Stock Market Built on Seismic Fault
Pay now or pay later. But pay you must...
WHAT issue can stocks no longer ignore? asks Brian Maher at The Daily
Reckoning.
Ten-year Treasury notes.
The
10-year Treasury note yielded
3.92% at year's onset.
Last week the 10-year Treasury note yielded 4.55% – a
63-basis point leap.
Jim Rickards labels such a bond yield effervescence an "earthquake". And the seismometers
on Wall Street are reporting
tectonic activity. Bloomberg's Jan-Patrick Barnert:
"While stocks were mostly
ignoring a rise in bond yields
since mid-May it seems that...stocks can't ignore the issue any longer."
Adds
Bloomberg: "Higher yields are
starting to hit stocks."
For years the stock market and the economy rose upon a
San Andreas Fault of
artificially low interest rates.
Artificially low rates have kept the $100
trillion edifice of public and
private debt standing.
This architectural atrocity stretches thousands of feet
into the sky – yet only inches
into the earth.
That is, it has been all high-rise and no foundation. It has
been all height and no
depth.
The thing risks a great heaping down as rates shove higher.
This is the peril
of erecting misproportioned structures upon a deeply unstable fault line.
And
vast tectonic energies, vast
potential energies, are mounting and mounting.
Reports Fox
Business:
"New research
published by Baringa, a global consultancy firm, found that companies that refinance between this year
and 2030 will pay an additional
$381 billion in interest costs due to elevated borrowing rates. This amounts to the largest single
increase in debt-related costs and
the highest cumulative interest payment total ever faced by US companies.
"The
largest expense is expected to
occur in 2024, with more than $3 trillion in loans and bonds set to mature this year. Companies
refinancing that debt will likely pay
$76 billion more in interest this year than they did under lower interest rates, according to Baringa,
which analyzed FactSet
data."
In conclusion:
"It's tempting to look at
plateauing interest rates and
conclude that the worst is behind us, but that's simply not true," said Cindra Maharaj, partner in
Baringa's financial services
practice. "In fact, US businesses and the wider economy are just beginning to experience the painful
effects of a serious hangover
from the rapid escalation in interest rates that will last for several years to come."
The United States
government confronts an identical fix.
The Congressional Budget Office projects
2025 net interest expenses
will scale $951 billion.
From 2025-2034 the same Congressional Budget Office
divines annual $1.2 trillion net
interest expenses...for a combined $12.4 trillion.
We add that the
Congressional Budget Office forecasts no
recession. It further forecasts habitually expanding tax receipts.
What if
recession comes hammering down?
What if tax receipts do not expand in the forecast fashion?
Then net interest
expenses will bulge greater
yet.
And the central difficulty multiplies – deeper into the pit goes the
government of the United
States.
That is, deeper into the pit go the citizens this preposterous
organization purports to
serve.
For they are thrown upon the hook. The burden of payment is thrust upon
them.
As we have argued before: Government lacks all resources.
Before government can
ladle out one meager Dollar
for guns, for butter, for bread, for circuses...it must first pluck it up from private pockets –
directly or indirectly.
That is, directly through taxes or indirectly through credit – borrowing.
That is, through taxes
or taxes.
The borrowed Dollar must be repaid...with interest into the
bargain.
Thus
the Dollar borrowed is merely a delayed plucking, a plucking at one remove.
It
is a plucking nonetheless. It
represents a future plucking of the taxpayer's pocket.
It is in one sense a
greater plucking owing to the
interest. It is he who services the interest. It is he who absorbs the fleecing.
And we hazard he is in for
an extended fleecing. We do not believe elevated rates are a transience.
Michael Hartnett is Bank of
America's chief investment strategist. From whom:
"The lower inflation of the
last 40 years that sent
interest rates down and stock market valuations higher has reached a turning point. We believe we are at
a secular turning point for
both inflation and interest rates.
"We believe 2020 likely marked a secular low
point for inflation and
interest rates...due to a reversal of deflationary secular factors, fiscal excess and an explosive
cyclical reopening of the global
economy creating excess demand for goods, services and labor."
And if you
invest money in the stock market?
You confront a vastly extended lean season.
Market history has witnessed eight
major cycles dating to 1871.
Investors grabbed the greatest gains – nearly all of them – in four cycles of the eight.
Investors handed
over their gains in the others. The silent thief of inflation pickpocketed them.
Importantly: The bulking
majority of market gains across these cycles were harvested during disinflationary cycles – not
inflationary cycles.
What if Hartnett is correct? What if the 40-year cycle of declining inflation and declining
interest rates is
ending?
It would suggest rough going for stocks during the coming years...as
the cycle swings from
disinflation...to inflation.
At present valuations, stocks could shed 50% or
more of last decade's
gains.
By some estimates, your odds of losing money in the stock market
approach 100% – odds that make the
bravest fellow quail.
What if we train our binoculars on the farthest
horizon...20 years out?
Michael Carr instructs technical analysis at New York Institute of Finance. Says
he:
"Starting
from this level, stocks are likely to disappoint over the next 20 years."
Twenty years? That is
correct:
"When the P/E ratio is near all-time highs, as it is now, the S&P
500 delivers annual returns
averaging about 5% over the next 20 years. When the P/E ratio is near all-time lows, returns are about
three times higher, averaging
15.4% a year over the next 20 years."
Yet as we are fond to say: Climate is
what you can expect. Weather is
what you actually get.
Even the harshest bear market has its joys, as even the
harshest winter has its
thaws.
We expect not a fantastic tempest but a protracted malaise – a long
season of dreary drizzle, of false
starts and false dawns.
This time is different, say Wall Street's drummers. It
always is.
Yet if a hangover exists in direct proportion to the binge that produced it...investors may
be down for the following
decade...or two...











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