October 5, 2016, 4:15pm EST

As you might recall, since I’ve written this daily note starting in January, I’ve focused on a few core themes.

First, central banks are in control.  They’ve committed trillions of dollars to manufacture a recovery.  They’ve fired arguably every bullet possible (“whatever it takes”).  And for everyone’s sake, they can’t afford to see the recovery derail – nor will they.  With that, they need stocks higher.  They need the housing recovery to continue.  They need to maintain the consumer and growing business confidence that they have manufactured through their policies.

A huge contributor to their effort is higher stocks.  And higher stocks only come, in this environment, when people aren’t fearing another big shock/ big shoe to drop.  The central banks have promised they won’t let it happen.  To this point, they’ve made good on their promise through a number of unilateral and coordinated defensive maneuvers along the way (i.e. intervening to quell shock risks).

The second theme:  As the central banks have been carefully manufacturing this recovery, the Fed has emerged with the bet that moving away from “emergency policies” could help promote and sustain the recovery. It’s been a tough road on that front.  But it has introduced a clear and significant divergence between the Fed’s policy actions and that of Japan, Europe and much of the rest of the world.  That creates a major influence on global capital flows.  The dollar already benefits as a relative safe parking place for global capital, especially in an uncertain world.  Add to that, the expectation of a growing gap between U.S. yields and the rest of the world, and more and more money flows into the dollar… into U.S. assets.

With that in mind, this all fuels a higher dollar and higher U.S. asset prices.  And when a dollar-denominated asset begins to move, it’s more likely to attract global speculative capital (because of the dollar benefits).

With that in mind, let’s ignore all of the day to day news, which is mostly dominated by what could be the next big threat, and take an objective look at these charts.

U.S. Stocks

Clearly the trend in stocks since 2009 is higher (like a 45 degree angle). Since that 2009 bottom in stocks, we’ve had about 4 higher closes for every 1 lower close on a quarterly basis. That’s a very strong trend and we’ve just broken out to new highs last quarter (above the white line).

U.S. Dollar

This dollar chart shows the distinct effect of divergent global monetary policy and flows to the dollar.  You can see the events annotated in the chart, and the parabolic move in the dollar.  Any positive surprises in U.S. economic data as we head into the year end will only drive expectations of a wider policy gap — good for a higher dollar.

Oil

We looked at this breakout in oil last week after the OPEC news. Oil traded just shy of $50 today.  That’s 17% higher since September 20th.

Oil trades primarily in dollars.  And we have a catalyst for higher oil now that OPEC has said it will make the first production cut in eight years. That makes oil a prime spot for speculative capital (more “fuel” for oil).  And as we’ve discussed in recent days, weeks and months… higher oil, given the oil price bust that culminated earlier this year, is good for stocks, and good for the economy.

What’s the anti-dollar trade?  Gold.  As we discussed yesterday, gold has broken down.

If we keep it simple and think about this major policy divergence, we have plenty of reasons to believe a higher dollar and higher stocks will continue to lead the way.

The Billionaire’s Portfolio is up 23% year-to-date — that’s nearly four times the return of the S&P 500 during the same period.  We recently exited a big FDA approval stock for a quadruple, and we’ve just added a new pick to the portfolio — following Warren Buffett into one of his favorite stocks.   If you haven’t joined yet, please do.  Click here to get started and get your portfolio in line with our Billionaire’s Portfolio

 

October 4, 2016, 5:00pm EST

Stocks continue to chop around as we head into the big jobs report this week.  But the dollar has been a mover today, so has gold.

Let’s take a look at the chart of gold.  It has broken down technically.


You can see the longer term downtrend in gold since it topped out in 2011.  And we’ve had a corrective bounce this year, which was contained by this descending trendline.  And today we broke the trend that describes this bullish technical correction (i.e. the trend continues lower).

A lot of people own gold.  And it’s a very emotional trade.  Whenever I talk about negative scenarios for gold, the hate mail is sure to follow.

