Sunday, May 24, 2020
As volatility continues to decrease - expect systematic pools of capital to take US equity markets higher
Below a simple realized volatility extrapolation to have an estimation of where realized volatility could be soon. As vol continues to decrease, systematic trend following will increase significantly exposure to equities starting in June.
We shall not forget that these pools of fast moving capital, in aggregate, account for approximately USD 500bn in notional exposure in equity at max risk...
Thursday, April 30, 2020
The Corona Circus - an absurd example of reflexivity
The Covid-19 has been highly contagious (R0 -12-20) but its mortality rate will most probably prove to be quite low. The recession we are experiencing has been triggered by a global lockdown, not the Covid virus. We’ve been assisting at an epic crisis management debacle in most developed markets. More preoccupying, is the fact that the population is led into believing that the worse is yet to come. Is it on purpose? we can only speculate, but what seems a safe bet is to say that the consensus firmly believe now that the Covid-19 is extremely dangerous, not curable and with us for a long time. The “shock doctrine” (see Naomi Klein) is in full swing: the public is led into an emotional state that will prevent it to question/critic anything governments/medias will tell us (remember the Patriot Act…). Be prepared for surprises.
“Confidence in one’s belief is not a measure of the quality of evidence but of the coherence of the story that the mind construct”. Nobel Laureate D.Kahneman
The rapid global spread of an obscure virus with no known cure is a great story to stimulate our collective imagination. It is logic for our minds to quickly envisage the worst: our family health is at risk, we face years of lockdown in/out , unemployment and a world changed forever. Our transversal thinking can also put in perspective the virus apparition with recent HK protests, Yellow Vests, climate change issue etc.. So yes, this all becomes clear: the global reset was in the card! haha – great synopsis for our Corona Circus show.
So, we have all the ingredients for a blockbuster scary show:
Red everywhere. Financial markets correct sharply with losses not seen since 1929 (!) business confidence craters to all-time lows. The Financial media advertise that we are experiencing the worst economic shock since 1945 and extrapolate the crisis on base on 1918 Spanish flu outbreak model… Investors deleverage, go to cash, expect the worst and look at every daily stock market movement for clues for the next 2 years trends.
To keep public anxiety at high levels, we have our best actors on stage: politicians. On a daily basis they appear on TV to explain how deadly is the virus, why we must stay in lockdown for 2 or 3 months, that likely a second wave of the treacherous silent killer is around the corner. “We are at war” . “We have to learn to live with the virus”. The “shock doctrine” is probably the only way for politicians to appear less ridiculous after the crisis management debacle and ideally be seen as hero (!) when Corona Circus will close its doors. Or maybe they have another agenda…? (China is now in full control mode with compulsory QR codes and cell phone tracking apps)..
The politicians' anxiogenic message is further enhanced by the big pharma agenda. They are doing whatever they can to contribute to the story as expensive pills are in the making: the message they convey, cheap (and generally safe) medicine is killing patients!
This is I think potentially one of the major scandals that could erupt once the Corona Circus closes. Pr. Raoult treatment (chloriquine + Azytromicine) is curing at a rate of 90%+. Most African countries that are used to take this anti-malaria drug have the lowest death rate globally. Statistics, speak for themselves: Nigeria, 200M living people, 85 Covid-linked deaths - yes they might underreport, but proportions are here – France, prohibited chloriquine: 70M living people, 25K deaths!
The sub-saharian region has no access to expensive drugs, so they take what they have, particularly if this is a very common one. G7 have large healthcare companies that finance research (and politics..) for new molecules. As a result, the logic wants that no scientist will receive any financing for research on a generic drug as no healthcare company will be willing to finance it. The system is geared toward the research of new expensive drugs as this is where are the financial interest of the full production chain (scientists publishing, lab etc...). Last missing part in the healthcare drama: the vaccine. Vaccines are the holy grail for big pharma – don’t be surprised by the well distributed message that says that the Covid will disappear only when a vaccine will be ready.
Finally, echoing and amplifying our Corona Circus show: the media crew, as usual. Dead bodies everywhere, mass graves, newsflash with number of new contaminated or dead every 5 minutes. For sure there is no way we could miss a piece of the show! This is an amazing opportunity for the media industry, as the correlation between its sales and the proportion of bad news is probably close to one. You can count on them to continue to print bad news to fine tune the story of our Corona Circus show.
