What s Behind The Stock Market Drama

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This Monday was one of the worst days for  global stock markets in years, Stocks in the US,   Europe and Japan tanked on Friday and again on  Monday before a partial rebound. Bond yields   and foreign exchange rates swung around wildly  too. The VIX index, a measure of expected US   stock market volatility rocketed to its highest  level since the pandemic meltdown in early 2020.   The VIX essentially tracks how expensive stock  options are and can be seen as a measure of how   worried investors are about large market moves in  the near future (either up or down). It had been   sitting at around 12 for most of the year – which  was quite low and implied that investors expected   calm - before rocketing to 65 on Monday. It  has since returned to a more moderate 22.  

Japan – which we have talked about quite a lot  here over the last year was at the center of the   storm. The Topix index fell 12.2% on Monday,  having hit an all-time high just three weeks   earlier. The sell off wiped out its entire year  to date gains. The press described it as the   worst Japanese market crash since 1987 (something  we will come back to in just a moment). The index   rebounded 9 per cent the next day prompting  the FT to describe it as “Trading like a   penny stock.” which is not what you want to hear  about the third largest economy in the world.  

US markets, which had been strong all year  fell almost 8% from their recent highs and   the tech heavy Nasdaq fell almost 13% over  the first three trading days of the month.   The Magnificent seven stocks – a term coined  by Michael Hartnett at Bank of America about a   year ago to describe the hottest tech stocks  that retail investors are most focused on,   lost about $1 trillion dollars in just  two days. So, what exactly is going on   in markets, and how much should we worry? Well as always in markets there is never a   quick and easy explanation, but the spark that  lit the explosions in all of the YouTube finance   thumbnails this week was last Friday’s US jobs  report, which showed a much sharper slowdown in   hiring than Wall Street expected. For a spark to turn into a fire,   you need some fuel and there was plenty of dry  fuel lying around. The ISM survey of manufacturing   businesses from the day before had shown that  industry economic activity had contracted at a   faster rate than the prior month, and this  was the fourth contraction in a row. There   had been a few soft earnings releases too, for  example at Microsoft, cloud services growth had   slowed slightly to 29 per cent year on year,  down from 31 per cent in the previous quarter.  

That doesn’t sound like a big deal – except  if these stocks are priced for perfection.   Apples revenue growth appears to be stagnating  too, and its management are now pinning their   hopes on AI (much like all of the others), which  investors hope will revive growth. But so far,   it’s hard to know how that might work.  According to Bloomberg if AI fails to pay off,  

Apple starts to look more like Coca  Cola than high growth tech company.   Markets which had been pricing in a guaranteed  soft landing (meaning an end to inflation without   a recession) and really no political risk as  I discussed in the recent Trump Trade video   suddenly started assigning some probability  to a hard landing. Goldman Sachs said over   the weekend that it now believed there was a  twenty five percent chance of the US falling   into recession in the next year, compared with  its previous forecast of a 15 per cent chance.   The recent rise in the stock market has been very  much driven by the US consumer – and consumer   strength is a function of the labor market.  Other evidence of a consumer slowdown can be   seen in the earnings reports from Disney Airbnb  and Hilton, all of whom are seeing lower demand.   While US inflation has cooled – meaning that  prices are no longer rising – the consumer is   still dealing with higher prices. According to  the San Francisco Federal Reserve – Households  

have now spent the excess savings that  they had accumulated during the pandemic.   As investors internalized the fact that six  of the last seven major US labor releases   had been disappointments, they started  to question stock market valuations.   Because of time zone differences, The Japanese  market was closed for a big part of the US sell   off on Friday. Part of the decline in the  Japanese market can be attributed to just  

catching up with the US market – as the US market  tends to drag other markets around with it,   but Japanese investors were slowly digesting the  surprise 25 basis point interest rate hike that   had been announced the prior Wednesday and they  began to panic when their market opened on Monday.   A big move in one market can lead to big moves in  other markets because of interconnectedness and   the way institutional risk management works. Before we get into that, let me introduce this   week’s sponsor, NordPass, a password manager  created by the experts behind NordVPN,   the world’s most popular VPN solution.  The average number of passwords used   for personal purposes is 168, and it’s 87 for  business-related accounts. Chances are, you reuse   your passwords across all of your accounts. If just one of your accounts is compromised,   a hacker may gain access to numerous  other accounts. 86% of business hacks  

