Thursday, August 31, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 31, 2023

Last day of August starts with Euro Area inflation coming in above expectations at 5.3% this morning while Chinese manufacturing was better than expected.  Domestically (kind of), Bostic speaking at an event in South Africa said: "I feel policy is appropriately restrictive," "We should be cautious and patient and let the restrictive policy continue to influence the economy, lest we risk tightening too much and inflicting unnecessary economic pain."  He added: "that does not mean I am for easing policy any time soon,  Yesterday ADP payrolls missed expectations as did GDP with yields continuing to ease from the highs of August 21st.  Ahead of PCE and jobless claims this morning yields are down a little over a bp with the 2Y at 4.87% and 10Y at 4.10%.   On the upcoming PCE data, Nick Timiraos X/Tweet: "Based on inputs from the July CPI and PPI, forecasters anticipate the July core PCE price index will rise by 0.2% or 0.3% from June.  That would bring the 12-month rate to 4.3% in July from 4.1% in June. The increase partly reflects base effects, as July 2022 printed at +0.08%"


XTOD: Morgan Stanley predicts a TSwift/Barbie/Beyonce hangover in consumer spending data in the fourth quarter. (+ it's only slightly smaller than their estimate of the drag coming from the expiration of the student loan moratorium, which they put at 0.8pp)

XTOD: Pyongyang said it had successfully test-fired two ballistic missiles designed to make “scorched-earth strikes” at South Korean command centers and operational airfields

XTOD: Preemptive congrats to the cartels on seizing political power over all of Mexico in a little over 20 years time.

XTOD: First poll in Argentina that shows Milei winning outright in the first round..What is more shocking, in a global-historic sense, than an Internet movement lifting up an anarcho-capitalist candidate in Argentina (population ~46M) basically out of nowhere? You go back 2 years ago and people would have laughed at you for suggesting this was possible...He's also incredibly weird right up to his hair, like dog clones named after libertarian philosophers weird, has flirted with some extremely radical views and is a thorough ideologue for a fringe political tradition.

XTOD: to industrial policy enthusiasts: "I think that what we are seeing right now in China illustrates the real limits of that kind of government planning for the economy." 

XTOD: The problem is that the crackdown on residential property has resulted in a sharp fall in housing sales. And I don’t think those sales are ever coming back. That’s a problem because residential housing investment mostly accrues to households through those sales. So if housing sales have fallen, but the household’s gross savings rate has not, then household net financial balances must be increasing. Higher household net savings must be absorbed by the corporate or government sector, or else the current account surplus will widen as it lends the savings to foreigners. But it’s not clear to me that any sector can really absorb these savings...Property developers really must deleverage. That’s been partly offset by the government’s pivot to manufacturing in 2020, but there’s unlikely to be enough corporate investment & credit demand to absorb higher HH net savings.  And the rest of the world probably can’t either. China’s trade surplus as a share of its GDP may be lower than in 2008, but it’s now a larger share of global GDP. So, assuming policymakers don’t want to reflate the housing market like they did in 2016, the only solution is to restore HH confidence to bring down the savings rate. But nothing the government has announced seems likely work If not, the household net financial surplus will continue to get stuck in the financial system and won’t be intermediated into new demand. Which will lead to lower incomes and eventually lower savings, sort of like what happened in Japan after 1990. Which is the great irony. China's policymakers launched the crackdown on property to reign in a housing bubble they feared could lead to a Japan-like balance sheet recession. But in doing so, they may have sowed the seeds for a different kind of economic collapse


Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 30, 2023

The 2Y is yielding around 4.91% to start the day, while the 10Y is yielding around 4.15%.  Yesterday the 2Y yield fell by (checks charts) the most since (gasp) May (obviously historic), following JOLTS, which El Erian summarized in a X/Tweet as: "The job market isn't so strong that employees feel emboldened to quit loudly and find another job, but it isn't so weak that companies can carelessly cut their staff count, counting on easy hiring when profits improve."  The JOLTS data, declining consumer confidence and a strong 7Y auction has emboldened bets of the Fed pause in September.  Across the pond this morning, German and Spanish inflation data looked to come in above expectations.
We'll see how ADP and GDP looks today and still have PCE and Jobs on the come. 
Hurricane Idalia is yet another reminder that climate risk are real.

XTOD: You a year ago: OMG the Phillips Curve is going to destroy us!! 😲 You now: Hahaha idiot macroeconomists, you actually believed in the Philips Curve, LOL macro is so fake 😂😂😅

XTOD: Sure why not crowd on 

XTOD: You’ve probably read studies finding <5% of stocks make up the entire historical excess return of stocks over T-bills. The market is cap weight, so those successful companies have a large impact. Active managers tend to equal-weight, and that makes it tough to beat the market.

XTOD: “There are 60,000 economists in the US, many of them employed full-time trying to forecast recessions and interest rates and if they could do it successfully twice in a row, they’d all be millionaires by now. As far as I know most of them are still gainfully employed which ought to tell us something”   --- Peter Lynch

XTOD: While a weaker RMB does make Chinese manufacturing more competitive in export markets, the PBoC doesn't want a weaker RMB for at least two reasons. First, stronger exports come at the expense of weaker domestic consumption, as a depreciating RMB effectively shifts income from households (who are net importers) to manufacturers (who are net exporters), and by now almost everyone agrees that China must urgently boost domestic consumption.  Second, expectations of RMB weakness can become self-fulfilling and lead to destabilizing capital flight if these expectations cause wealthy Chinese to start selling RMB for dollars. We saw how badly this can go seven years ago.

XTOD: GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramswamy said in an interview he’d accept the terms of a cease-and-desist letter he received for a campaign trail performance of Eminem’s hit song “Lose Yourself.”

XTOD (not investing advice, by who new Jeff Bezos had some real estate investing platform?): Thanks to Jeff Bezos, you can now make money from real estate for just $100

XTOD: Thursday 31st August 2023 is a Super Blue Moon.  Last Super Blue Moon was on 31st Jan 2018.  Subsequently, $NDX dropped by 10% in a week.  Incidentally, $NDX was up roughly +40% over a year, almost similar to now 🥹  #Gothilocks does work in mysterious ways🥹


Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 29, 2023

U.S. yields start the day with yields relatively unchanged following the double auctions yesterday which seemed relatively clean.  The 2Y is trading 5.01% and the 10Y ~4.20% (off the highs of about a week ago of around 4.35%) . I guess we're all going to be buying electric cars from Vietnam...and I thought VinFast might be tied to vehicles made for Vin Diesel in Fast and Furious.  China remains in focus, wake me up when they do something big in terms of stimulus.  The Jackson Hole papers referenced yesterday continue to garner some discussion, especially the Eichengreen paper on the era of high government debt.  I haven't listened to the podcast yet but Odd Lots has covered the paper.

 Today's JOLTS data will be the first labor market indicator that will be scrutinized this week and I'm sure there will be some post somewhere about the Beveridge Curve.

XTOD: Here is the J-Hole paper that concluded the world is f**cked (which was of course obvious to anyone who is not a career economist since 2009)

XTOD: I wonder why there is no session at Jackson Hole on "Lessons from the fastest economic recovery ever" or on "How to restore full employment faster after a recession"

XTOD: U.S. consumers in recent weeks have seen gasoline prices tick up to their highest levels so far this year, leaving many with an unwelcome sense of déjà vu

XTOD: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1696262024626651461.html Share this if you think it's interesting. 

XTOD: The "urban doom loop" has caught on as a possible threat to cities nationwide -- especially in midsize cities that may be more vulnerable to an economic spiral  My look at what's behind the risk, and what it could look like from Minneapolis to Memphis:  Much of the focus has gone to hubs like New York and San Francisco. But many economists and analysts are more concerned about smaller cities with less ability to offset the economic blow if companies nix large leases or sale prices of downtown buildings crater.  Still, the loop isn't a given. Many cities are leaning on state and local stimulus aid. A large share of the outstanding business and mortgage loans aren't due for a few more years. And wonky tax rules are key to assessing whether individual cities could be in trouble. But a look at midsize cities could show early signs of distress. These places have some of the highest rates of office delinquency (where loan payments on buildings are behind schedule) and the lowest rates of office occupancy.

XTOD: "They issued an urgent call for a revised playbook to better understand and respond to a rapidly changing landscape that threatened to stoke more frequent supply shocks, higher prices and heightened volatility across financial markets." An important article on #JacksonHole by the  @FT 's  @colbyLsmith   Good to see the growing recognition among policymaking influencers that we have gone from a world of insufficient aggregate demand to one in which the supply side needs to be better understood and responded to.

