Confidence Peak, Dumb Money AND Bonds Are Dead?

 | Sep 29, 2016 08:09AM ET

It was interesting to see the markets reaction to the Consumer Confidence report on Tuesday, along with some of the media headlines, to wit:

Consumer confidence just surged to its highest level since the recession. The latest reading on consumer confidence from the Conference Board came in at 104.1 for September, up from the prior month’s 101.8. The index touched 105.6 in August 2007.

There are a couple of important points to consider in the statement above.

First, it is NOT surprising that after 8-years of an economic recovery, consumer confidence has finally recovered all the way back to where it was prior to the last recession. This is what you would expect during any economic recovery, much less one driven by massive liquidity injections, government programs to promote consumption and ongoing Central Bank interventions. The fact that we are only NOW back at previous highs, shows just how fractured the domestic economy was, and likely still is.

Second, and most importantly, records are a record for a reason. Record levels denote the point that previously marked the end of a cycle, not the beginning of a new one. This point is often missed by the mainstream media. Record highs of anything, whether it is economic, fundamental or financial data, are warnings signs of late stage events.

The chart below is the COMPOSITE confidence index which is an average of the Conference Board and University of Michigan consumer confidence indices.