wknd
notes


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       We're All FX Traders Now

wknd notes: Nobility In Our Struggles

wknd notes: Nobility In Our Struggles
August 14, 2022
Read more

wknd notes: Defying Physics

wknd notes: Defying Physics
August 07, 2022
Read more

Innovation & Optimism

Innovation & Optimism
July 24, 2022
Read more

Finding Weak Links

Finding Weak Links
July 17, 2022
Read more

wknd
notes

Each Sunday morning for over a decade, One River’s CIO, Eric Peters, has published “Wknd Notes.” It is an unorthodox take on markets, politics, and policy that’s widely read across our industry and within global policy/political circles. Eric has written for as long as he has traded and the discipline is part of his investment process. Drawing on wide-ranging, multi-disciplinary research, historical study, and discussions with interesting characters throughout the world, Eric collects those things he finds most thought-provoking each week and distills them into a concise letter. At times the ideas and views are consistent with his own, but just as often, they challenge his positions and it is this openness to opposing views that helps him maintain a flexible mind in the search for emerging opportunities and risks. His writing is a reflection of how he thinks, and as such it is as focused on identifying the right questions to ask as it is on seeking answers. The publication of this work is Eric’s way of exchanging ideas/information and developing dialogue with a network grown over his thirty-one-year career.

We're All FX Traders Now

Marcel Kasumovich, our Head of Research, is writing wknd notes this week with a thematic focus on Quantum Change in the monetary system. Today’s system arrived at its ‘equilibrium’ by accident, not design. Won’t last. Can’t last. Pressure builds gradually. We’re all FX traders now.

 

Overall: “There is no ex-ante limit to that [Transmission Protection Instrument] programme,” said ECB President Lagarde, following her predecessor’s playbook, “[the] ECB determines in its own discretion not being hostage to anyone.” The market disagreed, widening peripheral spreads. The tools that came from “whatever it takes” have been made redundant by politics. Markets are skeptical version-two can be effective. “There’s ample room to hike in 0.25 and 0.50 [percentage point] levels to whatever rate we think, we consider reasonable,” Austria’s central bank Governor Holzmann emphasized in speaking of future meetings, a reminder of the ECBs North-South balancing act. “We do have the risk of a slowdown in the economy,” said the ECB Chief economist ahead of the July rate hike. Political tools are needed to resolve the energy crisis. Nord Stream announced the company was “in process of resuming gas transportation” last week, though at 40% capacity. “The response cannot rely on imposing unfair sacrifices without properly identifying the most effective and solidary contributions each member state can deliver,” the Spanish government wrote in rebuke to an across-the-board cut to gas demand. “It is not efficient, fair, or equitable,” the government continued, another North-South tension. The IMF predicted Russian action to stop supplying Europe would trigger economic contractions of more than 5% over the next year in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, and Italy. Liz Truss, vying for Conservative leadership, shed her 2016 Remain campaign to end every EU-derived regulation: “European Union rules hinder British businesses.” Daylight in Brussels is shortening by 2 minutes and 38 seconds July 24, a slow reminder that winter is coming. Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action has been on alert level for gas since June 22, providing daily updates. “If Russian gas supplies via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline persist at this low level, it will hardly be possible to achieve a storage level of 90% by November without additional measures.” It is a daily reminder of what is to come. “Companies and private consumers must expect a considerable increase in gas prices.”

 

Sarah Schroeder has a terrific read on non-fungible tokens. Most mainstream applications of digital will be non-fungible assets and there is a lot of untapped utility [click here].

 