We’ve talked quite a bit about the drivers of the gold trade. I want to revisit that today.

Gold has been a core trade for a lot of people throughout the crisis period. When Lehman failed in 2008, it shook the world, global credit froze, banks were on the verge of collapse, the global economy was on the brink of implosion—people ran into gold. Gold was a fear–of–the–unknown–outcome trade.

Then the global central banks responded with massive backstops, guarantees, and unprecedented QE programs. The world stabilized, but people ran faster into gold. Gold became a hyperinflation–fear trade.

Gold went on a tear from sub–$700 bucks to over $1,900 following the onset of global QE (led by the Fed).

Gold ran up as high as 182%. That was pricing in 41% annualized inflation at one point (as a dollar for dollar hedge). Of course, inflation didn’t comply.

Still eight years after the Fed’s first round of QE (and massive global responses), we have just 13% cumulative inflation over the period.

So the gold bugs overshot in a big way.  We’ve looked at this next chart a few times over the past several months.  This tells the story on why inflation hasn’t met the expectations of the “run-away inflation” theorists.

This chart above is the velocity of money. This is the rate at which money circulates through the economy. And you can see to the far right of the chart, it hasn’t been fast. In fact, it’s at historic lows. Banks used cheap/free money from the Fed to recapitalize, not to lend. Borrowers had no appetite to borrow, because they were scarred by unemployment and overindebtedness. Bottom line: we get inflation when people are confident about their financial future, jobs, earning potential…and competing for things, buying today, thinking prices might be higher, or the widget might be gone tomorrow. It’s been the opposite for the past eight years.

When this reality of low-to-no inflation and global economic malaise became clear, even after rounds of Fed QE, there were a LOT of irresponsible people continuing to tout gold as an important place in everyone’s portfolio, even at stratospheric levels.  People bought gold at $1900 and have since lost as much as 40% on the value of their investment – an investment that was supposed to “hedge” against inflation.

On that note, today the IMF downgraded U.S. growth estimates for the year from 2.2% to just 1.6% — in a year that many were initially expecting to be a good year, nearing trend growth levels (3%-3.5%).  So eight years from the inception of the Fed’s extraordinary policies, the case for gold remains weak and an investment with more risk than reward.

The Billionaire’s Portfolio is up 23% year-to-date — that’s nearly four times the return of the S&P 500 during the same period.  We recently exited a big FDA approval stock for a quadruple, and we’ve just added a new pick to the portfolio — following Warren Buffett into one of his favorite stocks.   If you haven’t joined yet, please do.  Click here to get started and get your portfolio in line with our Billionaire’s Portfolio. 

 

September 21, 2016, 4:40pm EST

Yesterday we talked about the two big central bank events in focus today.  Given that the Bank of Japan had an unusual opportunity to decide on policy before the Fed (first at bat this week), I thought the BOJ could steal the show.
Indeed, the BOJ acted.  The Fed stood pat.  But thus far, the market response has been fairly muted – not exactly a show stealing response.  But as we’ve discussed, two key hammers for the BOJ in achieving a turnaround in inflation and the Japanese economy are: 1) a weaker yen, and 2) higher Japanese stocks.

Their latest tweaks should help swing those hammers.

Bernanke wrote a blog post today with his analysis on the moves in Japan.  Given he’s met with/advised the BOJ over the past few months, everyone should be perking up to hear his reaction.

Let’s talk about the moves from the BOJ …

One might think that the easy, winning headline for the BOJ (to influence stocks and the yen) would be an increase in the size of its QE program.  They kicked off in 2013 announcing purchases of 60 for 70 trillion yen ($800 billion) a year.  They upped the ante to 80 trillion yen in October of 2014. On that October announcement, Japanese stocks took off and the yen plunged – two highly desirable outcomes for the BOJ.