XTOD: Michael Kantrowitz - bearish stocks
Michael Hartnett - bearish stocks
Michael Wilson - bearish stocks
Michael Kramer - bearish stocks 
Michael Gayed - bearish stocks 
Michael Burry - bearish stocks
What do they all have in common?  Anyone?

XTOD: "Everything in life is volatility times time. As volatility increases, time compresses. But what we care about is the validity of the fixed point. If we lose it, everything in the past becomes meaningless." — Myron Scholes

Monday, August 28, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 28, 2023

The final days of August are upon us with a week that ends with a Jobs/ Payrolls Friday report. Before we get there 2Y is up over 4bps to 5.10% and the 10Y is flat, trading at 4.24%.  It will be a busy data week and labor disputes remain something to watch with UAW, actors and writers, etc. 
With J-Hole behind us, while Powell gets all the hype, there were other speakers.  To start here's a quick recap of Lagarde at J-Hole: (1) there may be some fundamental changes in economic relationships, so understanding policy transmission can be more difficult in today's changing world (2) three major changes are changes to labor markets, with remote work and AI, the green energy transition and geopolitics (3) these shifts may lead to more supply side disruptions in the economy as well as increasing investment needs which may lead to relative price changes amongst sectors  (4) confronting this changing world monetary policy will need to continue to ensure price stability while being flexible.

I can't say I read all of the J-Hole papers (not good beach reading), but at a high level here's what I saw upon a cursory review (not all inclusive and take this summary with a grain of salt): (1) a paper by Ma and Zimmerman positing that monetary policy may impact innovation (tight monetary policy may impact innovation negatively with higher cost to future growth) and therefore may not be long run neutral (2) a paper by Duffie on deficits and how structurally dealer balance sheets may not be able to accommodate the increase in the size of the Treasury market (3) a handout by Jones that seems to ponder if we're running out of ideas and therefore poised for lower growth - will AI come up with ideas for us? (4) a handout by Richardson on the job market for nurses and teachers where demand outstrips supply (5) a paper by Eichengreen on how high debt and deficits are here to stay and could lead to financial repression and some difficult "medicine"

It's a busy week that starts with a double auction day today with both the 2Y and 5Y being auctioned at 1pm. 
Tue: JOLTS, home prices, 7Y note
Wed: ADP, GDP (2nd read), pending home sales
Thur: PCE, Income and Spending, Jobless claims
Fri: Jobs Day! ISM Manufacturing

XTOD: Everybody knows the inflation target is ACTUALLY 3.14159265359

XTOD: Yesterday, I trolled Larry Summers, as I thought his graph was more misleading than helpful. But I fully agree with the major points of his WAPO column today: Inflation is still too high, unemployment very low, and deficits too large.

XTOD:  Mark Cuban said that after investing nearly $20 million in 85 startups on “Shark Tank,” he’s taken a net loss across all of those deals combined. 

XTOD:  I cannot believe Bob Barker lived as close to 100 as possible without going over.

XTOD: For the sake of argument, can we consider an alternative to the current narrative on rates, literally the semantics: the explicitly pessimistic "raise them until something breaks" or the ominous sounding "higher for longer"?   How about "properly pricing risk," "correcting mistaken capital allocation", or even the pedantic but true "getting all those formulas in the finance books to actually work?"  Yes, the inversion of the curve/high near-term rates is real/has negative implications for businesses & consumers, has created issues for bank balance sheets (1.5% paper now at 4%), & managing inflation is a challenge for all.  But the 10 year at 4% is a whole lot healthier & "normal" for financial decision making than 1.5%. By a lot. It will lead to less speculation & to less misallocation of capital. So, here's 😃 😀 😃 for rates closer to where they ought to be after too many years of distortionary rate levels expressed in comforting but misleading phrases.

XTOD: I’m bullish on organizations that help people live their ordinary lives well over the next few decades: who to call when someone dies, teaching adults how to cook, curating the best of music and literature, how to manage content and take paid time off. All these things and more.


Friday, August 25, 2023

Powell at J-Hole: must there still be pain as "we are navigating by the stars under cloudy skies"?

J-Star, unlike the other "stars" (r-star, u-star, etc.) is a fully observable variable that describes how Jay Powell is the star of J-Hole and what he says carries more weight than any other variables.  When J-Star is inserted into your equation all other coefficients go to zero and therefore have no impact.  WWPD, "What Will Powell Do?" is important for markets.  I'm being facetious of course. 

Expectations play a prominent role in  today's economic models and Fed policy (this wasn't always the case, see here). If you followed Powell's speech one thing he didn't mention was cutting interest rates.  Highlights of the speech focused on uncertainty around the post-pandemic labor market dynamics and how labor market tightness feedbacks into wages and inflation.

In today's speech Powell didn't use the word "pain" but he did say:

"Getting inflation sustainably back down to 2 percent is expected to require a period of below-trend economic growth as well as some softening in labor market conditions." and "We expect this labor market rebalancing to continue. Evidence that the tightness in the labor market is no longer easing could also call for a monetary policy response."

So I guess the Phillip's curve is alive and well, while it remains a topic of debate

Markets didn't seem to react much too strongly to Powell's speech and market expectations are for 2024 rate cuts.

One other thing Powell mentioned again was that 2% remains the Fed's inflation goal, despite some debates and calls for changes to the target. 

The current Atlanta Fed GDP estimates are 5.9% and Powell acknowledged that growth has continued to come in above estimates this year.  It's hard to fathom 2% inflation with real growth at 5.9%, but perhaps it's possible.

We'll get more data on employment and inflation between today and the meeting that could change market expectations.  The next FOMC meeting is September 20th along with updated dot plot, for now Powell's journey to get inflation back to targe will have to ramble on:

"..the autumn moon lights my way
For now I smell the rain, and with it pain, and it's headed my way
..but I know one thing I've got to do
Ramble on, the time is now" - Ramble On, Led Zeppelin


Daily Economic Update: August 25, 2023


 J-Hole day is upon us. 2Y Treasury is trading 5.03% and the 10Y is trading 4.24% both up slightly.  Atlanta Fed GDP now rises again, now at 5.9% for Q3, while across the pond German Ifo business confidence fell again and was below estimates.  Why we care so much about central bank speeches is a wonder of the modern world, but I guess if you're of the view that the Fed acts largely through expectations then speeches matter a lot.  Of course there is also a saying that actions speak louder than words and eventually people won't care about what you say unless you eventually follow through.  Last year Powell basically said there would be pain and I guess there was if you were were certain institutions, but for the market writ large that pain has been hard to see and inflation has come down nonetheless.  
On the day ahead we get UofM Consumer Sentiment data, Powell's speech and Lagarde's speech. 

XTOD: My experience with Jackson Hole is that the actual contents of the speech rarely matter. It’s an opportunity to identify the point of maximum pain, and squeeze

XTOD: All the *s should be "dismissed with prejudice" https://thefaintofheart.wordpress.com/2016/08/10/the-fed-wastes-time-star-trekking/

XTOD: Lots of people beating up on Larry Summers over his chart making recent disinflation look just like the mid-70s disinflation, which reaccelerated. Indeed, problematic on many fronts. But the biggest issue is that the story was very different. Mid-70s disinflation was achieved via a huge rise in unemployment; reasons to wonder what would happen as U came down again.  This time no rise in U at all, so completely different process. Oh, and a lot of the inflation resurgence was about the Iranian revolution and oil prices 

XTOD: Nike down record 11 days in a row

XTOD: Tiger 🐅 Global is doomed

XTOD: Here’s a great primer by Popular Info on what “shrink” and “organized retail crime,” is, and why corporations and media like to make it sound like it’s all shoplifting.

