Ominously for the stock markets, the Federal Reserve is warning that
quantitative tightening is coming later this year. The Fed is on
the verge of starting to drain its vast seas of new money conjured
out of thin air over the past decade or so. The looming end of this
radically-unprecedented easy-money era is exceedingly bearish for
these lofty stock markets, which have been grossly inflated for
years by Fed QE.
Way
back in December 2008, the first US stock panic in an entire century
left the Fed frantic. Fearful of an extreme negative wealth effect
spawning another depression, the Fed quickly forced its benchmark
federal-funds rate to zero. Once that zero-interest-rate policy had
been implemented, no more rate cuts were practical. ZIRP is
terribly disruptive economically, fueling huge distortions. But
negative rates are far worse.
So
instead of turning ZIRP to NIRP like the European Central Bank in
June 2014 and the Bank of Japan in January 2016, the Fed chose a
different unconventional-monetary-policy path. Just before it went
full ZIRP in late 2008, it had started quantitative easing.
Despite this fancy name, QE is nothing more than old-fashioned
central-bank money printing. The Fed spun up its printing presses
at wildly-unprecedented rates.
Literally trillions of dollars were created from nothing and used to
buy bonds. This extreme measure was known all throughout history as
debt monetization. Euphemistically calling it QE sounds so
innocuous, leave it to economists to hide what’s really going on
behind big words. Injecting such vast sums of new money into the US
economy had never before been attempted, and the resulting
aberrations were epic.
The
chief among them was levitating the US stock markets even
though the Fed was monetizing bonds, not stocks. This happened via
two primary mechanisms. The Fed’s bond buying forced interest rates
to extreme artificial lows. So traditional bond investors seeking
income from yields were effectively bullied into far-riskier
dividend-paying stocks instead. There’s no doubt boosting stock
markets was QE’s intention.
The
stock-market wealth effect is powerful, permeating the entire US
economy. In just one single month leading into late-October 2008,
the benchmark S&P 500 stock index had plummeted 30.0%!
Americans were terrified, so consumers and businesses alike rapidly
pulled in their horns. With stocks seemingly in a death spiral,
they had no confidence in the future to spend. The Fed feared the
economy grinding to a halt.
While QE directly lifted stocks by sucking investment capital out of
bonds newly saddled with record-low yields, a secondary indirect QE
impact proved more important. US corporations took advantage of the
Fed-manipulated extreme interest-rate lows to borrow aggressively.
But instead of investing all this easy cheap capital into growing
their businesses and creating jobs, they squandered most of it on
stock buybacks.
QE’s
super-low borrowing costs fueled a stock-buyback binge vastly
greater than anything seen before in world history. Literally
trillions of dollars were borrowed by elite S&P 500 US corporations
to repurchase their own shares! This was pure financial
manipulation, boosting stock prices through higher demand while
reducing shares outstanding. That made corporate earnings look much
more favorable on a per-share basis.
Incredibly QE-fueled corporate stock buybacks have proven the
only net source of stock-market capital inflows in this entire
bull market since March 2009! Elite Wall Street banks have
published many studies on this. Without the debt-funded
stock-buyback frenzy only possible through QE’s record-low borrowing
rates, this massive near-record bull wouldn’t even exist.
Corporations were the only buyers of their stocks.
Just
this month, Credit Suisse reported “one of the major features of the
US equity market since the low in 2009 is that the US corporate
sector has bought 18% of market cap, while institutions have sold 7%
of market cap.” Both institutional and individual investors have
been net sellers since the stock panic, only the corporations
have been net buyers. So quite literally, without QE this anomalous
bull never would’ve happened!
Smug
Fed officials have taken countless victory laps on QE, declaring
this biggest monetary experiment in all of world history a great
success. But until those extreme bond monetizations are fully
unwound via quantitative tightening, the fat lady has yet to
sing on QE’s ultimate impact. If QT’s resulting interest-rate rises
make bonds competitive for income again, and retard corporate stock
buybacks, stocks are in dire trouble.
The
total scope of QE is unfathomably large. What was originally
promised to be a temporary measure in the bowels of a
once-in-a-century stock panic quickly became quasi-permanent. The
Fed didn’t just keep QE in place, but expanded it multiple times
over the years. QT’s unprecedented threat to today’s lofty
Fed-levitated stock markets can’t be fully appreciated without
understanding the QE that generated this mess.
