October 3, 5:00 pm EST

China remains the hold-out on making a deal with Trump on trade.  And itlooks likely that they are holding out to see what the November elections look like.

Will Trump retain a Republican led Congress? I suspect we may see China do what they can to influence that outcome.

As we know, the Republicans will be promoting the economy as we get closer to voting day. 

What can China do to rock that boat?

They can sell Treasuries, in an attempt to ignite a sharper climb in rates. And a fast move in rates (at these levels) has a way of shaking confidence in equity markets – which has a way of shaking confidence in the economy.

As we’ve discussed, the economy can withstand a 10-year yield in the low 3s.  But what has spooked market this year (namely stocks) is the fear that a 3% 10-year could quickly turn into a 4% 10-year.

We may have seen a taste of it today.  We had a run from 3.08% to 3.18%.  That’s the highest level since 2011.  And stocks came off of the highs.

If China was the culprit, or if China chooses to dump some Treasuries over the next month, in attempt to stir up some instability in markets, we should see them move that money elsewhere.  The likely recipient of that capital would be gold.

It wasn’t evident with the behavior gold today.  Gold had a big dayyesterday, but backed off today, even as rates ran.  But as you can see in the chart below, the set up for a bounce in gold here looks ripe.  The level to watch will be 1214. 

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October 2, 5:00 pm EST

Italy’s face-off with the EU is ramping up, following their announcement last week of plans to increase their deficit spending.

Why does it matter?

This is another round of populist push-back against policies that have stifled economic recovery and threatened sovereignty over the past decade.  We’ve seen it play out in Greece, in the UK, and in the U.S. 2016 election.

With risk rising of a shakeout in Europe, you can see in the chart above, money is moving out of Italian government bonds and into German government bonds.  This sends Italian yields UP and German yields DOWN — on what is already a 300 basis points spread between the two 10 year borrowing rates.  A continuation of this puts pressure on Italian solvency.

But this will all likely end favorably for Italy and for the broader European economy.  Because as Italy pushes back on austerity, we’ll likely to see the EU make concessions on fiscal constraints, that will open the door for fiscal stimulus across Europe.

The policymakers know very well that the health of the “monetary union” is the lynchpin in Europe.  If it’s pulled (by an exit of a constituent member), the European Union will crash and fracture.  That’s why the ECB stepped in back in 2012 to prevent debt defaults in Italy and Spain.  And that’s why EU officials have made concessions throughout, on aid to keep Greece alive.

Italy’s resistance will come with a lot of draconian threats and warnings (from EU officials, as we’ve already seen), but in the end Italy may be the catalyst to unlock growth in Europe.

Trump has laid out the playbook for economic stagnation.  It’s aggressive fiscal stimulus.  Europe should follow that lead.

Attention loyal readers:  The Billionaire’s Portfolio is my premium advisory service.  And I’d like to invite you to join today, as we are beginning what I think will be a tremendous run for value stocks into the end of the year.  It’s a great deal for the money. Just click here to subscribe, and get immediate access to my full portfolio of billionaire-owned stocks. When you join, you’ll get immediate access to every recommendation–past, present and future–in the portfolio. And I’ll deliver my in-depth notes on our portfolio and the bigger picture every week, directly to your inbox.

October 1, 5:00 pm EST

Given the global nature of business within the Dow constituents, the DJIA has been the place for pain, as uncertainty over trade has ebbed and flowed over the past year.  So, with a new trade agreement with Mexico and Canada, we get a big rally in the Dow today.  That puts the Dow up 7.8% on the year.

Still, we came into the year expecting something much bigger for stocks.

The big tax cuts that came near the end of last year, have indeed translated into big corporate earnings surprises, and a hotter than expected economy.  This is something you would expect to be fuel for a much bigger than average year for broader stock markets.  And you would expect it to be fuel for a big run in commodities markets.  But the stock market performance is sitting right around long-term average gains.  And broad commodities performance (if we look at the CRB index) is up just 2% on the year.

This has all been supressed by the uncertainties surrounding trade, and the resulting rising geopolitical tensions.

But with concessions from Europe on trade earlier in the summer, and now a new agreement on North American trade, Trump is clearly winning on trade. 

What’s next?  Infrastructure.  This has been the next pillar of Trumponomics.  Gary Cohn, the former White House economic advisor, said he thinks the White House will get it done ($1 trillion+) regardless of who controls the House after November.

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September 28, 5:00 pm EST

 Back in May, the populist movement that gave us Grexit, Brexit and then the Trump election, gave us a new government in Italy with an “Italy first” agenda.