XTOD: The Sopranos 2023: Adriana starts an OnlyFans... This is not a meme. Drea De Matteo announced last night on IG that her OF is now live

Thursday, August 24, 2023

Treasury OFR compares the plight of Office to that of Malls

Researchers from the Treasury Office of Financial Research has a brief out today titled Work from Home and the Future Consolidation of the U.S. Commercial Real Estate Office Sector: The Decline of Regional Malls May Provide Insight.  In the report the authors provide the following key points:
  • Workers have a preference for work from home which may become permanent and if it does employers who recognize and adapt to that reality will have an advantage obtaining and retaining talent.
  • Office demand may be even weaker than reported due to the high level of space that is currently being subleased by existing tenants and that structural vacancy rates may be as high as 50%.
  • The authors discuss how e-commerce up-ended regional malls and the negative feedback looped that ensued; retailers left malls, leading to fewer shopping options, making malls less attractive for shoppers, leading more tenants to leave.
  • The preference for work-from-home is much like that of e-commerce and may lead office down it's own negative feedback loop that will need to ultimately culminate in finding a new "highest and best use" (I like the nod to accounting terminology out of ASC 820) for these properties, most likely with significant reduction in current value. 
  • It is not clear that appraisers have fully baked in the possibility of structural vacancies, instead continuing to focus on in-place leases and some assumption that the future will be like the past and not yet reflecting the risk premium that would be required to actually sell an office to a new owner.
  • Because the OFR is focused on financial stability as one its mandates, they highlight 3 risk to financial stability due to declining office values: 
  1. Significant losses for financial institutions holding debt and equity positions tied to office
    • $3.2 trillion of total value is current in the office sector and losses of over $180 billion are plausible
    • This loss of value would happen over time but would hit direct lenders and exposed CMBS.
  2. The loss of tax revenue for municipalities
    • Commercial property taxes make up a significant portion of municipal revenues and may be difficult to replace which could deteriorate municipal balance sheets.
  3. The high cost of repurposing the buildings
    • Unlike malls, offices don't sit on large land parcels around their buildings, offices tend to be in dense areas and cannot be easily transformed into warehouse or distribution or storage centers.
    • There are likely a number of challenges to convert office to multifamily.
    • The most likely outcome is to demolish the buildings.
While the brief is certainly not prognosticating that office is doomed, it does outline the risk which are generally known by market participants.  The question is exactly what scenario the market is pricing in for office and whether or not it's reflective of the risk posed in this brief.

Daily Economic Update: August 24, 2023

Apparently 8/24 is the date that more people call out sick than any other date.  After bonds rallied solidly and stocks rose on Wednesday, Thursday starts with 2Y up ~3bps at 4.98% and 10Y up ~1bp at 4.21%.  WSJ article with quotes from former St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard where he calls recession fears overblown and mentions the possibility of the Fed going to 6%.
Stocks look to rise following Nvidia post-close earnings beat on news that we're all just generative AI running on their chips after all. We get jobless claims and durable goods orders on the data front today.

XTOD: Don't forget. Yellen has unholy powers to make you buy bonds. Even if you don't want to

XTOD: Love it.  Every fleeing H4L on silly survey data ahead of Jackson Hole

XTOD: Everyone buying a house is like “well, rates will come down, so can just refi” and that’s why rates are so high to begin with.

XTOD: The Kremlin continues to target and attack Ukraine’s ports and food exports. This time, Russian forces destroyed 13,000 tons of grain that was destined for Egypt and Romania.

XTOD: Books that endure don't look like good books; they are almost always very poorly written, but address fundamental topics. Masterfully crafted ones generate excitement; they look like "great works", get prizes, impress academics, critics, & empty suits, then fade away.....3)Samuelson on Keynes's General Theory:  "a badly written book, poorly organized; any layman who bought it was cheated of his 5 shillings ... not suited for classroom use... arrogant, bad-tempered. polemical...abounds in confusions.  (...) In short, it is a work of genius."

XTOD: A very thoughtful look at designed insecurity and how it manifests itself in the financial world and beyond. https://nytimes.com/2023/08/18/opinion/inequality-insecurity-economic-wealth.html?smid=tw-share via  @nytopinion   +  @astradisastra

XTOD: Still one of the most important market dynamics to watch: inflation-adjusted Treasury yields (magenta, inverted) are at cycle highs, yet valuations (blue) remain lofty. No knowing how/when the lines converge again, but the gap is not likely sustainable

XTOD: Brazil’s former president may be arrested because of expensive watches sold at Philadelphia suburban Willow Grove Mall   inquirer.com/politics/phila… via @phillyinquirer



Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 23, 2023

U.S. yields start the day lower, with the 2Y down 4bps back at 5% and the 10Y down 6bps at 4.26%, both back to where they were pre-SVB (remember SVB?).  Eurozone PMI contracting further with German manufacturing continuing to weaken.   Some retail earnings weren't great on Tuesday, but really where are there still Macy's anyway??..and stop stealing from Dick's [insert if Staples sells Staples then...videos here].  There are some academic and non-academic theories connecting a rise in retail theft (or "shrinkage") to inflation.  Generally those theories are that either: (a) rising prices make some goods more expensive so people steal them and (b) rising prices creates an incentive to sell stolen goods below retail prices on the black market.  As we wait for Powell at J-Hole on Friday, attention has turned to bashing Biden's trip to Maui, counting Trump arraignments, Republican primary debates, or, dare I say mask-mandates?  On the day ahead we have S&P PMI's, new home sales and 20y auction today.

If we're going to keep talking about R-Star, can we at least give my man Knut Wicksell some credit?  Wicksell believed that while you could not see the natural rate, you could see the impact of policies that kept rates above or below this rate by looking at trend growth rates. Today, our central bankers discuss their interest rate policy relative to this neutral rate or “R-Star” to determine if their policy is restrictive or not. 

“Nature’s productivity has a strong tendency to keep up the rate of interest” – Irving Fisher ....read the Febezzle article 

XTOD: Confession: in the past 3 years, I've never listened to a single podcast that someone has sent to me. I'm maxed out.  Always feels like main point can be summed up in a tweet or a paragraph rather than expecting me to block out 1-3 hours.

XTOD: Time to scrap ALL stars. ystar, ustar rstar

XTOD: Zoltan: “The west dreamt of the Brics as a lapdog, that they would accumulate dollars and recycle them into Treasuries, but instead of that they are renegotiating how things are done.”  Who opened this door?   “The signal moment for them in the past 18 months, argues the former Kofi Annan aide Mousavizadeh, was not Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 nor Nato’s rediscovery of its purpose, but the freezing of Russian central bank reserves, which dramatically underlined once again the power of the US dollar.  “For middle powers, it was the equivalent of someone going in and seizing embassy property.”

XTOD: Interesting article, but with a pretty bizarre quote from Zoltan Pozsar: “The west dreamt of the Brics as a lapdog, that they would accumulate dollars and recycle them into Treasuries, but instead of that they are renegotiating how things are done.”.....I don't think he understands at all how the international balance of payments works. If he were the only one, it wouldn't matter, but he repeats a very common confusion....There is a popular conspiracy theory (sometimes called the petrodollar conspiracy) that claims that the main purpose of US foreign policy is to trick or cajole foreigners into buying US Treasuries so as to lower the borrowing cost for the US government...This is total nonsense. Net foreign purchases of US assets is just another name for US trade deficits, and the US has been eager to reduce its trade deficits, which is just another way of saying that the US wants foreigners to stop buying US assets..BRIC countries want to do exactly what Pozsar says they don't want to do, and the west wants them to stop doing exactly what Poszar says the west wants them to do.

XTOD: Microsoft $MSFT just announced the public preview of Python in Excel - Tech Crunch

XTOD: Unexpected inflation can lead to redistribution, hurting creditors and possibly workers.  But steady, expected inflation gets built in to interest rates and wages—it does not hurt workers or creditors.  To a first approx think of real wages as unrelated to average inflation.

XTOD: Crash coming.  Haven’t used that word in forever.  Retail is getting taken out back today.  The consumer is not strong.  Airlines all failed miserably and household savings is 90% below it’s peak of 2020/2021.  Asset prices and real estate prices are going to fall with rates pushing above levels not seen since 2007.  Credit conditions are tightening and we have record debt levels.  This is the most obvious precursor to a recession I have seen since the financial crisis.  Takes time and more layoffs, but it is coming.  I haven’t been this bullish on the vol market since the beg of 2022


Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 22, 2023

U.S. yields start the day down slightly with the 2Y at 4.99% and the 10Y at 4.31%, both still near multi-decade highs as speculation remains high that Powell might indicate r-star is higher.  Tech stocks, shrugging it off.  In labor news American Airlines pilots look to get a raise and UAW strike remains possible as they are set to vote on striking.  Speaking of labor yesterday's NY Fed Survey of Consumers on Labor conditions the lowest wage workers would be willing to accept for a new job rose to an all-time high of nearly $80K.  If you're interested in a summary of the latest debate on the Phillips Curve, I found this substack post by Marcus Nunes to be a good read.  On the day ahead we get sales of existing homes, speaking of which see this post

XTOD: Not only is the 10yr Treasury yield at a 15-year high today, but at 37 months it's also the longest correction of any since the early 80s bull market began.   No one active in the bond business today, including Fed officials, knows these uncharted waters

XTOD: "If global real interest rates returned tomorrow to their historical avg of roughly 2%, given the existing level of US govt debt & large continuing projected deficits, the US would likely experience an immediate fiscal dominance problem." -Charles Calomiris, 6/2/23

XTOD: ... an economy operating under conditions of fiscal dominance would have to make, how such a period could end (i.e., either through a prolonged phase of double-digit inflation or a full-blown debt crisis), and what role fintech, crypto, and other forms of decentralized ....finance will play in such an economy given the government’s need to fund itself without losing complete control over inflation.