When
the Fed creates new money to inject into the economy via bond
purchases, those bonds are held on its balance sheet. This
chart shows the Fed’s total balance sheet in orange. Stacked within
it are the Fed’s total holdings of US Treasuries in red sitting on
top of mortgage-backed securities in yellow. Way back in QE1 before
it dared monetize Treasuries, the Fed also bought government agency
debt in green.
Prior to the Fed birthing quantitative easing in late 2008 during
that brutal stock panic, the Fed’s balance sheet had been at $849b.
Then came the original QE followed by its expansion, QE2 with its
own later expansion, Operation Twist and its expansion, and the
unprecedented open-ended QE3 trailed by its own expansion. Together
they ballooned the Fed’s balance sheet to a mind-boggling $4474b by
February 2015!
In
just 6.7 years, the Fed’s QE had collectively more than
quintupled its balance sheet! A staggering $3624b of bond
monetizations with money newly conjured out of thin air made for
427% balance-sheet growth. We are talking about $3.6t of QE here,
so no superlative is too dramatic to describe how big it is. QE’s
sheer gargantuan-ness explains why this Fed-easy-money-fueled
stock-market bull has been so huge.
In
the 8.4 years between March 2009 when QE1 was nearly tripled to
late-July 2017, the S&P 500 has powered an astonishing 266.3%
higher. That is far beyond normal bull-market stature. This makes
for the second-longest and third-largest bull market in US history,
all fueled by QE-spawned corporate stock buybacks. Just this
week it overtook the previous third-largest bull, right under 266%
back in the early 1950s.
The
Fed finally ceased conjuring new money out of thin air to monetize
bonds in October 2014 when it had fully tapered QE3. Most investors
seem to think that was the end of the QE story, but it was really
only half-time. Once again QE really isn’t over, its full economic
impact cannot be understood, until this extreme monetary policy
is fully unwound and reversed via QT. And that is finally due
to start later this year.
Since the Fed’s balance sheet peaked just after QE3, there’s been
no meaningful bond selling at all yet. The latest read from the
Fed on its own grotesquely-bloated balance sheet showed it at $4440b
in late July. That’s down merely 0.7% from its peak 2.4 years
earlier! Just like the US stock markets had never experienced QE
before early 2009, they’ve never faced QT before. Stock investors
ought to be terrified of it.
This
next chart shows why. It superimposes that benchmark S&P 500
stock-market index (SPX) on the Fed’s extreme balance sheet. This
chart is incredibly damning, exposing the great folly of central
banks monetizing bonds. The stock markets closely tracked the Fed’s
balance-sheet expansion under those various QE campaigns. Make no
mistake, QT looks every bit as bearish for stocks as QE proved
bullish!
The
stock markets should’ve bottomed in October 2008, after that panic
selling climax bashed the SPX 30.0% lower in a single month. Over
the next 6 trading days, the SPX indeed rocketed up 18.5% to peak
on Election Day. Then Obama won, and started talking about big
tax hikes and effectively nationalizing US healthcare. So over the
next dozen trading days following Election Day, the SPX plunged
another 25.2%!
Fed
officials panicked, and birthed what would later prove QE1 a few
trading days later. QE has always had heavy political overtones.
The combination of ZIRP hammering the short end of the yield curve
and QE blasting down the long end removed all free-market restraints
on US government spending. Since interest-rate signals were
short-circuited by the Fed, the Obama Administration easily
doubled the US
debt.
Those same Obama big-tax-hike and healthcare-nationalization fears
in early 2009 drove stock markets to one final low in March. At its
next FOMC meeting just 7 trading days later, the Fed nearly
tripled its QE1 purchase plans with the QE1X expansion. That
was the first time the Fed started to monetize the US government’s
Treasury debt, directly financing record deficit spending. The
stock markets soared on that.
When
the full QE1 campaign including its expansion had ended in mid-2010,
the Fed’s balance-sheet growth naturally stalled. Without those
easy-money inflows, the SPX immediately corrected hard. It was
already becoming apparent stock markets were addicted to QE.
Soon after the SPX dropped 16.0% in a couple months, the FOMC
launched QE2 to keep the party going. Stocks started surging again,
despite QE2’s quirks.
The
original QE2 wasn’t new quantitative easing, it didn’t grow the
Fed’s balance sheet. All it did was convert mortgage-backed bonds
into Treasuries. But that was soon followed by QE2X, which proved a
huge escalation. The $600b in new direct Treasury monetizations
announced doubled QE’s total buying in that arena. The stock
markets once again soared in lockstep with the Fed’s balance sheet
ballooning.
