Category Yield Curve

The Ultimate Contrarian Signal

The Ultimate Contrarian Signal

When the crowd leans one way, the boat is at risk of capsizing. With BofA’s Bull & Bear indicator triggering a contrarian "sell" signal and equity inflows hitting record highs, market participants are priced for a "Goldilocks" perfection that leaves zero margin of safety. While consensus bets on double-digit earnings growth and Fed cuts, a "Bear Steepener" in the yield curve suggests the bond vigilantes are revolting against a $1.6T deficit. If the US 10-year creeps higher, today’s 22x forward multiple faces a sharp reality check. I remain 65% long in quality, but patient for the correction.

Wall Street Sounds the Alarm… 

It would not surprise me to see the market give back 10–15% over the coming weeks and months. Valuations are very full and the economic data is weakening. But something to watch is the bull-steepening of the 10-yr / 3-mth yield curve from inversions. Whilst not a great timing too - generally its 'vector' is correct. That's a warning - despite the Fed cutting rates.

Don’t Choke On Your TACOs

The market is betting Trump is all bluster and no action. The acronym "Trump Always Chickens Out" (TACO) is sure to piss the President off. Now, if the TACO trade is right, then Trump's threats will lose their power as a negotiating tactic. Therefore, on the assumption Trump believes in protectionism - he may have to follow through on some of his rhetoric. Markets seem to think that won't happen...

10-Yr Yield Rallies… as ‘Bear Steepener’ Warns

After the Fed initiated its easing cycle with a jumbo cut (50 bps) - the soft landing script kicked into full gear. Markets roared higher as they price in strong economic growth in the months and years ahead. And who knows - maybe that's what we get? But have you noticed what we've seen with bonds post the Fed - especially the long end? Those yields have been rising - not falling. The closely watched benchmark US 10-year yield for example is up 17 basis points (where one basis point equals 0.01%.) That wasn't Powell's plan.

When Bad News is Bad News

Last weekend I questioned whether markets could break out to the upside; or perform what trader's refer to as a "back and fill". My best guess was the latter. In turns out, things traded 'per the script', where the S&P 500 suffered its worst week since March 2023 - giving back 4.20%. The Nasdaq fared far worse - shedding ~6% - led by large losses in popular AI chip stocks. So why are market's worried? It's concerns about growth. With a market trading close to ~22x forward earnings - expecting YoY EPS growth of 11% -- that's not consistent with 'slowdown' scenario.