There’s no working from home in baseball! From Bloomberg:
Major League Baseball has ordered its employees to return to the office five days a week, according to people familiar with the matter.
The league had been on a hybrid policy since the pandemic. The change will go into effect in February, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. The league believes it operates best with staffers in the office working face-to-face, according to one of the people.
Tinker to Evers to Chance.
Everybody has a bad decade now and then: the zero-interest rate era’s emphatic end has dealt lasting pain to long-dated government bonds, as Bank of America strategist Michael Hartnett finds that rolling 10-year returns for Treasurys of at least 15 years in duration stand at minus 0.5%, the worst such showing according to data dating to the mid-1930s.
On a similar vein, the long bond has generated a minus 2.24% annualized total return over the past 10 years, Bianco Research relays, compared to a 13.62% annual gain for the S&P 500. That’s the largest such performance gap since at least 1992 (see the Dec. 20 issue of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a look at one capital-efficient way to play for a rebound in the beleaguered long-duration bond complex).
As the blue-chip stock market flirts with fresh highs following a 50%,15-month upside stampede, investors increasingly position for more of where that came from. Thus, a net 41% of respondents to Bank of America’s latest Global Fund Manager Survey report an overweight allocation to equities, compared to a net 20% assuming an underweight position in fixed income. Similarly, 68% of attendees at last week’s Goldman Sachs Global Strategy conference in London forecasted that stocks would outperform all other asset classes this year, with 10% venturing to predict that bonds will fare best. One year ago, those figures were 42% and 20%, respectively.
Individual investors are likewise loaded for bull. Bloomberg’s Eric Balchunas points out today that the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (ticker: VOO) has hoovered up $16.1 billion of inflows in this young 2025. For context, the trio of runners up – Vanguard’s Total Stock Market Index Fund ETF, the iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF and iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF – have collectively gathered just over $7 billion over that stretch. VOO has seen net assets swell by 97% since October 2023, roughly double the index’s total return over that period.
Then, too, some punters turn to the elixir of leverage to ramp up their exposure: trading venue Interactive Brokers relayed Tuesday that outstanding margin loans rose 45% year-over-year to $64.2 billion as of Dec. 31. For context, that metric peaked at just below $55 billion during the frenzied bull market of 2021.
“Asset prices are kind of inflated,” JPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon told CNBC from Davos, Switzerland this morning. “You need fairly good outcomes to justify those prices, and we’re all hoping for that.”
Maybe not the bears. Whatever happened to the bears?
Another round of tech-led euphoria led the S&P 500 to the cusp of a new high, though the averages did lose some steam in the final moments of the cash session, while 10- and 30-year Treasurys ticked to 4.6% and 4.82%, up three and two basis points, respectively. WTI crude finished slightly lower at $75 and change per barrel, gold remained on the front foot at $2,756 an ounce, bitcoin slipped to $104,000 and the VIX remained at 15.
- Philip Grant
From Bloomberg:
EFishery Pte, one of Indonesia’s most prominent startups, may have inflated its revenue and profit over several years, according to an internal investigation triggered by a whistleblower’s claim about the company’s accounting.
A preliminary, ongoing probe into the agritech startup, backed by investors including SoftBank Group Corp. and Temasek Holdings Pte, estimates that management inflated revenue by almost $600 million in the nine months through September last year, according to a 52-page draft report circulated among investors and reviewed by Bloomberg News. That would mean more than 75% of the reported figures were fake, the report said.
It’s a dweller’s market. Home prices are on the hop across the United States, freshly released data from Redfin show, as each of the top 50 metro areas logged a year-over-year increase in December to mark the first such comprehensive updraft since May 2022. That clean sweep is particularly impressive considering the fact that 30-year mortgage rates now average upwards of 7% per Freddie Mac compared to about 3% in 2021. Galloping interest rates helped send the market into deep freeze in April of 2023, with only 19 of the top metro areas seeing year-over-year price growth, the weakest share since 2012.
“Places that have been long known as affordable. . . like Cleveland and Milwaukee, are now seeing double digit price increases – and that’s after home prices skyrocketed during the pandemic,” commented Redfin senior economist Elijah de la Campa. “Affordable housing havens have become harder and harder to come by; even places that saw some price relief last year, like Texas and Florida, are now seeing prices tick back up.”
