Global Liquidity Conditions Remain Negative

 | May 15, 2016 03:08AM ET

“Earnings don’t move the overall market… focus on the central banks and focus on the movement of liquidity… most people in the market are looking for earnings and conventional measures. It’s liquidity that moves markets.” ~ Stanley Druckenmiller

Global liquidity conditions, as measured by BofA Merrill Lynch's Global Liquidity Tracker (GLT), continue to rest in negative territory and currently appear to be heading lower. The overall message coming from this data is that global liquidity conditions are providing an unfavorable outlook for financial market stability and reflect a global economy in a weakened/fragile state. As we'll show below, most of this weakness is currently coming from emerging markets.

First, here is the description provided by Bloomberg for what BofA Merrill Lynch's GLT measures:

"Our real-time Global Liquidity Tracker (GLT) is a composite indicator of liquidity conditions in emerging and developed economies. To estimate our GLT indicator, we employ a dynamic factor model used by global central banks. Our Liquidity Tracker extracts a common unobserved factor reflecting the greatest common variation among market spreads, asset prices, monetary and credit data across different frequencies. We combine our US, Euro area, Japan and EM Liquidity trackers into a global composite using financial weights reflecting the average relevance of an economy in terms of market capitalization and private sector credit. All of this allows us to produce timely estimates of liquidity conditions in an effort to assess the state of the global economy. A reading of zero indicates liquidity at its long-run average while activity between -3 and +3 represents the standard deviation from this average."

h3 Global Liquidity: Negative/h3

As you can see, global liquidity conditions tend to remain positive or negative for prolonged periods of time and, in agreement with Druckenmiller, correspond with major moves in the market. We've added green and red arrows on the MSCI World Index to highlight possible entry/exit points based on positive/negative liquidity conditions.