Credit Markets have Melted Overnight. Derivatives are a $1 Quadrillion “Ticking Time Bomb”
13
May, 2015
That
didn’t take long did it? I of course am speaking of the
second overnight and global meltdown of the credit markets …in the
last four business days! Before getting into this topic which I
believe will soon be seen in retrospect and by historians far into
the future as “THE” trigger event.
Just
as we saw last Wed. night/Thurs. wee hours, credit markets again
melted down overnight. The following charts clearly illustrate
this.
Bonds…
Charts: Bloomberg
…But
wait, just as last Thursday, credit again reversed so, …no harm no
foul?
It
is so important you understand “what” is happening and have
an idea of “why”. Let me tackle the what part first,
We are witnessing sovereign bonds and their yields move in wider
standard deviations than most commodities ever do. When you
hear the word “commodity” you should think “risky risky”
because they have wild moves limit up and limit down, it’s the way
the game is played and should be expected.
Sovereign
notes and bonds are (were) the opposite. They are THE bedrock
of the entire financial system. They are “supposed to be
safe”. They are supposed to be for widows and orphans.
Sovereign credits are THE core to nearly all retirement funds on the
planet. If everything else fails, it is this sector, government
bonds, which should stand tall and stave off the failure of
retirement plans. The action over the last week is anything but
bedrock or “stable”, in fact, it is volatility in the bond
markets that are endangering everything financial, suffice it to
say “a foundation of BAD credit is not foundation at all”!
The
next question is “why”. For laughs I guess I should point
out the explanation of a guest moron on CNBC. He claims that
yields on European bonds are rising because their economy is turning
up. He went on to actually say these spikes in yields (drop in
prices) are actually a very good thing because they provide “proof”
of future growth. Never mind all of this debt is held as
collateral for everything else, lower bond prices are “good” when
too much debt is the problem in the first place?
I
would ask if he has even heard of a little country named Greece?
Is
it even possible that eurobonds are being sold because fear of a
Greek default?
Is
the fear of a default cascade the reason bonds are being dumped in
wholesale batches? I have heard the explanation that “net
issuance” has again gone positive as the reason for these air
pockets. Maybe this is true, I do not think so but if it is
then there is a very real problem! If this is true, it means
the market cannot absorb the issuance and yields are going higher not
by design but because there are simply not enough buyers, an “uh oh
moment” so to speak.
I
have a little different theory which if not so now, or “yet”, it
will be soon!
I
believe much of the bond market weakness is being caused (and
saved) by OTC derivatives. I believe and have said multiple
time before, “someone(s) out there is already dead”. I
believe that “bankrupts” are strewn all over the place and have
been hidden with overnight loans… but there is a new problem.
The recent volatility has created more and more losers …which
creates more and more FORCED SALES! (Please don’t scoff at
this as there are a handful of “choice” firms who have
not had a single day of trading losses in over four years, with a
whole string of losers in their wake? )
You
see, for all intents and purposes we have lived through a global bull
market in bonds since 1982. This has culminated in negative
interest rates and we ended up with everyone on the same side of the
boat with no one left to “buy”. Of course you could ask the
question “why would anyone buy?” with zero or even negative
interest rates. Only a few of the “sane ones” out there
have asked this question until now, it seems maybe a few of the
insane may be regaining at least some sense of sanity!?
As
I did yesterday, I will repeat “why” all of this is important.
“Credit” is what our entire system is based upon. It has
become the basis for all paper wealth and the lubricant for all real
economic activity. Should credit collapse (it will), everything
we have come to believe in (been fooled by) will change. Credit
has come to be viewed as “wealth”, it is considered an “asset”…
with just one problem, it is neither! Credit is only an asset
and can be considered wealth as long as the borrower “can pay”.
And
herein lies the rub, Greece cannot pay which means the holders of
Greek debt (along with issuers of CDS) cannot pay and so on. It
is not just Greece of course, it is the entire Western world, it just
happens that Greece is first because they lied the most with the help
of Goldman Sachs and other “benefactors”. If counterparty
risk did not matter, there would be no problem. The reality is
this, the whole show from single dollar bills to trillions in
derivatives will be engulfed in this “counterparty risk”!
Derivatives
are a $1 quadrillion ticking time bomb, soaked in gasoline and
sprinkled with gunpowder. The volatility we are now seeing are
the matches! While we have had two “saves” where the
central banks have stepped in and bought debt to steady the markets,
the day will come when it does not work. This game has gone on
for a very long time and resulted in a mania where most all of the
players are “long”. The only potential new longs left are
the central banks themselves who can only buy more debt with money
created by debt. The day will come when the ability to “save”
is overcome. Along with it will come the freedom of prices
created by Mother Nature herself. Stocks, bonds, currencies,
commodities and yes, even silver and gold will finally break the
chains of “algo mania”.
Finally,
this you must understand, “power” is currently debt. The
control of debt is also the power of prices. Once debt breaks
loose and trades out of the control of central banks, these central
banks will also lose the control to price everything else. We
have come very close twice in the last four trading days of the
credit market control being broken. Will loss of control be on
the next convulsion? Or the next? I nor anyone else knows
this answer, I do know the greatest margin call in all of history
will be issued … and it cannot be met!
Bill
Holter writes
for Miles Franklin Gold
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