Italy first, means EU second.  And that puts the future of the European Union and the European Monetary Union in jeopardy.  Today, the new government made that clear by rejecting EU fiscal constraints, in favor of running a bigger deficit spending.

This puts the game of poker the European Union has been playing since the financial crisis erupted, front and center (again).

As we discussed back in May, this story is looking a lot like Greece, which used the threat of leaving the euro as leverage to negotiate some relief from austerity and reforms. It was messy, but it gave them a stick, in a world where the creditors (the ECB, Eurogroup and IMF) had been burying the weak economies in Europe in harsh austerity since the financial crisis.

As the third largest euro zone constituent, Italy brings a lot more leverage in negotiating, in this case, the EU rulebook. We may see this all result, finally, in a relaxing of the fiscal constraints that have suppressed the economic recovery in the euro zone in the post-Great Recession era. And Italy’s pushback may lead the way for a euro-wide fiscal stimulus campaign — following the lead of Trumponomics.

A better economy has a way of solving a lot of problems.  And Europe has a lot of problems.

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September 26, 5:00 pm EST

The Fed moved again today on rates, as the market expected. This is the eighth quarter point hike in this post-QE normalization on rates. And this now puts the Fed Funds rate at the range of 2%-2.25%.

Now, the markets will pick apart the statement and endlessly parse the Fed Chair’s words in the press conference. But let’s step back and take a look at the impact of these Fed hikes thus far.

We know the economy is running at the best pace since before the financial crisis. We know that the jobless rate is near record lows. We know that consumer credit worthiness is at record levels. This has all happened, despite the Fed’s rate hikes.

What about debt service coverage? As rates are moving higher, are consumers showing signs of getting squeezed?

If we look back at the height of the credit bubble in 2008 (just prior to its burst), 13.22% of household income was going to service debt–within that number, 7.2% of household income was going to service mortgage debt. What about now? Debt service is now 10.2% of household income. And the mortgage piece is down to just 4.4%. This is the result of six years of zero interest rates, a massive QE program (which included the Fed’s purchase of mortgage bonds), and a government program that subsidized banks to refi high interest rate mortgages.

So the big question is, how has the Fed’s exit of QE effected the consumers ability to service debt? Are higher rates hurting?

Well, they started hiking rates in the fourth quarter of 2015. Total debt service at that time was 10.1%. That’s virtually unchanged from today. And the mortgage piece was 4.5%. That’s actually a touch higher than today.

Bottom line: The Fed’s normalization on rates has not damaged the consumer, nor has it killed the housing market.

But that’s only because the yield curve has been flattening. That is, longer term market interest rates have been steady. That means the benchmark rate from which consumer and mortgage rates have been set, has been steady. And those longer term rates have been steady, in large part, because Europe and Japan have remained in QE mode (buying global assets, which includes our Treasurys).

With that, while most have been watching the Fed closely for how it’s delicately handling the exit of QE, the more important spot to watch will be how Europe and Japan manage their exits. Hopefully, the U.S. economy is hot enough, at that point, to withstand the move in longer term U.S. rates that will come with the end of global QE.

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September 21, 5:00 pm EST

Last Friday we talked about the technical breakout in rates.  And we looked at this chart as the benchmark 10-year U.S. government bond yield hit 3%. 

This week yields traded as high as 3.09%.  These 3%+ levels have proven to spook stock markets on all other occasions this year.   But it hasn’t this time.  In fact, the Dow closed the week on new record highs.  The prospects that Fed normalization might be slowing, and that 10-year rates may be carving out a new/higher range, reduces the prospects of seeing the yield curve “invert.” That’s positive for stocks.
As we close the week, let’s take a look at Chinese stocks, which put in a double bottom earlier this week, and closed today threatening a technical break of the big downtrend of the year.  Believe it or not, Chinese stocks could be the best buy in the world right now.
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September 20, 5:00 pm EST

Global markets continue to melt-UP.  Ironically, Trump’s promise to slap an additional $200 billion on Chinese goods proved to be the marker for “risk-on.”

As we’ve discussed, the reaction from global markets tells us that reforming China is a good thing.

Among the confirmation signals we’re getting on that theory: 1) Japanese stocks are surging (as a beneficiary of fair trade), 2) Chinese stocks are bottoming (perhaps a more sustainable and balanced economy in its future), and 3) the Dow is finally playing catch up (the U.S. stock index that has been punished by trade uncertainty).

Let’s take a look at the charts …

As you can see below, Japanese stocks are finally making a run back toward the highs of last year.  

Chinese stocks have put in a key reversal signal (an outside day) into a double bottom.  This is following a 50% decline from the 2015 highs.

And after eight long months, the Dow finally surpassed the January highs today.