An uptick in pending supply likewise takes shape, as the Census Bureau relayed last Thursday that nationwide housing starts registered at a 1.5 million seasonally adjusted annualized pace in December. That reading, the fourth strongest over the last 30 months and up 16% from the same period in 2023, topped each of the 56 economist guesstimates compiled by Bloomberg. Owing to persistent underbuilding relative to population growth over the past decade, the shortfall of housing units available for rent and sale stood at 3.7 million units in the third quarter, a November analysis from Freddie Mac concluded.
Improving market conditions for one key construction input accompany those housing tailwinds, as lumber futures now change hands at $585 per thousand board feet, up 31% from the late-June nadir and 10% north of their average price over the past two years. Thanks to Covid-induced supply hiccups and feverish demand in response to generous fiscal and monetary stimulus, lumber prices spiked to nearly $1,700 in May 2021 after averaging $356 over the five years through 2019.
Of course, the changing of the guard in Washington ushers in a new era of potentially precarious policy risks, as President Trump reiterated his threat Monday to slap 25% tariffs on all goods shipped from Canada and Mexico beginning Feb. 1. “I will immediately begin the overhaul of our trade system to protect American workers and families,” Trump said in his inauguration address. “Instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other countries, we will tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens.” Under now-former President Biden, the U.S. Department of Commerce increased average levies on Canadian softwood lumber to 14.54% last summer from 8.05% in 2023.
Yet that prospective uptick wouldn’t necessarily change the game for operators north of the border. Lumber and oriented-strand board (an engineered wood product) typically account for just 3% of new home costs. Meanwhile, Canada’s share of operable softwood lumber capacity across North America ebbed to 36.4% last year from 47.4% in 2003 per commodity pricing firm Fastmarkets.
Might Mr. Market be poised to smile on timber stocks once more following a mostly dour post-virus backdrop? See the Dec. 6, 2024, edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a bullish analysis of one leading industry player.
New President, same bull market. Stocks rallied by 0.9% on the S&P 500 to push the broad index to within a percentage point of its high-water mark reached early last month, while long-dated Treasurys also enjoyed a green session with 10- and 30-year yields each dropped four basis points to 4.57% and 4.8%, respectively. WTI crude retreated below $76 a barrel, gold ripped 1.3% to $2,744 per ounce – less than 2% from its October peak – while bitcoin advanced above $106,000 and the VIX fell three-quarters of a point to 15.
- Philip Grant
From Reuters:
Global luxury goods companies are expected to pull out all the stops this year to persuade U.S. shoppers to splash out on diamond bracelets, quilted leather handbags and other designer fashions, given forecasts for more market weakness in China.
Retail executives are looking to tap into wealth in the United States linked to the strong stock market and rise in cryptocurrencies, while potential tariffs from U.S. President-elect Donald Trump could support the dollar, raising Americans' purchasing power for European luxury goods.
U.S. credit card spending on luxury brands in December improved, turning positive for the first time in more than two years, rising 1% year-on-year, based on data from Citi, thanks to better sales of leather goods and clothing. . . Last year was likely to have been one of the sector's weakest on record, with sales down 2% [worldwide], based on previous estimates from consultancy Bain & Company.
The recent stock-market stutter step has done little to curtail pervasive risk appetite according to a pair of Wall Street mainstays: institutional investors have increased their allocations to the mega-cap technology complex to their highest levels in six months, Deutsche Bank-collected data show. Similarly, Goldman Sachs’ prime brokerage customers have acted as net tech buyers for four consecutive weeks, with the desk reporting its most pronounced shopping spree since October.
“Managers have started buying technology, media and telecom again after a period of selling and rebalancing,” Jonathan Caplis, CEO of hedge fund research firm PivotalPath, told Bloomberg Thursday. The Magnificent Seven logged a 3.2% pullback from the Dec. 18 Fed meeting through Tuesday compared to a 0.5% downtick for the S&P 500, but as Bloomberg notes, “the latest turbulence did little to increase hedging appetite,” with demand for put options shrinking relative to calls in recent weeks following a brief spike last month. That charmed cohort has returned 265% since the start of 2023, dusting the broad index’s 60% showing.