The
full QE2 campaign ran its course in mid-2011, so the Fed’s balance
sheet again stalled out. Right on cue, the SPX corrected hard. It
plunged 19.4% nearly entering a new bear market! The Fed was
really worried the stock markets would roll over into that bear
without QE’s boost, so the FOMC birthed Operation Twist at that
correction’s bottom. That was designed to slowly wean the stock
markets off QE.
Twist wasn’t new QE, it just shifted $667b of Treasuries from
short-term to long-term to hold down the long rates. So the SPX
rallied again with the mounting perception the Fed was getting in
the business of backstopping stock markets. If the Fed wouldn’t let
them sell off, then why worry about anything? Twist also greatly
forced down corporate borrowing costs, really accelerating the
already-big stock buybacks.
Once
again politics came into play with the launch of QE3. TwistX had
recently ended, and the Fed was under heavy fire from Republican
lawmakers heading into the 2012 elections. They were furious
that QE had enabled record deficit spending and national-debt growth
under Obama, so they threatened to strip the Fed of its coveted
independence. The Fed retaliated by launching QE3 with stock
markets near highs.
Stock-market fortunes
heavily sway the
outcomes of US presidential elections, really affecting how
swing voters feel economically. The stock markets were looking
toppy in late summer 2012, and weaker stock markets reduced the
incumbent Democrats’ chances of winning and protecting the easy
Fed. So out of the blue in September 2012 less than 8 weeks before
Election Day, the Fed birthed QE3 and goosed stocks again.
The
resulting rally indeed resulted in a second Obama victory,
immediately removing the Republicans’ threats of reining in the
Fed. And QE3 was radically different from QE1 and QE2 in that it
was open-ended. After seeing the ends of QE1 and QE2 both
result in major stock corrections, the Fed didn’t want to risk QE3
doing the same. So QE3’s monetizations had no predetermined sizes
or end dates like earlier campaigns’.
QE3
was soon expanded in December 2012, so the Fed’s balance sheet
started rocketing higher again in 2013. Once again the SPX
perfectly mirrored the Fed’s bond-monetization growth! QE3’s
advent was when the stock markets started getting extremely
distorted. Every time they started to sell off in any normal
healthy pullback or correction, top Fed officials would rush to say
QE3 could be expanded anytime.
Stock traders came to believe the Fed was backstopping the
stock markets, so they ignored all usual fundamental, technical, and
sentimental topping signals to buy every dip. The
resulting SPX
levitation from 2013 to 2015 after QE3 was finally fully tapered
and the Fed’s balance sheet stopped growing was wildly unprecedented
in all of history. This stock bull’s advance closely tracked the
Fed’s balance sheet!
All
investors need to study and understand the stock markets’ tight
relationship with the Fed’s bond holdings. QE directly fueled and
drove this extreme stock bull, so the unwinding of QE via QT is
something to be feared. Based on stock-market action during the
entire QE era, it’s hard to imagine stocks staying high as the Fed
soon starts to unwind and reverse QE. Monetary creation will shift
to monetary destruction.
Soon
after QE3 ended in October 2014, this stock bull topped not too much
higher in May 2015. Then the SPX suffered two corrections in rapid
succession, 12.4% in mid-2015 and 13.3% in early 2016. That was
unlike anything seen in the QE era, showing the stock markets
starting to roll over into their overdue Fed-delayed bear. Stock
markets traded sideways to lower for nearly 14 months, until
that surprise Brexit vote.
In
late June 2016, the British people surprised by courageously voting
to leave the EU and retake their own sovereignty. The stock markets
sold off hard initially on that surprise, but then started surging
higher on hopes that would force central banks to aggressively
ease again! That hope-for-CB-intervention rally soon fizzled
though, with the SPX grinding lower until Trump’s surprise election
win early last November.
The
resulting
Trumphoria rally since is another extreme anomaly, on hopes
for big tax cuts soon instead of more Fed QE. Almost all the
big daily rallies since the election happened on days when political
news seemed to signal those fabled Trump tax cuts were really
coming. Without Trumphoria, the SPX would still be stalled near
2100 right where it was when the Fed’s balance sheet stopped
expanding a couple years earlier.
Traders are starting to understand that the bickering Republican
lawmakers in Congress might not come together long enough to pass
those Trump tax cuts. And without massive tax relief, this whole
rally since the election is built on a foundation of sand. The
stock markets were already trading way up near bubble valuations
before Trump won, and have stayed in that dangerous toppy territory
since. And now QT cometh!
The
Fed started talking about beginning quantitative tightening later
this year at its early-May meeting, as subsequently revealed in
the minutes. Then at the next FOMC meeting in mid-June, QT was
really made official within the FOMC statement. It warned, “The
Committee currently expects to begin implementing a balance sheet
normalization program this year, provided that the economy evolves
broadly as anticipated.”
The
Fed even went into great detail, “This program, which would
gradually reduce the Federal Reserve’s securities holdings by
decreasing reinvestment of principal payments from those securities,
is described in the accompanying addendum to the Committee’s Policy
Normalization Principles and Plans.” That attached document
explained how the FOMC is expecting to actually implement
quantitative tightening.
No
start date was specified, but Fedspeak from top FOMC officials has
implied it will likely happen at the next FOMC meeting followed by a
Yellen press conference in mid-September. Wall Street
expects the Fed to soften the blow with no rate hike at that
meeting. QT will likely be formally announced, to start the next
month as Q4 dawns. The FOMC laid out plans to begin QT small, but
it will quickly grow to massive levels.
QT
won’t involve active bond selling, instead the Fed will let maturing
Treasuries and mortgage-backed bonds roll off its bloated balance
sheet. These rolloffs will initially be capped at just $6b per
month for Treasuries and $4b per month for MBSs. Every quarter,
these monthly caps will be raised by $6b and $4b respectively until
they reach $30b and $20b per month. That makes for total monthly QT
projected at $50b!
That’s astounding, vastly more aggressive than Fed watchers expected
from this uber-dovish Fed. If it sticks to plan, that full
$50b-per-month QT would be in place by the end of 2018. This is
really going to happen. Janet Yellen’s term ends in early February
2018, and she really wants to get QT underway on her watch. But she
will be out of office well before QT grows big enough to obliterate
QE-levitated stocks.
A
$50b-per-month pace of quantitative tightening works out to $600b
per year! Remember the Fed has $3.6t of QE it would have to
unwind to fully reverse it, which would take 6 years. That pace is
roughly symmetrical with the 6.7 years all the QE campaigns
collectively took. If the Fed’s extreme balance-sheet expansion
during QE was so bullish for stocks, won’t a similar-paced
contraction be super-bearish?
But
this hyper-dovish Fed is far too cowardly to fully unwind QE, with
top Fed officials often pointing out the Fed’s balance sheet will
remain much bigger than pre-panic levels. General consensus among
the elite Wall Street analysts who watch the Fed full-time is that
a half-unwind is coming, $1.8t of QT on that $3.6t of QE. At
the Fed’s projected $600b-per-year pace, that would only take a few
years to execute.
The
implications for these near-bubble stock markets artificially
inflated by the Fed are staggering. That half-unwind would shrink
the Fed’s balance sheet back to April 2011 levels of $2630b. Back
then before the end of QE2 and QE3’s stock rocket fuel, the SPX
merely traded at 1330. That’s 46% under the recent all-time record
high! Destroying $1.8t of capital that levitated the stock markets
is going to really hurt.
Quantitative tightening is hostile for stock markets, a fierce
headwind. Less Fed bond buying as it lets bonds roll off its books
means higher interest rates coming. That will raise bond
yields, restoring some of their competitiveness with far-riskier
dividend-paying stocks. Plenty of income-seeking bond investors
forced into stocks by QE will sell stocks to return to bonds under
QT. Stocks will no longer be the only game in town.
Higher rates will also greatly retard that extreme
corporate-stock-buyback spree that directly levitated the stock
markets. Corporations will not only find it more expensive to keep
borrowing to manipulate their own stock prices higher, but much of
their existing trillions of debt under QE will become costlier to
service. They will greatly reduce their buybacks, instead
allocating any available capital to paying down QE debt.
Remember corporate stock buybacks have been the only source of net
buying for this entire monster bull of the QE era. So if QT
significantly slows or even reverses these massive buybacks, watch
out below for the stock markets! But surely the Fed will stop QT if
the stock markets drift lower or correct hard nearing bear-market
territory, right? Maybe or maybe not, but by that point it might
already be too late to matter.