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September 19, 5:00 pm EST

Just two weeks ago, the Nasdaq was up 19% on the year, while the “blue-chip” heavy DJIA was up just 4%.

This is in a world where rates are low, corporate profits are growing at 20% and the economy is on pace to have above trend growth.

Great traders love when prices are detached from fundamentals, especially when it’s driven by fear or euphoria.  This was a clear disconnect.  And you could argue that there has been a bit of both fear and euphoria driving it (fear priced into the Dow about trade wars, and euphoria priced into the tech giants on the idea that the burgeoning monopolies would go unchecked forever until all competition is left for dead).

Both the fear and the euphoria were misguided for all of the reasons we discuss almost daily in my Pro Perspectives note.

And now we’re seeing a convergence.  In just two weeks, that performance gap between the Dow and Nasdaq has now closed from fifteen percentage points to nine percentage points.  And the Dow still has a lot of room to run.  It remains just under the highs from January.

Now, yesterday we talked about the opportunity for Japan to benefit from forced trade reform in China.  Other big beneficiaries?  Emerging market economies.

In short, all of the countries that have been short-changed on their global trade competitiveness because of China’s weak currency policies, should benefit in a world where China is held to a standard of fair trade.

That’s why Japanese stocks had a huge run yesterday (and expect it to continue).  And that’s why EM stock markets were big movers today.  The Frontier Markets ETF (FM) is still down 14% on the year.  With the idea that these countries may get a better crack at global demand, I suspect these stock markets could be in for a big bounce.

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September 18, 5:00 pm EST

Yesterday Trump made good on his promise by announcing another $200 billion in tariffs on China.

To the surprise of many, stocks went up. Why?

Perhaps it’s because reforming the way the world deals with China is a good thing.  Remember, China’s currency manipulation over the past two decades led to the credit bubble, which ultimately led to the financial crisis. And as long as the rest of the world continues to allow China to maintain a trade advantage (dictated by their currency manipulation): 1) they will manufacture hot economic growth through exports, 2) the global cycle of booms and bust will continue, and 3) the wealth transfer from the rest of the world to China will continue.

With this in mind, as I’ve said, the trade dispute is all about China – everything else Trump has taken on (Canada, Mexico, Europe) has been to gain leverage on getting movement in China.

With Trump now making it very clear that he won’t back down until major structural change takes place in China, it’s no surprise that one of the biggest winners of the day (following the further economic sanctions on China) was Japan!

The Nikkei was up big today.  And it was Japanese stocks that set the tone for global markets on the day.  As a signal that China’s days of cornering the world’s export markets may be coming to an end, Japan is in position to be a big winner.

Remember, while much of the world has returned to new record highs following the global financial crisis, Japan remains 40% away from the record highs set nearly 30 years ago.

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September 17, 5:00 pm EST

The market is typically pretty good at pricing in what is known.  And it has been pretty clear that Trump has seen trade imbalances as a key piece of his structural reform plan.  And the strategy on correcting those imbalances has been to fight trade barriers with trade barriers.

While it has created plenty of fodder for political and economic debates, the markets seem to like it.

As we’ve discussed, any movement on trade, from a U.S. perspective, is success.  He has said as much with this statement on China:

Given the position of U.S. stocks (at or near record highs) relative to global trading partner stock markets (largely, negative on the year), the market seems to be fairly comfortably betting that movement will occur, given the position of strength from which Trump is negotiating (i.e. the biggest and most powerful economy behind him).

Now, this is the effort to level the playing field internationally. We’ve also talked about the ‘domestic’ leveling of the playing field on the Trump agenda.  And that has everything to do with the tech giants.  And it has most to do with Amazon.

With that, we’ve talked about the case for breaking up Amazon.  As I’ve said

At 161 times earnings, the market seems to be betting on the Amazon monopoly being left to corner all of the world’s industries.  That’s a bad bet. Much like China undercut the competition on price and cornered the world’s export market, Amazon has undercut the retail industry on price, and cornered the world’s retail business.  That tipping point (on retail) has well passed.  And as sales growth accelerates for Amazon, so does the speed at which competition is being destroyed.  But Amazon is now moving aggressively into almost every industry.  This company has to be/will be broken up.

Amazon was a big loser on the day today. Why?  Break-up speculation.

A Citibank internet analyst today called for the split of Amazon’s ecommerce and cloud computing business (AWS).  But the analyst recommended the company split itself to avoid regulators doing it for them.  That sounds like a recommendation for a pre-emptive strike in an effort to maintain the euphoric investor sentiment in the stock.

When we look back, the trillion-dollar valuation threshold in Amazon may have been curse.  On September 4th, it hit a trillion dollars. And that has been the dead top.   

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