So, we have the perfect recipe for a blockbuster Corona Circus show: Scary story line, viewers in lockdown with lot of time to spend glued to their TV, media in siren mode, violent financial markets, politicians and scientists putting oil on the fire. No escape possible, everyone and his dog can understand that this is the end of the world.
But if we take a step back, the Corona Circus is probably fantastic in its absurdity. While the virus does exist, expected consequences are mostly a creation of our mind and a formidable example of reflexivity. The inertia of our cognitive bias is proportional to the strength of our belief.
When the voice of the consensus is loud and dwarfing anything we can hear, this is usually the moment to challenge it. The easier to understand, the better distributed a story is, the quicker it is priced in financial markets. This is generally a very fertile ground for asymmetric investment opportunities.
Below few highlights on the key divergences between macro and investors positioning:
Macro
. COVID-lockdown shock is transitory by nature. This is not a classic recession! the macro here is much simpler than in a normal recession: Simply put, economies in lockdown: GDP down big, economies not in lockdown: GDP rebounds big! Therefore, as the lockdown stops, the global Economy will rebound as fast as it came down.
. Despite the fact that we are experiencing a "technical" lockdown led recession - Central banks response has been a. coordinated, b. much faster than in previous crisis/recession and c. substantially larger in size - stimulus size never seen before
. Moreover, the private sector in G7 is not leveraged like it is always in recessions (see chart below grey line). Meaning that the private sector does not have to restructure its balance sheet to spend again.
. Global economic negative momentum is already decelerating - we are already in the rebound phase
. Companies inventories are at close to 12 years low, increasing the capacity of the global economy to rebound fast and in sync (!)
. The crisis accelerates the adoption of MMT approach - long advocated in this blog - which will finally help redistribute wealth and help structurally economies
. As politicians get acquainted with MMT, they will increasingly understand that MMT will please both left and right voters = they will realize that this is one of the most powerful tools to gather more voters. They might actually end up to be addicted to it!
Conclusion: We are curing a short lived – lockdown-led recession with monetary and fiscal policies that are far stronger than during a classic structural recession such as 2008 GFC. The rebound in private sector spending will be spectacular. As the Global economy rebounds, the probability of having "over stimulated" might become apparent as the crisis dissipates. Moreover, the MMT increasing adoption, might well lead global the economy to enter a secular structural bull regime with the real economy benefiting this time much more than during the last 10 years as monetary stimulus inflated assets but not salaries.
Market positioning:
. Mechanized/passive markets led to huge sell off pushing lot of investors to cut risk massively
. Size of quarterly loss will reduce investors’ appetite to go back long risk.
. Global macro data should continue to be negative and volatile, preventing investors to go long risk quickly
. Most leveraged investors are net short or out of the market (see below exposure of # type of investors): Recent rebound is only supported so far by retail buying
. Crude oil recent sell off is only re-enforcing the fear of global melt down
Conclusion: Investors are not positioned – at all - for an uptrend. I expect an V rebound and we could see global equity markets finishing the year +30-40%.
Asset price reflation is always faster and sharper than real economy rebound. This time the nature and the force of the politically led “emotional shock” will probably contribute to one of the most hated bull markets ever.
Friday, April 17, 2020
Long time since I last contributed to this blog. With more time for mediation and reading, I feel the need to write as I m developing (again!) an investment thesis that seems not to be aligned with most investors - (probably the lockdown is indeed driving me insane ;)
My main objective is to safeguard my mind against any bias (typically coming from my current PnL and positioning, quite long risk since mid March) and stay fully objective. Festinger used to say " people coginze and interpret information to fit what they already believe". Meditation and writing down thoughts as you know, helps to keep the mind centred and independent.
I continue to send out to 1-2 times a year a macro slide deck focused on inflection points when I potentially see them. As usual, I focus on divergences between rate of change in macro data (eco growth/liquidity) and investors' positioning (cross assets, cross strategies) which, in my opinion, lead to the largest and most asymmetric moves.
The last macro slide deck I shared with my colleagues was in early January when global growth was decelerating while positioning in risk assets was significantly uber-long. Conclusion was that any negative news breaking out could trigger large liquidations.
