A Day Of Trauma For Markets

 | Feb 09, 2016 04:03AM ET

It’s been a day of trauma for the equity bulls and for many the towel has been thrown in.

I suggested yesterday that the financial markets were at a key juncture, but the widening in credit spreads and the focus now on credit default swaps suggests that the pain is not going away anytime soon. There is huge demand for portfolio protection in all asset classes and it just doesn’t feel like we are going to see a major turn anytime soon. One can then do a sense check as to what will effectively turn this juggernaut of pain around and this is not a question that is readily answered.

The long-felt pain in the energy sector has now fully morphed into a banking crisis. Much has been made of the demand for credit default swaps (CDS) protecting against future default in the European banking space. Rightly so, when Deutsche has been sold off 58% from its 2015 high and left with a market capitalisation of €21 billion. Given they have €54 billion in bonds maturing over the next two years (much of this in the next two months) and much of their existing funds tied up as regularity capital, things don’t look hugely sustainable. The less focus on earnings numbers the better. One does suspect the market cap does reflect quite a bit of bad news.

Price action in Asia has reflected these concerns with Aussie banks getting smashed, despite not having anywhere near the same balance sheet duress as European banks. Aussie banks don’t rely on the long-end of the yield curve for margin expansion like US banks, but what we do know is the big four Australian banks will be raising up to A$100 billion of debt throughout the year, much of which will be issued offshore. With funding costs on the rise, this will affect net margins and presumably this will be passed onto the costs for business loans. So there will be an in impact on credit and wider economics.

There is a genuine concern that stress in asset markets will start affecting real economics, so let’s forget the US payrolls report, it is a lagging indicator. This period of sustained volatility and deterioration in credit will impact businesses and one has to be concerned about how many households are feeling this drawdown in the financial markets.