Duck And Cover
By Peter Tchir of Academy Securities
Even I am not old enough to done “duck and cover” drills in school, but it somehow comes to mind this weekend as we digest the latest market action and the ongoing Russian nuclear threats.
Markets
On the week, stocks didn’t do too badly. The Dow was almost unchanged, and even the hard-hit Nasdaq “only” dropped 1.4%. Based on that, last weekend’s Bad to the Bone seemed overly dramatic. But the weekly change isn’t reflective of the mess the markets were. From its lows on Wednesday, ahead of the FOMC, the Nasdaq 100 rallied over 5% only to plunge almost 8% at its lowest point on Friday morning! While we expected many to try and rally, post FOMC, largely because it worked extremely well back in March, I had no expectation that the rally would be that strong and fast! Nor, did I expect it to be so short lived and to turn so ugly, so quickly.
Markets, largely, remain broken. Liquidity is abysmal. Stock indices seem to move 0.5% on a whim and the trading this week, made me think back to the days when the TARP legislation failed, which I discussed on TD Ameritrade.
There were some bright spots, like energy, where XLE was up almost 10% on the week! (Barron’s included Academy’s view that “The energy companies of today are also the energy companies of the future”). Bitcoin, on the other hand, is back below $35,000 as I type and had a miserable week, dropping more than 10%.
I remain concerned that the “non-virtuous circle” described in last week’s report, highlighting the linkage between “disruptive” stocks and crypto isn’t over (though TQQQ had large inflows last week, including a huge inflow on Friday, as some investors bet heavily on a bounce, using leverage. ARKK, which I also highlight, had inflows on the week, but had a significant outflow on Friday which is something to watch).
As much as I want to be full on bullish at these levels, the only “capitulation” that I have seen is the capitulation of shorts and hedges on Wednesday afternoon!
Duck and cover seems to apply to trying to manage risk in these markets.
Rates and Credit
Much of the blame for last week’s markets can be placed on the Treasury market, though, that is a bit too simplistic. Yes, the 10-year treasury went from 2.94% on Wednesday, to 3.13% by Friday, but it did moved 5 bps higher on Monday, while stocks rallied and even on Friday, stocks and bonds were not moving in lock-step, which sets us up, potentially for a “risk-off” type of day, when stocks sell-off as treasuries rally.
The yield curve actually steepened (at least 2s vs 10s) which should, if anything, be encouraging.
Credit, as expected (or at least as hoped) did very well! The Bloomberg corporate bond spread actually tightened from 135 to 134 on the week. That seemed almost too good to be true, but LQD (a longer dated IG ETF) had spreads go from 172 to 169. The CDX index, didn’t fare as well, but that is linked, via algos, to the stock market almost as much as to the bond market.
Lower prices and overall higher yields are attracting money to corporate bonds! That has been very supportive for spreads.
I think there are some key takeaways from the credit markets:
- Credit is holding in, which should support equity prices. Equities should not go into freefall while credit is holding in. What we are seeing is the gap between high equity valuations and credit, close. There is a large buffer between the credit risk and equity risk for most firms and that is what is getting priced in. Even some “distressed” investors are buying IG bonds, as the dollar prices are so attractive (buying bonds below par, solves a lot of credit concerns).
- Watching the leveraged loan market closely. Leveraged loans and CLO’s had done very well, especially versus high yield bonds. That, to me, indicated that the movement was primarily rates related, and there wasn’t much concern about credit spreads. But these markets (BKLN and SRLN and JBBB are some ETFs to watch) are back to their march lows, or even worse than that. There is at least a hint that in the high yield market, credit risk is becoming more of a concern! This “metric” or signal has gone from comforting to mildly disturbing.
Market Strategy - Duck and Cover
As we head into this week:
- Expect more volatility. I cannot think of any reason why volatility would decline dramatically. Last week’s extreme price action will likely feed into VAR (value at risk) models and cause traders to reduce positions. Liquidity, with summer coming is likely to remain poor, or get worse as traders won’t have the stomach for large positions with reduced staff as people take their vacations.
- Buy dips on credit and rates. Unless we see signs of credit fears (either IG bond spreads widening or leveraged loans catching up to high yield bonds) I like buying dips on credit and rates. But very cautiously.
- Watch Quantitative Tightening in action. When a bond matures, the issuer often issues new debt. That applies to treasuries as much as anything. Often, the holders of an existing bond, “roll” into the new bond. There is, to some extent, a list of ready made buyers. They are receiving cash for the bond that is maturing and may have an inclination to re-invest that money in bonds of the same issuer. Simplistic, yes, somewhat true, also yes. So, when the FED holds bonds that are maturing and is NOT planning on re-investing those proceeds, new buyers have to be found. I think we will see investors in every asset class, reduce risk to get similar expected returns, which is why I think the selling in the riskiest assets, isn’t quite over, yet.
- Sell rips on risky assets. I’m stuck thinking we have another 10% downside on risky assets (and more than that on crypto). It doesn’t mean that we won’t get vicious “bear market” rallies. But I just don’t think this ‘valuation re-evaluation’ is over yet. It is getting close to being done, but I would really like to see capitulation, which I still don’t think we’ve seen.
Stay nimble. Duck and cover was meant to be a way to protect yourself, and I think we have to trade this market with that perspective in mind.
Longer term, the level of discussion about “securing” supply chains is high and I’m certain is going to result in action as companies (and countries) focus on ensuring that their supply chains are robust and “secure”.
I am the least bearish I’ve been, even expecting some sort of a rally, which may mean I’ve become part of the problem and markets will face a rough start to the week.
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