Investors likewise remain ravenous for speculative-grade corporate paper despite the recent updraft in borrowing costs, as one eye-catching deal illustrates. On Tuesday, double-B-minus/single-B-plus-rated Clarios Global priced $700 million in senior secured five-year notes at a 6.75% coupon – down from initial price talk of 7% to 7.25% on the strength of an order book topping $5.5 billion – along with a $3.5 billion, seven-year term loan at 275 basis points over the Secured Overnight Financing Rate, instead of the 300 to 325 basis point premium initially bandied about.
Those securities, which have each subsequently rallied above par according to CreditSights, will help finance a hefty $4.5 billion payout to the electric vehicle battery manufacturer’s shareholders, including Brookfield Asset Management. That deal marks one of the largest so-called dividend recaps on record by PitchBook LCD’s lights. For context, buyout firms issued $68.3 billion in loans to pay themselves dividends last year, the second-highest total on record behind 2021’s $73.2 billion haul.
Bulled-up fiduciaries are even venturing far afield in search of fat returns. As the Financial Times documents today, “pension funds are dipping their toes into buying bitcoin,” with state-run retirement schemes in Wisconsin and Michigan registering among the top hodlers of various crypto-focused ETFs and pension managers in the U.K. and Australia allocating to the digital ducats via funds and derivatives in recent months.
“Since election day, we have been getting a flood of [inbound] queries,” Matt Scott, a consultant at pension advisory firm Mercer, advised the pink paper. “Trustees don’t like to think that there’s a hot asset class out there that they don’t know anything about.”
Almost Daily Grant's will resume on Tuesday, Jan. 21
An informative pair of Bloomberg bulletins:
Eli Lilly & Co. reported preliminary fourth quarter revenue that missed analyst estimates on lower-than-expected sales of its weight-loss and diabetes shots. Fourth-quarter sales are expected to be $13.5 billion, Lilly said Tuesday morning in a statement, below the $14 billion average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Both Zepbound for obesity and Mounjaro for diabetes came in below projections. . .Other drugs performed within Lilly’s expectations, the company said.
Cocoa futures gained after chocolate maker Lindt & Spruengli AG reported strong sales growth, indicating that demand remained resilient despite record prices.
Ares Management detailed a noteworthy fundraising feat Tuesday, closing its latest European direct lending fund with €17.1 billion ($17.5 billion) in equity commitments. That sum tops Ares’ €15 billion target and represents, per the press release, “the largest institutional fund in the global direct lending market to date.” The firm’s previous 2021-vintage European vehicle notched €11.1 billion in equity commitments.
Though institutional investors continue to pile into private credit in the face of a global updraft in borrowing costs, so-called alternative managers cast a wider net in their search for assets. The Financial Times relayed last week that the likes of Apollo, KKR and Blackstone are lobbying the incoming Trump administration to “allow tax-deferred defined contribution plans such as 401(k)s to back unlisted investments such as leveraged buyouts, low-rated private loans and illiquid property deals.”
Apollo boss Marc Rowan argued the case for bringing such wares to the masses at a company-hosted event last fall, pointing to the heavy representation of tech behemoths such as Nvidia within retirement portfolios and assuring the audience that “we’re going to fix this and we’re in the process of fixing it.”
Of course, such a remedy would loudly reverberate across Wall Street, as Moody’s relayed last week that individual investors account for roughly half of global wealth but only 16% of alternative asset manager AUM. Then again, the rating agency identifies several potential hold-ups to industry’s grand ambitions, including “reputational risks if private asset funds fail to perform as expected, particularly considering the hefty fees.”
Writing that “illiquidity is a feature of private assets” and is “typically one of the [industry’s] drivers of outperformance,” the Moody’s analysts pointed out that “retail investors tend to be more sensitive to market volatility and increase redemption requests during periods of market stress,” potentially turning that feature into a bug. “New fund structures that target the wealth channels and allow for some access to liquidity have not been tested over several periods of severe market stress.”
Indeed, a darkening of today’s largely blue-sky growth picture could spell trouble for the fast-growing, cyclically untested asset class, one fiduciary believes. Wellcome Trust chief investment officer Nick Moakes (who is set to retire from his post at the end of March) told the FT Tuesday that “if the world gets a little bit more difficult economically, I think there are some accidents waiting to happen in the private credit world. . . [the industry] has sucked in an enormous amount of capital. That has meant that the lending standards that are applied in certain parts of private credit markets have diminished.”