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The 25-basis point hike in Japanese interest  rates doesn’t sound like a big move,   but it was a surprise announcement, and it is  the highest interest rate seen in Japan since   2008. Policymakers also announced that they  would be halving monthly bond purchases and   hinted that there would be more rate hikes  in the pipeline. This was a big change.   Japanese stocks had hit new highs over the summer,  and the Yen had been in a long term downtrend,   which was starting to cause problems. By July, the  Yen was the weakest it had been against the dollar   in 34 years. This wasn’t a strong dollar issue  either, it was weak against every other developed   market currency too. While Japanese policymakers  wanted inflation – they were worrying that the   weak yen was causing the wrong sort of inflation  – where imported goods were getting expensive,   rather than Japanese goods and services. This  meant that money would just leave Japan and  

do nothing to boost the local economy. The  policy makers are aiming to spur inflation,   which would be good for Japanese businesses who  would then be forced to increase wages leading   to a virtuous cycle where Japanese workers earn  more and spend more – kickstarting the economy.   Japan’s core inflation rate had been above the  Bank’s 2% target for 27 months and there was   concern that the decline in the yen was  just hurting consumer spending. The FT   reports that Japanese government officials  had put pressure on the Bank of Japan to   hike rates and arrest the yen’s decline. The interest rate hike on the 31st of July  

did have an impact. The Yen strengthened quickly  and on Thursday and Friday the stock market sold   off - with Toyota, Panasonic and Japan’s  biggest banks being the biggest losers.   Toyota had just reported record profits, boosted  by a favorable exchange rate and increased   consumer interest in hybrid vehicles rather than  pure electric vehicles. The weak yen, which boosts   the value of overseas profits for Japanese  exporters, also helped. It’s price decline   added two and a half billion dollars in operating  profit to the firm over the quarter. The problem  

with that is that if the yen were to strengthen  – like it did - the opposite would happen.   Over the last three years, the yen carry trade —  which involves borrowing at a low interest rate   in Japan to fund investment in assets elsewhere  that offer higher returns — has exploded because   of Japan’s ultra-low rates which contrast with  higher interest rates around the world. With   the carry trade you can buy foreign bonds  to earn the interest rate differential,   or you can buy other risk assets. This is  a trade that works as long as the foreign   exchange rate doesn’t move and wipe out all  of your profits, or even cause you losses.  

Low rates in Japan combined with higher  rates around the world - especially in recent   years - as central banks have been hiking rates  to fight inflation caused this trade to explode   in popularity. It’s not just forex speculators  who do this either, big Japanese companies often   keep their foreign earned income abroad to  reap the higher interest rates available.   The low-return environment in Japan over the  last thirty five years led the Japanese into   being amongst the biggest capital exporters in  the world: they own over a trillion dollars of   US Treasuries and half a trillion Euro bonds. Commerzbank estimates that Japanese international  

investments come to around four  trillion dollars in total.   The rapid appreciation of the yen brought about  by the rate hike forced hedge funds and other   leveraged investors to rapidly unwind their carry  trades. This was a big contributor to the extreme   volatility in global markets over the last ten  days or so as investors rushed to dump assets,   they had purchased by borrowing in yen. The way risk management often works at big   financial institutions is that when a big  loss occurs in one investment strategy, the   risk management team often walk around the trading  floor telling traders who are running completely   different strategies to cut their position  sizes. As these traders cut their position sizes,   the spreads that they are trading widen, causing  further losses, and further cuts in risk. This  

can lead to contagion, and experienced traders  who hear about a loss on a different trading   desk often cut their positions right away – as it  is better to get out quickly before the spreads   start widening due to industrywide deleveraging. We saw a huge spike in stock market correlation   on Monday – correlation being a measure of  the degree to which stocks move up or down   together - as shares across the market  fell in lockstep. This was a big change   as in July correlation had hit a record low,  helping to dampen overall market volatility.   I’ve made a few videos about Japanese  markets over the last year or two and still   feel that the Japanese market might be the most  interesting thing going on in markets right now.   My first video on the rise and fall of Japan  was made after finding a 1988 article George   Soros had written in the wake of the 1987 crash.  In it he argued that the crash had signaled a   transfer of financial and economic power in the  world economy from the United States to Japan.  

