2016 Crash Begins – This Time Isn’t Different
January
4th, 2016
NOTE:
Global stock markets from Japan to China to the European Union to the
United States opened the new year this morning with declines.
Economists have been predicting that 2016 will be the year when the
charade ends. Stocks cannot continue to rise when there is nothing
underneath them but hot air. Tyler Durden lays it out below.
Jan.
4, 2016
Last
year ended with a whimper on Wall Street. The S&P 500 was down 1%
for the year, down 4% from its all-time high in May, and no higher
than it was 13 months ago at the end of QE3. The
Wall Street shysters and their mainstream media mouthpieces declare
2016 to be a rebound year, with stocks again delivering double digit
returns. When haven’t they touted great future returns.They
touted them in 2000 and 2007 too. No one earning their paycheck on
Wall Street or on CNBC will point out the most obvious speculative
bubble in history. John Hussman has been pointing it out for the last
two years as the Fed created bubble has grown ever larger. Those
still embracing the bubble will sit down to a banquet of consequences
in 2016.
At the peak of every speculative bubble, there are always those who have persistently embraced the story that gave the bubble its impetus in the first place. As a result, the recent past always belongs to them, if only temporarily. Still, the future inevitably belongs to somebody else. By the completion of the market cycle, no less than half (and often all) of the preceding speculative advance is typically wiped out.
Hussman
referenced the work of Reinhart & Rogoff when they produced their
classic This Time is Different. Every boom and bust have the same
qualities. The
hubris and arrogance of financial “experts” and government
apparatchiks makes them think they are smarter than those before
them. They
always declare this time to be different due to some new technology
or reason why valuations don’t matter. The issuance of speculative
debt and seeking of yield due to Federal Reserve suppression of
interest rates always fuels the boom and acts as the fuse for the
inevitable explosive bus.
In
2009, during the depths of the last crisis that followed such
speculation, economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff detailed
the perennial claim that feeds these episodes in their book,This Time
is Different:
“Our
immersion in the details of crises that have arisen over the past
eight centuries and in data on them has led us to conclude that the
most commonly repeated and most expensive investment advice ever
given in the boom just before a financial crisis stems from the
perception that ‘this time is different.’ That advice, that the
old rules of valuation no longer apply, is usually followed up with
vigor. Financial
professionals and, all too often, government leaders explain that we
are doing things better than before, we are smarter, and we have
learned from past mistakes. Each
time, society convinces itself that the current boom, unlike the many
booms that preceded catastrophic collapses in the past, is built on
sound fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and
good policy.”
“The
essence of the this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is
rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crises are something
that happen to other people in other countries at other times; crises
do not happen, here and now to us… If
there is one common theme to the vast range of crises we consider, it
is that, excessive debt accumulation, whether it be by the
government, banks, corporations, or consumers, often poses greater
systemic risks than it seems during a boom.”
The
third speculative boom in the last fifteen years fueled by Federal
Reserve idiocy is about to become a the third bust in the last
fifteen years. The
unwashed masses who believe what they are told by CNBC are going to
be pretty pissed off when they lose half their retirement savings
again.
None of their highly paid financial advisors are telling them to
expect 0% returns over the next twelve years, but that is their fate.
The numbers don’t lie over the long haul.
My
view on “this time” is clear. I remain convinced that the U.S.
financial markets, particularly equities and low-grade debt, are in a
late-stage top formation of the third speculative bubble in 15 years.
On the basis of the valuation measures most strongly correlated with
actual subsequent market returns (and that have fully retained that
correlation even across recent market cycles), current extremes imply
40-55% market losses over the completion of the current market cycle,
with zero nominal and negative real total returns for the S&P 500
on a 10-12 year horizon. These are not worst-case scenarios, but
run-of-the-mill expectations.
Hussman
recently saw the brilliant take down of Wall Street – The Big Short
– and thought it was a highly accurate portrayal of the rampant
criminality of the Wall Street banks. They created fraudulent
mortgage products, doled them out to suckers, and created complex
toxic derivatives, selling them to clients while shorting them at the
same time. Hussman’s only problem with the movie was that it left
the true villain off the hook with nary a mention. Wall
Street could not and would not have created the trillions of
fraudulent products if the Federal Reserve had not kept interest
rates at 1% and had performed their regulatory obligations of
overseeing the banks.
