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5 Reasons To Fear The Market Fall

Published 07/24/2017, 10:49 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

This powerful and protracted bull market has made Cassandras look foolish for a long time. Those who went on record predicting that massive central bank manipulation of markets would not engender viable economic growth have been proven correct. However, these same individuals failed to fully anticipate the willingness of momentum-trading algorithms to take asset prices very far above the underlying level of economic growth.

Nevertheless, there are five reasons to believe that this fall will finally bring stock market valuations down to earth, and vindicate those who have displayed caution amidst all the frenzy.

Reason Number One: Budget and Debt Ceiling Showdowns in D.C.

Congress needed to shave two weeks off its August recess in an effort to make headway on raising the debt ceiling, which will hit the absolute limit by mid-October, and how to fund the government past September 30th of this year.

Tea-Party Republicans, as well as Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, would like to add spending reform riders to the debt limit bill. But, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is looking to pass a “clean” bill. If Mnuchin gets his clean debt ceiling bill passed, the show-down will then move to the appropriations bills used to fund the upcoming fiscal year. For the past few years, Congress has been pushing through last minute continuing resolutions, rather than passing a budget, to provide funding at a rate of the previous year's funding. Not being able to make progress on either of these measures will lead to a government shutdown that could leave markets and Trump’s tax reform agenda in a tail spin.

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Reason Number Two: Trump May Finally Deal with North Korea

President Donal Trump may find it very convenient to “Wag the Dog” before the year closes out. What is needed is a “fantastic”distraction from his failure to reach an agreement to repeal and replace Obamacare and to push through with a tax reform package. Also, an assault on Kim Jong-un’s nuclear facilities would go a long way in reducing the media’s obsession with Russiagate. The President and his administration held an emergency meeting on July 4th after North Korea fired its first ICBM into the Sea of Japan. Trump promised that a nuclear strike against the U.S. “won’t happen” and guaranteed, “A measured response” to the rogue regime. Trump also urged China to, “put a heavy move on North Korea” and to “end this nonsense once and for all.” Such a preemptive strike this fall would tilt the robot trading machines into a sell-button frenzy.

Reason Number Three: China’s Inverted Yield Curve

On June 7th the spread between China’s 10 and 1 year sovereign bond yields became negative. This was only the second time since 2005 that such an inversion occurred, and this time around it became the most inverted in history.

An inverted yield curve, no matter what country it occurs in, is a sign of severe distress in the banking system and almost always presages a recession. A recession, or even just a sharp decline in China’s GDP growth, would send shock waves throughout emerging markets and the global economy. Indeed, on July 17th the major indexes in China all plunged the most since December 2016 due to investor fears over tighter monetary and economic controls from Beijing. If the yield curve remains inverted into the fall, look for exacerbated moves to the downside in global markets.

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Reason Number Four: QE Tapering from the European Central Bank

The head of the ECB, Mario Draghi, stated in late June that deflationary forces have been replaced by reflationary forces. This simple statement sent bond yields soaring across the globe in anticipation of his inevitable official taper announcement that could be made as soon as September 7th. German 10-year Bund yields are still about 150 basis points below the ECB’s inflation target, and about 350 bps below implied nominal GDP.

This means when Mr. Draghi actually starts removing his massive bid from the European bond markets yields should spike suddenly and in dramatic fashion—regardless of the pervasive weak economy. Rapidly rising borrowing costs on Europe’s over-leveraged economy would cause investors to worry about future growth prospects and send high-frequency front-runners scrambling for the narrow exit door at once.

Reason Number Five: Janet Yellen’s Quantitative Tightening

Most investors don’t understand that the Federal Reserve has been tightening monetary policy since December 2013 when it started to taper its $85 billion per month asset purchase program. Now, after QE has been wound down to zero and four rate hikes have taken place, the Fed will likely announce the actual start date for the selling of its balance sheet at its September FOMC meeting. This means it should begin dumping about half of the $4.5 trillion worth of Treasury and MBS holdings starting in Q4. The problem is that global central banks are tightening monetary policy as the economy weakens.

For instance, U.S. GDP averaged about 2% since 2010; but has dropped to just 1.6% during 2016 and is just 1.4% so far in 2017. This additional supply of Treasury debt, coupled with the already soaring deficits (up 31% year over year), could send bond prices tumbling. This would exacerbate the move higher in bond yields caused by the ECB’s Tapering. That could be enough to send the passive ETF investing sheeple jumping off a cliff en masse.

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The end of central bank monetary accommodations, which is coming to a head this fall, is the primary reason to believe the odds for a significant stock market correction could be just a couple of months away. Rising debt service payments on the additional $60 trillion of debt incurred since 2008 is likely to be the catalyst that turns the market sentiment from greed to panic.