In the crash, Japanese stocks fell around 15%,  which was much less than the 23 percent decline   in the United States. On top of that, the  Japanese market recovered to its pre-crash   levels in just five months. While the US,  UK and Germany all needed more than a year   to achieve the same level of recovery. The Japanese market appeared to do better  

as the ministry of finance pushed the nations four  largest securities firms to start buying stocks to   keep the market afloat. Japan was able to keep all  of their balls in the air for a few years longer,   but since 1990 the nation has been in decline. In 1989, 32 of the 50 largest companies in the   world were Japanese and Japan’s stock market was  worth 45% of the whole global market, while the   US was at 33%. Today, Japanese stocks are 5.4% of  the global market and only one Japanese company  

(Toyota) is in the global top 100. Japan has been struggling to recover   from the malinvestment brought about by excessive  government interference in markets for thirty-five   years. Today, western politicians look to Chinas  economic miracle driven (once again) by government   interference and wonder if they should mimic  the industrial policies that appear to be   generating all of this growth. Japan’s public debt reached $9.2   trillion dollars as of March 2023 and at 263  percent of GDP is the highest debt to GDP   ratio in the developed world - more than twice  the debt to GDP ratio of the United States.  

Servicing this debt is already a struggle and  will become more difficult if rates rise and   the yield-curve control program is abandoned. Japanese stocks broke a number of records last   week — their combined 20 per cent fall over the  three sessions from last Thursday to Monday was   the biggest drop ever, wiping $1.1trillion dollars  off the value of the stock market. On Tuesday,   the stock market bounced back by almost 10 per  cent in the steepest rally in almost 16 years.   The Yen did seem very cheap at its lows,  but the Japanese economy did contract in   the first quarter of this year – so while the  rate hike may have helped the yen, the Bank   of Japan is hiking rates into a weak economy. The severity of the market reaction is likely   to have surprised the central bankers, but even  after the decline the Topix is still up 4.4% year  

to date and up 65% over the last five years. Pressure on the Yen can be expected to wane if   the US starts cutting rates as the market  now expects. interest rate differential   will become less extreme under that scenario. The reason the Japanese market is so interesting   is that Japan is on a completely different  economic cycle to the rest of the world,   trying to spur inflation when the rest  of the world was fighting inflation,   and now hiking rates when the rest of the world  is either cutting rates or thinking about it.   For the last year, Japan has looked like it might  finally return to economic growth. But, over the   past 30 years Japan has seen many false dawns,  and the country is facing some big structural   problems that won’t go away – their ageing  population, low growth and high public debt.  

Over the last few days, the S&P500 all but erased  the losses suffered by investors in a week that   included some of the worst and best days for  US stocks in almost two years. The jobs report,   added to fears that higher interest rates  were finally having an impact and slowing the   economy reducing companies hiring and consumers  willingness to spend. This is only so much of   a surprise, as that is the mechanism through  which higher interest rates reduce inflation,   and it is not a bad thing for investors to  be considering the risks when investing.   Blaming the carry trade unwind on the declines  in the US stock market might be unreasonable,   as the carry trade was by no means  what was driving the rise in the US   stock market over the last few years. The worry with US stocks is that the   magnificent seven - which have been driving stock  market returns for quite some time - are failing   to deliver on the sky high expectations that  investors have for them. The magnificent seven  

had contributed 52% of the Year-to-Date return  of the S&P 500 through to the end of July. If   you excluded Tesla from that group – as it  has been falling for close to three years   – the contribution of the remaining six stocks  to US investors returns has been even higher.   As I mentioned in last week’s video, the big  tech firms have been laying off staff for   quite some time and more worryingly – insiders  have been selling their stock. Indicating that   they are possibly less excited about the  AI future than the rest of the market is.   Leadership at Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, Nvidia  Apple Microsoft and Tesla have all been selling.  

Last weekend we learned that Warren Buffets  Berkshire Hathaway had sold 390 million   shares of Apple – which was about half of its  stake. Buffet started paring his position last   year but really stepped up his sales in 2024. The antitrust judgement against Google – finding   that they have a monopoly in search came out on  Monday, this wasn’t just bad for Alphabet – but   also for Apple as court documents showed  that Google paid Apple $20bn in 2022 alone,   a huge chunk of Apple’s services business,  which includes its App Store and Apple Pay.   If Alphabet is no longer allowed to pay apple to  be the default search engine on their devices,   Apple might leave the choice to customers –  like they do in Europe – where most customers   pick google – but Apple will receive no payment. Earnings for the big US tech firms have not been  

bad at all. For example, if you look at Alphabets  core businesses they have been doing just fine.   But Alphabet (just like the others) is spending a  fortune on AI which is not yet making money – and   there is no obvious path towards profitability  either. This is the case for all of the big tech   firms other than Tesla who have just been having a  bad year as demand for their cars has dried up.   It is not yet obvious how the big tech firms plan  to make back the money they are spending on AI and   interestingly, a recent study from Washington  State University found that including the term   "artificial intelligence" in a product description  made consumers significantly less likely to buy a   product. So not only is there no clear path  towards monetization, customers are possibly   steering clear of AI branded products. MIT researchers argued in a recent report   that the types of AI being developed at the big  tech firms is not designed to solve the kind of   complex problems that would justify the costs,  and the costs may not decline as many expect.  