The
answer is straightforward: as the bubble expanded toward its
inevitable collapse, the role of Wall Street was to create a massive
supply of new “product” in the form of sketchy mortgage-backed
securities, but the demand for that product was the result of the
Federal Reserve’s insistence on holding interest rates down after
the tech bubble crashed, starving investors of safe Treasury returns,
and driving them to seek higher yields elsewhere.
See,
the Fed reacted to the collapse of the tech bubble and the
accompanying recession holding short-term rates to just 1%, provoking
yield-seeking by income-starved investors. They found that extra
yield in seemingly “safe” mortgage securities. But as the demand
outstripped the available supply, Wall Street rushed to create more
product, and generate associated fees, by lending to anyone with a
pulse (hence “teaser” loans offering zero interest payments for
the first 2 years, and ads on TV and radio hawking “No income
documentation needed! We’ll get you approved fast!”; “No
credit? No problem! You have a loan!”;
“Own millions of dollars
in real estate with no money down!”). The loans were then
“financially engineered” to make the resulting mortgage bonds
appear safer than the underlying credits were. The housing
bubble was essentially a massive, poorly regulated speculative
response to Federal Reserve actions.
And
now the Fed has done it again. The
stock market on most valuation measures is the most overvalued in
world history. The rolling tsunami is about to wipe away the life
savings of millions for the third time in fifteen years.
The
current, obscenely overvalued QE-bubble is simply the next reckless
response to Federal Reserve actions, which followed the global
financial crisis, which resulted when the housing bubble collapsed,
which was driven by excessively activist Federal Reserve policy,
which followed the collapse of the tech bubble. As my wife Terri put
it “It’s like a rolling tsunami.”
The
pompous professionals inhabiting the gleaming skyscrapers in the NYC
financial district are still arrogantly ignoring the imminent bust
headed their way. The
Fed juiced gains over the last six years will evaporate just as they
did in 2007-2009. Cheerleading for and denying the existence of the
bubble is a common them among those whose paycheck depends upon them
doing so.
One
had to suffer fools parroting things like “being early is the same
thing as being wrong” until the collapse demonstrated that,
actually no, it’s really not. The 2007-2009 collapse wiped out the
entire total return of the S&P 500, in excess of risk-free
Treasury bills, all the way back to June 1995.
Since
two crashes weren’t enough to teach the lesson, here we are again,
at what’s likely to be seen in hindsight as the last gasp of the
extended top formation of the third speculative bubble in 15 years.
The median stock actually peaked in late-2014.
And
now for the bad news. At current market valuations, a run of the mill
bust will result in a 50% decline. A bust that puts valuations back
to 1982 bear market lows would result in a decline exceeding
75%. Whether
it is a violent collapse or long slow decline, there is no doubt that
returns over the next decade will be non-existent. This is not good
news for Boomers or GenX entering or approaching retirement.
For
the S&P 500 to lose half of its value over the completion of the
current market cycle would merely be a run-of-the-mill outcome given
current extremes. A truly worst-case scenario, at least by post-war
standards, would be for the S&P 500 to first lose half of its
value, and then to lose another 55% from there, for a 78% cumulative
loss, which is what would have to occur in order to reach the 0.45
multiple we observed in 1982. We do not expect that sort of outcome.
But to rule out a completely pedestrian 40-55% market loss over the
completion of the current cycle is to entirely dismiss market
history.At present, investors should expect a 12-year total return
from the S&P 500 of essentially zero.
The
reckless herd has been in control for the last few years, but their
recklessness is going to get them slaughtered. Corporate
profits are plunging. Labor participation continues to fall. A global
recession is in progress. The strong U.S. dollar is crushing exports
and profits of international corporations. Real household income
remains stagnant, while healthcare, rent, home prices, education, and
a myriad of other daily living expenses relentlessly rises. The world
is a powder keg, with tensions rising ever higher in the Middle East,
Ukraine, Europe, and China. The lessons of history scream for caution
at this moment in time, not recklessness. 2016
will be a year of reckoning for the reckless herd.
There’s
no question that at speculative extremes, recent history always
temporarily belongs to the reckless herd that has ignored concerns
about valuation and risk at every turn. Fortunately, the future has
always belonged to those who take discipline, analysis, and the
lessons of history seriously. Decide which investor you want to be.
Market crash.... better than trashing the planet.....
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