Adding to this perilous situation is the record amount of NYSE margin debt outstanding, along with the fact that institutional investors have just 2.25% of their portfolios in cash—the lowest level since just prior to the start of the Great Recession, according to Citigroup. In other words, investors are levered up and all-in.

Since the election of Donald Trump, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has reached a record high one out of every four trading days. And, according to Ned Davis Research, the S&P 500 hasn’t seen a pullback of more than 10% in almost 350 days,and it has been nearly 2100 days without a decline of more than 20%. The average days without such a decline is 167 and 635 respectively. This market is overvalued, overextended and extremely dangerous!

Therefore, it is very likely this long-overdue market correction could be worse than the ordinary 20 percent decline. The upcoming stock market toboggan ride is not only starting from the second highest valuation in history, but also with the balance sheets of the Fed and Treasury already severely impaired. In other words, there just isn’t a lot of room left to lower interest rates or to run up huge deficits in an attempt to quickly pull the economy out of its downward spiral. It is time to put a wealth preservation strategy in placebefore the fall arrives.

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Latest comments

Dear Michael Pento,. I'd verily like to express my sincere gratitude to you for posting your logically remarkable insights in this informative article.. Here, I humbly want you to please answer particularly about currency market.. . . My question is, after both significant events in the month of September (ECB meeting on September 07, 2017 & FOMC Economic Projections Report on September 20, 2017);. . how would you like to predict at this moment that after the end of September 2017, what will be the mid-term TREND of famous currency pair EUR/USD ?. . Will the EUR/USD be in DOWNTREND (after September 2017) ?. Or. Will the EUR/USD be in UPTREND (after September 2017) ?. . . I look forward to hearing from you soon.. . Regards,. Meticulous
Of all the points mentioned, I believe an outbreak of war would be the most damaging to the economy as it is a pure economic sink similar to most other wars. Note that there have already been signs of economic weakness coming from a number of industries. The transportation sector has seen some slowdown in activity along with the construction sector. The retail sector has also been in a downward spiral for quite some time now with only the biggest retailers holding on.
ILLYA is absolutely 100 percent right.  This author has been dead wrong so many times its ridiculous to even pay any attention to his articles.  At some point the odds are will be he will be right about something.    I hope Pento isn't being paid for the rubbish he posts.   Don't waste  your time reading his articles or at least read them for a laugh.  How many times has he predicted a collapse? Ive lost count.
This guy has been unsuccessfully predicting the collapse since 2012, check out this for example:. . "In 2012 I wrote a book called The Coming Bond Market Collapse, in which I predicted that the bond market would begin to collapse by the end of 2016. Clearly, this prediction has started to come true.". . https://www.investing.com/analysis/the-yield-that-breaks-the-trump-rally-200169496
Hi everyone, I apologize in advance because of the next question that I gonna ask which is maybe out of scope. Indeed I guess most of you is has heard about Moroccan dirham floatation (flexibility), so the question is there any forecast or seroius study (regarding mad /usd evolution) predicting the impact of a such politics planned by the Moroccan central bank ?
I meant does the MAD gonna fall down ?
None of these are compelling reasons. Especially not the government shut-down
Good comment. But I cant agree with you in the most aspects. no1. gov shutdown: it is an old time story and never have affected to market for 2 yrs. no2. north korea: the value of south korean won is the highest than ever in this yr. and korean stock market is also the highest ever. korean cds is stable as well. no3. china debt issue: it is also an old time story and chinese gov seems to have an enough power to manage it at least for a few yrs. moreover chinese gdp growth on 2q bounced to 6.9. (I think someday chinese problem can cause global crisis but not this time) no4. i agree with your point. but i dont think it will conjure the bear market at all. they will taper and probably hike the rate because their economy is healthy enough. Good econ indictors and growing earnings(plus see french taxcut plan) can cause bull market rather. no5. feds tapering fear: these days averse rally of 10yr bond says the problem is on elsewhere.
Mmm
Good research. I agree and all ready short dow 30 and dax 30.
Totally meaningful reasoning,professionally stated.Will definitely happen accordingly!
Winter is coming
Excellent article.I am positioning myself to short the market in September onwards especially due to the debt ceiling and budget crisis that's sure to come.I doubt the Fed will have a chance to undertake quantitative tightening if markets unravel this fall and may actually unleash QE4 not forgetting that the yield curve is slowly flattening and if the yield curve inverts its game over for the markets.I expect the bond market to roll over first bringing down all the other bubbles in stocks,real estate, student debt,auto loans plus other bubbles.
The question is when :)
Nothing left to add, good points, and hope youre positioned on the right side of the trade
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