Are U.S Markets OnThe Road To Shanghai?

 | Dec 07, 2014 01:00AM ET

“I just want you to stand there and admire me for a while.” – Ace Lannigan (Bob Hope) in The Road to Singapore

So the November jobs number was the biggest in years. From what I could see, the consensus opinion in the business media in the wake of the report was fairly definitive: This Is The Big One. Employment, the economy (and presumably stock prices) are entering a new leg of long-lived growth. How long? Why, very long sir. We’re quite sure of it. How many shares are you buying?

A strong undercurrent of the victory theme is that anyone who is not celebrating is a hopeless crank of one form or another. Gee, do I have to be in the cranky camp now, along with the Fed-haters and goldbugs? It was a good report, the one I thought we would get last month, but the truth be told, I don’t think it was really much better than the November 2013 report and not nearly as good as the cheering parades on Wall Street would have it – for example, the unemployment rate remained steady at 5.8% and the jobs seemed to be heavily weighted towards part-time work. There’s a lot more detail below in The Economic Beat.

The bond market didn’t seem all that impressed either, with the U.S. 10-Year yield nudging up five basis points to 2.31%, half of one percent lower than this time a year ago. Yes, yes, oil is down, the dollar is up and that makes Treasuries more attractive, no argument. But there is no evidence at all that the bond market is concerned about economic growth taking off.

But what does the economy matter? Last Thursday, markets sold off briefly when European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi talked vaguely about the much-anticipated plans to add sovereign bond-buying to quantitative easing (QE). He cautioned that while preparations were underway, one should not assume that it would begin in January. Disappointment, as stocks were anticipating the start of QE all week. But then a story was floated over just in front of the European close quoting “unnamed” ECB officials as saying QE could begin in January – and stocks immediately rebounded back into the green. The story turned out to be a plant, nothing more than a rehash of Draghi’s earlier statement that “technical preparations” were proceeding apace and could be complete by January. But the story only seemed to reinforce the feeling that QE must be inevitable.

The common analytic theme seems to be that QE European-style may have little impact on the EU economy, partly because the transmission methods are different, partly because the ECB would need to buy a lot of German bunds (already at record centuries-low yields), and partly because, as Nouriel Roubini put it, it would be “too little too late.” Quite possibly, but the stock market is unlikely to care about any of that. These days the lure of central banking QE is growing into the attraction that a new business name once had when it ended with a dot com. You don’t ask questions, you just buy.

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Lest you think I’m exaggerating, it’s exactly what is happening in China. The central bank’s cut in the benchmark lending rate last month has set off a speculative frenzy in the Shanghai stock market: