Some Confirmation Bias
Plus some initial forecasts for Trump 2.0...
TRUMP ADMINISTRATION 2.0 – this time, with real tariffs – has just made
landfall, says Tim Price at
Price Value
Partners.
The
market focus (aka projectile vomiting) has primarily been on stocks, but like other commentators, we
suspect the real story is taking
place in the bond market.
Here is investment consultant Jeremy McKeown's take,
as at 7th April 2025, via
Linked-In:
"Asian markets fell high single-digit percentages overnight as trade
war fears increased over the
weekend.
"Safe havens include the Japanese Yen, the Swiss Franc, and gold, all
relatively
resilient.
"Everything else is being torched.
"Trump
cheerleaders from last year,
such as Bill Ackman, have condemned the Trump tariff policy, and even Scott Bessent's mentor Stan
Druckenmiller spoke out against
it.
"The Donald remained unphased, saying he hadn't checked his 401(k) this
weekend and compared his policy
to necessary medicine.
"While the headlines focus on the global traded goods
sector, a more meaningful
analysis might be on the capital and liquidity flows these tariff moves have set in motion.
"As Bessent has
said, he is the US's biggest bond salesman, comparing his most pressing job to securing the pilot doors
on US commercial aircraft
before 9/11. While Ackmann and Druckenmiller have capital at risk that, like others, is being
liquidated, Bessent worries about the
Treasury 10-year yield and the federal debt burden.
"What is clear is that this
phase will pass. However,
portfolio risk adjustments are necessary.
"The narrative for the recovery is
still in production; it will
centre on a collapsed oil price, lower interest rates, an extension of the 2017 Trump tax cuts, some
DOGE successes and massive
supply-side reforms, including evidence of inward investment into the US economy.
"Of course, none of this is
sure to work; otherwise, investors would be happy to hold their nerve. After all, human nature fears
loss twice as much as gains; the
adjustment can continue for some time.
"The new administration has achieved its
objective of removing the
Trump Put. It needs to collect funds into its safe-haven Treasuries before it executes a pivot back to
risk.
"However, every stage of this process is fraught with danger."
In an earlier
post from the weekend of April
5th/6th, Jeremy made the following comparison:
"This is America's Brexit. This
is when global investors
re-assess their belief in American Exceptionalism, or at least the price they are being asked to pay for
it. As with Brexit, rational
economic man cannot comprehend the degree to which some are prepared to take short-term pain for their
longer-term ambition. In this
case, the price the US administration is prepared to pay to restore manufacturing jobs to Detroit and
the wider US rust belt. This is
MAGA 2.0 in action and damn the torpedoes!"
We agree. The original Brexit vote
marked the point at which
British blue-collar workers issued a definitive vote of no confidence in the globalist experiment,
complete with offshoring, a
hollowing-out of traditional industry, and unwanted mass migration, known as the European
Union.
Predictably,
this vote was ignored by the so-called elites in London and Brussels. Trump 2.0 may prove a harder nut
to crack.
Trump doesn't (personally) have to worry about re-election, so he can spend some quality
time as a wrecking ball of
change, and seizing the nettle of the US' unsustainable debt load. Whether by accident or design, and
probably the latter, tariff
chaos helps lower US sovereign borrowing costs in a year when roughly $9 trillion will mature or need to
be refinanced.
We happen to think that the damage done to US sovereign creditworthiness and credibility by
the Biden administration
egging on the freezing of Russian foreign reserves was and is irreversible: that particular genie is not
going back in the
bottle.
So we remain of the view that the future involves a concentration on
real assets as opposed to the
illusion of fiat ones. So in turn we are more than happy to keep the faith with regard to gold, silver
and sensibly priced miners,
notwithstanding the elevated volatility that Trump 2.0 has injected into the markets.
Here is what the
retired wealth manager Clive Thompson, again via Linked-In, expects. Irrespective of some perhaps
inevitable confirmation bias, we
also tend to agree:
"Tariffs! You feel you should DO something? Read this
first. This is a step-by-step guide
to what we can expect for stocks, bonds, the economy and gold.
1) America
imposes tariffs.
2)
Some foreign nations respond with retaliatory tariffs.
3) Stocks fall; recent purchases show
losses.
4) Worst
hit are exporters to the US, US importers, and high P/E growth stocks.
5) US sellers shift
money into deposits,
money-market funds, T-Bills, and T-Bonds.
6) Foreign sellers do the same with domestic
equivalents (eg, gilts, OATs,
Bunds).
7) Gold and silver hold gains thanks to central bank buying.
8)"Buy-the-dip" investors sell gold to
buy stocks. But stock rallies are brief.
9) Nervous foreign nations reduce US Treasuries,
buy more gold, undeterred by
price.
10) Prices rise, wages don't. Everything costs more.
11) With limited
funds, people cut spending on
both US and foreign goods.
12) Global consumption drops. Economies contract. Stocks are
falling.
13) Some
businesses fail.
14) Many see reduced profits or slower growth.
15) Asset
allocators, analyzing losses, see
gold would've improved portfolio Sharpe ratios.
16) Portfolio managers begin adding
gold.
17) Layoffs rise.
Unemployment climbs. A global recession follows.
18) Perversely stocks are rising strongly
from the bottom. Stocks are
already anticipating central bank stimulus.
19) Slowing economies reduce tax revenues,
partly offset by US import
tariffs.
20) Governments borrow more to cover shortfalls and rising social
costs.
21) Central banks blame
consumer price rises on a "one-off", not underlying inflation.
22) They lower interest rates
multiple times to try and
boost economies. Longer term Treasury yields remain stubbornly high.
23) With fewer surplus
Dollars from lower exports,
foreign nations buy fewer US Treasuries.
24) Americans buy some, but only at higher yields.
Treasury prices fall, yields
rise.
25) Higher yields raise debt servicing costs.
26) The Fed becomes lender
of last resort, prints money to
buy T-Bonds − like in 2008 − 2011 and 2020–2023. Foreign central banks follow.
27) We have
global QE.
28) More
money boosts economies. Stocks rise. Gold soars."
In a financial world
experiencing genuine chaos and wild
tectonic shifts, there is the possibility that the secular bull in the monetary metals and real assets
has only just
begun.
We can live, quite happily, with that.











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