To say that the last
month as been turbulent in markets would be a drastic understatement. We saw
the biggest intraday range in US bond yields in 16 years, equities nosedive
then whipsaw right back to new highs, VIX hit the highest levels since 2011
whilst gold, silver and oil hit multi year lows. With such volatility around
the theme of uncertainty is rife across financial markets, therefore it is
important to reassess ones views of the market and properly understand the
underlying drivers of market action.
The Importance of
Central Banks
The most powerful force
in financial markets is global central banks and the monetary policy they
follow. Mayer Amschel Rothschild, founder of the House of Rothschild,
famously said; “Give me control of a nation’s money supply, and I care
not who makes it’s laws", and since the global financial crisis
central banks have been more active and more critical to market direction
that ever before. Therefore any macro view on global markets must start with
an opinion on what path central banks are taking and how they may react to
potential upcoming scenarios.
The Fed, ECB, BoE and BoJ
are the titans of this world. Before we discuss their individual positions
there is an overriding theme that is vital to understand first. Globalization
in the later part of the 20th Century connected the global economy
like never before. Therefore the trajectory of all economies are much more
highly correlated, since globalization has interwoven nearly every area of
commerce across all borders. Given that each country’s growth, and the
principal drivers of their growth, are so interdependent, it follows that the
monetary policy of various central banks also become more correlated also.
Hence we have had all major central banks on a course of highly accommodative
monetary policy in recent years.
As central banks look to
move away from this stance and begin to tighten monetary policy over coming
years, the global economy becomes ever more sensitive to their moves. One
bank tightening is similar to a tightening in global monetary policy, due to
the ripple effect across markets, since the global economy and financial
markets are so interconnected. Likewise an easing from a major central bank
makes financial conditions more accommodative across the globe. Thus is
follows that if the banks are all easing or tightening, the impact is
multiplied.
Translating
Monetary Policy To Market Movements
Many observers have been
puzzled by the market reaction to recent monetary policy changes. When the
Fed began tapering some thought that equities would crash as the support for
the financial system was being removed. However this is only considering that
impacts of Fed policy and lacks an appreciation for the global dynamics at
play.
The US Federal Reserve is
currently looking at tightening monetary policy by increasing interest rates
next year. They have been steadily reducing their accommodative stance by
tapering QE. At the same time we had the BOJ embarking on massive increases
in their quantitative easing which is supportive of asset prices. So to a
degree these are offsetting in global sense and keep asset prices supported.
Similarly there were
those who thought the recent program by the ECB to buy ABS would send gold
prices higher, working on the simple assumption that more QE leads to higher
gold prices, which we strongly disagreed with (Please see our article “Why ECB
QE Is Bearish for Gold Prices
”
for further detail). At the same time that the ECB is moving to more QE, the
Fed remains confident that it will begin increasing interest rates next year,
thus keeping gold capped in USD. Once we consider the finer details that the
ECBs targeted and relatively small QE is perhaps helpful for the global
economy it further discredits the notion that gold prices should have every
moved higher under such an scenario.
Another
critical point to understand is that it is not the position of the central
bank that moves markets, it is the change in that position that counts.
Throughout 2013 many wondered why gold prices were falling when the Fed was
still actively involved in QE. It was the fact that they were tapering
purchases and changing their policy position that drove gold prices lower.
The same principles are present in currency market; it is not the underlying
interest rates or strength in a nation’s economy that drives the currency
movements, it is the changes in the velocity of those factors that drives the
price action.
Central
banks are becoming ever more reactive to changing conditions; therefore any
view on the trajectory of monetary policy should be subject to regular and
rigorous revision. At present our view is that global monetary policy is on
balance quite accommodative and thus supportive of risk assets such as
equities. The massive easing by the BOJ and the clear intent from the ECB to
maintain and increase their accommodative stance if necessary puts enough
slack in financial conditions to allow the Fed to increase interest rates
next year without sabotaging global growth.
This Will
Keep Risk Assets Supported
Given that
the BOJ and ECB are more likely to step up their easing than reduce it, we
believe risk assets such as stocks and credit will remain well supported.
Naturally it follows that stocks are a buy on dips and during this last dip
we executed trades that expressed that view.
Stocks
remain vulnerable to sharp pullbacks as markets digest changes in policy over
the coming months. Let us not understate the magnitude of the task ahead
given we are coming out of the most accommodative policies markets have ever
seen. Even a perfectly executed transition will not be without hiccups.
Therefore we are not running a core long in equity markets; we are simply
tactically trading from the long side when the risk-reward dynamics move in
our favour.
Equity
Volatility To Remain Contained
Concerns
that a tightening of US monetary policy will lead to declines in the stock
market are misplaced and whilst we acknowledge that the transition to tighter
monetary policy will be a bumpy road, one must factor in how careful central
bankers are going to be driving down this road. The tightening process will
be slow, gradual but most critically will be highly reactive to market
conditions and economic data.
If there is
even a slight cause for concern that the tightening is causing instability in
financial markets or threatening global growth, the tightening bias will ease
and central bankers will communicate to markets that they will only tighten
further if the situation calls for it. As such we have high conviction in our
view the equity volatility will remain contained. The chart below highlights
the last Fed hiking cycle in which volatility was low and relatively well
behaved. Historically equity volatility is much more likely to spike during
times of central bank easing than tightening.
Recently
our largest position has been in short VIX positions on its spike up to 30
and whilst we are more neutral on the index at these levels, we do not think
that the VIX is a buy unless it is below 12. Towards 20 and higher would be
our targets for re-entering short VIX trades.
Precious
Metals Sliding Further South
As a
function of our view that the Fed will continue shifting to tighter monetary
policy we have been bearish on precious metals since the end of 2012. We
retain our view that gold prices will move towards $1000 and that rallies are
to be faded as any increase in QE from the BOJ will be countered with more
hawkish rhetoric from the Fed. We also view the ECB’s currently ABS purchase
program as bearish for gold prices on a standalone basis, however a larger
sovereign debt purchase program would tilt global monetary policy towards an
easing bias, therefore it would depend on what action the Fed was taking
under that scenario regarding if we changed our bearish stance on gold and
silver.
Conclusion
Our core
view is that on global monetary policy is the key dynamic in current markets,
far more so than the actions of any one central bank due to the highly
interconnected nature of the economic system across borders. On balance
global policy is still accommodative, this is supportive of higher stock
prices and should keep equity volatility subdued even if the stock market
does not soar higher. However on balance globally monetary policy is more
likely to tighten from current levels, led by the Fed, and this change is
bearish for gold prices. These are the key themes we are focused on at
present, to find out more about what trades we are executing and how we are
allocating capital in our model portfolio please visit www.skoptiontrading.com to
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