Week-in-Review (expressed in YoY terms)Mon: China weighs mortgage grace period for stalled home projects, Apple plans to slow hiring and spending in 2023 amid economic slowdown, NS1 turbine delivered from Canada to Germany – paving way for pipeline to reopen on Thursday, Goldman beats / slows 2022 hiring, Saudi airspace open to Israel after Biden visit, Chilean peso continues to rally as intervention starts, Italy agreed to hold confidence vote on Drahi Wednesday, N. Zealand CPI 7.3% (7.1%e), UK house prices 9.3% (9.7%p), Singapore non-oil expts 9% (6.1%e), US NAHB housing mkt index 55 (65e), S&P -0.8%; Tue: leaks that ECB is looking closely at hiking 50bp, EU calls on members to immediately cut gas usage by 15% / EU Commission does not expect NS1 gas pipeline to restart, Russia says NS1 to resume but at reduced levels (was at 40% capacity pre-maintenance shutdown), NFLX users fell but less than feared, RBA minutes showed hawkish tilt, UK unemp 3.8% as exp, HK unemp 4.7% (5%e), EU CPI final 8.6% (as exp), US housing starts -2% MoM (2%e), S&P +2.8%; Wed: M5S abstains from confidence vote – effectively forcing Draghi’s resignation even though he technically survives confidence vote, China keeps LPR unch as exp, Biden expects to talk to Xi in next 10 days, Russia foreign min Lavrov says Russia’s objectives have changed from just Donetsk/Luhansk to a number of other territories, Ukraine wants to delay payment on foreign debt for 2y, Google to pause hiring for next 2w, Tesla profit beats / sells most of its BTC, UK CPI 9.4% (9.3%e) / RPI 11.8% as exp, German PPI 32.7% (33.7%e), S. Africa CPI 7.4% (7.3%) / Core CPI 4.4% (4.3%e), Taiwan expt orders 9.5% (6.4%e), UK house price index 12.8% (12%e), Canada home prices 16.7% (18.3%p), Canada CPI 8.1% (8.4%e) / Core CPI 5.5% (5.6%e), US existing home sales 5.12m (5.35m exp), EU cons conf -27 (-24.9e), Russia PPI 11.3% (18%e), S&P +0.6%; Thu: ECB hikes 50bp (50% exp after leak earlier in the weak) / announces TPI (anti-fragmentation tool) – unanimous and unlimited / ends forward guidance as moves to data dependent / accelerating hikes – not increasing terminal rate, Biden tests positive for Covid, BOJ unch as exp / Kuroda says won’t target FX, NS1 gas delivery resumed at pre-maintenance levels, Draghi resigns as PM – snap elections set for 9/25, Turkey CB unch as exp, S. Africa CB hikes 75bp (50bp exp), Indonesia CB unch as exp, SNAP misses earnings, US sees a price cap on Russian oil by December, Argentina eco activity index 7.4% (8.3%e), Japan expts 19.4% (17%e) / impts 46.1% (46.3%e), UK public borrowing 22.9b (24b exp), HK composite CPI 1.8% (1.6%e), Mexico ret sales 5.2% (4.3%e), US Philly Fed -12.3 (0.8e), US init claims 251k (240k exp), US leading index -0.8% MoM (-0.6%e), S&P +1.0%; Fri: ECB’s Kazimir says Sept hike may be 25 or 50bp, Russia CB cuts 150bp (50bp exp) – below pre-war level, Zelensky says cease-fire without reclaiming lost lands will only prolong the war, Ukraine grain accord allowing Black Sea shipments to resume may be finalized today, Twitter disappointed on sales results, UK cons conf -41 (-42e), Japan CPI 2.4% as exp / Core CPI 1% (0.9%e), UK ret sales -0.1% MoM (-0.2%e), EU mfg PMI 49.6 (51e) / serv 50.6 (52e) / comp 49.4 (51e), US mfg PMI 52.3 (52e) / serv 47 (52.7e) / comp 47.5 (52.4e), S&P -0.9%.

 

Weekly Close: S&P 500 +2.5% and VIX -1.20 at +23.03. Nikkei +4.2%, Shanghai +1.3%, Euro Stoxx +2.9%, Bovespa +2.5%, MSCI World +3.2%, and MSCI Emerging +3.0%. USD rose +2.1% vs Turkey, +1.7% vs Brazil, and +0.2% vs Indonesia. USD fell -23.3% vs Ethereum, -11.0% vs Bitcoin, -2.5% vs Sweden, -2.0% vs Australia, -1.9% vs Chile, -1.8% vs Yen, -1.5% vs South Africa, -1.3% vs Euro, -1.2% vs Sterling, -1.0% vs Russia, -0.9% vs Canada, -0.1% vs China, flat vs Mexico, and flat vs India. Gold +1.3%, Silver +0.1%, Oil +0.1%, Copper +3.6%, Iron Ore -1.1%, Corn -6.5%. 5y5y inflation swaps (EU -4bps at 2.03%, US -6bps at 2.41%, JP -23bps at 0.71%, and UK -15bps at 3.48%). 2yr Notes -15bps at 2.97% and 10yr Notes -17bps at 2.75%.

