that surprising that yields are climbing.  

Too, the other outcome here has been the yen (+0.7%) gaining a little ground, as per the below chart from tradingeconomics.com, and perhaps we have seen a short-term low in the currency.  Certainly, the increasing probability of US rate cuts is weighing on the dollar overall, so that is part of the story, but it remains to be seen if there are going to be wholesale changes in investment allocations that would be necessary to completely reverse the yen’s remarkable weakness over the past nearly four years.

The move in JGB yields has been blamed for the rise in yields around the world with Treasury and European Sovereign yields uniformly higher by 3bps this morning while some other regional Asian yields climbed between 4bps and 6bps.  In the end, inflation remains a problem almost everywhere in the world and I think that is what we are witnessing here.

As well, the JGB move was seen as the cause for Japanese equities’ (-1.9%) very weak performance which also dragged down some other regional markets (Taiwan, Australia, Philippines) but was not enough to undermine the rest of the region.  The flip side of that weakness was China (+1.1%) and HK (+0.7%) where it appears that hopes for a Fed rate cut more than offset weaker than forecast PMI data from China.  Another interesting story from the mainland was that the monthly Housing price data that was compiled by two key private companies was squashed by the Chinese government after China Vanke, one of the largest Chinese property companies, explained they would be late on an interest rate payment.  One can only imagine what that data looked like!

Meanwhile, in Europe, red is the color led by Germany’s DAX (-1.5%) although with weakness across the board (CAC -0.8%, IBEX -0.6%, FTSE MIB -0.9%).  Apparently, the story that progress has been made regarding peace talks in Ukraine is not seen as a positive there.  After all, if there is peace, will European governments still be so keen to build out their military, spending billions of euros at local defense and manufacturing firms?  It seems after a very strong close to the month in November, there is a bit of profit taking underway this morning.

In the commodity space, oil (+1.3%) is bouncing back to its trend line after OPEC confirmed it will not be increasing production in Q1 next year at a meeting yesterday.  I would expect that a real peace deal would be negative for this market as some part of that would be the relaxation of sanctions, I would assume.  But maybe I’m wrong there.  However, I continue to believe the trend is modestly lower going forward as there is far more supply available.  As to the other metals, both copper (+0.6%) and platinum (+1.5%) are continuing their runs higher with no end currently in sight.

Finally, the dollar is softer overall this morning, and while the yen (+0.7%) is the leader, the euro (+0.3%), SEK (+0.3%) and CHF (+0.25%) are also nicely up on the day with the rest of the G10 little changed.  The real movement, though, has been in the EMG bloc with CZK (+0.75%), HUF (+0.5%), PLN (+0.5%), and CLP (+0.4%) all benefitting from the Fed rate cut story as well as Chile’s benefits from copper’s rally.  While a cut seems highly likely, I suspect the real dollar story will be about the dot plot and SEP as well as Powell’s presser next week.

I’ve already run too long so will just mention that ISM Manufacturing (exp 48.9) is due this morning and I will review the week’s data expectations tomorrow.  

The world is changing and I expect that we will continue to see volatility across markets as investors come to grips with those changes, whether simple central bank rate decisions or more complex social movements and electoral outcomes that lead to major policy changes.  Be careful out there.

Good luck

Adf

Falling Fast

His swords were words he wielded well
He spoke his truths, but would not yell
His followers enrapt
His enemies then snapped
And undeservedly he fell
 
RIP Charlie Kirk
 
A score plus four of years have passed
Since thousands died, we were aghast
No logic could be found
For those at, zero, ground
Society is falling fast


 
A generation after the horrific events of September 11, 2001, it appears that memories have faded.  Personally, having observed those events from one block away, it is indelibly imprinted on my brain.  But now, in the course of a week we have seen several senseless murders make the news as whatever decorum may have existed at the turn of the century is long gone.  Messrs. Howe and Strauss were always quite clear that the 4thTurning involved chaos and the destruction of institutions.  I fear the process is accelerating.  I also fear that it must play out to get through to the other side.  Civil war feels excessive as a description, but as I have forecast for the past year or two, one of the major political parties was likely to explode.  Right now, it feels like the Democrats are on that path.  I don’t know what will replace it, but something must, and it would behoove us all if there is some coherence in their policies when it appears.  I remain confident that Socialists are not the answer, nor will they be embraced across the nation. 
 
