Are Cracks Starting To Appear ? Midterm Election Years, Energy, S&P 500 Earnings

 | Oct 17, 2022 12:48AM ET

h2 Yellen On Treasury Market Illiquidity

It’s interesting that Janet Yellen raised the specter of buying Treasuries this past week, without it being QE. The comments seemed to be born of some illiquidity issues within the Treasury market. This was somewhat reminiscent of 1998 and the LongTerm Capital (LTCM) Crisis and Greenspan being forced to reduce the fed funds rate in early October, 1998, as cracks were starting to appear between credit spreads and the Treasury relationship.

It’s been a while since I read the book on that mess, stemming from John Meriwether and the LTCM debacle where Wall Street was shooting openly at the LongTerm Capital Management positions. The UK Gilt market and the Liz Truss fiscal policies are also adding to the mix, on a global scale. In 1994, similar to 2022 in that the AGG and the US Treasury market had it’s worst year ever, also saw an international incident – the peso devaluation – that started the “great unwind” in terms of the Treasury bear market. Orange County, California declaring bankruptcy, was another blow but it was mainly headlines. Orange County filed for bankruptcy based on a bad interest rate bet. If memory serves correctly, one of the OC operating funds was long zero-coupon Treasuries.

I wonder what that same trade would look like today. (A little sidebar on LTCM and Greenspan: it was Wall Street that had to bail out the banks in the early 1990’s after the commercial real estate crisis, but with LTCM – as the story goes – Greenspan had to ask the banks to bail out Wall Street.

From late July ’98 through the low in early October ’98, the Nasdaq corrected 35%… Fun times. I still remember David Faber breaking the story on CNBC…

h2 Midterm Election Years/h2

Ryan Detrick now with Carson Group out of Omaha, after leaving LPL Financial, has done yeoman’s work on the pattern of midterm elections and SP 500 returns. 1994 was a midterm election year, (bond bear market) as was 1998 (LTCM talked about above). 2022 is a midterm election year. It’s been grim YTD with the SP 500 down -23.83% while the AGG is down -15.69%, for a 60% / 40% balanced portfolio YTD return of -20.57%.