MARKET FLASH:

"It seems the donkey is laughing, but he instead is braying (l'asino sembra ridere ma in realtà raglia)": si veda sotto "1927-1933: Pompous Prognosticators" per avere la conferma che la storia non si ripete ma fà la rima.


sabato 27 gennaio 2018

Alan Greenspan Admits Ron Paul Was Right About Gold

In the next issue of The Austrian, David Gordon reviews Sebatian Mallaby's new book, The Man Who Knew, about the career of Alan Greenspan. Mallaby points out that prior to his career at the Fed, Greenspan exhibited a keen understanding of the gold standard and how free markets work. In spite of this contradiction, Mallaby takes a rather benign view toward Greenspan. 
However, in his review, Gordon asks the obvious question: If Greenspan knew all this so well, isn't it all the more worthy of condemnation that Greenspan then abandoned these ideas so readily to advance his career? 
Perhaps not surprisingly, now that his career at the Fed has ended, Old Greenspan — the one who defends free markets — has now returned. 
This reversion to his former self has been going on for several years, and Greenspan reiterates this fact yet again in a recent interview with Gold Investor magazine. Greenspan is now a fount of sound historical information about the historical gold standard: 
I view gold as the primary global currency. It is the only currency, along with silver, that does not require a counterparty signature. Gold, however, has always been far more valuable per ounce than silver. No one refuses gold as payment to discharge an obligation. Credit instruments and fiat currency depend on the credit worthiness of a counterparty. Gold, along with silver, is one of the only currencies that has an intrinsic value. It has always been that way. No one questions its value, and it has always been a valuable commodity, first coined in Asia Minor in 600 BC.
The gold standard was operating at its peak in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a period of extraordinary global prosperity, characterised by firming productivity growth and very little inflation.
But today, there is a widespread view that the 19th century gold standard didn't work. I think that's like wearing the wrong size shoes and saying the shoes are uncomfortable! It wasn't the gold standard that failed; it was politics. World War I disabled the fixed exchange rate parities and no country wanted to be exposed to the humiliation of having a lesser exchange rate against the US dollar than itenjoyed in 1913.
Britain, for example, chose to return to the gold standard in 1925 at the same exchange rate it had in 1913 relative to the US dollar (US$4.86 per pound sterling). That was a monumental error by Winston Churchill, then Chancellor of the Exchequer. It induced a severe deflation for Britain in the late 1920s, and the Bank of England had to default in 1931. It wasn't the gold standard that wasn't functioning; it was these pre-war parities that didn't work. All wanted to return to pre-war exchange rate parities, which, given the different degree of war and economic destruction from country to country, rendered this desire, in general, wholly unrealistic.
Today, going back on to the gold standard would be perceived as an act of desperation. But if the gold standard were in place today we would not have reached the situation in which we now find ourselves.
Greenspan then says nice things about Paul Volcker's high-interest-rate policy: 
Paul Volcker was brought in as chairman of the Federal Reserve, and he raised the Federal Fund rate to 20% to stem the erosion [of the dollar's value during the inflationary 1970s]. It was a very destabilising period and by far the most effective monetary policy in the history of the Federal Reserve. I hope that we don't have to repeat that exercise to stabilise the system. But it remains an open question.
Ultimately, though, Greenspan claims that central-bank policy can be employed to largely imitate a gold standard:
When I was Chair of the Federal Reserve I used to testify before US Congressman Ron Paul, who was a very strong advocate of gold. We had some interesting discussions. I told him that US monetary policy tried to follow signals that a gold standard would have created. That is sound monetary policy even with a fiat currency. In that regard, I told him that even if we had gone back to the gold standard, policy would not have changed all that much.
This is a rather strange claim, however. It is impossible to know what signals a gold standard "would have" created in the absence of the current system of fiat currencies. It is, of course, impossible to recreate the global economy under a gold standard in an economy and guess how the system might be imitated in real life. This final explanation appears to be more the sort of thing that Greenspan tells himself so he can reconcile his behavior at the fed with what he knows about gold and markets. 
Nor does this really address Ron Paul's Concerns expressed for years toward Greenspan and his successors. Even if monetary policymakers were attempting to somehow replicate a gold-standard environment, Paul's criticism was always that the outcome of the current monetary regime can be shown to be dangerous for a variety of reasons. Among these problems are enormous debt loads and stagnating real incomes due to inflation. Moreover, thanks to Cantillon effects, monetarily-induced inflation has the worst impact on lower-income households. 
Even Greenspan admits this is the case with debt: "We would never have reached this position of extreme indebtedness were we on the gold standard, because the gold standard is a way of ensuring that fiscal policy never gets out of line."
Certainly, debt loads have taken off since Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, breaking the last link with gold: 

Stocks Storm To Best Start Since 1987 Amid Dollar-Devastation

After that week, we suspect more than a few FX traders feel the same way...


