Among the many themes we might pick for the market turmoil – energy,
margin debt retreating, currency gyrations, emerging market disarray –
the one that will be the most punishing is when people lose faith in
central bankers to control the markets and steer certain outcomes.
As I noted in a recent piece:
However, there’s a new fault line that’s opened up and it’s quite serious. As we’ve noted previously, the immediate reaction to Japan’s negative interest rates was for the share prices of Japanese banks to get crushed (even as the rest of the Nikkei spiked upwards, briefly).This idea of s schism between the big banks and the central banks is really a very big deal. I’m not sure where the Bloomberg journalist got this idea, but it’s focusing on a really important theme: Stock Rout Deepens, Bonds Jump as Faith in Central Banks FaltersIt’s even worse than “investors” (speculators is the correct term) losing faith in the ability of central bankers to support the global economy, they are beginning to lose faith that the central bankers can support the asset markets. That’s the major sin at the moment. So – poof! – just like that several years of ‘gains’ in the stock market have been wiped out. And there’s more to come until and unless the central banks intervene and give the junkie another big fix of monetary heroin. Which will, by the way, only makes things worse over the long haul even as it shores things up for a while. This next quote from the above article captures the sentiment well I think: “Over the last few years when we got bad news, equity markets would rally because they would interpret this as potential for central banks to go more dovish,” said Mohit Kumar, head of rates strategy at Credit Agricole SA’s corporate and investment bank unit in London.Yes, now bad news is actually bad news. Just like it used to be and arguably should be. This whole fixation on the Fed, et al., cajoling and pumping markets ever higher and “doing whatever it takes” will be more widely recognized as being utter intellectual rubbish that has caused and will continue to cause major economic, monetary and social damage. Chris |
Friday, February 12, 2016
Central Bankers Losing Control, Now Bad News Is Actually Bad News.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment