The Biggest Risk to Markets Right Now

I learned long ago to not be committed to a macro view as a market participant. Perhaps the most valuable thing to “understand” as an investor is to fully appreciate that there is a lot  that “i don’t know that I don’t know.” The forces at play which affect interest rates, stock prices, precious metals etc. are vast, numerous, and always in flux. The more confident a market participant is in his prediction of the future, the harder he is likely to fall when that prediction does not come to fruition. We don’t know what we don’t know, and in the markets that can be a lot of information.

Interest rates in particular are a tricky, yet integral, corner of financial markets. Central banks have a large influence in the direction of interest rates, however, rates also closely track inflation levels which are affected by economic activity and the growth rates of the economy.

Let me digress before I lose you dear reader. Whether we like it or not interest rates are complicated, charts can help us to simplify and get to the heart of the matter at hand in an otherwise murky topic.

Yesterday long end Treasury yields spiked aggressively higher with the 10-year note yield rising more than ten basis points from its session low to weekly closing level while staging a breakout from a multi-week ascending triangle pattern:

 

10-Year U.S. Treasury Note Yield (Daily)

 

TNX_Daily_8.26.2016

Not too big of a deal right? After all the measured move target on this breakout is barely more than 20 basis points higher than the level at which yields closed on Friday. However, let’s pull it out to a longer term chart of 10-year yields and see what we find…

 

10-Year U.S. Treasury Note Yield (Weekly)

TNX_Weekly_001

And the monthly chart going back to 1986…

 

10-Year Treasury Note Yield (Monthly)

TNX_Monthly_30_year

While a one day 10 basis point spike in yields does not reverse a 30+ year trend from the upper left to the lower right of the chart. Friday’s market action cannot be ignored, especially when so many other factors are lining up for an upward reversal in yields:

  • Futures speculators were heavily net long of 10-year Treasury futures heading into last week, a textbook setup for a shakeout.

Treasuries_Net_Long

  • It has become conventional wisdom that one should sell rallies in rates because central banks will do everything to keep rates low, the economy is weak, there is no inflation etc.
  • An economy which has been dealing with severe deflationary headwinds, the UK, has suddenly experienced the strongest rise in inflation expectations in years:

UK_Breakeven

  • With the ZIRP and the negative rates meme now becoming conventional wisdom and more than $13 trillion of global debt now carrying a negative yield the stage is set for the herd to get punished for its negative interest rate insanity. On Friday BAML highlighted “euphoric fund flows tied to ZIRP expectations”:

ZIRP_euphoria

I have learned to view markets in terms of potential risk and reward, I am interested in asymmetric opportunities in which the potential reward is far greater than the downside risk. Right now the potential reward from betting on lower rates is fairly small, whereas, the biggest risk to markets is a large and rapid rise in long end rates which will generate massive and potentially uncontrolled losses for the multi-trillion dollar bet that rates will not rise anytime soon.

 

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