“Greatness is a road leading towards the unknown.” (Charles de Gaulle
1890-1970)
Hardly Settled
An ongoing wave of calmness resonates in the markets
in which US stock volatility is still low, yields on European debt are
relatively moderate and an all-out panic in the day-to-day is not quite felt.
After all, the S&P 500 index is attempting to revisit all-time highs and
Crude is not quite at the desperate lows it witnessed early in the year. A
breather of sorts, after a turbulent January, is creating mixed reactions.
Meanwhile, a the quasi-settled turbulence of the financial
market fails to tell the full
story. There are plenty of unsettled
nerves in the intermediate-term, as the global political climate is perceived
overly turbulent from Britain to Brazil to Russia to China. Western leadership
is being questioned, since the global economy is failing to drive more
confidence in the globalized and well-established system. Nationalism is in
demand, as witnessed in European elections; and, deciphering the consequences
of this trend is the ultimate challenge for money managers. The
short-term gains from status-quo preservation via stabilization in financial
markets are not answering the long-term concerns.
Important to note, most of these concerns are not new.
Significant capital is seeking risk exposure and desperate for returns.
Therefore, the sentiment in stock markets is not quite the same sentiment as
ground level discussions. Perhaps, all the unsettling issues do not
automatically deter many from deploying capital. That’s the critical factor
that may explain the ongoing disconnect between the real economy and financial
markets.
Sectors' Duress
Financial services are being attacked from multiple
angles, as pressure mounts for operators and investors alike. Hedge Funds have
under performed recently, energy loans on banks’ balance sheets are troubling,
negative interest rates by central banks are troubling, increasing banks'
regulatory pressure is impacting margins, populists' vicious attacks on wall
street are accelerating and revenue making opportunities for banks seem rather
bleak in 2016. These are some of the well-known and
documented matters. Mounting pressure on financial services can quickly
translate to less faith in capitalism and diminishing global growth.
That’s a danger to Western civilization and less appreciated in generic
discussions. Ultimately that’s the long-term concern and the great unknown.
This is the big picture concern that’s awfully difficult to quantify and
remains in the back of the heads of most investors. Unwarranted blames for political gains aside,
the financial sector is facing a challenging period in both practical and
ideological debates.
Lively Movements
Emerging Markets (EM) have shown some recovery at
least in terms of stock and currency movement. After an abysmal recent run in
commodities and EM, the first quarter reminded us that stability is mildly
possible:
“The best rally in emerging-market stocks and bonds in
seven years is sending bears back into hibernation…Traders added more than $1
billion to U.S.-traded emerging-market stock and bond ETFs this month through
April 15.” (Bloomberg, April 17, 2016)
Yet, skepticism is plenty, especially since the
fallout in China is not understood. From stimulus efforts in China to tensions
in the pacific to demand for Nationalism in the West that can lead to adverse
trade relations, misunderstandings abound. Nonetheless, the rift between China
and the West is not to be downplayed and the impact is mostly unknown. China is
strengthening her ties with EM, especially Russia. At the same time, political
tensions with Japan will continue to linger, and, at some point, that can
convert into a financial risk. Western
leaders haven’t found a stable answer for China and corporations are realizing
new challenges to navigate in China, as well.
Despite the short-term rally in EM, the long-term picture is murky.
However, investors are not bothering about the long-term and are willing to
live only in the present, for now.
Article Quotes:
“Speaking to the FT during a trip to Beijing, Alexei Moiseev said Russia expected to sign a deal this year that would link China’s national electronic payment network into its own soon-to-be-launched credit card system as part of measures aimed at reducing reliance on the west. ….Amid several rounds of negotiations over financial integration, many see Russia’s primary aim as access to China’s debt markets. Western sanctions mean many of Russia’s largest banks and corporations are unable to raise finance in dollars. Historically low oil prices have also hurt Russia’s economy and led to an increase in financing needs. Meanwhile, China is easing international access to its onshore bond market, estimated at some $6tr — the third largest in the world. Several western banks and corporates, including HSBC and Daimler, as well as South Korea, have over the past year issued so-called 'panda bonds'.” (Financial Times, April 17, 2016)
“For equity investors across the developed world,
large chunks of the past year and a half have been miserable. But for different
reasons. The International Monetary Fund, in an analysis, looked at the
stock-price declines in Europe, the U.S. and Japan from the beginning of 2015
to the market bottom in mid-February of this year. (The U.S. and Europe have
since recovered.) For Europe, the analysis tells a particularly dismal story:
Corporate earnings play a bigger role in stock slumps in Europe than
elsewhere–and corporate profits don’t look good. The IMF breaks the change in
prices down into three parts: the risk -free rate of interest, the equity risk
premium and the change in current and expected earnings…. The bottom line is
that the decline in earnings explains a much bigger share of the decline in
stock prices in Europe than it does in Japan or the U.S, and the outlook on
that front is considerably more miserable.” (Wall Street
Journal, April 15, 2016)
Key Levels: (Prices as of Close:
April 15, 2016)
S&P 500 Index [2,080.73] – There has been a major
upside move since February 11th lows. Nearly a 15% increase since
then. The ever so familiar range between 1,900-2,100 is being revisited. The May
2015 high of 2,134.72 is the next critical point.
Crude (Spot) [$40.36] –From $26.05 to above
$40 showcased a sharp recovery that coincided with the equity markets in recent
weeks. Now, there is an attempted stabilization around $40.
Gold [$1,227.10] – March 4th highs of $1,277.50 remain a key level in the
near-term. Breaking above $1,250 has been a challenge last year and early this
year.
DXY – US Dollar Index [94.69] – The Dollar weakness
remains a big theme thus far in 2016. The
pullback from 100 to 94 in the near-term defines the current trend.
US 10 Year Treasury Yields [1.75%] – Yields remain
closer to annual lows of 1.68%. It further confirms the weakness in the economy
as it is perceived by bond markets. Climbing back to 2% seems possible in the
near-term.
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