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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
February 15, 2008
The question remains: How much will the Chinese, Indians, Russians,
American consumers and others be willing to pay for wheat and other
vital commodities? For energy? For stores of value such as gold, silver
and the other (increasingly) precious metals in an age of unregulated,
unrestrained, unanchored, electronic-based, securities-based, and
market-driven global "money" and Credit. With trillions of dollar
liquidity sloshing vagariously around the global financial "system",
there is clearly more than ample high-octane inflationary fuel to
destabilize markets for myriad essential things of limited supply. And,
increasingly, there is talk of problematic margin calls and
derivative-related issues impacting commodities trading conditions. The
talk is of trading dislocations and nervous "bankers" pulling away from
the financing of hedging activities in various markets. Or, in short, we
are witnessing a precarious ratcheting up of Monetary Disorder – in a
multitude of key markets and on a global basis.
At the Heart of Monetary Disorder, we have a leveraged speculating
community increasingly on the ropes. January was a tough month for the
hedge fund community. In particular, it appears the (over-hyped)
"long/short" (holding both long and short positions) and (over-hyped)
"quant" funds had an especially tough go of it. To begin the New Year,
last year’s favorite stocks (i.e. technology, emerging markets, energy,
and utilities) were hammered, while the heavily shorted sectors have
significantly outperformed (i.e. homebuilders, banks, retailers,
"consumer discretionary," and transports). The yen and Swiss franc
(currencies traders had shorted to finance higher yielding "carry
trades") have rallied. Even the dollar has rallied somewhat. Many
speculators have been (caught) short commodities, having expected
negative ramifications from the bursting of the U.S. Credit Bubble.
Others have been caught over-exposed to emerging equities and debt
markets. And, increasingly, it appears various trades throughout the
complex corporate Credit arena have run amuck.
Friday, various indices of corporate credit risk moved to record
highs, including the previously stalwart "investment grade" sector.
Leveraged loan prices fell to record lows late in the week, as talk of
further bank and hedge fund liquidations captivated the marketplace.
While the status of the ("monoline") Credit insurers is now a central
focus, behind the scenes there is increasing angst at the prospect for a
disorderly unwind of various leveraged trading strategies in corporate
Credits and Credit derivatives. "Synthetic" CDOs (collateralized debt
obligations) – pools of Credit default swaps and other derivatives – are
especially vulnerable and problematic for the system. In short, the
Corporate Credit Crisis took a decided turn for the worse this week.
There is, with the economy sinking rapidly and the leveraged speculating
community faltering abruptly, little prospect at this point for
stabilization. The downside of the Credit Cycle is attaining
overwhelming momentum.
The Wall Street punditry seems to go out of its way to get things
wrong. The latest talk is that the market will simply look over the
"valley" and begin focusing on a recovery from what will be, at worst, a
brief and mild recession. The relative strong performance of the banks,
retailers, homebuilders, and transports is accepted as confirmation of
the bullish view. I’ll instead take the view that the recent major
squeeze in the heavily shorted stocks and sectors is only further
destabilizing and indicative of dynamics troubling to the leveraged
speculating community and the Credit system more generally. "Hedges"
have stopped working, creating a backdrop of angst and forced
liquidations.
Despite last year’s subprime collapse and mortgage turmoil, the
leveraged speculating community overall chalked up another stellar year
of performance. Actually, the "community" in total likely boosted
returns with bets against subprime and mortgage Credit more generally.
Certainly, the hedge funds profited nicely from shorts on the financial
and consumer sectors. Ironically, the initial stage of the bursting of
the Credit Bubble proved a favorable backdrop for many of the major
players and the community in general. The deluge of industry inflows ran
unabated through much of the year, a crucial dynamic that masked rapidly
developing fragilities and vulnerabilities. These flows were surely
critical in supporting speculative trading positions away from the
mortgage bust.
In particular, I believe the general backdrop delayed a problematic
unwind of leveraged and highly speculative positions in corporate
Credits (securities, derivatives and other "structured products").
Shorting mortgage-related Credit last year provided a convenient
mechanism for hedging corporate Credit and equity market risk.
Meanwhile, the combination of profitable (mortgage bust-related) shorts
and hedges – in concert with industry fund inflows – emboldened the
speculators to press their (huge) bets on technology, energy, the
emerging markets, global equities, and other speculative Bubbles. The
relative resiliency of the U.S. corporate Credit market and global
markets through 2007 played a critical role in delaying impending
economic and stock market adjustment.
Well, I believe the dam broke in January. The leveraged players were
hit with losses from all directions. Their long positions were
immediately slammed with simultaneous bursting Bubbles round the globe.
Meanwhile, a rush to unwind positions led to upward pressure on the
heavily shorted sectors, only compounding the leverage speculating
community’s predicament. Last year fostered an extraordinary dynamic of
ballooning "crowded trades," and January saw the bursting of this
multifaceted Bubble.
The leveraged speculating community has suffered the occasional tough
month – last August providing a recent case in point. Each time,
however, performance quickly bounced back. In true Bubble fashion, each
quick recovery from a setback emboldened all involved; industry fund
inflows not only never missed a beat – they accelerated. Yet a strong
case can be made today that this (historic) Bubble has now burst – that
last year was the "last gasp" before succumbing to New Post-Credit
Bubble Realities. I don’t expect performance to bounce back, while I do
foresee a flight away from the leveraged speculating now beginning in
earnest. With "crowded trades" unraveling virtually across the board,
marketplace risk is now escalating significantly for leveraged
strategies in general. Systemic liquidity issues and dislocated market
conditions have created an environment where there is seemingly no place
to hide.
Importantly, a leveraged speculating community "unraveling" would
prove a death blow for myriad sophisticated trading strategies and risk
models, with enormous ramifications for systemic stability. There are
unmistakable "Ponzi Dynamics" involved here worthy of a few Bulletins.
Going forward, I expect a foundering leveraged speculating community
to be At The Heart of Deepening Monetary Disorder. The initial victims
appear the fragile global equities market Bubbles and the U.S. Corporate
Credit market. Forced deleveraging of hedge fund corporate debt and
derivatives is in the process of creating a massive overhang of
securities to sell, in the process profoundly curtailing Credit
Availability and Marketplace Liquidity throughout. The ramifications for
our finance-based Bubble Economy are momentous. As an economic and
financial analyst (as opposed to "fear-monger"), I feel it is imperative
to highlight that it is more "technically" accurate to categorize the
unfolding scenario in the historical context of an economic "depression"
rather than "recession." This is certainly not shaping up as a
short-term inventory-led economic adjustment or "mid-cycle" slowdown.
Instead, we have now entered the very initial stages of what will likely
prove a deep, prolonged and arduous adjustment to the underlying
structure of our Credit and economic systems.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |