The
unnaturally-tranquil stock markets suddenly plunged over this past
week. Volatility skyrocketed out of the blue and shattered years of
artificial calm conjured by extreme central-bank distortions. This
was a huge shock to the legions of hyper-complacent traders, who are
realizing stocks don’t rally forever. With stock selling unleashed
again, herd psychology will start shifting back to bearish which
will fuel lots more selling.
As a
contrarian student of the markets, I watched stocks’ recent
mania-blowoff surge in stunned disbelief. On fundamental,
technical, and sentimental fronts, the stock markets were as or
more extreme than their last major bull-market toppings in March
2000 and October 2007! I outlined all this in an essay on these
hyper-risky stock
markets on 2017’s final trading day. The ominous writing was on
the wall for all willing to see.
January’s extreme surge in the US stock markets made this selloff
case even more likely. Mid-month in
another essay
I warned, “The stock markets are now dangerously overbought,
implying a major selloff is probable and imminent. … Such extremes
are very unusual and never sustainable for long, signaling major
selloffs looming.” So the fact these crazy stock markets
finally rolled over wasn’t a surprise at all.
But
I was awestruck at the sheer violence of what happened last Friday
and the subsequent Monday, it was very odd. Even though the
countless market extremes argued strongly for a major selloff, they
tend to be much more gradual initially off bull-market
peaks. So it was fascinating to watch all this unfold in real-time
with my data feeds and CNBC. Students of the markets live for
anomalous exceedingly-rare events!
The
igniting catalysts were multilayered. The US flagship S&P 500
broad-market stock index (SPX) had blasted to a dazzling new
all-time record high on Friday January 26th. It was stretched a
mind-boggling 14.0% over its key 200-day moving average, which
itself was high and steeply rising! The 8.9-year-old stock bull
that had powered 324.6% higher felt unstoppable. Traders were
universally convinced it would continue.
But
just a couple trading days later on Tuesday January 30th,
significant selling emerged. That morning Amazon, Berkshire
Hathaway, and JP Morgan declared they were going to form a
healthcare company. That unanticipated news way out of left
field crushed the major healthcare stocks, hammering the SPX 1.1%
lower. That was actually a significant down day by recent
standards, the worst seen since mid-August.
With
euphoric bullish psychology dented, Jobs Friday arrived a few
trading days later on February 2nd. That official monthly US jobs
report saw a modest headline beat, but the big news came on the
wages front. Average hourly earnings beat expectations by climbing
2.9% year-over-year, the hottest read on wage inflation since June
2009. That triggered inflation fears with the 10-year
Treasury yield already at 2.78%.
Higher prevailing interest rates are a huge problem for
bubble-valued stock markets. The SPX had just left January with its
500 elite component stocks sporting a simple-average
trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratio way up at 31.8x!
Historical fair value is 14x, twice that at 28x is formal bubble
territory. In a higher-rate environment, extreme valuations are far
harder to tolerate. So the stock markets sold off.
A
week ago Friday the SPX slid all day long to close at a major 2.1%
loss. That proved its biggest down day since way back in September
2016, before Trump won the election and the resulting extreme stock
rally first on Trumphoria and later on taxphoria. Something was
changing, the unnaturally-low volatility regime was crumbling.
That left speculators and investors alike very nervous heading into
last weekend.
It
had been an all-time-record 405 trading days since the SPX’s
last 5% pullback, unbelievably extreme. So that selloff really
struck a nerve, I started to hear from casual acquaintances I hadn’t
spoken to for years. At a friend’s Super Bowl party Sunday night,
once the guests I didn’t know found out what I do for a living I
felt like a celebrity. We spent the first quarter talking about the
markets, people were really concerned.
Monday the 5th was extraordinary, a record day in some respects.
SPX futures were down less than 1% in pre-market trading, nothing
wild. But once the US stock markets opened, the selling started
gradually snowballing. It greatly intensified around 3pm, with the
SPX plunging from -2.3% to -4.5% on the day in literally 11
minutes! There was no news at all, it simply looked and felt like
cascading stop-loss selling.
All
prudent traders put trailing stop-loss orders on their stock
positions. They are an essential measure to manage risk. Once a
stock falls a preset percentage from its best level achieved during
a trade, that position is automatically sold. In big
stock-market selloffs, as stop losses are sequentially hit they feed
into the ongoing selling. The more stocks fall, the more stops
triggered, the more sell orders fuel the maelstrom.
The
SPX bounced a bit, but still plunged a whopping 4.1% on close
Monday! That was a serious down day by any standard, actually the
worst since way back in mid-August 2011 which followed Standard &
Poor’s downgrading US sovereign debt. Everyone takes notice when
stock markets suffer their biggest daily drop in 6.5 years.
That really changes collective psychology, shattering the euphoria
rampant in January.
But
amazingly that SPX plunge wasn’t the most-interesting thing Monday.
The implied volatility on SPX options is tracked in the famous VIX
fear gauge. It skyrocketed a stupendous 125.8% higher that day, its
largest daily spike ever witnessed! That wreaked colossal
havoc in the short-volatility market. Since Trump’s election win,
more traders and capital have flocked to bet on the idea that
volatility will keep falling.
Students of market history knew that was an absurd bet before
Monday’s spike. Stock-market volatility has always been cyclical,
just like stock prices. Exceptionally-low or -high volatility
levels always mean revert back to normal. So betting that the
record-low stock volatility in recent months would keep going
even lower was a foolish, suicidal bet even before Monday. That
epic VIX spike totally gutted these guys.
There are, or were, extraordinarily-risky inverse-VIX
exchange-traded notes. These were designed to rally when volatility
fell, some even with leverage which traders liked to further amplify
with their own margin. One of the leading inverse-VIX ETNs was XIV,
which is VIX spelled backwards. It had closed at $129.35 per share
on Thursday February 1st, but by this Tuesday it had imploded 94.3%
in a termination event!
All
these inverse-VIX ETNs were shorting VIX futures, so they had
to become massive buyers on that sharp SPX selloff to close out
those devastated positions. On Monday the banks sponsoring these
crazy ETNs had to buy an extreme record 282k VIX futures contracts!
That catapulted the VIX itself to 50.3 on Tuesday morning, about as
high as it ever gets outside of actual crashes and panics. What a
wild ride!
That
begs the question what happens next? This stock-market-selling and
volatility shock happened at a time when stock markets were already
very precarious. Such an extreme event has to start altering
herd psychology. This first chart looks at the SPX superimposed
over the VIX during the last few years, both on a closing basis.
Once serious selling starts out of toppy stock markets, it usually
portends much more coming.
This
week’s stock selling unleashed emerged in some of the most-toppy
stock markets ever witnessed. Again the average SPX-component
TTM P/E leading into it was a bubble-valued 31.8x! Again the SPX
had stretched 14.0% above its 200-day moving average, some of the
most-overbought conditions seen in all of SPX history. The SPX had
rocketed vertically for most of January in popular-mania-grade
euphoria.
The
future impact of stock selling being unleashed really depends on the
market conditions that birthed that selling spike. If stock prices
were near multi-year lows leading into selling spikes, with
valuations lower than their historical average of 14x earnings,
these events can mark selling climaxes before major reversals
higher. But unfortunately the exact opposite was true leading into
our current sharp SPX plunge.
Coming out of what looked and felt like a mania blowoff top, this
past week’s serious selling is surely an ominous omen. Stock
markets can’t rally forever, yet that’s exactly what they seemed to
be doing since Trump’s surprise election victory. Between Election
Day and late January’s latest record high, the SPX had soared 34.3%
higher in just 1.2 years! And that span was incredibly extreme with
record-low volatility.
Again as of last Friday it had been an all-time-record 405
trading days without a single 5% peak-to-trough SPX pullback.
That’s 1.6 years! Nothing like that had ever happened before.
Technically a pullback is a 4%-to-10% selloff in the stock markets
on a closing basis. The last pullbacks were minor, a 4.8% one in
late 2016 following a 5.6% one in mid-2016. Those were the last
material selloffs in the SPX before this week.
Periodic selloffs to rebalance sentiment are essential to keeping
stock bulls healthy. The longer markets go without significant
selloffs, the more greed and complacency multiply. Traders forget
that stocks fall too, and their hubris leads them to take all
kinds of excessive risks. Like betting that record-low volatility
will persist indefinitely. The leveraged speculation eventually
gets so extreme that it threatens the entire bull.
My
favorite analogy on this is forest fires. Officials love to
suppress natural wildfires to protect structures. But the longer
firefighters put out every little wildfire, the denser forest
underbrush gets. This fuel source grows out of control, eventually
leading to a conflagration far too extreme to put out. Rather than
having a bunch of smaller wildfires to keep fuel in check,
suppression eventually guarantees a super-destructive hell
fire.
Periodic pullbacks and corrections in stock markets allow the
underbrush of greed to be burned away before it gets thick enough to
become a systemic risk. Traders naively believe levitating stock
markets are less risky, but the opposite is true. The longer a span
without a serious selloff, the higher the odds one is coming soon.
Normal healthy bull markets actually suffer 10%+ corrections once
a year or so to keep balance.
It’s
been 2.0 years since the last actual SPX correction, which bottomed
in early 2016. The lack of both smaller pullbacks and larger
corrections let complacency grow unchecked into greed, euphoria, and
even hubris recently. And these emotional extremes have to be
mostly burned away for this bull to have any hope of eventually
heading higher. The only thing that can eradicate widespread greed
is major stock selloffs.
After Monday’s serious 4.1% plunge, the SPX was still only down 7.8%
since its peak just 6 trading days earlier. While that is unusual
speed to see such a decline, it still only ranks towards the high
end of mere pullback territory. We hadn’t even hit a correction yet
at 10%, and they can stretch as high as 20%. The SPX’s last
corrections ran 12.4% over 3.2 months in mid-2015 and 13.3% over 3.3
months into early 2016.
Given the extreme overvalued and overbought conditions leading into
this past week’s plunge, there’s no way even that was enough to
rebalance away the euphoric sentiment. So it’s all but certain the
SPX will grind lower in the coming months, heading down well over
10% into deep correction territory. At 10% the SPX would merely be
back to early-November levels, merely erasing the recent
mania-blowoff surge.
If
this correction approaches 20% as it really ought to, that would
drag the SPX all the way back down to 2298. Those levels were first
seen just over a year ago in late January 2017. That would reverse
the lion’s share of the entire past year’s taxphoria rally, wreaking
tremendous sentiment damage. But don’t forget corrections tend to
take a few months, not a few days. So the selling is way
more gradual than Monday’s.
That
extreme 50 VIX spike Tuesday morning must be considered. Again
that’s about as high as the VIX ever gets in normal corrections,
implying the immediate selling pressure should have abated. The
only times higher VIX levels are briefly seen is after crashes and
panics. A crash is a 20%+ drop in just two trading days from
very-high stock-market levels. This past week’s Friday-Monday
selloff wasn’t even close.
Crashes are exceedingly rare in history, and next to impossible
today given the widespread use of stock-market circuit breakers.
They effectively close markets for a time after intraday selling
milestones are hit. Today the SPX has levels triggered at 7%, 13%,
and 20% intraday declines. The trading halts depend on when
these declines occur within a trading day, before or after 3:25pm.
They would slow crash-grade plummets.
Panics are steep 20%+ selloffs within two weeks, extreme but
much slower than crashes. They tend to cascade from lows out of
late-stage bear markets to climax them. They are very rare too,
with 2008’s being the first formal one since 1907. The VIX can
temporarily soar above 50 in crashes and panics, but those extremes
never last for long. In normal market conditions, a 50 VIX spike
should mark an absolute bottom.
But
the problem this week is Tuesday’s extreme VIX spike was the result
of panic buying of VIX futures to liquidate those inverse-VIX
ETNs. That has never happened before. Without that dynamic,
the VIX likely wouldn’t have gone much above 30. That too implies
this stock-market selloff still has plenty of room to run. So the
stock selling unleashed is likely to persist over a few months at
least, despite the VIX spike.
Given the extremes in these stock markets in late January, I still
suspect the odds heavily favor a new bear market over 20%
instead of a bull-market correction. I presented this
compelling
SPX-bear case in late December, and don’t have room to rehash it
here. Normal bear markets tend to cut stocks in half over a couple
years or so, 50% SPX losses. That works out to a gradual average
selling pace of 0.1% per day.
The
last couple SPX bears give an idea of what to expect in the
inevitable next bear after such an epic stock bull. The SPX fell
49.1% over 2.6 years ending in October 2002, and 56.8% over 1.4
years that climaxed in March 2009. A 50% SPX loss, which is
conservative since bears tend to be proportional to their preceding
bulls’ sizes, would drag this index back to 1436. That’s
September-2012 levels, a long way down!
No
one knows whether this stock selling unleashed will culminate in a
bull-market correction under 20% or a new bear market over 20%. But
either way, speculators and investors ought to swiftly boost their
anemic portfolio allocations to gold. The record-high stock
markets in recent years have led to
radical gold
underinvestment. Gold tends to rally on balance
when stocks fall,
it’s the ultimate portfolio diversifier.
As
this final chart shows, after the last SPX correction ending in
early 2016 gold surged into a major new bull market.
Hyper-complacent stock traders suddenly realized that they needed to
own gold to diversify their stock-heavy portfolios. That gold bull
has persisted, powering higher in a strong uptrend ever since
despite this past year’s extreme taxphoria stock-market rally. A
new SPX correction will work wonders for gold.
That
last SPX correction into early 2016 wasn’t large at just 13.3%. Yet
that was still enough to motivate complacent investors to flock back
to gold. Their heavy buying catapulted gold 29.9% higher in just
6.7 months! Gold turned on a dime from deep 6.1-year secular lows
because a major stock-market selloff finally convinced investors to
up their meager gold allocations. Every investor should have
5% to 10%+ in gold.
Just
a week ago that
ratio was likely only running around 0.14% based on the values
of that leading GLD gold ETF and the collective market
capitalizations of the 500 SPX companies! So with gold allocations
essentially zero late in an extreme stock bull, there’s vast
room for massive capital inflows into gold in the coming years as
investors rebalance their portfolios. Gold thrives for a long time
after major stock selloffs.
The
gold buying isn’t instant when the SPX falls though, as traders need
time to process the drop and its likely implications. Back in early
2016 stock investors really didn’t start aggressively buying GLD
shares until the SPX suffered multiple big down days. The SPX fell
1.5%, 1.3%, 2.4%, and 1.1% on separate trading days in a single week
before gold buying resumed. More big SPX losses soon accelerated
these inflows.
If
you don’t have a significant gold allocation in your portfolio, you
ought to get buying. It can be done with physical gold bullion or
GLD shares. If you want to leverage gold’s bull market that will
accelerate following a major stock selloff, consider the
stocks of great
gold miners. They tend to amplify gold upside by 2x to 3x
due to their fantastic profits leverage to gold. The
precious-metals sector thrives after stock selloffs!
Finally the stock selling unleashed is likely just beginning due to
what the major central banks are doing this year. The Fed’s
unprecedented
quantitative-tightening campaign to start reversing its
trillions of dollars of QE liquidity injected that levitated stocks
for years is accelerating throughout 2018. At the same time
the European Central Bank slashed its own QE campaign in half until
September, when it may cease entirely.
Between the Fed’s QT and ECB’s QE tapering, global stock markets
face central-bank tightening running $950b in 2018 and another
$1450b in 2019 compared to 2017 levels! This will
certainly
strangle this QE-inflated monster stock bull. So on top of
everything else this week’s sharp selloff portends, the euphoric
stock markets were already in serious trouble from record extreme
central-bank tightening. Got gold yet?
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The
bottom line is the stock selling unleashed this week isn’t over.
Given the fundamental, technical, and sentimental extremes around
January’s record highs, a sub-10% pullback isn’t enough to eradicate
the euphoria. At best a major correction approaching 20% is
necessary, and those tend to run a few months or so. This week’s
extreme VIX spike to levels that usually mark major bottoms was
artificial, not normal.
And
after such an extreme bull market largely driven by record
central-bank easing, the odds really favor this selloff eventually
growing into a 20%+ new bear. Especially with the major central
banks starting to aggressively pull their liquidity in 2018.
Whether a major bull correction or major new bear market, gold tends
to thrive after major stock-market weakness. That leads investors
to buy gold to re-diversify their portfolios. |