XTOD: Which R-star to believe? The @RichmondFed  R* or the  @NewYorkFed  R*? ..And yes, I can already hear many of you muttering under your breath "I don't believe in any R-Star!"

XTOD: When inflation is below target, their solution is a higher inflation target. When inflation is above target, their solution is a higher inflation target.

XTOD: Just shows how downright dumb is the proposal for a higher inflation target when "higher inflation target" is good for all seasons!

XTOD: Billionaire Day Traders: 1._____2. ___ 3. ____ 4. ____ 5.____The second list isn't blank on accident.

XTOD: Some are surprised that 40% of U.S. women have tattoos. A major social class divide. Very few upper and upper middle class women have them. But just about every working class woman under age 40 I know has at least one tattoo. My guess is 70-80% of non-college grad women.

Monday, August 21, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 21, 2023




J-Hole week is upon us.  The week starts off with rates up 3-4bps with the 2Y ~4.97% and the 10Y re-approaching 4.30%, but it will be capped off on Friday by Powell's 10am speech at the Jackson Hole Symposium.  The recent rise in yields has been attributed to everything from growth, inflation and selling by central bank reserve managers.  Overnight China cut it's 1 year loan Prime rate by 10bps to 3.45% as they continue to deal with their slowing economy.  In between today and Friday there is some Fedspeak and otherwise Thursday's jobless claims and durable goods reports are highlight.

Ahead of J-Hole, we have Nikileaks out with an article about r-star (the neutral rate) and how it might be higher post Covid.  Speaking of r-star, there was an interesting paper in March 2022 from Fed researchers that posited what follows (in fairness with respect to persistent low rates, but it wouldn’t be inconceivable that this same feedback loop can work with higher rates): “an incomplete information setting where the central bank and the private sector learn about r-star and infer each other's information from observed macroeconomic outcomes. An informational feedback loop emerges when each side underestimates the effect of its own action on the other's inference, possibly leading to large and persistent changes in perceived r-star disconnected from fundamentals. Monetary policy, through its influence on the private sector's beliefs, endogenously determines r-star as a result. We simulate a calibrated model and show that this `hall-of-mirrors' effect..

TTOD: How many people know about Winnie the Pooh and Xi Jinping? Is it just me who knew nothing about this?

TTOD: "Not only do high interest rate policies directly lead to significant increases in interest payments as a percent of GDP, but they also indirectly raise interest payments if they slow the economy..."

TTOD: Expectations about returns in choosing how much to save and in what was the driving force in the mechanisms I described in this thread

TTOD: 2. Without nominal rigidities, the price level would indeed behave like an asset price, reacting to future changes in monetary and fiscal policies.  John Cochrane would be (largely 😊) right. Shifts in aggregate demand would be absorbed automatically by changes in interest rates.

TTOD: Fiscal theory of the price level easily adds sticky prices! That’s what most of the book is about, and the whole literature, starting with Leeper 1991 who didn’t even present the flex price case. A fiscal price level jump becomes a drawn out but finite  inflation with sticky prices — exactly as happened.

TTOD: “Conceptually, if the economy is running above potential at 5.25% interest rates, then that suggests to me that the neutral rate might be higher than we’ve thought."

TTOD: In sum, the pandemic may have flipped us from a savings glut to a savings shortage almost overnight.  If so, markets have more adjustments to make (fixed income and equity).

TTOD: But it's not the lower interest rates that caused the increase in investment. The desire to invest was already there, based on the expected productive consequences of that investment, and the lower interest rates simply accommodated this desire...The problem in China's speculative property market in the past two years hasn't been expensive mortgages, but rather the perception that prices will no longer inexorably rise, and so there is no longer any reason to buy property. In that case the only way lower mortgage...

TTOD:  The heart of Hudson Yards' microgrid is a cogeneration system that consists of four Jenbacher J620 gas engines.  Each engine generates approximately 3.3 MW of electrical power.  These things are beasts.

TTOD: Doctors transplanted a genetically modified pig’s kidney into a brain-dead person more than a month ago. It’s still working.

TTOD: I've never felt more bearish  Inflation ?  You need risk seeking financial credit creators 
I don't see any...  And we got an $18 trillion behemoth with huge excess capacity to make stuff that will eviscerate companies granting 6% plus wage growth in the West. Go on, I dare you, raise wages in this environment and face commercial extinction

Saturday, August 19, 2023

Residential Housing: Is this graph a fair representation of the "cost to buy"?


I have seen some form of this graph going around social media for a few months. This graph shows the cost to buy a home (the mortgage payment) exceeding the cost of renting by ~$1,000.00 / mo. Usually the conclusion reached by the author of the post is that home prices will have to fall, which may or may not prove accurate.  There is a lot to debate in a simple graph like this, including whether the comparison of the properties that underly the data are of similar characteristics (geography, square footage, finishings, age, etc.).  There can also be a debate around whether or not home prices are too high and whether rents will rise or fall.

Those topics might be interesting, but they are not the topic that interest me today.  

What interest me today is solely related to the "cost to buy", the mortgage payment, and whether or not how you frame that monthly payment might influence a person's conclusion around the value of that payment.

A unique feature of the U.S. mortgage market is that loans are generally freely prepayable by the mortgagor/borrower.  In financial terms, the borrower is long an option to prepay. Without getting into all the details, most homeowners will refinance their current mortgages if interest rates fall and they are able to reduce their monthly payments.  The holder of the mortgage loan asset obviously is aware of the fact that their cash flow stream could be curtailed which poses two problems for them: one, they don't know how long they will receive payments and two, if they get prepaid they will now likely have to reinvest in a lower yield environment.  The mortgage originator/lender needs to be compensated for this risk.

In an interest rate environment with higher yields and higher volatility, the value of the prepayment option being sold by the lender to the borrower will rise.  The mortgage borrower will need to pay more in their monthly payment to compensate the lender, but will equally be acquiring a more valuable option, a point that seemingly is never discussed.

The point being, when you decompose mortgage rates, there is a benchmark, or risk free component, typically considered to be the 10-year treasury yield and there is the cost of the call option that allows the borrower to prepay the mortgage without penalty.

My question is, if you represented the above "cost to buy" as a mortgage payment split into two components, the first being the monthly mortgage payment excluding the value of the option (the sum of the benchmark rate and what is known as the Option-adjusted spread) and second being the amount of the monthly payment that is for the option, if that would change any conclusions reached when people read these graphs?  I'm open to hearing thoughts.

I am also sure that someone with a Bloomberg Terminal can find and use the Z-Spread and OAS Spreads to calculate the value of the option embedded in the mortgage rate.

Friday, August 18, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 18, 2023

It's another no U.S. data summer Friday.  Yields are down to start the day with the 2Y down 2bps to 4.91% and 10Y down 5bps to 4.23%  UK retail sales came in weaker than expected at -1.2%, EU inflation came in at 5.3% (lowest since Jan 2022), while Japan inflation came in above expectations at 3.3% on headline.  Of course China remains a concern this week and it feels a little risk-off into the weekend.

All investors seem to be aware of the risk in China, but in case you need a reminder, Biden called its economy a "ticking time-bomb" and Ray Dalio said China needs to "follow this beautiful deleveraging process now because the debt-burdended balance sheets and burdensome debt service payments are freezing the economy."   Given we've all known about some debt issues in China, why is all of this still news?  Evergrande has been in the news for like a year?  Is any of this "new" information or are we just past the idea that prices "fully reflect" all available information (any form of efficient market hypothesis)?