But all central bank credibility is in jeopardy at this stage in the global economic recovery.  Going back to the well of bigger asset purchases could be dangerous if the market votes heavily against it by buying yen and selling Japanese stocks.  After all, following three years of big asset purchases, the BOJ has failed to reach its inflation and economic objectives.

They didn’t take that road (the explicit bigger QE headline).  Instead, the BOJ had two big tweaks to its program.  First, they announced that they want to control the 10-year government bond yield.  They want to peg it at zero.

What does this accomplish?  Bernanke says this is effectively QE.  Instead of telling us the size of purchase, they’re telling us the price on which they will either or buy or sell to maintain.  If the market decides to dump JGB’s, the BOJ could end up buying more (maybe a lot more) than their current 80 trillion yen a year. Bernanke also calls the move to peg rates, a stealth monetary financing of government spending (which can be a stealth debt monetization).

Secondly, the BOJ said today that they want to overshoot their 2% inflation target, which Bernanke argues allows them to execute on their plans until inflation is sustainable.

It all looks like a massive devaluation of the yen scenario plays well with these policy moves in Japan, both as a response to these policies, and a complement to these policies (self-reinforcing).  Though the initial response in the currency markets has been a stronger yen.

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September 12, 2016, 5:00pm EST

We headed into the weekend with a market that was spooked by a sharp run up in global yields.  On Friday, we looked at the three most important markets in the world at this very moment: U.S. yields, German yields and Japanese yields.

On the latter two, both German and Japanese yields had been deeply in negative yield territory.  And the perception of negative rates going deeper (a deflation forever message), had been an anchor, holding down U.S. market rates.

But in just three days, the tide turned.  On Friday, German yields closed above the zero line for the first time since June 23rd.  Guess what day that was?

Brexit.

And Japanese 10-year yields had traveled as low as 33 basis points.  And in a little more than a month, it has all swung back sharply.  As of today, yields on Japanese 10-year government debt are back in positive territory – huge news.

So why did stocks rally back sharply today, as much as 2.6% off of the lows of this morning – even as yields continued to tick higher?  Why did volatility slide lower (the VIX, as many people like to refer to as, the “fear” index)?

Here’s why.

First, the ugly state of the government bond market, with nearly 12 trillion dollars in negative yield territory as of just last week, served as a warning signal on the global economy.  As I’ve discussed before, over the history of Fed QE, when the Fed telegraphed QE, rates went lower.  But when they began the actual execution of QE (buying bonds), rates went higher, not lower (contrary to popular expectations).  Because the market began pricing in a better economic outlook, given the Fed’s actions.

With that in mind, the ECB and the BOJ have been in full bore QE execution mode, but rates have continued to leak lower.

That sends a confusing, if not cautionary, signal to markets, which is adding to the feedback loop (markets signaling uncertainty = more investor uncertainty = markets signaling uncertainty).

Now, with government bond yields ticking higher, and key Japanese and German debt benchmarks leaving negative yield territory, it should be a boost for sentiment toward the global economic outlook. Thus, we get a sharp bounce back in stocks today, and a less fearful market message.

Keep in mind, even after the move in rates on Friday, we’re still sitting at 1.66% in the U.S. 10-year. Before the Fed pulled the trigger on its first rate hike, in the post-crisis period, the U.S. 10-year was trading around 2.25%.  As of last week, it was trading closer to 1.50%.  That’s 75 basis points lower, very near record lows, AFTER the Fed’s first attempt to start normalizing rates.  Don’t worry, rates are still very, very low.

Still, the biggest risk to the stability of the bond market is, positioning:  The bond market is extremely long. If the rate picture swung dramatically and quickly higher, the mere positioning alone (as the longs all ran for the exit door) would exacerbate the spike.  That would pump up mortgage rates, and all consumer interest rates, which would grind the economy to a halt and likely destabilize the housing market again. And, of course, the Fed would be stuck with another crisis, and little ammunition.