Big tech has been a crowded trade for  quite some time and investors have made   a fortune owning these stocks, but they  are possibly getting a bit nervous.   An other big story during the big sell off on  Monday was that brokerages like Charles Schwab,   Vanguard and Fidelity experienced outages on  their trading platforms, leaving some retail   investors unable to trade on Monday. This is  somewhat reminiscent of the brokerage outages   that occurred during the meme stock frenzy  a few years ago, and indicates how excited   investors got over the market drama, During the market sell-off on Monday,   the treasury yield curve, which has been inverted  for two years briefly returned to normal. An   inverted yield curve — where two-year interest  rates rise above 10-year interest rates — is   said to signal that a recession is on the  way. An inverted yield curve has probably   predicted twenty of the last seven recessions. Anxieties prompted by the bad jobs number were   also heightened by the fact that the data release  triggered what is known as the Sahm rule, devised   by and named after the economist Claudia Sahm. The purpose of the rule is to act as an early  

warning signal of recession. Claudia Sahn came  up with the rule in early 2019 to act as an   automatic trigger for policymakers to step in. The way it works, according to its creator,   is that when the three-month average  of the US unemployment rate is half of   a percent or more above its low of the prior  12 months, the US is already in a recession.  

This rule back tests well, but Claudia Sahn  warned earlier this week on Bloomberg that   as any investment prospectus will tell you: Past  performance is no indication of future results.   Some economists have argued that some of  the surge in the recent unemployment number   reflected a temporary Hurricane Beryl effect  as power outages on the gulf coast led many   businesses to stay closed and temporary  workers to sign on for unemployment.   Matthew Klein pointed out on his blog that  while the job market may not be great,   it is better than it first appears. He points  out that economic downturns normally feature   large increases in the number of workers  who lose their jobs and don’t expect to be   rehired. These “permanent” job losses are quite  distinct from situations where people enter the   labor force but don’t immediately find a  job, or when people are temporarily laid   off but expect to be rehired shortly, there  are also people who finish temporary jobs,   and “job leavers” who quit without  immediately finding another job.   He says that bad labor markets also feature  large increases in the number of workers who   lose their jobs and stop actively looking for  work. This group are not counted as unemployed,  

but they are counted as people outside  the labor force who “want a job now”.   He highlights that the recent increase  in the unemployment rate is almost   entirely attributable to the categories of  joblessness that are least representative   of bad underlying economic conditions. Claudia Sahm also wrote on Bloomberg that   there are signs that stronger labor supply, not  just weaker labor demand, helped push the Sahm   rule past its half a percent threshold. Unemployed  entrants to the labor force (new or returning)  

accounted for about half of the increase which is  a notably higher share than in recent recessions,   when most of the contribution came from  unemployed workers who had been laid off   temporarily or permanently. She says that the  current Sahm rule reading is likely overstating   the weakening in demand and is not at recessionary  levels. She does argue however that the federal   reserve should be thinking about cutting rates. It has been quite an interesting week in markets,   with many wondering if we are in a period of  regime change. Rate increases are supposed to   slow the economy as that is how they reduce  demand for goods and bring down inflation,   and that is exactly what they are doing. The  higher rates have by no means eliminated risk   taking, as evidenced by the fact that meme  stocks and crypto are still riding high.  

One way higher rates slow the economy  is by weakening the job market – last   weeks video on Tech layoffs looked at how low  interest rates can lead to moonshot projects,   but when rates go up, investors start expecting to  see a return on their capital, and they begin to   care about the timing of the cashflows. Real US GDP grew at an annual rate of   2.8 percent in the second quarter of 2024,  so it’s not like economy is doing badly and   most global equity markets have reversed the  majority of Monday’s losses. Volatility is   higher than before, and a lot of big earnings  numbers still have to come out. A big signal   of the health of the US tech sector will be the  Nvidia earnings report at the end of this month.  

One of the big lessons of the week is that it  usually doesn’t pay to panic in a sell off. The   brokerage website outages on Monday likely  saved a few panicked investors some money   if they were trying to sell near the lows. If you enjoyed this video, you should watch   my video on the rise and fall of Japan next.  Don’t forget to check out our sponsor NordPass   using the link in the description. Talk  to you again in the next video. Bye.

2024-08-18

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