Let's get a little context before we start - this is the most overbought (by a bloody mile) that US equities have ever been...
And...98% of global equity markets trading above 50 & 200 day moving averages.
This is the best start to a year for the Dow and the S&P 500 since 1987...
While Nasdaq is 2018's big winner, this is only its best start to a year since 2004. S&P, Dow, & Nasdaq have only seen 4 down days in 2018
On a side note, China's H-share index broke its record daily streak this week, but...with its seventh week of gains, the Chinese index reaches its longest run of gains since October 2010.
Today was pure panic-buying euphoria...
On the week, Trannies suffered as Airlines crashed (Transports worst week in over 3 months)...
This is the 4th weekly gain in a row for the S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq (and 9th of the last 10 for Dow and S&P)
Having surpassed Goldman's 2018-Year-End Target of 2850, at 2863, the S&P becomes the 2nd largest US equity bull market of all-time, and BofA's Q1 target.
For a brief few panic-buying minutes there, NASDAQ actually went vertical on massive volume as the machines ran it up to 7500!!
A VIX Close above 11.27 for the week would be the 3rd week in a row of gains for both VIX and the S&P 500 (something that hasn't happened since Feb 2013 and has only happened 5 times in history before - always followed by equity weakness)...
Everyone's buying calls...
As the usually extremely high correlation between upside and downside implied volatility has collapsed...
A stunning week for Tech with AAPL plunging and FANGs surging... (NOTE this is the biggest weekly divergence between the two since FANGs started trading - bigger than April 2016)
In FX Fantasy-land... Trump's Rescue Bid failed and the dollar pressed down towards cycle lows... (NOTE the dollar is down 7 weeks in a row - the longest streak since Aug 2010) The Mnuchin Massacre managed the worst week for the dollar in 8 months
One could be forgiven for thinking this is a Trump-driven dump...
This is the worst start to a year for the dollar since 1987...
And the ultimate correlation has broken...
Treasuries were very mixed on the week. Despite the bloodbath in the dollar, the Long Bond rallied (-2.25bps on the week) as 2Y yields spiked almost 6bps...
10Y Yields bumped up against 2.67% three times and rallied lower in yield each time...
And the yield curve continued to crater... today is the first time that the 2s30s spread has closed below 80bps since Oct 16th 2007...
Away from the Dollar Index, today saw more chaos in USDJPY as Kuroda spoke then The BoJ reportedly clarified his comments... but it seems FX traders weren't buying the denial... Of course asymmetrically echoed the sudden spike in USDJPY (ignoring its demise)...
A weak dollar helped send all major commodities higher on the week...
Gold continues to lead The Dow since The Fed hiked rates in December...
Another not-very-pretty week for cryptos amid South Korean crackdowns and Japanese exchange hacks...Ethereum managed to hold on to a 1% gain while the rest fell led by a 21% plunge in Ripple...
Bitcoin stabilized around $11,000...
Finally, we leave you with this... for no good reason...


Marine One wheels up from #Davos. View from the helo trailing Marine One.
Bonus Chart: From Tom McClellan - Bitcoin as a leading indicator for The Dow...?

This Is What Market Madness Looks Like

2018 has seen something unusual happen...
As stocks have soared, so the implied volatility of the S&P 500 has also  - very unusually - risen...
In fact VIX and the S&P are up for 3 straight weeks - the longest streak since Feb 2013.
Typically this is interpreted negatively as it would seem people are paying up for downside protection as stocks go ever higher and ever more parabolic.
But 2018 has been anything but typical: It appears that everyone's buying calls into the rally, accelerating it in the process!
Thus the rise in VIX (which measures the 'around the money' implied vol of the S&P) is being driven higher by exceptional demand for calls -  upside levered bets that this crazy melt-up continues - as demand for downside protection slides lower the higher the market goes!
And finally this is what real market madness looks like.
The normally extremely high correlation between upside implied volatility and downside implied volatility has totally and utterly collapsed, confirming that as the market soars the only "protection" being bought is... upside.
So to summarize - investors are now so convinced - by years of volatility suppression by the market's central bank sponsors - that nothing can go wrong, that they are paying up dramatically to own leveraged positions in equity markets like never before... and dismissing any need for downside protection like never before.
Of course, who needs downside protection when there's levered equity risk to buy with both hands and feet.