 

YTD Equity Indexes (high-to-low): UAE +13.8% priced in US dollars (+13.8% priced in dirham), Chile +8.8% priced in US dollars (+21.2% in pesos), Argentina +8% in dollars (+36.3% in pesos), Saudi Arabia +6.2% (+6.3%), Venezuela +3.9% (+28.6%), Turkey +1% (+35.5%), Indonesia -0.2% (+4.6%), Singapore -1% (+1.8%), Portugal -1.7% (+9.4%), Brazil -3.9% (-5.6%), Norway -9.1% (+2.4%), India -10.1% (-3.7%), Mexico -11.4% (-11.3%), Canada -12.1% (-10.6%), UK -12.5% (-1.5%), HK -12.5% (-11.9%), South Africa -12.6% (-7.9%), Malaysia -12.6% (-6.5%), Israel -12.9% (-3.5%), Australia -12.9% (-8.8%), Denmark -14.3% (-5.1%), Thailand -14.7% (-6.3%), China -15.4% (-10.2%), Spain -16.4% (-7.6%), Greece -16.5% (-7.1%), S&P 500 -16.9% (-16.9%), Colombia -17.7% (-10.7%), Japan -17.9% (-3%), MSCI World -18% (-18%), Switzerland -18% (-13.8%), Russell -19.5% (-19.5%), Philippines -19.9% (-12.1%), Netherlands -20.6% (-11.6%), Czech Republic -20.7% (-13.2%), New Zealand -20.9% (-13.6%), France -21.9% (-13.1%), Belgium -22% (-13.3%), Taiwan -24.1% (-17.9%), NASDAQ -24.4% (-24.4%), Germany -24.6% (-16.6%), Euro Stoxx 50 -24.8% (-16.3%), Finland -25.3% (-17.3%), Korea -26.9% (-19.6%), Sweden -27.4% (-18.2%), Russia -28.6% (-44.6%), Ireland -29.5% (-21.5%), Italy -29.9% (-22.4%), Hungary -29.9% (-16.5%), Austria -31.1% (-23.8%), Poland -31.7% (-21.9%).

 

Privilege to Curse: “I have directed Secretary Connally to suspend temporarily the convertibility of the American dollar [to gold]. …what does it mean for you? Let me lay to rest the bugaboo of what is called devaluation. The effect of this action, in other words, will be to stabilize the dollar. But our primary concern is with the American workers.” August 15, 1971, President Nixon ended the gold standard that defined world monetary order since the end of WWII. Gold reserves had plunged and the budget austerity for its survival was untenable.

 

Privilege to Curse II: US surpluses was the challenge at the start of the new global monetary regime after WWII. The world needed dollars and the US needed to run deficits to supply them. US policy recycled dollars through aide to support Germany and Japan. US deficits is what ended the monetary regime, with rapidly draining US gold reserves. Floating exchanges rates were formalized in 1973. International balance sheets were no longer anchored. A new era with long memories evidenced in US Treasury holdings of gold set to the 1973 price of $42.2222.

 

Privilege to Curse III: Balance sheets have long memories. Mistakes accumulate, waiting to be reconciled. International balance sheets are too often overlooked in that context. The post-war Bretton Woods era did its job – it imposed austerity. International balance sheets ended that era clean. Unhinging to gold opened the door for more participants with emerging countries eager to accelerate growth through debt financing. Pegging to the USD was a way of importing US policy credibility – virtuous cycles of lower capital costs, foreign inflows, and strong growth followed.

 

Privilege to Curse IV: Until it stopped. Latin America suffered from rapid Fed tightening and dollar appreciation in the 1980s. Asian economies were similarly destabilized in the 1990s. A new monetary era emerged. EM countries built unprecedented US dollar reserves to ward-off boom-bust cycles. Undervalued currencies. Large external surplus. Delayed gratification in the interest of shorter-term stability and long-term growth. EM foreign exchange reserves rose to $8trln in 2014 from $617bln in 1998. Financiers rejoiced. Industrialists moved to China.