Speaking of concepts that feel somewhat forgotten, it feels like the concept of Equity Risk Premium is something forgotten that will soon become a topic of discussion, in much the same way that "Term Premium" has returned to a point of discussion for bond investors. "Term Premium" in Treasury bonds is defined as the compensation that investors require to compensate them for the risk that interest rates may change over the life of the bond.  It would seem that more uncertainty for the path of Fed policy would result in higher term premiums (though it doesn't appear there has been much impact yet on term premiums) For stock investors, as yields rise it's clear you discount future cash flows by an increasing amount, however, the question becomes: are yields rising because the economy is stronger and therefore you expect equities to deliver more cash flow in the future or are other monetary and fiscal factors solely responsible for rising risk-free rates?  Setting that aside, the Equity Risk Premium is the extra amount you need to discount cash flows from a stock to compensate you as an investor in the stock fairly for the risk of that stock. Given the inherent uncertainty in the macroeconomy at present it would seem risk premiums might rise.  In short, stocks seem to fall when it turns out the discount rate used to support their price is too low and it’s difficult to estimate the correct premium ex-ante.

TTOD: "Multiple compression is a bitch." - Benjamin C. Spero 

TTOD: Bitcoin "flash crash?" Fell $2,000 in minutes. No idea why. Working to find out.

TTOD: “Pessimism about China is becoming entrenched. In Bank of America’s latest Asia fund manager survey from early Aug, 84% of respondents said they believed Chinese equities were in the middle of a structural derating—in other words, a lasting contraction in the proportion of overall investment allocated to the country’s stocks.

TTOD: "Neutral rates?" New definition time: The rate at which the economy is neither expanding or contracting, and the rate at which non-banks and banks can compete on level playing field for lending market share. 

 TTOD: The FOMC may soon be setting monetary policy for Argentina. This sounds drastic but if the alternative is ongoing hyperinflation then it would be an improvement. The key issue, IMHO, is whether the Argentina government can credibly commit to dollarization. TTOD: This is deep in the economic weeds, but I just saw the SF Fed blog arguing that household excess saving will be depleted soon. I doubt it. We estimate excess saving will end the quarter at close to $1 trillion. The more excess saving the more resilient the consumer and economy.

TTOD: Everything in this @NewYorkFed  remote work survey is interesting, but this especially: Business leaders mostly don't expect to pull back from offices further. 

TTOD: It’s going to be pretty freaking hilarious when there’s an NYC office space shortage in like 12 years

TTOD: A brand new mini-continent is found. It is rapidly populated, and you are made supreme leader. How do you get a monetary system started?

TTOD: Succession director Mark Mylod still worries about Kendall Roy 

TTOD: Fewer relationships, nurtured genuinely, yield richer emotional dividends.




Thursday, August 17, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 17, 2023

U.S. yields continue their march higher with the 10Y crossing 4.30%, a YTD high, and the 30Y hitting a decade high of 4.42%.   I'm sure you're familiar with "Post-Keynesian economics" right?  My lay understanding (courtesy of Alex Williams blog) is that expectations play a major role in this school of thought.  Expected demand, drives investment, which drives employment, which leads to wage increases, which allows workers to buy the products being produced which creates a virtuous cycle, one in which demand creates supply by driving investment without curtailing current consumption. "A boom begets a boom".  Obviously there are sectors in the economy not doing well with higher rates, but at least for now it looks like consumption is hanging in there, just look at Walmart earnings today.  
As we get closer to J-Hole be prepared to hear more and more about R-Star estimates.  There was a Reuters article here and a St. Louis Fed post trying to grasp what is a restrictive Fed Funds rate.

On the day ahead, jobless claims, Philly Fed.

TTOD: Another day, another upward revision over at the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow..this is good for the US economy in much the same way that fentanyl is good for one’s well-being. I’ve never taken that particular drug, but I imagine that it makes one feel good—for a while...So what’s wrong with 5.8% RGDP growth? Nothing, as long as NGDP growth is below 5%. But let’s be real; if RGDP comes in at 5.8%, then NGDP growth (which is what matters) will be 8% or 9%. And that would increase the risk of recession in 2024......On the other hand, Bloomberg says there’s a 100% chance of recession by October, so perhaps the Atlanta Fed is wrong......So this growth (if it happens) would be the lagged effect of exactly what?

TTOD: The Fed went on one of the most aggressive rate-hiking cycles in history  It's been 18 months yet the unemployment rate hasn't budged, GDP growth is accelerating & housing prices didn't crash  Can we just admit that no one really understands how the US economy works?

TTOD: I would guess that these higher long-term rates are with us to stay — and if I had to bet, I think I bet that they’re more likely to go higher, than to go lower.

TTOD: Either a major productivity boom is unfolding right before our eyes or the economy is running too hot. Here's hoping for the former!

TTOD: Would there be demand for a hedge fund with 8-year lockups that doesn't send out monthly statements?

TTOD: Saudi Arabia’s stockpile of US Treasuries has fallen 41% since early 2020, to the lowest level in more than six years. China sold $11.3 billion of the debt in June to bring its holdings of US Treasuries to the lowest level since mid-2009.

TTOD: Do not throw away perfectly good food: 1. Put leftovers in Tupperware 2. Place Tupperware in fridge 3. Let it go bad 4. Then throw it away

TTOD: The world record for the longest pee of 508 seconds, lasting nearly 8.5 minutes, was achieved by a man named Andrew Stanton in 2018. This remarkable feat took place in the United Kingdom. While this may seem like an unusual record, it's important to note that records like this can sometimes be a result of unique circumstances or physiological variations.



Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 16, 2023

After a couple of days of full flights, full resorts, establishments that seem to still face some staffing issues and seeing plenty of cranes in the sky, it's hard to to see the coming recession in real life. Maybe the bond market sees the same as yields remain up on the week.  On the day the 2Y is down 3bps to 4.92% and the 10Y is down 3bps to 4.19%.  Across the pond, UK inflation fell to 6.8% with core at 6.9% and wages rising.  All the talk this week has been about China and their  real estate and shadow bank concerns.  Speaking of Asia, remember when we were all worried that the U.S. was becoming Japan, mired in secular stagnation despite (or because of) high public debt?  Instead what if the U.S. is turning into the Japan on Tuesday that posted a 6.0% annualized GDP for Q2? Well the Atlanta Fed's GDP now is at 5.0% for 3Q2023 in the U.S., maybe the U.S. is turning into Japan after all, just in the exact opposite way that everyone expected. On the day ahead it's Housing Starts and Building permits a 830am ET and FOMC Minutes at 2pm ET.

TTOD: Rich Men North of Richmond by Oliver Anthony tapped into the zeitgeist of the silent majority

TTOD: I don't think The Song was astroturfed, but I do now wonder if it was lip-synced. I'm not a sound designer but...

TTOD: I'm told songwriters from @AEI @Cato and  @AFPhq  gathered at George Mason this weekened to rebut the declensionism and grievance-onomics of  @AintGottaDollar 's Rich Men from Richmond. The result is a powerful new ballad for the Old Right:   "Every Feller's a Rockafeller"
Your revealed preference, is to work all day
Your marginal product, determines your pay
And thanks to government aid, like the ol’ ACA
Your standard-uh-livin’ just keeps risin’ away....

TTOD: GDP now forecasting tracking 5.0% GDP growth in Q3.If you exclude 2020 their forecasts at this stage have a standard deviation of ~1.5pp. But their forecasts at this stage are also biased upwards by ~1pp.So all in roughly a 70% chance growth is between 2.5% and 5.5% in Q3.

TTOD: ERC pumping $30 billion a monthly certainly helps...the well-heeled.

TTOD: Future historians will marvel at the amount of time economists in the 2020s devoted to calculating various measures of inflation. They will also wonder why such a bad analogy as landing a plane was used to explain the effects of monetary policy to the public.

TTOD: Reading this from @R2Rsquared ; I'm happy to grant that we should ditch the notion of the Phillips Curve as a causal-story tool for setting unemployment to reach target inflation, but then what is the path from interest rate policy to lower near-term measured inflation?

TTOD: When the CB raises nominal interest rates, agents want to save more in nominal vehicles as opposed to real ones. The relative value of nominal vs real must rise. Inflation must fall. This happens as: (i) banks want to deposit more at the CB rather than lend to projects, (ii) investors and firms prefer to park resources in nominal accounts rather than invest them in real projects, (iii) households prefer nominal savings instead of buying durables or others. All of these--less lending, less investment, less spending--often will raise unemployment, but that is a side effect, not the causal channel.   Usually u will rise when i rises (and I expect it will soon), but this is not necessary for pi to fall.