The reason I discuss this, which seems outside the bounds of my market perspective, is that it is going to impact markets even more than it already has.  The ongoing politicization of the media, businesses and entertainment does not lead to kumbaya, but rather volatility and distress.  If you wonder why gold continues to perform well, look no further.  Whatever the data, whatever the Fed does, whatever Trump and his administration do, or what Congress tries to do, gold has a history of maintaining value for the past 5 millennia.  Everything else is new and prices are all relative to gold.  Remember that as you approach your day job and your investments, whether you hedge for a living, or simply are trying to make a living.
 
There are now two things on the docket
That could lead risk assets to rocket
First, CPI comes
The Jay and his bums
Decide what gets put in our pocket

Considering these very serious issues, it seems almost ridiculous to discuss markets, but they will continue to trade and the ability to keep your eye on that particular ball is still critical to financial outcomes.  So, let us turn to the two stories (well, maybe two and a half stories) that have the potential to change some viewpoints.  The first is today’s CPI, then next week’s FOMC meeting with a half nod given to today’s ECB meeting.

Regarding the least important, the ECB is almost certainly going to leave policy unchanged.  The only opportunity for anything new will come from Madame Lagarde’s press conference and if she displays a new tone, whether hawkish (I doubt) or perhaps more dovish as European data continues to ebb.

But let’s move on to CPI.  After yesterday’s much lower than expected PPI data, where the M/M numbers for both headline and core were -0.1% compared to +0.3% expected, there has been some talk on the margins that we could see much softer CPI data.  However, it is worth knowing that for the inflation cognoscenti (e.g., @inflation_guy) PPI data is seen as a random number generator with very little direct impact on the consumer data.  (In fact, after my look at NFP data, aren’t all the data points random?)  With that in mind, current median expectations remain as they were earlier in the week (0.3% M/M for both headline and Core with the Y/Y numbers expected at 2.9% and 3.1% respectively).  

Given the market is currently pricing a full 25bp cut with an 8% probability of 50bps, my take is the only way to change things would be for CPI to also print like the PPI data as negative numbers.  If that were to be the case, and I do not anticipate that outcome by any stretch, it would give Chairman Powell ample opportunity to cut 50bps with the market welcoming the outcome along with President Trump.  On the flip side, I don’t think CPI can print a high enough number to remove the 25bp cut.  As a reminder, below are the cumulative probabilities for future Fed funds rates based on the CME’s futures contract.  A total of 75bps remains the default view for the rest of 2025.

We will learn about the outcome at 8:30 this morning and I have no particular insight into whether those median forecasts are high, low or on the money.  This is a wait and see situation.

As to the FOMC meeting, it has the opportunity to be far more impactful.  While 25bps is currently baked in the cake, I remain of the opinion that 50bps is a very viable outcome.  Recall, the most recent Fed discussions were about the importance of the employment portion of their mandate as opposed to the inflation portion.  With the newly revised reduction in NFP over the past twelve months, characterizing the employment situation as solid or strong seems unreasonable.  Weakening would seem a more apt description and should have the discussion be between 25bps or 50bps.  We already know there are at least two governors, Bowman and Waller, who wanted to start cutting last time, and it appears that Stephen Miran, Trump’s current head of the CEA, is going to get approved by the Senate in time to sit in the meeting next week.  One would assume that is a vote for easier policy.   

ITC Markets has a very nice table on the perceived hawkishness/dovishness of FOMC members, and it shows that the governors, as a whole, live in the dovish camp with only a few regional presidents as known hawks.  In fact, one of the remarkable things about the entire Lisa Cook affair is that she was always one of the more dovish members of the board and the fact that she was not pushing for cuts never made any sense.  At least based on her background and history.  However, if you take politics into account, and the idea that she didn’t want to cut because President Trump wanted a cut, it begins to become clearer.  At any rate, it strikes me that based on this table, which feels reasonable, 50bps is in play.

With all that in mind, let’s take a quick turn around the markets to see what is happening ahead of this morning’s data.  As seemingly always, equity markets rallied in the US yesterday, well mostly.  The DJIA slipped, but the other indices managed to continue their hot streaks.  It is very hard to link economic activity to equity market outcome these days, at least to my eyes.