I've positioned portfolios more defensively around mid January. Frustrating at first, but this ended up helping me to capitalize on recent market volatility with full objectivity and dry powder. Let's be clear, I did not expect the extent of the sell of nor anticipated the virus outbreak.
I m copy/pasting below the slides of a short macro deck I sent out toward the end of March. It is a bit of a particular one as the attractive inflection point was much more asymmetric 10 days ago. Nevertheless, positioning is still quite defensive or short across hedge funds, systematics funds and across assets (vol, FX).
Economic macro momentum data are pointing to continued deterioration, but the negative rate of change is fading (bit like the "second derivative" growth story of late 2008), liquidity is surging like never before with phenomenal rates of changes. MMT which i so much wrote about in my early posts will finally be adopted….
But more importantly, COVID-lockdown shock is transitory by nature. This is not a classic recession! the macro here is much simpler than in a normal recession: Simply put, economies in lockdown: GDP down big, economies not in lockdown: GDP rebound big!
As the lockdown stops, the global economy will rebound as fast as it came down. Moreover, despite the fact that we are experiencing a "technical" lockdown led recession - Central banks response has been a. coordinated, b. much faster than in previous crisis/recession and c. substantially larger in size - stimulus size never seen before
Finaly the private sector in G7 is not leveraged like it is always in recessions. This means that the private sector does not have to restructure its balance sheet to spend again. Watch out for a big rebound in private sector spending as the commodity shock and fiscal stimulus add further fuel!
So here the inflection point is optimal for long term investors. I see a potential sea change in investors appreciation for risk assets vs defensive assets as liquidity injection will most probably be way above what would have been required...
I let you take a look at few of these simple slides, but in a nutshell the message is : investors should expect financial markets to disconnect from economic growth data and be influenced mainly by liquidity. It will be a very challenging environment for fundamental investors as they can not properly modelise future potential earnings stream as macro data goes down and stay extremely volatile. Investors will most probably continue to model the current "technical" recession in perspective with typical recession- again this is not the case!
It will contibute further to upside price inertia as investors go back long risk only step by step as they try to rationalize the up move. We could see risk assets at much higher level at year end while economic growth will be subdued at best. Most investors are not positioned yet for such a scenario.
Good luck trading
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Oil bears - beware
Did have time to publish for some time as working a PM for multiassets UHNW accounts - here s a suite of slides I ve produced this summer for a bull call on Oil - found that the trade is quite asymetric.
More importantly benefit from macro, micro and positioning supporting factors, typically the configuration that lead to powerfull moves.
The background was to try to find what could move upward investors inflation expectations - well we probably found one of the factors----
The title of the research piece is called "Crude Bears bewares". BB screenshots are from August but the theme is still very much fresh. I v added a selection of slides - but cover the key points.
Conclusions are
Did have time to publish for some time as working a PM for multiassets UHNW accounts - here s a suite of slides I ve produced this summer for a bull call on Oil - found that the trade is quite asymetric.
More importantly benefit from macro, micro and positioning supporting factors, typically the configuration that lead to powerfull moves.
The background was to try to find what could move upward investors inflation expectations - well we probably found one of the factors----
The title of the research piece is called "Crude Bears bewares". BB screenshots are from August but the theme is still very much fresh. I v added a selection of slides - but cover the key points.
Conclusions are
- Oil demand is as strong as ever with EM driving a large part of the growth - EM cyclical upswing will only reinforce it
- US inventories (laggging indicators as cheapest place to stock) are declining fast - should converge soon twrd 5 years average
- 2014 bear forced E&P to cut significantly capex : will be challenging to add production growth
- US shale oil = only growing suppply BUT seems to be already past its peak in term of MB/D of growth (rig productivity going down fast)
- The US oil production likely to peak soon as a result
- Oil price should increase in the next 12 months to reflect supply/demand imbalances
- It will contribute to increase inflation expectations of investors in the US which is probably what the FED wants before raising rates i.e behind the curve, on purpose
- Therefore a long crude/energy equities (ex-shale) should be an interesting exposure to balance long duration exposure of traditional multi asset portfolios
- Suggest a mix of crude futures, XOP US Equity, OIH US Equity and Stoxx 600 Oil Explo.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
2016 top trades - 12m
Investors sentiment is extremely depressed on the back of the "China
deflation trade" with the most cyclical assets trading for some of them
at 2009 levels.
