Market Worries Accelerate, Bonds And Gold Shine

 | Aug 06, 2019 01:02AM ET

As the kids fill their backpacks with textbooks and head back to the classroom, investors are looking for a textbook to help them understand this rapidly changing investing environment. In less than a week, the climate changed from ‘maybe one Fed rate cut and done’ to ‘a full out Chinese trade and currency war’. Once again, how is anyone supposed to run a business under these conditions? This is definitely not an environment for increased capex spending or hiring decisions. And, with so much uncertainty, this is not a market that deserves to trade at a premium multiple. If you want to see the short-term flight to safety in action, just look at the four-day move in 10-year Treasury yields which collapsed 30 basis points. There hasn’t been a bigger four-day move since the Brexit vote in 2016.

While weak earnings guidance continued to throw shade on the market last week, it was the non-progress in the China trade talks, and the new layer of tariffs imposed by Trump and Navarro that threw the markets into the wok. Increased tariffs on most everything under a Christmas tree will cause a new round of higher costs for U.S. consumers. It also caused the Chinese government to stop purchases of all U.S. agricultural goods (goodbye farmers) and to devalue their currency (sorry U.S. manufacturers). Bottom line is that global trade will slow further and all boats will sink with the falling tide.

Where is the silver lining in all of this? Well, interest rates are clearly headed toward zero. The more that world trade slows, the closer the U.S. economy gets towards being in a recession. The Fed would like to avoid this so they will be forced to moved the Fed Funds rate even lower. We are certain to get another cut at the September meeting. The markets are even pushing the odds of a 0.5% cut toward 30%. So the bond markets should continue to march higher. Gold loves uncertainty, so it should continue to shine. Defensive stocks (Utes, REITs & Staples) should continue to outperform as stock portfolios look for safety and yield.

A hard ceiling now seems built in for stock prices. Let’s see how investors feel about the 200-day moving average, as well as the 3-month lows. We broke both of these levels hard when the trade wars, earnings uncertainty and the credit markets bit us back in October. This time we have a repeat of the trade wars and earning uncertainty, but are missing the credit break piece. So of course, I will tell you to keep a close eye on the credit and bank loan markets. If they snap then we will likely test another bear market pullback. One more silver lining to a 20%+ correction will be that Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa), and all the private equity funds, can finally deploy those cash hoards without complaining about the prices paid.

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The Bond markets flight to safety…

Market worries accelerated over the weekend as the China trade war evolved into a China currency war…

Indeed, the flare-up in trade tensions has renewed global financial market concerns over how much China will allow the yuan to weaken to offset heavier pressure on its exporters.“It appears the Chinese authorities no longer see the need to limit the tools at their disposal and that the currency is now also considered part of the arsenal to be drawn upon,” Rob Carnell, chief economist and head of research, Asia Pacific at ING, said in a note.

Analysts have previously said that authorities will keep depreciation in check due to concerns about potential capital outflows.

Despite slowing economic growth over the past year amid the intensifying trade war, China has not seen a rush of capital flight, thanks to capital controls put in place during the last economic downturn and growing foreign inflows into Chinese stocks and bonds.