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The 20-Year Stock Bubble - Its Origin In Wholesale Money

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Submitted by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

As doubts surrounding QE have grown, there has been a somewhat detectable if still small trend in central banker repentance. Alan Greenspan to an extent has embraced a more decentralized and market framework in his public comments even though he has yet, to my knowledge, actually repudiate his own work more directly. As noted a few days ago, former BoE governor Mervyn King has been far more open and alarming. While that may seem to indicate that monetarists only find free market “religion” once out of the drudgery of their professional office, I think Zhou Xiaochuan, head of the PBOC, performs the exception.

The direction the Chinese central bank has taken since late 2013 seems to confirm that idea more and more. Viewed as a repudiation of textbook monetary tactics and even basic justifications, the PBOC has become if not more “market” oriented at least drastically shifting priorities from the conventional, QE definitions of “growth at all costs” to something like managing that past mistake (as the PBOC took orthodox monetarism to new levels of insanity from 2009 through 2012). Last April, really at the outset of what China was about to do, Zhou issued a warning that looks to have been quite appropriate:

“If the central bank is not a part of the government, it is not efficient in coordinating policies to push forward reforms,” [Zhou] said.

“Our choice has its own rational reasons behind it. But this choice also has its costs. For example, whether we can efficiently cope with asset bubbles and inflation is questionable.”

That certainly seems to be a damning repudiation of the monetary illusion. Faith in the QE world is waning everywhere and with very good reason; it just doesn’t work in anything outside of dangerous financial imbalance and asset price inflation. Even Krugman appears to have wavered:

“I’m still really, really worried,” Krugman said at a conference in Tokyo on Wednesday. A big problem remains building enough momentum in the economy to escape deflation, he said.

Krugman said he is concerned that Abenomics is getting bogged down as the Bank of Japan fails to spur inflation to a 2 percent target, hampered by falling oil prices. The economy is struggling to rebound after a contraction last quarter, while the central bank’s main gauge of inflation fell to zero for a third time this year in July.

One former central banker and academic economist (redundant) who is not contrite in the slightest degree is Ben Bernanke. Bernanke has been writing consistently about how he not only believes QE’s work, they did work (to some qualified extend) and further that there aren’t any bubbles – not even a stock bubble. In dealing with the leftward sting of “income inequality”, the former Fed chair wrote on June 1:

Stock prices have risen rapidly over the past six years or so, but they were also severely depressed during and just after the financial crisis. Arguably, the Fed’s actions have not led to permanent increases in stock prices, but instead have returned them to trend. To illustrate: From the end of the 2001 recession (2001:q4) through the pre-crisis business cycle peak (2007:q4), the S&P500 stock price index grew by about 1.2 percent a quarter. If the index had grown at that same rate from the fourth quarter of 2007 on, it would have averaged about 2123 in the first quarter of this year; its actual value was 2063, a little below that. There are of course many ways to calculate the “normal” level of stock prices, but most would lead to a similar conclusion.

From this view, the Fed acted quite appropriately with regard to stock prices in order to get them back to their own established trend; therefore no bubble. It isn’t surprising that his math works out, as you can plot his figures on a chart of the S&P 500 and see his reasoning painted forth.

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend

Starting at the end of the dot-com recession sometime in the last quarter of 2001, a 1.2% per quarter trend nicks the top of the market in 2007. Ignoring the implications of panic and crash through March 2009, as he does, filling out the rest of the chart puts the current (before August 24) stock index directly within the path of his trend.

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend2

It is a ridiculously weak argument for obvious reasons, not at all unlike his defense of QE in the real economy via the unemployment rate without mentioning the denominator. It isn’t clarified in his post, but it seems equally evident that he picked the end of the dot-com recession as a start date because that is when Greenspan’s Fed brought forth “ultra-low” interest rates (see below). So if you believe that “ultra-low” interest rates are responsible for the current stock bubble, there you go.

