It’s pretty rough out there in financial markets. Stocks are still falling, notwithstanding the odd counter rally here and there, and yields are still rising, leaving investors with little in the way of a place to hide. I think it is relatively simple to explain what’s going on, in general terms. Before the pandemic, markets were propelled higher by low inflation, low bond yields and plenty of monetary accommodation. Running the economy hot was not just relatively cheap—in terms of the classic trade-off between stocking growth and employment and inflation—it was the right thing to do. I mean, you wouldn’t want unemployment to rise, would you? The initial roaring rebound in markets from the initial Covid shock in spring 2020, promised a quick return to “normal”. It didn’t last.
Read MoreApart from soul-searching on the endgame for Covid—see my version here—the arrival of Omicron seems to have had two relatively predictable effects on financial markets. Volatility has shot higher, and the yield curve has flattened. Put differently, stocks have sold off, and the long bond has rallied. The MSCI World is down just under 4% from its peak at the start of November, and the U.S. 10-year yield is off some 25bp. Neither of these numbers are dramatic, but they’re eye-catching, all the same. I suspect these shifts are driven by both fears of Omicron—despite little hard evidence that it is the vaccine-evading super-bug everyone has feared—and the fact that monetary policymakers so far have had little interest in changing their stance. More specifically, Fed officials have said nothing to shift expectations that it is expected to taper QE to zero by the middle of next year, and start raising rates shortly thereafter.
Read MoreInvestors remain locked in discussion about the same issues they were mulling before the holidays. The rollout of the vaccine—however frustratingly slow in some countries—means that the light at the end of the tunnel for the economy is probably not an oncoming train. That’s great news, but the counterpoint is that markets have long since priced-in such an outcome, leaving investors vulnerable to the famous adage that if they’re buying the rumour, they’re also likely to sell the fact. In that vein, I am happy to double down on my comments at the end of last year that you should now be looking to stash away profits rather than putting new money to work. On that occasion I showed two charts to warn about incoming multiple contraction in equities, proxied by valuations on the S&P 500, and my in-house valuation score, which is also headed for the basement. The first chart on the next page shows that the six-month stock-to-bond return ratio in the U.S. remains pinned close to cyclical highs, also hinting that equities are about to give up some of their recent gains, with bonds rallying in appreciation. The second chart shows what happened the last time stock-to-bond returns were this stretched. It occurred in the run-up to the Flash Crash in 2010, before the swoon in the summer of 2011, ahead of the drawdown in May 2012, not to mention during the Taper Tantrum in 2013. Based on this albeit short sample, investors should brace for volatility in H1.
Read MoreIt’s been a while since I updated my views on markets, which invites humility. It usually takes a few weeks for me to get a feel for what’s really going on. I return to my analysis at a point when risk assets are on the back foot, the dollar is rallying, and bond yields are falling, though in all these cases, the moves are so far undramatic. Granted, a quick-fire 7% decline in Spoos since the end of August will have driven some Robinhood punters against the wall, but that’s hardly a surprise. Similarly, the dollar is not blowing the doors off more so than it has caught a stretched bearish position off guard. That, after all, is what currency markets do. Meanwhile in bonds; zzz. In preview; I think risk assets sell off further, the dollar has further upside, and as far as bond yields go, I think they will do more or less nothing. This is not a hill that I am willing to die on, though, One of the problems with trying to read the charts at the moment, is that base effects from the collapse during the initial phases of the Covid-19 shock are now coming into view. In other words, it’s very easy to convince yourself of the idea that the rally is running out of steam, simply by looking at trailing returns. The first chart on the next page shows that the six month stock-to-bond ratio on the S&P 500 has now made a full rebound from the collapse in March, forming a peak similar to after the rebound from the swoon in 2018, and after the initial snap-back following the selloff in early 2016. The data are inconclusive, but in any case un-troubling for investors.
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