TTOD: 2. He thinks of the price level very much as an asset price I think of the price level as the result of millions of uncoordinated nominal price decisions by individual price setters, who do not care about the price level, but care about their relative price.  3. In my way of thinking, the only way to get inflation down (leaving out happy commodity price shocks, etc) is to induce price/wage setters to want to decrease their relative price/wage, leading to a general adjustment of nominal prices, and a slowing of inflation.  3. In my way of thinking, the only way to get inflation down (leaving out happy commodity price shocks, etc) is to induce price/wage setters to want to decrease their relative price/wage, leading to a general adjustment of nominal prices, and a slowing of inflation.

TTOD: Must read blog (and series of blogs!) by @JohnHCochrane  on what we really know on the impact of interest rates on inflation. Summary: very little. A tiny thread on identification explaining the last blog with an analogy, specially for non-economists. 

TTOD: aight imma need you to see my man flacco on the 5th floor. if you can't get to the 5th floor, say you're muslim and you want to attend "jumah".  if that dont work, go to medical like 5 times and ask about flacco. tall flacco from the bronx. there are 50 flaccos.  next, when you approach flacco you must make a bird noise. do not make direct eye contact and make sure it is a cooing type of bird, not a chirping type of bird, but it shouldnt be 100% coo.  if he doesnt acknowledge you, quickly remove yourself. if he nods his head up slowly, you may say "hunnit" send you. i, martin shkreli, am "hunnit". that is a long story you need not concern yourself with at this stage.  flacco will give you the rest of what you need to know.



Friday, August 11, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 11, 2023

We start the day with yields down about 1bp, 2Y down to 4.827% and 10Y at 4.10% (it was under 4). Overnight news of continued weakness in China with concerns around bad real estate debt and slowing bank lending. In the UK, GDP posted a surprise growth number in 2Q, expanding 0.2% where forecast were flat with growth in manufacturing and construction. On the day ahead in the U.S. it's PPI and survey about how consumers feel about gas prices (UofM)..

TTOD: via James Galbraith (Aug 9, 2023) "Back in 2021 and early 2022, a posse of prominent economists...all of Harvard...[argued] that inflation, fueled by federal spending, would prove “persistent"...But...inflation peaked on its own in mid-2022 (owing partly to sales from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve). There was no persistence, no surge from the 2021 fiscal stimulus, and no wage-driven inflation from low unemployment.....There also has been no recession, unemployment has not risen, and higher interest rates have not deterred business investment.. Residential construction took a hit, but the construction sector overall soon shook that off, and the banking crisis earlier this year has not led to financial contagion. A recession remains possible, of course, but so far there are very few warning signs...These happy circumstances have led some observers to congratulate Powell...But ...There is no way, under any theory or precedent, that rate hikes beginning in January 2022 could have knocked back inflation by July of the same year...Whatever its consequences down the road, the Fed’s policy tightening has been irrelevant to the inflation slowdown so far ...why haven’t 18 months of rising interest rates had any perceptible effect on employment, investment, or growth?"

TTOD: We’ve all thought about it. Some of us have studied it. But I have studied it more than anyone. The geography. The strategy. I know how to do it. HOW TO INVADE, OCCUPY, AND PARTITION CANADA

TTOD: 1. Zillow signed rents declining 2. Vacancy rates rising 3. Apt supply booming “.. suggest that further declines in rental inflation are barreling down the pipe.”

TTOD: Yep. The rest of the 2020s in China will be a big game to figure out who takes the losses from the real estate bubble.

TTOD: Today I learned Eddie Vedder wrote Better Man as a teenager and played it with his previous band, Bad Radio. The song was so personal, he didn’t want to perform it with Pearl Jam, but eventually he was convinced.

Thursday, August 10, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 10, 2023

CPI day in 'merica. U.S. yields relatively flat at the open, 2Y at 4.80% and 10Y at 4.00%. While today's CPI will look backwards, markets are paying attention to the re-acceleration in commodity prices with crude up around ~$84/bbl (it was under $70 to start July). There's a headline about olive oil prices rising due to droughts in Spain and the Bloomberg Pizza Index (not a joke) being up 13.5% YTD. Elsewhere, to our South, an Ecuadorian presidential candidate was assassinated by a drug cartel. We've got the Maui wildfires (crazy images). We have China dealing with property defaults and Biden signing an order to restrict US investment in Chinese tech (haven't we seen that before?).   
On the day ahead it's CPI, Jobless Claims, 30Y Auction and Fedspeak

TTOD: a lot easier to get at using housing policy than interest rate policy. Housing inflation rose because rents rose, so the Fed hiked, so we slowed the rate of...building more units to rent...to slow inflation. "The price of this rose so we're going to make it more expensive to produce by raising funding costs" is not an unfair way to describe the strategy here. The hope on the Fed's part is that enough people feel broke enough to slow the rental market, not to let the supply side work

 

TTOD: You ever notice the people betting on higher interest rates are super angry?

 

TTOD: If you want to talk, don’t be a coward and lie about someone speaking in the audience—show up at the debate and say it to my face. I’ll be there…waiting for you.

 

TTOD: Michael Lorenzen throws the 14th no-hitter in Phillies history. His family's reaction is everything.

 

TTOD: Today the U.S. can produce around 30,000 artillery shells a month. In 1995 the army could produce 867,000 shells a month

 

TTOD: Salary envy among tech workers when they heard about UPS drivers getting $170,000 per year. Some tech workers on social media pointed out the salary boost could make the drivers' salaries more competitive with white collar employees — and big tech workers responded with a mix of ire and appreciation for the union.

"This is disappointing, how is possible that a driver makes much more than average Engineer in R&D?" a worker at the autonomous trucking company TuSimple wrote on Blind, an anonymous jop-posting site that verifies users' employment using their company email. "To get a base salary of $170k you know you need to work hard as an Engineer, this sucks."

 

TTOD: I will not relent. We are on the verge of a global margin call. A credit event is coming. No one is prepared.

 

TTOD: Eugenics will be the single greatest moral danger and threat to humanity in the 21st century. People are talking about it without even knowing that they're talking about it—and that, to me, is the most worrying sign.


Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 9, 2023

Yields in the U.S. up 2bps, 2Y at 4.776% and 10Y at 4.04%. The overnight Chinese deflation in CPI (down 0.3% yoy in July) and PPI (-4.4%) didn't seem to have a major market impact. That said, the price of rice in Asia reportedly hit the highest level since 2008. In other news WeWork reported there is "substantial doubt" they'll be able to stay in business. This must have been completely surprising to absolutely no one (though their shares are down 17%) as I was under the impression they were already out of business. Rising commodity prices and labor strikes has raised some doubts in the minds of some pundits around the ability for inflation in the U.S. to continue to decelerate. NY Fed LSE out with a note on r-star, largely says long-run r-star is still low. On the day ahead there is NO economic data, just the much anticipated 10Y Treasury Auction. 

TTOD: People say they are here but they really aren't, only 20bp above the most cuts priced into 2024. Still clean pristine beaches and no trouble getting dinner reservations at the hottest restaurants. Talk to me about crowded when cuts for 2024 are less than 100. 

TTOD: Client note: "Good news is that a recession is unlikely. Bad news is that some large events of default are more likely. Will hit REITs, bonds and banks equally. CRE equity has gone up for 50 years on the assumption of refinance at a higher equity value" @petergrantwsj 

TTOD: The Fed's favorite measure of "inflation compensation" (their term) is the 5-year/5-year inflation break-even rate. It shows the market's pricing of the average inflation rate in five years for the next five years (this supposedly removes short-term distortions like gyrations in crude oil and gasoline prices). It is again getting close to a new nine-year high. 

TTOD: If you thought August was supposed to be the quiet part of summer when everyone was on vacation ....Below is a tick chart of the 10-year yield August 1 to August 4 (three days), up 26 basis points. (green) August 4 to August 7 (two trading days), down 22 basis points. (red) (If you are not a bond person ... these are big moves) 

TTOD: I personally have been skeptical of AIRBNB causing a housing crash. What it could do though is crush the comps in a neighborhood. As I’ve said before: Banks wanna move their foreclosures. If they have to drop the price 20% to sell so be it. Here’s how it could happen: 

TTOD: On Thursday the headline inflation measure will increase from 3.0% to something like 3.2%. The takeaways will be: (1) you should pay less attention to 12-month measures & (2) you should pay less attention to headline (which includes volatile food and energy). 

TTOD: The entire economy is one giant Ponzi scheme. That meme about the guy digging the hole and 10 Americans in suits standing there is more true than ever. 