As Bernanke said last month, the Fed has done damage to their own cause by so aggressively telegraphing a tighter interest rate environment. In that instance, he was referring to the demand destruction caused by the fear of higher rates and a slower economy.  But as we discussed above, the Fed also has risk that their hawkish messaging can run market rates up and create the same damage.

Bottom line:  The Fed is walking a fine line, which is precisely why they continue to sway on their course, leaning one way, and then having to reverse and shift their weight the other way.

In our Billionaire’s Portfolio, we’re positioned in deep value stocks that have the potential to do multiples of the broader market—all stocks that are owned and influenced by the world’s smartest and most powerful billionaire investors.

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September 6, 2016, 3:30pm EST

As we headed into the holiday weekend, stocks were sitting near record highs, yields were hanging around near record lows, and oil had been sinking back toward the danger zone (which is sub $40).

In examining the relationship of those three markets, each has a way of influencing the outcome and direction of the others.

First, the negative scenarios: A continued slide in oil would soon sink stocks again, and send yields (the interest rate outlook) falling farther. Cheap oil, in this environment, has dire implications for the energy business, which has a cascading effect, starting with banks, which effects credit and the dominos fall from there.

What about stocks?  When stocks are falling, in this environment, it’s self-reinforcing.  Lower stocks, equals souring sentiment, equals lower stocks.

What about yields?  As we’ve seen, lower yields are supposed to promote spending and borrowing.  But, in this environment, it comes with trepidation.  Lower yields, especially when much of the world’s government bond markets are in negative yield territory, is having a stifling effect on economic activity, as many see it as a signal of another recession coming, or worse.

Now, for the positive scenarios.  Most likely, they all come with intervention. That shouldn’t be surprising.

We’ve already seen the kitchen sink thrown at the stock market.  From a monetary policy standpoint, the persistent Fed jockeying through much of the past seven years has now been handed over to Japan and Europe.  QE in Europe and Japan continues to promote stability, which incentivizes the flow of capital into stocks (the only liquid alternative for return in a zero and negative interest rate world).

And we’ve seen them influence oil prices as well, through easing, currency market intervention, and likely the covert buying of oil back in February/March of this year (through China, ETFs via the BOJ or an intermediary Japanese bank).  Still, OPEC still swings the big ax in the oil market, and it’s been OPEC intervention that has rigged oil prices to cheap levels, and it looks increasingly likely that they will send oil prices higher through a policy move.  The news that Russian and Saudi Arabian might coordinate to promote higher oil prices, sent crude 5% higher on Monday.

As for yields, this is where the Fed is having a tough time.  They want yields to slowly climb, to slowly follow their policy guidance.  But the world hasn’t been buying it.  When they hiked for the first time in December, the U.S. 10 year yield went from 2.25%, to 2.30% (for a cup of coffee) and has since printed new record lows and continues to hang closer to those levels than not (at 1.53% today).  Lower yields makes it even harder for them to hike because it’s in the face of weaker sentiment.

Last week, we looked at the U.S. 10 year yield. It was trading in this ever narrowing wedge, looking like a big break was coming, one way or the other, following the jobs report on Friday.  It looks like we may have seen the break today (lower), following the week ISM data this morning.

What could swing it all in the positive direction?  Fiscal intervention.

As we discussed on Friday, the G20 met over the weekend.  With world government leaders all in the same room, we know the geopolitical tensions have been rising, relationships have been dividing, but first and foremost priority for everyone at the table, is the economy.

Even those opportunistically posturing for influence and power (i.e. Russia, China), without a stable and recovery global economy, the political and domestic economic outlook is bleak.  So we thought heading into the G20 that we could get some broader calls for government spending stimulus was in order.

The G20 statement did indeed focus heavily on the economy. They said, “Our growth must be shored up by well-designed and coordinated policies. We are determined to use all policy tools – monetary, fiscal and structural – individually and collectively to achieve our goal of strong, sustainable, balanced and inclusive growth. Monetary policy will continue to support economic activity and ensure price stability, consistent with central banks’ mandates, but monetary policy alone cannot lead to balanced growth. Underscoring the essential role of structural reforms, we emphasize that our fiscal strategies are equally important to supporting our common growth objectives.”

Keep an ear open for some foreshadowing out of Europe to promote fiscal stimulus – the spot it’s most needed. That would be a huge catalyst for “risk assets” (i.e. commodities, stocks, foreign currencies) and would probably finally signal the top in the bond market.

After a fairly quiet August, we have a full docket of central meetings in the weeks ahead, starting this week.  The European Central Bank meets on Thursday.

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August 25, 2016, 4:00pm EST

Tomorrow is the big annual Fed conference in Wyoming.  It typically draws the world’s most powerful central bankers.  This is where, in 2012, Bernanke telegraphed a round three of its quantitative easing program.

The economy was still shaky following the escalating sovereign debt crisis in Europe, which had taken Spain and Italy to the brink of default.  Draghi and the ECB stepped in first, in late July and made the big “whatever it takes” promise.  This is where he threatened to crush the bond market speculators that had run yields up in the government bond markets of Spain and Italy to economic failure levels.  He threatened to take the other side of that trade, to whatever extent necessary, in effort to save the future of the euro.  It worked.  He didn’t have to buy a single bond.  The bond vigilantes fled. Yields ultimately fell sharply.

But just a month after Draghi’s threat, it was uncertain at best, that it would work.  With that, and given the economies globally were still flailing, Bernanke hinted that more QE was coming at the August Jackson Hole conference.

The combination of those to intervention events ignited global stocks, led by U.S. stocks.  The S&P 500 is up 55% from the date of Bernanke’s speech and the climb has been a 45 degree angle.

This time, this Jackson Hole, things are a bit more confusing, if that’s possible.  The BOJ, ECB and BOE are QE’ing.  The Fed has been going the other way.  But in the past six months, they’ve backstepped big time.

The hawk talk went quite for a while earlier this year.  Even Bernanke has written that the Fed has shot itself in the foot by publishing an optimistic trajectory and timeline for normalizing rate. It has resulted in an effect that has felt like a rate tightening, without them having to act.  That’s the exact opposite of they want.  They want to hike to restore some more traditional functioning of the financial system, but they don’t want to slow down economic activity.  It doesn’t normally work that way, and it hasn’t worked that way.

So now we have Yellen speaking tomorrow, and people are looking for answers.  We have some Fed members now wanting to dial back on public projections, as to not continue to negatively influence economic activity (Bernanke’s advice) and others getting in front of camera’s and telling us that a September hike might be in the cards.

But while everyone is looking to Yellen for clarity (don’t expect it), the show might be stolen by another central banker.  Haruhiko Kuroda, head of the Bank of Japan, will be in Jackson Hole too.  The agenda is not yet out so we don’t know if he’s speaking.  But he could conjure up some Bernanke style QE3.  Not a bad bet to be long USD/JPY and dollar-denominated Nikkei through the weekend (ETFs, DBJP or DXJ).  Full disclosure: We’re long DBJP in our Billionaire’s Portfolio.

In our Billionaire’s Portfolio, we’re positioned in deep value stocks that have the potential to do multiples of the broader market—all stocks that are owned and influenced by the world’s smartest and most powerful billionaire investors. Join us today and get yourself in line with our portfolio. You can join here.  

 

August 22, 2016, 4:30pm EST

As we head into the end of August, people continue to parse every word and move the Fed makes.  Yellen gives a speech later this week at Jackson Hole (at an economic conference hosted by the Kansas City Fed), where her predecessor Bernanke once lit a fire under asset prices by telegraphing another round of QE.

Still, a quarter point hike (or not) from a level that remains near zero, shouldn’t be top on everyone’s mind.  Keep in mind a huge chunk of the developed world’s sovereign bond market is in negative yield territory.  And just two weeks ago Bernanke himself, intimated, not only should the Fed not raise rates soon, but could do everyone a favor — including the economy — by dialing down market expectations of such.

But the point we’ve been focused on is U.S. market and economic performance.  Is the landscape favorable or unfavorable?

The narrative in the media (and for much of Wall Street) would have you think unfavorable.   And given that largely pessimistic view of what lies ahead, expectations are low.  When expectations are low (or skewed either direction) you get the opportunity to surprise.  And positive surprises, with respect to the economy, can be a self-reinforcing events.

The reality is, we have a fundamental backdrop that provides fertile ground for good economic activity.

For perspective, let’s take a look at a few charts.

We have unemployment under 5%.  Relative to history, it’s clearly in territory to fuel solid growth, but still far from a tight labor market.

unem rate

What about the “real” unemployment rate all of the bears often refer to.  When you add in “marginally attached” or discouraged job seekers and those working part-time for economic reasons (working part time but would like full time jobs) the rate is higher. But as you can see in the chart below that rate (the blue line) is returning to pre-crisis levels.

u6

In the next chart, as we know, mortgage rates are at record lows – a 30 year fixed mortgage for about 3.5%.

30 yr mtg

Car loans are near record lows.  This Fed chart shows near record lows.  Take a look at your local credit union or car dealer and you’ll find used car loans going for 2%-3% and new car loans going for 0%-1%.

autos

What about gas?  In the chart below, you can see that gas is cheap relative to the past fifteen years, and after adjusted for inflation it’s near the cheapest levels ever.

gas prices

Add to that, household balance sheets are in the best shape in a very long time.  This chart goes back more than three decades and shows household debt service payments as a percent of disposable personal income.

household

As we’ve discussed before, the central banks have have pinned down interest rates that have warded off a deflationary spiral — and they’ve created the framework of incentives to hire, spend and invest.  You can see a lot of that work reflected in the charts above.

In our Billionaire’s Portfolio, we’re positioned in deep value stocks that have the potential to do multiples of the broader market—all stocks that are owned and influenced by the world’s smartest and most powerful billionaire investors. Join us today and get yourself in line with our portfolio. You can join here.  

 

August 10, 2016, 4:00pm EST

After the past two weeks, that included a Fed decision, more BOJ action, the approval of Japanese fiscal stimulus, a rate cut and the return to QE for the Bank of England, and a strong jobs report, this week is a relative snoozer.

With that, every headline this week seems to contain the word Trump. Clearly the media thought a post by the former Fed Chairman, the architect of the global economic recovery and interventionist strategies that continue to dictate the stability of the global economy (and world, in general) today, wasn’t quite as important as Trump watching.

On Monday, Ben Bernanke wrote a blog post that laid out what appears to be his interpretation of a shift in gears for the Fed – an important message.  Don’t forget, this is also the guy that may have the most intimate knowledge of where the world has been over the past decade, what it’s vulnerable to, and what the probable outcomes look like for the global economy.  And he’s advising one of the biggest hedge funds in the world, the biggest bond fund in the world and one of the most important central banks in the world (at the moment), the Bank of Japan. And it’s safe to assume he still has influence plenty of influence at the Fed.

My takeaway from his post:  The Fed’s forward guidance of the past two years has led to a tightening in financial conditions, which has led to weaker growth, lower market interest rates and lower inflation.

Why?  Because people have responded to the Fed’s many, many promises of a higher interest rate environment, by pulling in the reins somewhat.

To step back a bit, while still in the midst of its third round of QE, the Fed determined in 2012, under Bernanke’s watch, that words (i.e. perception manipulation) had been as effective, if not more, than actual QE.  In Europe, the ECB had proven that idea by warding off a bond market attack and looming defaults in Spain and Italy, and a collapse of the euro, by simply making promises and threats.  With that in mind, and with the successful record of Bernanke’s verbal intervention along the way, the Fed ultimately abandoned QE in favor of “forward guidance.”  That was the overtly stated gameplan by the Fed.  Underpin confidence by telling people we are here, ready to act to ensure the recovery won’t run off of the rails — no more shock events.

The “forward guidance” game was working well until the Fed, under Yellen, started moving the goal posts.  They gave a target on unemployment as a signal that the Fed would keep rates ultra low for quite some time.  But the unemployment rate hit a lot sooner than they expected.  They didn’t hike and they removed the target.  Then they telegraphed their first rate hike for September of last year.  Global markets then stirred on fears about China’s currency moves, and the Fed balked on its first rate move.

By the time they finally moved in December of last year, the market was already questioning the Fed’s confidence in the robustness of the U.S. economy, and with the first rate hike, the yield curve was flattening.  The flattening of the yield curve (money moving out of short term Treasuries and into longer term Treasuries, instead of riskier assets) is a predictor of recession and an indicator that the market is betting the Fed made/is making a mistake.

And then consider the Fed’s economic projections that include the committee’s forecasts on interest rates.  By showing the market/the world an expectation that rates will be dramatically higher in the coming months, quarters and years, Bernanke argued in his post that this “guidance” has had the opposite of the desired effect — it’s softened the economy.

So in recent months, starting back in March, the Fed began dramatically dialing back on the levels and speed they had been projecting for rates.  It’s all beginning to look like the Fed should show the world they are positioned to well underestimate the outlook, rather than overestimate it, as it’s implied by Bernanke.  The thought?  Perhaps that can lead to the desired effect of better growth, hotter inflation.

This post by Bernanke is reversing some of the expectations that had been set in the market for a September or December rate hike by the Fed.  And the U.S. 10-year yield has, again, fallen back — from 1.62% on Monday to a low of 1.50% today.  Still, the Fed showed us in June they expect one to two hikes this year.  Given where market rates are, they may still be overly hawkish.

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August 9, 2016, 4:15pm EST

Yesterday we walked through some charts from key global stock markets.  As we know, the S&P 500 has been leading the way, printing new highs this week.

U.S. stocks serve as a proxy on global economic stability confidence, so when stocks go up in the U.S., in this environment, there becomes a feedback loop of stability and confidence (higher stocks = better perception on stability and confidence = higher stocks …)

That said, as they begin to capitulate on the bear stories for stocks, the media is turning attention to opportunities in emerging markets.  But as we observed yesterday in the charts, you don’t have to depart from the developed world to find very interesting investment opportunities.  The broad stock market indicies in Germany and Japan look like a bullish technical breakout is coming (if not upon us) and should outpace gains in U.S. stocks in second half of the year.

Now, over the past few weeks, we’ve talked about the slide in oil and the potential risks that could re-emerge for the global economy and markets.

On Wednesday of last week, we said this divergence (in the chart below) between oil and stocks has hit an extreme — and said, “the oil ‘sharp bounce’ scenario is the safer bet to close the gap.”

oil v stocks aug 1 2
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

Given this divergence, a continued slide in oil would unquestionably destabilize the fundamentals again for the nascent recovery in energy companies.

With that, and given the rescue measures that global central banks extended in response to the oil bust earlier this year, it was good bet that the divergence in the chart above would be closed by a bounce back in oil.
That’s been the case as you can see in the updated chart below (the purple line rising).

aug9 oil v stocks
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

At the peak today, oil had bounced 11% in just five trading days.  Oil sustaining above the $40 is key for the stability of the energy industry (and thus the quelling the potential knock-on effects through banks and oil producing sovereigns).  Below $40 is the danger zone.

In a fairly quiet week for markets (relative to last week), there was a very interesting piece written by former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke yesterday.

Tomorrow we’ll dig a little deeper into his message, but it appears that the Fed’s recent downgrade on what they have been projecting for the U.S. economy (and the path of policy moves) is an attempt to stimulate economic activity, switching for optimistic forward guidance (which he argues stifled activity) to more pessimistic/dovish guidance (which might produce to opposite).