QE3
had a much-greater impact on the stock markets than QE1 and QE2 not
just because of its size, but due to its influence on trader
psychology. Once QT is launched later this year, there will be
no doubt that the Fed no longer has stock traders’ backs. The Fed
will shift from being viewed as friend to foe, and not even slowing
or stopping QT will change that rapidly. QT headwinds will persist
for years just like QE tailwinds.
If
the FOMC gets worried that QT is crushing stock markets and stops
it, that is very problematic too. It won’t only be a colossal hit
to the Fed’s credibility, but traders will view a pause in QT as a
sign the Fed has lost confidence in the US economy. That will
motivate them to flee stocks all the faster, exacerbating any
bearish sentiment. Once the Fed starts QT, it’s seriously
committed. Stopping it could prove even worse.
The
Fed won’t be blamed anyway. While QE absolutely levitated the stock
markets as this chart proves, at the time QE wasn’t widely
attributed. Instead traders naturally focused on short-term news,
daily events that are used to rationalize stock-market up
days. During QT the same thing will happen. Even if QT is driving
the overall selling, down days will be explained at the time based
on current newsflow instead of QT.
And
once again politics will come into play surrounding QT too. This
Fed remains highly political, with at least one top FOMC official
donating to Clinton’s campaign in the last election. Yellen herself
is a hardcore lifelong Democrat, often giving speeches with views
that could come from any Democratic campaign. Consider how the Fed
rate hikes in
this latest cycle have played out relative to presidents, it’s
pretty striking.
Despite soaring stock markets and good economic data, the Fed only
hiked a single time while Obama was in office. And that was nearly
7 years into his term when there was no re-election risk! After
that the Fed held fire for an entire year during the 2016 campaign,
when it looked like a Fed-friendly Democrat would succeed Obama.
Then just 5 weeks after Trump won, the Fed started hiking again.
Aggressively.
It
has now raised rates three times in less than 9 months since Trump’s
victory! And now after years of delay under Obama, QT is coming
under Trump. The FOMC very well understands how damaging QT
will prove to stocks, and likely wants to pin the blame on Trump
instead of its own QE. Weaker stock markets in coming years will
lower the odds incumbent Republicans can keep their hold on Congress
and the presidency.
Since Republican lawmakers remain very hostile to the Fed, still
threatening to greatly neuter its power, the FOMC has every
incentive to let the QT stock-bear aftermath unfold on Trump’s
watch. Don’t be hasty to dismiss the Fed’s political angle here.
Every major Fed decision for years now has closely tied in with the
politics of the time. A QT-spawned stock bear before the coming
elections could maintain Fed independence.
With
quantitative tightening looming for the first time in history,
investors really need to lighten up on their stock-heavy
portfolios. A
major new bear is long overdue anyway due to near-bubble
valuations.
Cash is king in bear markets, as its buying power
increases as stock prices fall. Investors who hold cash through a
50% bear market can double their stock holdings at the bottom by
buying back stocks at half price!
Put options on the
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downside risks. They are cheap now with
euphoria rampant, but their prices will surge quickly when stocks
start selling off materially. Even better than cash and SPY puts is
gold, the anti-stock trade. Gold is a rare asset that tends to move
counter to stock markets, leading to
soaring
investment demand for portfolio diversification when stocks
fall.
Gold surged nearly
30% higher in the first half of 2016 in a new bull run that was
initially sparked by the last major correction in stock markets
early last year. If the stock markets indeed roll over into a new
bear in 2017, gold’s coming gains should be much greater. And they
will be dwarfed by those of the best gold miners’ stocks, whose
profits leverage
gold’s gains. Gold stocks rocketed 182% higher in 2016’s first
half!
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The
bottom line is the coming quantitative tightening is incredibly
bearish for these stock markets that have been artificially
levitated by quantitative easing. All the stock-bullish tailwinds
from years of QE will reverse into fierce headwinds under QT.
Higher interest rates will restore bonds’ competitiveness with
stocks, and greatly retard corporate stock buybacks which were this
outsized bull’s only meaningful driver.
The
Fed’s monetary fire hose that injected trillions of dollars of
freshly-conjured money into the markets for years will soon start
sucking that capital back out. As the Fed’s QE giveth, the Fed’s QT
taketh away. These QE-inflated stock markets are in serious trouble
under QT, and the FOMC might not even care for political reasons.
But even if it does, stopping QT after it begins could crush
confidence accelerating the selling. |