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend EFF

Of course there is already something missing from this intentionally narrow review, namely that the dot-com bubble had already occurred; it was that process that seems to have led to “permanent increases in stock prices”, but only intermittently. Thus ultra-low interest rates were not at all its source but rather the FOMC’s belated attempt to minimize the damage from the inevitable. Many people have instead extrapolated interest rates into just the housing bubble (which that was certainly a factor, but clearly not the true bubble source) but without explanation for the dot-coms. Bernanke is trying to be clever here by using that vagueness on the first part to his advantage.

In fact, the housing bubble did not begin in 2003 when Greenspan got the FOMC down to 1% on the EFF, it had already been under way for nearly a decade by then. His efforts, such that there might have been any effect, was only to partially aid unleashing the true mania (though I would argue that even here the federal funds rate is given an overstated role as I have little doubt the housing bubble was going where it was going no matter what Greenspan did or did not do; the evidence for that is how rising interest rates in 2004 had so very little impact, as dark leverage in especially CDS just exploded at that very moment). Put together, the stock bubble (or repeated stock bubble) dates to around the same time as the housing bubble, which should not in any way be unexpected.

 

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend 1995 SP500

ABOOK June 2015 Bubble Risk Housing Bubble

We don’t even have to search very hard for the commonality of 1995, either. It was at that time, developed throughout the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, the JP Morgan “sold” its RiskMetrics platform widely to Wall Street and London. The torrent of dark leverage and wholesale “banking” that would be unleashed through the mathematical effects on balance sheet leverage, extended and received, was simply obvious. That counted, too, for the global effects upon the eurodollar stage, as the surge of the “dollar” coincided with the end stage of pure economic financialization. Greenspan believed, as did almost everyone else, he was controlling the economy through minute fine-tuning of the federal funds rate, a quarter point here, quarter point there, as if those made any true difference. Instead, the “dollar” was surging everywhere but especially Europe (this is Bernanke/Greenspan’s mysterious “global savings glut”; not “savings” at all but balance sheet expansion across multiple dimensions).

ABOOK March 2015 Curve Swiss Participation

If the eurodollar takeover was instead responsible for the serial asset bubbles of the past two decades, then it would make far more sense to extrapolate stock trends from that point rather than the irrelevant and overstated federal funds monkeying. So where Bernanke’s stock trend aligns the peaks as if that were “fair” and of the real market, the troughs instead just as easily conform traced back to the plainly obvious eurodollar deviation.

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend Dollar Trend

In this context, the panic in 2008 makes perfect sense as it was a total failure of the eurodollar/wholesale system which not only reversed in total the prior bubble levels it crushed the global economy with it. The failure of the eurodollar standard to heal or rebuild to its prior upswing (ended on August 9, 2007) was seen more so in the real economy (the 2012 slowdown) but also in the stock market in 2010 and again in 2011; both those outbreaks appeared to revert back to that “dollar baseline.”

The fact that asset inflation can continue on its own apart from any financial contribution of the wholesale “dollar” is due to partially separate liquidity and funding sources. Liquidity isn’t everything always, but when it is failing it takes over for the dominant marginal direction. In other words, corporate repurchases and retail flows might be sufficient for stock prices to rise and rise rapidly where the “dollar” isn’t as supportive, but those are easily overwhelmed where the “dollar” is acutely retreating (as August 24).

When we plot Bernanke’s 1.2% per quarter benchmark at a start date of January 1995, that compounding growth works out to a “target” S&P 500 level of 1236.09 for Q3 2015.

ABOOK Sept 2015 Bernankes Trend Dollar Trend Compounded

Where his 1.2% per quarter within the bubble mechanics calculates to 2123 (as of June) for the S&P 500, applying the same idea to starting outside the serial bubbles is vastly different (-42%).

I’m not making any claims about whether 1236.09 is “fair value” for the S&P 500, only realizing the true nature of the stock bubble makes a huge difference. He isn’t quite taking the full weight of the Yellen Doctrine here (I define that as her notion that a bubble isn’t really a bubble unless it doesn’t “work” in the real economy) but you can see how he is, by the construction of his trend narrative, thinking in at least that direction. Both are attempts to justify asset inflation by moving the perspective to within the bubble period so as not to have to explain how it all arrived in the first place (inferring from Bernanke’s intent: since the dot-com bubble predates “ultra-low” interest rates it can’t possibly be the Fed’s fault, and therefore the Fed has been successful in simply re-establishing what the “market” did on its own beforehand).