But on to Asia, where Japan (+1.2%) had a solid session on the back of the remarkable rise in Oracle shares and the idea that Japanese tech companies will benefit.  China (+2.3%) was the beneficiary of the story that President Xi is now looking to have banks prop up local governments that have stopped paying contractors now that their property sale gravy train has derailed.  It seems that they have figured out if you don’t pay people, they don’t consume anything.  So, upwards of CNY 1 trillion will be injected into local government coffers specifically to pay these late bills and try to kickstart consumption.  But, as I look through the rest of the region, it was a much more mixed picture with some gainers (Korea, Indonesia, Thailand), some laggards (HK, Malaysia, Australia) and many markets that barely moved.

In Europe, all the major markets are green this morning led by the CAC (+0.85%) and UK (+0.5%) with the others showing much smaller gains (DAX +0.2%, IBEX +0.25%).  There is no obvious reason for the gains as expectations for the ECB remain static and there has been no data of note released.  Meanwhile, US futures are higher by 0.25% at this hour (7:30).

Bond markets remain frozen as Treasury yields have edged higher by just 1bp and European sovereign yields are +/-1bp from yesterday’s close.  As you can see from the chart below, the range on 10-year Treasuries has been fairly narrow for the past week.  Perhaps today’s CPI will shake things up.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

In the commodity space, oil (-1.25%) is giving back the gains it saw earlier in the week but basically remains unchanged overall.  If fears grow that a recession is upon us, I could see a rationale for oil to decline, but it is hard to get excited about the market right now.  Gold (-0.6%) is backing off its most recent all-time high, but is still firmly above $3600/oz.  Given the recent run, it is no surprise it takes a breather here and there is no reason to believe that precious metals are topping out.  In fact, a look at the charts tells me that there is plenty of upside left across the space.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Finally, the dollar is a bit firmer this morning, probably one reason the precious metals are under some pressure, but here too, if we use the DXY as our proxy, the range is pretty clear.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

JPY, INR and ZAR are the largest movers this morning, each declining -0.4%, while the rest of the world is mostly softer by -0.1% to -0.2%.  Broad based dollar strength but no depth whatsoever.  We shall see how things behave after the CPI release.

And that’s really it.  For now, the big picture remains the same, where the prospects of an easier Fed will weigh on the dollar and support commodities.  Equities will like that for now, at least until inflation picks back up, and bonds feel subject to manipulation so I’m just not sure.

Good luck

Adf

Inundated

Investors have been inundated
By news that has been unabated
There’s tariffs and war
Plus rate cuts and more
With stocks and bonds depreciated
 
Now looking ahead to today
The payroll report’s on its way
As well, later on
With nothing foregone
We’ll hear from our own Chairman Jay

 

It has certainly been an interesting week in both markets and the world writ large.  So much has happened and yet so much is still unclear as to how things may evolve going forward.  Through it all, volatility is the only constant.  To me, what has become abundantly clear is the post WWII order is being dismantled, and every nation is trying to determine its place in the future.  This is a grave threat to those who benefitted from flowery words and limited action, which covers a wide swath of government leaders around the world.  I’m not sure if this is the 4th Turning, or if this is merely the prelude, with the impacts of all these changes what brings the 4thTurning about.  Regardless, history is clearly in the making.

I do not have the bandwidth to continuously follow the tariff story, although yesterday’s news was there will be more delays for both Canada and Mexico.  China received no such relief and at their National People’s Congress they seemed resolute in their pushback and highlighted their own achievements.  The data from China, though, tells me that their goals for more domestic consumption remain far in the distance.  Last night they reported their Trade Balance for the January/February period (they always combine because of the Lunar New year disruptions) and it jumped to $170.5B, far greater than anticipated.  While exports underperformed slightly, growing only 2.3% compared to a 5% estimate, it was the imports that really tells the story.  Imports fell -8.4%, a significant shortfall from both last year and consensus estimates, and an indication that the Chinese consumer is not yet the type of force that President Xi would like to see.  

In fact, a look at the chart below showing imports for the past 10 years demonstrates that very little has changed on this front.  As I wrote yesterday, converting a mercantilist economy into a consumer-focused one is a huge lift, and one that the CCP has not yet figured out.  It is not clear that they ever will.  Meanwhile, the obvious explanation for the huge jump in the trade balance was companies pre-ordering things to get ahead of the tariffs.

