Friday, October 21, 2011

Faux Crisis

It is tough being a short these days.  Every other person is short because they buy into the European crisis rhetoric and that's somehow going to crash the markets like Lehman Brothers.  The Europeans don't have a serious crisis.  Greece does, and maybe Portugal and Ireland.  But they can go bust and it will be like Argentina defaulting.  No one would care.  Sure, it could cause short term panic for the brainless who think contagion will happen because they see CDS spreads blowing out fearing Europe is on the verge of a 2008 repeat.  But crises are born from excess.  I don't see much excess over the past few years in Europe.  They are cutting back government spending and taking their medicine.  You get the short term result:  a recession which cause credit spreads to widen, earnings to lag, and a breeding ground for fear mongers.  Italy and Spain are solvent.  With the ECB providing a backstop, there will be no liquidity crisis for those countries.

The Europeans aren't so willing to inflate their way out of this problem because Germany has the most power, and they are the most hawkish country in the world.  So this is what you get:  a weak economy, with a currency that doesn't want to go down much even with the world betting against it.  If this really was a serious crisis, do you think the S&P would be down just 3% on the year?  And much higher than 1 year ago?  One year from now, the euro will be much higher vs. the dollar, and equities and precious metals will be higher. What may end up being the weakest are those commodities most sensitive to China, like industrial metals like copper, nickel, tin, iron, etc.  The real estate bubble bursting in China will have negative ramifications for commodity exporters, like Brazil and Australia, but it shouldn't really have much impact on the US or Europe, who don't have that big of a market for exports to China.

19 comments:

Anonymous said...

So do you fade the gap up this morning or does this rocket and go?

Anonymous said...

MO are we not going down from this top? I thought we may still have a pull back to 1150 and then once things have calmed down, rally hard for the rest of the year.

Market Owl said...

I would fade the gap, but I would play it small on the short side. There is a small chance we gap and run.

We're not going back down to 1150 until we consolidate at the higher end of this range for at least another week.

Anonymous said...

Looks like we are gapping and running.

Anonymous said...

Greece is a big problem only to the uber wealthy in Europe who are invested in their bonds in the trillions. Derivative markets are much larger than the underlying. This is just a bailout of the rich.

Anonymous said...

as TARP and QE was a bailout of the 1% in the US. prior and during the bank crisis, our economy wasn't in a crisis. the crisis is greed stuck in bad derivative positions.

Anonymous said...

the uber wealthy use fear tactics and armageddon scenarios to pass keynesian policies and tax the 99% to bail their own skins.

Anonymous said...

US and Europe especially Germany have very large hand in China construction. Germany produces most of China's smelters, power turbines, asphal and concrete machinery. US also supplies much of their heavy machinery. In fact earnings on the S&P are mostly international now. S&P is a global index.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-04-06/germany-s-future-rising-in-east-as-exports-to-china-eclipse-u-s-.html

Anonymous said...

Another face rip...

Anonymous said...

MO S&P 1235-40 now. Are we topping out?

Market Owl said...

Yes, we are pretty much at the top. We should consolidate at these levels for several days before the next big drop. Still more shorts to take out, but most of the weak shorts are squeezed out.

alexnewbee said...

you are mixing the cause and the effect.
the cause is - lack of liquidity and buying power. effects are - collapsing markets and need for the matrix to explain it with BS news like Greece etc.

Market Owl said...

One thing this thing is not lacking is buying power and liquidity. Bad fundamentals and meager growth, yes, but there is plenty of liquidity. Way too much liquidity.

alexnewbee said...

that is why S&P collapsed smth like 300 points at the end of July? and still bouncing down there?

Market Owl said...

If we were lacking liquidity, we'd be under 1000.

Anonymous said...

man, the bears got hammered. 1260 here we come.

eh said...

I don't see much excess over the past few years in Europe.

Perhaps just a few years ago when Greece was able to borrow on the same terms as Germany that was an example of "excess".

Also, perhaps one definition of "excess" is countries running perennial deficits and expecting lenders to continue ante-ing up, even after it's more than obvious that existing loans will never be repaid in full without inflating away the value of the currency. This is true of the US as well.

Government spending is part of GDP, and therefore deficit spending is propping up these economies in numerous ways.

It is tough being a short these days.

I agree with that, but not much else.

All of the above will end very badly. Living standards will have to fall in order to match genuine wealth creation.

So a crash is coming, it's just a question of when.

Anonymous said...

The economy is not the stock market. We rally the rest of the year.

Anonymous said...

There are two extreme opinions on where markets will be. So I believe we don't have a year end rally and we don't crash this year. I believe we continue to have big moves both ways but settle right around here Dec 31.