I think that is true but only in the narrow view that interest rate targeting didn’t actually do much of anything – which was and remains the whole problem. If interest rate targeting didn’t directly cause the asset bubbles, it didn’t restrain them either. This is not a small or trivial reflection, as the whole point of controlling the liquidity rate was to not just “stimulate” but also to restrict where “necessary.” To say that there was no limitation upon the eurodollar advance is an understatement since banks simply wrote their own, to the point that they even manufactured their own currency (collateral) far outside of what these economists considered to be well-aligned financial behavior.

ABOOK June 2015 Bubble Risk Eurodollar Standard2

 

The relevant point to consider for stocks is which trend is closer to the “truth” of asset inflation. That is, of course, amplified in 2015 by the revisiting of eurodollar decay in much more strained and openly chaotic fashion. If the “dollar” is again to fail, what might that do to stocks? While that isn’t knowable we do have some methods of gaining insight, for which only certain central bankers will provide useful perspective.

ABOOK July 2015 Eurodollars Swiss plus OCC

 

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Sat, 09/12/2015 - 15:38 | 6540066 lordbyroniv
lordbyroniv's picture

geez

 

this is gunna end bad

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 15:47 | 6540082 Secret Treaties
Secret Treaties's picture

Retail Sweep Programs and Bank Reserves, 1994-1999

Richard G. Anderson and Robert H. Rasche

"In January 1994, the Federal Reserve Board permitted a commercial bank to begin using a new type of computer software that dynamically reclassifies balances in its customer accounts from transaction deposits to a type of personal-saving deposit, the money market deposit account (MMDA).1 This reclassification reduces the bank’s statutory required reserves while leaving unchanged its customers’ perceived holdings of transaction deposits.

The use of deposit-sweeping software spread slowly between January 1994 and April 1995, but rapidly thereafter. Estimates of the amounts of transaction deposits reclassified as MMDAs at all U.S. depository institutions, prepared by the Board of Governors’ staff, are shown in Figure 1.2 By late 1999, the amount was approximately $372 billion. In contrast, the aggregate amount of transaction deposits (demand plus other checkable deposits) in the published M1 monetary aggregate, as of December 1999, was $599.2 billion."

So . . .

"Our analysis suggests that the willingness of bank regulators to permit use of deposit-sweeping software has made statutory reserve requirements a “voluntary constraint” for most banks. That is, with adequately intelligent software, many banks seem easily to be able to reduce their transaction deposits by a large enough amount that the level of their required reserves is less than the amount of reserves that they require for day-to-day operation of the bank. For these banks at least, the economic burden of statutory reserve requirements is zero."

 

https://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/01/0101ra.pdf

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:02 | 6540110 rccalhoun
rccalhoun's picture

geez

this is gunna end

good!

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 17:31 | 6540288 junction
junction's picture

Yesterday, on 9/11, there were postings dealing with the use of Brady Bonds, created by Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady to loot in excess of one trillion dollars from the world economy in 1991.  Then there were postings here repeating the story of the two trillion dollars looted from the Pentagon's account, with the information stored in the offices in the wedge of the Pentagon that was destroyed by the cruise missile and pre-planted RDX explosives.  There is still a missing answer to the big question no one has yet posted: "Where are all those stolen trillions of dollars?"  Just saying.  

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 15:41 | 6540072 de3de8
de3de8's picture

I'm ready for some good news

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 23:34 | 6541150 Pool Shark
Pool Shark's picture

 

 

I just saved a ton of money on my car insurance.

 

 

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 15:49 | 6540088 DOGGONE
DOGGONE's picture

Central history kept out of sight:

Dow, Inflation Adjusted
http://patrick.net/investing/Dow%2C+Inflation+Adjusted

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 15:56 | 6540103 DontWorry
DontWorry's picture

Don't worry.  Many things changed in 1995, some permanently, and this article takes a rather myopic view.  Remember the Netscape browser that hailed the beginning of the commercial Internet?  That was released in December of 1994.  This article doesnt even mention the Internet!  That changed the world economy as much or more than the invention of the railroad!  Preposterous!