What would I need to go long EM assets ?
Tactical:
1st: Price of EM equities market to start trending up for initiation of 1/3 of long tactical position at an asymmetrical point (correction after small uptrend and close to recent lows)
2st: Key "economic visible indicators" to start losing negative momentum
3st : light positionning cross assets/strategy
Increase in potentially strategic long:
3st : fiscal stimulus + additional eco data to print green numbers: PMI, current account etc..so that it can convince long term investors to accumulate and as a result sustain the uptrend
Why looking at it now ?
Well, EM markets not accelerating in down move any more after significant double digit losses, the most leveraged representation of China bubble is going almost bankrupt (Glencore) - EM FX crosses are devaluating across the board and stop accelerating and central banks are injecting liquidity - at some point, it will have an impact on macro data.
Moreover, as a starter, economic growth and financial conditions are not all at the same level and speed in EM which is a different context that the one of the last decade. Investors seems to focus on China PMIs which seem to be the only "fast and easy and reliable " over there, but actually there is a bunch of other indicators such as real estate prices, business confidence, service PMI that shows that all is not so dark in China. The Chinese Government is trying to deflate post-crisis bubble without too much crashing the economy and we should not expect an easy ride.
Across the EM world - except Brasil - Central banks are accelerating the easing of financial conditions (RBI this morning) to counter falling inflation rates and reduced economic growth.
This is one positive development for economic growth and ultimately risk assets. Additionally, FX is devaluating fast against DV world which is also a positive for both GDP growth and financial conditions.
While most Central banks seems to act against current negative cyclical forces (except Brasil - again..), economic growth is not yet kick starting.
My prefered beta to this story : China and Brasil equities. I m going small net long now.
The best beta to "China Inflation" trade... will be EEM. Stay tuned.
Monday, December 14, 2015
HYG close to capitulation
HYG price action points to short term capitulation - look for bounce from these level and re-test close to recent lows to offer asymmetrical entry point - risk/reward
Macro backdrop could support risk assets in the short term following FED meeting: following significant credit spread widening in the US, if Yellen increases the target ranger from 0-0.25 to 0.25-0.5 she will most probably be quite dovish - should be supportive of a Christmas rally especially in the current price action environment.
Once the market rebounds, it will be interesting and key to assess how the "target range" system which differs from the post-crisis "target rate" works - indeed, with USD 2.5tr in reserve, the FED might be forced to set up RRA with commercial banks in order to sock up liquidity and manage accordingly the range - hopefully it will not be a problem...
Macro backdrop could support risk assets in the short term following FED meeting: following significant credit spread widening in the US, if Yellen increases the target ranger from 0-0.25 to 0.25-0.5 she will most probably be quite dovish - should be supportive of a Christmas rally especially in the current price action environment.
Once the market rebounds, it will be interesting and key to assess how the "target range" system which differs from the post-crisis "target rate" works - indeed, with USD 2.5tr in reserve, the FED might be forced to set up RRA with commercial banks in order to sock up liquidity and manage accordingly the range - hopefully it will not be a problem...
Monday, August 24, 2015
Markets Turbulences are creating huge buying opportunities in US (and EU)
One charts explain it all again : Spread of US BBB spreads vs Phily Fed is at highest since 2009 on the back of recent de-risking + supply is hitting historical high before expected rate hikes. Seems quite bullish to me !
EU charts in next post.
Friday, August 21, 2015
Time to reconsider Brasil and BRL
The asymmetry in being short BRL against EUR (4.2) or USD (3.7) is not there anymore (see my thesis there with details there : http://factualmacro.blogspot.ch/2014/08/short-brl-charts-only.html ) - As a starter, one simple chart support my view - see below : the current account deficit is closing at a rapid pace. There is still significant room to improve - as most of the move is due to reduced imports and current account /GDP is still at a wide -4% - to help the external sector to actually contribute to GDP growth but nonetheless this is a much welcome development that will resonate with the investor community, especially non BRL denominated investors.