 

Privilege to Curse V: “A particularly interesting aspect of the global saving glut has been a remarkable reversal in the flows of credit to developing and emerging-market economies.” Bernanke’s 2005 address on the issue coined the term “saving glut.” US policy appreciated the challenge. But times were good. “I see no reason why the whole process should not proceed smoothly.” It was the height of privilege. The US economy shifted toward consumption, away from production. Foreign savings fueled the luxury – US external borrowing rose to 7% of GDP.

 

Privilege to Curse VI: It was an implicit monetary accord, not formalized. Domestic production was hollowed in the name of globalization and principles of the Washington Consensus – dutifully ignored by EM countries. Under the constraints of a hard-money system, deficits needed to either be financed or creditors would take back their gold. Net international liabilities never had a chance to build. Today, they haven’t had a chance to correct. The US international liability of $17.75trln is the cumulation of the past, like looking back at stars in a telescope.

 

Privilege to Curse VII: The privilege of cheap financing is now a curse – and it’s global. The world is racing to a new monetary regime with an unknown finish line. Inflation was the starting gun. Monetary regimes change under stress. Countries cooperate when they all have a lot to lose. The virtuous cycle of globalization is now working in reverse with a focus on security – in food, energy, and technology. Foreign exchange is the asset class that drives the transition to new monetary regimes, during macro quantum change. “It’s our currency, but it’s your problem,” a legendary declaration from Secretary Connally in 1971 that is truer today. We’re all FX traders now.

 

Anecdote: “No clubs, no hobbies, no fraternities, no athletics…how do you network?” the head trader asked, miffed. Welcome to Wall Street 1990s – I was not an obvious fit. Driven by curiosity. I had just finished careful study of FX intervention tools as a signal to markets. Really careful. Nuanced tools never worked. Traders demanded bluntness – rate hikes always came next. “So…you see things in FX intervention to predict rate hikes?” the partner asked, sceptical. It was my only answer – not intentionally bold. Policy transparency wasn’t a thing at the time. Most central banks didn’t have fixed meeting dates. EM and DM lines were blurred. Rich countries were forced to defend their currencies, too. It was a period ripe for macro speculation. Mathematical models crumbled under the pressure of things that could “never happen.” But policy drew a line in the sand. The Hong Kong peg to the US dollar held with unprecedented intervention – the CEOs of the three largest stockbrokers in Hong Kong were invited to the China Club in Central to attend a breakfast meeting that was the start of a stock market intervention. The yen reversed depreciation pressure, a more natural state for a creditor country in global risk aversion. Greenspan-Summers-Rubin towered on the cover of Time Magazine as the “committee to save the world.” A new era emerged. The US dollar was the only protection for poorer countries. And for the next two decades, the US enjoyed a privilege that will never be repeated – the poor funding the rich. EM countries opted for a slower path to prosperity – buying US dollars to keep their currencies cheap. A new monetary era. The rich refocused on globalization and financialization. Tech, housing, tax arbitrage, IP investment – megatrends of US dollar dominance. But the 1990s still matter today. Balance sheets hold long memories of past sins, past policy errors, past imbalances. They can’t be permanently swept under a rug. And it was only through that tiny bit of knowledge on FX intervention that I was able to enter the rabbit hole of finance. Seeing the world as Alice does. This wonderland built on privilege that may just become today’s curse.

 

Good luck out there,

Marcel Kasumovich

Head of Research

One River Asset Management

Toronto, Canada

 

 

Disclaimer: All characters and events contained herein are entirely fictional. Even those things that appear based on real people and actual events are products of the author’s imagination. Any similarity is merely coincidental. The numbers are unreliable. The statistics too. Consequently, this message does not contain any investment recommendation, advice, or solicitation of any sort for any product, fund or service. The views expressed are strictly those of the author, even if often times they are not actually views held by the author, or directly contradict those views genuinely held by the author. And the views may certainly differ from those of any firm or person that the author may advise, drink with, or otherwise be associated with. Lastly, any inappropriate language, innuendo or dark humor contained herein is not specifically intended to offend the reader. And besides, nothing could possibly be more offensive than the real-life actions of the inept policy makers, corrupt elected leaders and short, paranoid dictators who infest our little planet. Yet we suffer their indignities every day. Oh yeah, past performance is not indicative of future returns.

BACK