The world is awash in central bank money for the forseeable future, and as things get worse in the rest of the world, that money will come to the US stock market.  Invest with confidence, and always with a qualified investment professional who can design a diversified portfolio based on your risk tolerance.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:37 | 6540177 Ataxic Press
Ataxic Press's picture

YES!

And later, what of the iPod? or the Apple Watch?

Soon, everyone’s wildest dreams will come true, and to be rich will simply mean willing oneself to be so.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:44 | 6540193 magnetosphere
magnetosphere's picture

i can't make any sense of what this guy says.  it looks like gibberish to me, or am i stupid?

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 17:07 | 6540242 I AM SULLY
I AM SULLY's picture

100% AGREE! IT'S EASY TO MAKE BETWEEN 70 AND 100 THOUSAND DOLLARS AN HOUR WHILE LIVING IN YOUR PARENT'S BASEMENT AND EATING RAMEN NOODLES AND DEFECATING WITH BLOOD IN YOUR STOOL ...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn5z0eWy_Z4

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:04 | 6540111 tocointhephrase
tocointhephrase's picture

Market shmarket

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:06 | 6540119 ebworthen
ebworthen's picture

Let's complete the circle FED, send me my tax-free check for $4 Million.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:12 | 6540128 daveO
daveO's picture

Why the Japanese, who import over 90% of their oil, put up with this guy is a testament to their gullibility. It really should be more apparent to them what a fool he is.

“I’m still really, really worried,” Krugman said at a conference in Tokyo on Wednesday. A big problem remains building enough momentum in the economy to escape deflation, he said.

 

Krugman said he is concerned that Abenomics is getting bogged down as the Bank of Japan fails to spur inflation to a 2 percent target, hampered by falling oil prices.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:25 | 6540153 i_call_you_my_base
i_call_you_my_base's picture

Krugman saying he is "really worried" about japan is absurd. He has no stake in it other than in a purely academic way. Krugman is rich and will be fine no matter what happens. Fucking asshole.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:48 | 6540205 I AM SULLY
I AM SULLY's picture

Krugman is a turd monkey ... and he is in on this one time opportunity for making between 70 and 100 thousand dollars per month in  your underwear ... while simply sitting and doing nothing and defecating in your bed ... with bed sores and puss and shit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn5z0eWy_Z4

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:40 | 6540183 I AM SULLY
I AM SULLY's picture

DO YOU WANT TO MAKE BETWEEN 70 AND 100 THOUSAND DOLLARS PER MONTH?

(you do)

(that's nice)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn5z0eWy_Z4

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:48 | 6540203 FranSix
FranSix's picture

If anyone really despises their Federal Reserve banknotes and think it's fiat confetti, I'm willing to relieve you of your complete disgust. You can just hand them over and a great weight will be lifted from your shoulders.

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 16:52 | 6540220 I AM SULLY
I AM SULLY's picture

That's great! Clearly you're ready to make between 70 and 100 thousand dollars a day while living in your mom's basement and eating cheetos and getting bed sores from immobility ... this is a one time opportunity to leverage the same techniques the Federal Reserve has pioneered.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn5z0eWy_Z4

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 17:04 | 6540233 Clowns on Acid
Clowns on Acid's picture

What happened in 1995? Thats easy .. the repeal of Glass Steagal. Baks, brokers, and Insurance companies no longer competing for funds ...at a market price . cost.

Once the Banks, brokers and insurance get "centralized" they use one balance sheet to lever all risk ... chasing ther same asset groups. With a ZIRP policy the respective demand of funds does not cause an increase in interest rates. 

Thus they all bid up all asset groups usig the same risk metrics ... until 2007/08 when it all crashes ... until the Fed shows how printing money is the answer.... to lack of liquidity and falling asset prices. 

 

Sat, 09/12/2015 - 19:45 | 6540605 Omega_Man
Omega_Man's picture

what happened in 95? bond meltdown in 94

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