Moreover, inflation is topping out and as a result, long BRL Fixed Income is should be a good play @ approx. 12% carry and potential price appreciation and BRL appreciation.
Clearly, industrial production and output gap are at 2009 lows, credit is being tightened big time and fiscal tightening is at his highest since 2002 - there is basically no oil in the economic motor and the gov.is trying to squeeze it even more...So macro data are definitely not rosy! But I believe, after the recent China related fears, most of these info are in the prices of BRL and brazilian equities.
Interesting opportunities in Brazil equities should arise in the months to come with another potential catalyst being China stimulus. As investors are digesting China devaluation, we should expect some volatility down the road, but I believe this is a good time to slowly start building select exposure in Brazil. Factually, we need prices and macro to back our thesis before going in in size.
Now, on a FACTUAL basis, prices are not telling us to change positioning for the time being - but
I would recommend to cut short BRL exposure and start building small exposure in BRL denominated equities with beaten down non-cyclical sectors such as a Telco basket (TIM + Vivo for ex). While it might be too early to look at cyclical stocks, it make sense to start screening for the middle part of the smile in term of gdp beta such as supermarket (Lojas Americanas), few banks such as Bradesco, few local cyclical plays such as GOL Linha Aerias.
As China economy is decelerating fast (last PMI @ 47, 6 months in a row below 50) with inflation well below the 4% upper limit, the probability of monetary and more likely fiscal stimulus is increasing fast. We should also expect much more FX devaluation (20% should be a good start).
Any hint of stimulus in China should also help lift Brazil cyclical sectors. If such a scenario occurs, extremely beaten down global cyclical plays such as FCX (which recently announced that it will raise equity..) could be very interesting, especially after the current market correction.
Let s now wait context for market prices to change so that it help the trade logic resonate with investors.
Stay tuned
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Today s EU Macro data continue to support bullish positioning - all stars are aligned..
Higher than expected and continued rebound in growth + historical ease in financial conditions + recent sell-off on Grexit noise = all stars are aligned
Friday, June 19, 2015
Grexit is for sheep and sheep get .....
Why Grexit will not happen :
1. Political dimension: A Greece exit, i.e a return to the drachma, a default on its EUR denominated debt and more importantly a return back to monetary and fiscal sovereignty will - after probably a difficult period of 12-18 months - trigger a huge economic rebound (as it was the case for example in EU in Island). As a result, anti-EU parties across Europe will gain significant credibility and the "farce" of Troika' forced auterity will be totaly discredited. So politically this is simply not possible for the Troika - the current game-theory driven negotiation are only a staged act for the media/population. If markets could correct a bit more before the final outcome, the Troika/Grece Gov. could be even more happy has their "TV-novela" will be more credible and they will on top of that be considered as "hero" once they find a deal and market rebound as a results.
2. Financial dimension: just look at this charts, which is Greece loans to deposit ratio - this leveraging is made mostly with ELA (Emergency Liquidity Assistance)....- so if they default or exit...this is the double whammy for EU central banks that need to honor payment via Target. That s also explain why the ECB is keen to save Greece from default and exit illustrated by EUR 90bn in loan from ECB vs EUR 44bn in assets.
1. Political dimension: A Greece exit, i.e a return to the drachma, a default on its EUR denominated debt and more importantly a return back to monetary and fiscal sovereignty will - after probably a difficult period of 12-18 months - trigger a huge economic rebound (as it was the case for example in EU in Island). As a result, anti-EU parties across Europe will gain significant credibility and the "farce" of Troika' forced auterity will be totaly discredited. So politically this is simply not possible for the Troika - the current game-theory driven negotiation are only a staged act for the media/population. If markets could correct a bit more before the final outcome, the Troika/Grece Gov. could be even more happy has their "TV-novela" will be more credible and they will on top of that be considered as "hero" once they find a deal and market rebound as a results.
2. Financial dimension: just look at this charts, which is Greece loans to deposit ratio - this leveraging is made mostly with ELA (Emergency Liquidity Assistance)....- so if they default or exit...this is the double whammy for EU central banks that need to honor payment via Target. That s also explain why the ECB is keen to save Greece from default and exit illustrated by EUR 90bn in loan from ECB vs EUR 44bn in assets.
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