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Moving on to the Ukraine situation, while yesterday’s news was of the “whatever it takes” moment for defending Europe, this morning it seems there are some caveats attached.  Of course, the first caveat is the changing of the German constitution to allow them to spend all that money.  The second seems to be that not every European nation is on board for the massive spending increase and continuation of the war.  There are many political and financial hurdles to overcome in this story in Europe, and this morning’s European equity markets are indicative of the idea that this is not a straight-line higher.  In fact, every equity market in Europe is lower this morning, led by the DAX (-1.5%) although with solid declines elsewhere as well (CAC -1.0%, FTSE 100 -0.5%).  This, too, is a story with no clear end in sight.  One unconfirmed story I saw was that the group convened by the UK last weekend has not been able to agree terms for additional support.

Meanwhile, yesterday the ECB cut their short-term rates by 25bps, as widely expected, with the Deposit Rate now down to 2.50%.  The funny thing is nobody really noticed.  This is of a piece with my observation that central bankers just don’t have that much sway on market activity these days, it is all about politics and statecraft, not monetary policy.  This morning, Eurozone GDP for Q4 was released at 0.2%, a tick higher than forecast but still lower than Q3’s 0.4%.  There is no doubt the financial mandarins of Europe are keen to get this defense spending going, because otherwise they will continue to preside over a stagnant economy.  

But here’s an interesting thing to consider.  Germany has made a big deal about this new willingness to spend €500 billion outside the bounds of their budget framework on defense.  However, they continue with their Energiewende policy which has been the Achilles Heel of the German economy and will prevent them from actually producing armaments if they seek to continuously reduce fossil fuel powered energy for renewables.  It is almost as if this is theater, rather than policy, but that may just be my cynicism speaking.

Moving on to the US, this morning brings the Payroll Report with the following current median estimates:

Nonfarm Payrolls160K
Private Payrolls111K
Manufacturing Payrolls5K
Unemployment Rate4.0%
Average Hourly Earnings0.3% (4.1% Y/Y)
Average Weekly Hours34.2
Participation Rate62.6%

Source: tradingeconomics.com          

As well, we hear from Chairman Powell at 12:30pm, along with Bowman, Williams and Kugler in the hours leading up to that.  But again, I ask, do they matter to the markets right now?  Certainly, there is much discussion that the US economic data is starting to show more weakness, and there are many who are saying that long-anticipated recession is going to become evident.  If that is the case, we could certainly see the Fed cut rates, but again, my take is markets are far more attuned to 10-year yields than Fed funds.  And remember, while 10-year yields are clearly quite inflation sensitive, what we also know that questions over budget deficits and supply are critical to their pricing as well.  This was made evident yesterday in Germany.

I have glossed over market activity overnight so will give a really short update here.  Yesterday’s weakness in the US was followed by broad weakness throughout Asia, with most markets there lower on the day, notably Japan (-2.2%), but declines almost everywhere.  We have already discussed European bourses and at this hour (7:30) US futures are basically unchanged ahead of the data.

In the bond market, Treasury yields are slipping back -3bps this morning and we are seeing similar price action across most of Europe although Spain (+1bp) is bucking the trend on some domestic issues.  It is easy to believe that the Germany story was a bit overblown, and remember, if they cannot change the constitution, I expect a rally in Bunds (lower yields) along with a selloff in the DAX and the euro.

Speaking of the euro, it is continuing its sharp ascent, up another 0.6% this morning.  however, something to keep in mind regarding all the huffing and puffing about the euro is that with this sharp move higher in the past week, it is merely back to the middle of its 3-year trading range.  So, is this as big a deal as some are saying?

Source: tradingeconomics.com

But the overall currency picture is more mixed with both AUD (-0.6%) and NZD (-0.5%) lower along with CAD (-0.2%).  There are other gainers (GBP +0.2%, SEK +0.7%) and other laggards (ZAR -0.2%) although I would say the broad direction is still for dollar weakness.  

Finally, oil (+1.5%) is bouncing this morning, although this could well be a trading bounce as I have seen no new news on the subject.  I guess the delay on Canadian tariffs probably played a role as well.  Gold (+0.4%) is also firmer although both silver (-0.4%) and copper (-1.2%) are lagging.  In fairness, the latter two have had significant up weeks so are likely seeing some profit taking.

Once again, I will remark that for those who have real flows and exposures, the current market situation is why hedging is critical to maintain financial performance.  Nobody really knows where anything is going to go, but right now, it feels like the one thing we know is prices will not remain where they currently are for very long.

Good luck and good weekendAdf