TTOD: "The level of the problem is extreme." The spotted lantern fly has dominated public attention in the U.S. — but a different pest is killing trees and confounding scientists, and it has received precious little attention. 

TTOD: Israeli officials expect 6,000 missiles/rockets to be fired from Lebanon in the first fews days of war, if another conflict erupts with Hezbollah. They also warn of widespread blackouts and hundreds of civilian fatalities. Tension remains high on Israel's northern border amid increased provocations from the Iranian-backed Lebanese militant group.

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 8, 2023

Risk off Tuesday. Yields down 2-10bps across the curve, 2Y down 3bps to 4.73% and 10Y down 10bps, breaking below 4 to 3.99%.  Equity future indexes off 1%.  The catalyst appears to be China and Italy, with China trade declining, exports down 14.5% and imports declining. Then in Italy, the govt passed a 40% "windfall" tax on bank profits. Add to that Moody's downgrade of 10 small and midsize banks (including M&T) with eyes on downgrading some major lenders citing rising funding cost and weakness in CRE loans. 


On the day, we get our first dose of Treasury supply with the 3Y note auction:

Tue: Trade balance, inventories, 3Y note.


TTOD:  Remember when this place was an amazing resource?

 

TTOD: John Cochrane: "As inflation eases, representatives of different schools of thought are taking victory laps. But who really deserves one? What have we learned about inflation?

I think episode is a smashing confirmation of the fiscal theory of the price level." T or F?

 

TTOD: Manufacturing nations are running up against a generational problem: Younger workers, better-educated than their parents and veterans of Instagram, TikTok and other social media, are deciding their work lives shouldn’t unfold inside factory walls.

 

TTOD: The 2008 housing crash wasn't caused by subprime mortgages, that was just the scapegoat they used to hide the real issue so it could be perpetrated again. The 2008 housing crash was caused by prime borrower speculation/investment (Duke University study). We already knew we had another larger speculative mania (cause of GFC), what I didn't know is that it likely MUCH worse than I could have imagined.

The good news is we're all about to find out unless someone eats another bat and they print 45% of the currency again.

 

TTOD: Most of Africa is a no fly zone right now. Is that where global superpowers have decided to fight WW3 as a proxy war?


Monday, August 7, 2023

Daily Economic Update: August 7, 2023

8/7/2023: Yields up 6-7bps to start the day, 2Y at 4.83 and 10Y at 4.10%. No major reason for the climb in yield, but over the weekend Gov Bowman was "hawkish" saying more rate hikes needed and likely the continued focus on fiscal issues. If you followed the comments in Friday's post the term "fiscal dominance" seems to be going mainstream. Over the weekend MS analyst Mike Wilson used the term (yes, the same bearish Mike Wilson who recently made a mea culpa and flipped bullish after being wrong on equities all year) saying "fiscal dominance - i.e. monetary policy is subject to the whims of fiscal policy" and stating that "the fiscal impulse has returned with a vengance..and allowed the economy to grow faster than forecast." On the week ahead the focus will be on CPI Thursday and PPI Friday with Treasury auctions in between.

Monday: Bostic and Bowman 
Tue: Trade balance, inventories, 3Y note 
Wed: no data, 10Y Note 
Thur: CPI, jobless claims, 30Y bond 
Fri: PPI, UofM

TTOD: MAGA fans suddenly realize that they've shot themselves in the feet with their "Let's Go Brandon" chants as it's revealed that President Biden's "Dark Brandon" campaign merchandise is flying off the shelves — and fueling his reelection. 

TTOD: What’s most impressive about the current state of the labor market — low unemployment, rising real wages, falling inequality — is that Dark Brandon personally created each and every one of the millions of new jobs since he took office. Each job lovingly hand-crafted. 

TTOD: Nominal wage growth appears to be speeding up. Annualized growth for average hourly earnings for private / production & non-supervisory: 1 month: 5.1% / 5.5% 3 months: 4.9% / 5.0% 6 months: 4.4% / 4.8% 12 months: 4.4% / 4.8% 

TTOD: Bills folks. Bills 

TTOD: I think it's funny that a majority of Americans basically never think the stock market is going to go up over the next year even though obviously it does and has gone up most years  

TTOD: Cadillac just priced its new Celestiq electric sedan at a cool $340,000. We’re living in a simulation. 

TTOD: Elon Musk reportedly microdoses ketamine to treat depression and takes full doses of the drug at parties, per the WSJ. 

TTOD: If you were unfairly treated by your employer due to posting or liking something on this platform, we will fund your legal bill. No limit. Please let us know. 

TTOD: Xi airs a new 8-part documentary in China showcasing the PLA military and aggrandizing the unification of Taiwan. This is the psychological realm where Xi carefully drums up public support for the invasion of Taiwan …Xi marches closer to WAR. 

TTOD: How many times has someone been dropped in a baseball fight? I can only remember Mickey Rivers/Bill Lee in 1976. Odor/Bautista came close. Now Ramirez / Tim Anderson. 


Sunday, August 6, 2023

An Economist Walks Into a Brothel by Allison Schrager

 


Allison's book is all about understanding risk and how to manage unwanted risk.  This book uses a series of interesting stories to help the reader understand several "rules" related to risk.  What follows is a series of quotes I found interesting while reading this book and my associated commentary.

The importance of having a goal 

Taking a risk without a goal is just like getting in a car and driving around aimlessly expecting to wind up in a great place

knowing what you want might be the hardest part of risk management 

Over the course of my career one of the more interesting things I've observed both in my personal and professional life is just how difficult it can be at times to clearly specify goals.  We have all been part of performance review processes where we are asked to specify our goals for the upcoming performance period and became somewhat paralyzed as we assessed what we wanted out of the future.  At a corporate level sometimes defining a strategic vision, clearly identifying objectives, including return objectives, becomes difficult in practice. 

This is not to say that there aren't times when we can clearly articulate what we want, but simply to say that there are certainly times where defining what we want is challenging.  

Further, how we frame what we want, our goals, can lead us astray.  Using Schrager's example, how often have we framed what we want as simply "change", without defining further what we specifically want to the changed outcome to look like, what exactly will change.  For example, we all generally know that a goal of "taking a vacation" is going to be much better defined by being specific as to what you want out of the vacation.  Do you want to sit on the beach or go skiing?  Both satisfy the goal of "taking a vacation", but they clearly are very different outcomes.

taking a risk on the unknown for its own sake is a bad risk strategy

The risk of misspecification of goals is a risk that we don't think about managing, likely because we sometimes want to skip the step in the risk management process where we set our goals and objectives.

Why we want what we want is a topic for another discussion and something I'll cover when I review Wanting: The Power of Mimetic Desire by Luke Burgis in a forthcoming post.

Is risk-free enough to meet your objectives?

Identify your goal and then price it in risk-free terms.
Taking more risk than necessary is inefficient

The price of that risk-free asset is the most critical piece of information in any investment problem, or any decision you might face.

As we sit here in 2023, interest rates have risen at the fastest pace in the last 40 years. Risk-free rates, the yields on U.S. Treasury securities, are as high as in the 5% range.  If you have a monetary goal or return objective of 5% over the next year, you can very likely achieve that return without much risk (at least in nominal terms).

Risk-free depends on your goal.
In your personal life it can be much harder to define the "risk-free" option, and Schrager makes clear this fact by stating: 
it can be hard to see the risk-free choice because there is no single universal risk-free asset; it depends on your goal.

Schrager provides an example that likely resonates with anyone who has shopped for house these last few years. "If your goal is getting that specific house, the risk-free option is putting in a large bid...as much as you are prepared to pay - to ensure you get it." If your goal is different and you want a house you think is a good bargain, then "you should pay less than what you think the house is worth and be comfortable with the risk of losing a bidding war."

All said, it's universal that we shouldn't want to chose a higher risk path when a lower risk path can achieve our objectives.

Probably not, you likely will need to take some risk in life

Crucially, risk can lead to good outcomes, "rewards", as well as the bad outcomes we most often associate with risk. We all learn the old saying "no risk, no reward".  To reach our goals we often have to take some level of risk.  In your personal life if you're training for a physical goal, like running a marathon or earning a black-belt in a martial art, you inevitably face some risk of injury.  When managing a business you face some economic risk from every strategic decision, from personnel management, to product development.

smart risk taking involves going for more, and taking just enough risk that we need to, or are comfortable with to achieve our goal

What makes this so difficult is assessing the probabilities associated with each of the good and bad outcomes. I have often counseled the obvious, that you should avoid risk that lead you to blow up, the one's you can't recover from easily or ever.

