USD, Real Yields Head Lower As Gold's Cyclical Uptrend Accelerates

 | Dec 11, 2017 12:01AM ET

Sans the ever wilder world of bitcoin – more of the same since last month’s note. Spreads between short and long-term Treasuries continue to narrow, with 2's’s and 10's earlier last week at their tightest levels since the previous equity market peak in October 2007.

That said – and contrary to the market environment in Q4 2007 where spreads had been widening for several months as both short and long-term Treasury yields fell, but shorter-term yields fell faster – the curve today has continued to flatten as shorter-term yields have climbed and “outperformed” the long-end, greatly buoyed by staunch confidence of another rate hike by the Fed this week and tepid expectations towards rising inflationary pressures next year.

The cyclical disinflationary gravy train that began in Q4 2011 as the US dollar and real yields carved out their respective cyclical lows, has handsomely rewarded both equity and credit investors alike, at the expense of more inflationary driven assets – like commodities. And while there are many that believe that a secular move higher in equities began in 2013 as indexes broke out above their previous 2007 cycle highs, that observation appears mostly biased by simple technical disposition and ignorant of a wider historical perspective and understanding of the long-term yield/growth cycle – we believe essential to even considering more lasting secular persuasions.

The long and short of things – which appears entirely personified in the speculative microcosm of bitcoin mania these days: trade it while it lasts, but don’t be fooled by price alone. Valuations anchor all returns in the long run, and that rope between expectations and reality is exceptionally long and extraordinarily taut today.

Besides the unconventional and extraordinary monetary policy approaches applied in the markets since the global financial crisis, expectations continue to be muddled by the massive scale of the long-term yield and growth supercycle that we believe ultimately exerts the greatest influence on the respective equity and commodity sub-cycles over the long-term. Simply put, investors need to balance expectations by also viewing the overarching cycle through a market historian’s wide-angle lens, rather than just a weatherman’s radar display of current market conditions.

Granted, much easier said than done, as prudence typically takes a back seat to the ever pressing consequence of the fear of missing out. Heck, what’s a measly 20 percent return, when your kid’s teacher bought some crypto last week and doubled his “investment” – just because his nephew bought a bitcoin financed Bimmer on a cheap ticket punched in June? As if Millennials weren’t disliked enough already, returns in their preferred investment vehicle over the past year rival equities over the entirety of the more than 35+ year secular bull market. From a speculative point of view, there’s never been anything like it – and it’s happening right now. Chew on that.

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Getting back to a more stodgy and puritan landscape… When you look back at the span of the broader long-term yield cycle, you'll find it was a period in history that encompasses 70+ years of remarkable growth, the last 35+ of which were traveled with increasingly benevolent credit conditions, in which the US has enjoyed elevated equity market valuations on the back of a proportionately massive secular downdraft in yields.

Historically speaking, the significant investments and advancements in the world economy that took place directly after World War II helped drive growth, inflation and eventually yields to such Icarus heights – that countries, central banks, corporations and individuals have enjoyed the voluminous book-end benefits of a declining rate environment for well over 35 years. This in a nutshell built the long road to the top of the equity market cycle on the back of ever cheapening credit and ever more accommodative monetary policy.

Interestingly, the relative symmetry represented in the current yield cycle is not unusual and quite characteristic when you look back at several hundred years of market history.