Remember, we’ve talked in recent months about the effect of positive surprises on markets and the economy.  We’ve said that, given the ratcheting down of earnings expectations and expectations on economic data, that we were/are set up for positive surprises.  Like it or not, that’s good for sentiment.  And it’s good for markets.  And it can translate into good things for the economy (more hiring, more investment, more spending).

The positive surprises have been clear in earnings.  It’s happening in economic data.  It looks like the Fed is consciously playing the game too.

This is the perfect time to join us in our Billionaire’s Portfolio, where we  follow the lead of the best billionaire investors in the world.  You can join us here

 

August 8, 2016, 3:45pm EST

Today we want to look at some key charts as we head into the week.

First, to step back a bit, as we started last week, we had some big market events ahead of us.  Japan was due to approve a big fiscal stimulus plan.  The Bank of England was meeting on rates and the U.S. jobs report was on the docket to wrap up the first week of August.

As we discussed Thursday, the BOE announced they’ve returned to the QE game.  Japan doubled the size of its stock buying plan.  And the jobs report came in Friday with another solid report.  As we thought, despite the volatility in the monthly numbers the media likes to overanalyze, the longer term trend continues to clearly argue the health of the job market is in good shape, and not a legitimate concern for the Fed’s rate path.

All together, the events of the week only solidified reasons to be long stocks.

Most importantly, stocks have been, and continue to be, a key tool for central bankers in this global economic recovery. They want and need stocks higher. A higher stock market provides fuel for economic activity by underpinning confidence and wealth creation, which encourages hiring, spending and more investment.

With that, as we’ve said, this is the sweet spot for stocks, where good news is good news for stocks (better outlook triggers capital flows out of cash and bonds, and into stocks), and bad news is good news for stocks (it triggers more stimulus).

When it comes to stocks, back on May 25th, we said “everyone could benefit by having a healthy dose of ‘fear of missing out.’  Stock returns tend to be lumpy over the long run.  When we you wait to buy strength, you miss out on A LOT of the punch that contributes to the long run return for stocks.”

Fast forward to today, and the S&P 500 has printed yet another new record high.

But the horse is not already out of the barn on global stocks (including U.S. stocks).

Let’s take a look at the chart on the S&P 500…

1us stocks
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

You can see, we’ve broken out in U.S. stocks (very bullish).

Next, in the UK, the place people were most afraid of, just a little more than a month ago, traded near 14-month highs today and is nearing a breakout to record highs, with support of fresh central bank easing from the Bank of England.

1 uk stocks
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

In the next two charts, we can see the opportunities to buy the laggards, in areas that have been beaten down on broader global economic concerns, but also benefiting directly from domestic central bank easing.

In the chart below, you can see German stocks have fallen hard from the highs of last year, but have technically broken the corrective downtrend.  A return to the April highs of last year would be a 19% return for current levels.

1german dax aug
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

In the next chart, Japanese stocks also look like a break of this corrective downtrend is upon us.  A return to the highs of last year would be a 25% run for the Nikkei.  As we discussed last week, the sharp ascent in the chart below from the lower left corner of the chart can be attributed to the BOJ’s QE program, which first included a 1 trillion yen stock buying program and was later tripled to three trillion (a driver of the run from around 15k to 21k in the index).  Last week, that stock buying program was doubled to six trillion yen.

1jap stocks
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

Given the trajectory of the charts above (global stocks), which both promote and reflect global confidence, and the given lack of consequence that QE has had on meaningful inflation, the world’s inflation-fear hedge, gold, looks like its run into brick wall up here.

1 gold
Sources: Billionaire’s Portfolio, Reuters

Remember, we have a convergence of fresh monetary policy in the world this year, with fiscal policy in Japan, and the growing appetite for fiscal policy in other key economies.  That’s powerful fuel for global economic growth, risk appetite and stocks.

This is the perfect time to join us in our Billionaire’s Portfolio, where we  follow the lead of the best billionaire investors in the world.  You can join us here