Stephen asks “So…are you suggesting we’re about to see an abrupt reversal in this trend? What do you think might cause this?”
We will see a reversal of these one way bets over the next 18 months. Indeed, I would suggest that, under the surface, this mechanism is well underway and there are a number of factors that may cause the trend to reverse:
1.) Liquidity is decreasing and will decrease further. From a peak of 22% in 2005, liquidity growth has dropped to around 10% ( according to Khuram Chaudhry of Merrill Lynch). So far, this is largely due to central banks increasing interest rates. We have not yet felt the full impact of this, particularly in the UK housing market. Additionally, recent evidence from the US sub-prime housing market and the British credit card/personal loan environment indicate that lenders are taking a big hit as a result of lax lending criteria over the past few years. The offshoot is that financial institutions will tighten lending criteria, further reducing liquidity and will increase bad debts in the process as debtors struggle to either re-pay or re-finance their existing leverage. This could also force disposal of personal assets to cover losses in other areas.
2.) Market confidence will be undermined by increasingly hostile rhetoric between the US and Iran. Both countries appear to be on a collision course. I do not think this will go the whole way, i.e. they will not go to war, but we are going to see things go close. I would not be surprised if this becomes the ‘cuban missile crisis’ of the 21st century. Markets love certainty. The UK equity market bottomed out after the 2001-03 bear market when the US/UK finally invaded Iraq. I posit that uncertainty relating to a US-Iran dispute will shake financial markets, causing a correction but not a crash.
3.) Oil. If 2 is correct, we will see oil over $70 a barrel again and a re-emergence of energy related inflation.
4.) Safe haven currencies. The Swiss Franc has been battered by the carry trade recently. It is at near an all time low with the Euro. Traditionally, when geo-political uncertainty is high, the Swiss Franc is a safe haven. I expect a rapid strengthening of the Swiss Franc over the next 18 months and that this will have impacts for the carry trade. Furthermore, the Japanese economy may be carrying some of its anglo-saxon friends as their debt time bombs begin to unravel. As this becomes a ‘high growth’ economy again, we can expect interest rates to continue to rise and also become a safer haven for investor funds, causing the Yen to strengthen.
5.) Hedge Funds. These firms are highly leveraged and are susceptible should markets begin re-pricing risk. A number of factors could impact here: a large credit default, a strong adverse move in a carry trade currency, collapse in the value of derivatives instruments forcing unwinding of other positions, etc. As seen with LTCM, hedge fund collapses, due to the size of leverage and interconnecvity of these institutions, can have disastrous repercussions across the financial system.
For clarity, I am not predicting the end of the world. I am simply saying that we have lost sight of the fundamentals. A correction is due because there are many one way bets out there that have become self perpetuating due to a combination of cheap money and herd mentality. As a result, we have taken our eye of the ball and not priced risk or assets correctly. Cheap money is being retracted. This has started off the corrective process. Politics will take care of the rest.