So how do you Quantify and Communicate Risk

A good risk estimate requires data that can do two things: (1) reveal lessons from the past that will be relevant to the future, and (2) predict that certain past outcomes are more likely than others.

The hard part is knowing what constitutes a reasonable range

they often assume a normal distribution and use volatility as a standard measure of risk....normality is a controversial assumption.....if your distribution is skewed, volatility will underestimate risk.

that's the thing about predicting the future from based on the past.  It works until it doesn't...Often we don't realize the world is changing until long after it has changed.

When we think about the risk we want to take or avoid, we often look to the past. This makes intuitive sense.  As a child we learn to avoid touching a hot stove or that bees can sting as risk to be avoided.  We also learn through parables, traditions, and formal schooling the stories both of risk to avoid as well as risk that was rewarded. We learn from the past.

The most common ways we get probability wrong are: 1. We overestimate certainty 2. We overestimate the risk of unlikely events.  3. We assume correlations that don't exist. 4. We put a big weight on very likely or unlikely events and put almost no weight on anything that happens in between.

Because we live in an age of data, it is easy for us to want to quantify all known past risk and stop there.  Often it's better to take some time to consider risk qualitatively as well, brainstorming "what ifs" to see if the past data encompasses things you might want to consider before deciding whether to take or manage a risk. We often find ourselves in scenarios that are sometimes described as "regime changes", where past data provides little usual information in uncovering future probabilities. Thinking creatively can help you challenge the data before making a decision.

Manage risk you don't want to take or aren't being rewarded for taking

hedge: giving up some of your potential earnings in exchange for reducing risk

When we hedge, we give up some of our potential gains in exchange for reducing the chance of loss.
With hedging you must take less risk; you give up the extra upside of your potential reward in exchange for lessening the risk that something goes horribly wrong.

As someone who helped clients manage unwanted interest rate and currency risk, the act of hedging is near and dear to my heart, but a complex subject.  For some business managers, the decision to hedge can be simple because your investors aren't rewarding you for taking on a certain risk.  For example, if you manage certain assets, your investors may not reward you for generating returns due to fluctuations in foreign currency in your investments, but they may certainly punish you if you take that risk and lose money because of that decision. In this case managing foreign currency risk may be an easy decision.

In other situations you may not have a choice around what risk you manage.  We all are familiar with being required to insure our homes and automobiles. In certain financial transactions you may be required to manage interest rate or foreign currency risk as a condition to the transaction.

de-risking increases the odds of your getting what you want, but you must give up the possibility of getting more....Hedging does not differentiate between systematic and idiosyncratic risk, but it can reduce both types.

The thing about "hedging" is that it's a good news is bad news story.  For example if you own a foreign-denominated asset, if the foreign currency appreciates against your currency that's good news for your asset.  However, foreign currencies can be volatile and given the chance the foreign currency might depreciate against your currency, you may choose it's a risk that you need to manage to ensure you meet your return objectives.  In that case you may decide to hedge, or lock-in a future price at which you can sell/exchange your foreign currency from your asset for your local currency.  However by doing so you now can no longer benefit from foreign currency appreciation. So when the foreign currency appreciates, the "good news" on the underlying asset is now offset by "bad news" or losses on your hedge position.

Sometimes we want the possibility of more

With insurance you get rid of downside risk, but the upside, or upper tail, is still all yours (minus the cost of insurance).

Purchasing insurance or using options as a risk management tool is a way to remove downside risk while still retaining the ability to benefit from scenarios that are favorable to you.  For example when you insure your house you pay a premium such that the risk of loss due to fire is removed, but if your house doesn't burn down and continues to appreciate in value you get to keep the upside.  When a company manages interest rate risk or foreign currency risk using option products they can set a level of protection that corresponds with their risk management objectives and retain the upside of favorable moves in interest rates or currencies. 

Even if we don't buy insurance, the price helps us gauge risk and understand which situations are riskier than others.

Of course insurance isn't free and sometimes insurance can be very expensive.  As to why it can be expensive, it's useful to understand the underpinnings of how options are priced.  Schrager helps provide a basic understanding of option pricing models:

Vega: the larger your volatility is, the more risk you have to give up to protect yourself from bad outcomes.

Delta: sometimes one scenario is more likely to need insurance than the other. And the more likely you are to need insurance, the more expensive it is.

Theta: how long the risk will last. "fallacy of time diversification"..a longer time in the market means more risk

Rho:  how much you earn without taking any risk at all..Risk-free also represents how much it costs to finance a risky bet

It can be unfortunate, but not terribly uncommon, that people or businesses find themselves in a situation where they are effectively chasing the management of risk. Often this occurs because they didn't have any established risk management process at the onset of their decision making and the unwanted risk taken only becomes obvious later, which of course is generally at a time when that risk is expensive to manage.

But can we ever get more for less risk?

In finance risk is the input and reward is the output...Markowitz argued that diversification was how investors could create efficient portfolios.

Financial economist separate risk into two broad categories: the first is idiosyncratic risk, or the risk unique to a particular asset...The second kind of risk is systematic risk, or risk that affects the larger system instead of an individual asset...Systematic risks are harder to manage than idiosyncratic risks, and the downsides are potentially more dangerous. 

Study after study shows that actively managed mutual funds, the ones that contain professionally picked stocks, don't offer higher returns than index funds after adjusting for risk and fees.

In finance diversification is often referred to the closest thing to a free lunch, it's the concept that you if you make a bunch of uncorrelated bets some winners will offset some losers and you'll be left with only the systematic risk that is common to all of the bets.  It reduces the chance you just made a bad bet and or got unlucky at the expense of reaping all of the rewards of making an extremely correct single bet. Whether all correlations go to "1" in some extreme events is a topic for another day.

Schrager offers up one of the best diversification strategies in life:

Having more friends increases the odds someone will be available when you need them.

Common Mistakes

As mentioned above, sometimes the hardest part of risk management is identifying your goals and objectives.  The failure to know what you're after often leads us astray and allows us to become more susceptible to behavioral biases.

Risk offers the possibility of more, and risk management tools aim to empower us to go for more while taking less risk. Using them correctly involves staying focused on our goals and taking just enough risk to achieve them.

Prospect Theory says when we weigh different options, the value we place on them depends on how much money we have when we start and if there is the possibility of loss....Prospect Theory argues that humans are risk seeking, or willing to take a chance on even bigger losses to forgo certainty when offered a menu of loss scenarios.

The other way we often see excessive risk taking lead to challenges is when leverage is used. In finance, leverage is the use of borrowed money to make a risky investment. Often leverage is needed to magnify returns to equity to reach objectives. Inherently there is no problem with leverage per se, but applying leverage to a volatile asset or a volatile set of cash flows can cause ruin.

 leverage...it is a negative hedge...how people magnify risk     

Over the course of my career, I sometimes encountered a situation where the probability someone was assigning to negative scenarios (risk) was quite high and they were looking to manage that downside risk.  In those scenarios, if you truly believed the probability of a recession was much higher than anyone else in the market and were convinced the probability was 100%, it would seem the best way to manage that risk would be to sell all of your risky assets.

The simplest way to hedge is to simply take less risk.

Sometimes taking less risk is the correct strategy but again our behavioral biases can lead us to flawed decision making, especially when we are evaluating risk while sitting on losses.      

We have an aversion to loss and sometimes that can lead us to take bigger risks than we should or even realize

Riskless is unobtainable

Edwin Goldwasser posited that “A riskless society is 'unattainable and infinitely expensive" and that is true.  As discussed above, to meet goals risk some level of risk must be taken.
We can reduce uncertainty but never eliminate it.

Uncertainty makes us uncomfortable, and it is costly to deal with. 

we can never anticipate everything that will go wrong or right, and if we think we can, we set ourselves up for failure.

Risk models can't account for everything that can possibly happen, and they are not meant to.

Realizing that some risk is necessary and unavoidable, it remains prudent to maintain flexibility and some margin of safety where possible.  As Schrager provides: 

think creatively and be open to things unfolding in ways different from what they expect....flexibility comes with a cost....retain the option to change course when our plans go awry and have the humility to follow through. 

Know your goals, mitigate unwanted risk, prepare and position the best you can for when the unknown or unexpected occurs, because life is uncertain, but remember without risk there is no return.

Daily Economic Update: June 6, 2025

Broken Bromance Trump and Xi talk, but Trump and Musk spar.  I don’t know which headline matters more for markets, but shares of Tesla didn’...