Defaults within that category will register at 3% clip this year if a freshly released analysis from KBRA is on the beam, compared to a 1.9% clip for 2024, as investor hopes for a more pronounced easing cycle have ebbed substantially of late. “Companies at the bottom end of our credit assessment distribution could face a reckoning in 2025,” the rating agency warns.
Such a shakeout would largely spare the direct lending industry’s leading lights, Moakes predicts to the pink paper, though that prospect may prove cold comfort for limited partners: “You can construct all kinds of cataclysmic scenarios where they take each other down, but actually, they won’t, because what they’ve done is very clever. This stuff is all sitting in LP vehicles. So, the liability is all with the investors.”
Stocks again drifted towards unchanged on the S&P 500 after an early move, this time erasing a gap higher after recovering from an initial lurch lower Monday with December CPI print looming tomorrow morning (economists expect 2.8% annual growth on the headline figure). The long bond tested 5% intraday before settling at 4.98%, though the rest of the Treasury complex enjoyed a firmer tone with two-year yields dipping three basis points to 4.37%. WTI crude retreated below $78 a barrel, gold advanced to $2,677 per ounce, bitcoin hovered at $96,500 and the VIX edged below 19.
- Philip Grant
From Bloomberg:
Canadians should be prepared to face U.S. tariffs once Donald Trump assumes the presidency next week, with no exemptions for oil, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith warned after meeting the president-elect in Florida.
The conservative leader of Canada’s main oil-producing province met with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort over the weekend. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in an interview with MSNBC that Canada will respond with counter-tariffs against the U.S. if Trump follows through with his threat to impose a 25% levy on Canadian goods.
“We do need to be prepared that they are likely to come in on Jan. 20,” Smith said at a news conference on Monday. “I haven’t seen anything that suggests that he’s changing course.”
It’s a banking bumper-crop: A quintet of mega-lenders is set to begin fourth quarter earnings season in style later this week, with JPMorganChase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and Bank of America poised to report a combined $24.5 billion in trading revenues if Bloomberg-compiled sell side forecasts are on point, up 15% from the final three months of 2023 and the best showing for the period in at least five years.
Rampaging animal spirits in the stock market alongside a flurry of election-related activity likely proved a lucrative combination for that cohort. “It was a very strong end of the year for capital markets,” observes Scott Siefers, banking analyst at Piper Sandler. Then again, “the banks have a lot to deliver relative to expectations,” Charles Peabody, head of independent research firm Portales Partners, tells the Financial Times. “I am not worried about this quarter, but I do worry about 2025 because, relative to the risks that are developing, the optimism is too strong.”
Meanwhile, the recent jump in interest rates could bring an industry boogeyman back to the fore. Barron’s associate editor Andrew Bary estimated last week that domestic banks are collectively nursing $500 billion in unrealized losses on their holdings of lower-yielding Treasurys and agency mortgage-backed securities, compared to $346 billion in red ink one quarter ago per data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (for more, see the Jan. 27, 2023 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer).
Bank of America, which is scheduled to release fourth quarter figures on Thursday morning, could see unrealized losses on its $568 billion held to maturity portfolio (as distinct from held for sale securities which are marked to market, with unrealized losses deducted from reported capital) top $111 billion. That compares to $86 billion three months earlier and compares to the bank’s $200 billion in tangible equity as of Sept. 30.
The Charlotte-based behemoth undertook an ill-timed shopping spree during the zenith of the bygone bull market, building its HTM holdings to $675 billion from $216 billion over the two years through 2021. With those assets yielding a paltry 2% on average and the roll-off from maturing securities registering at a 6% to 7% annual pace in recent quarters, “the low yield on its portfolio could be a drag on its profits for some time,” Bary notes.
Stocks staged a solid rebound from an early downdraft to leave the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 within about a quarter percentage point of unchanged, while Treasurys likewise managed a mostly flat finish with 2- and 30-year yields at 4.4% and 4.97%, respectively. WTI crude remained red hot at nearly $79 a barrel to leave the commodity higher by nearly 10% in this young 2025, while gold pulled back to $2,662 per ounce. Bitcoin bounced towards $94,000 after testing $90,000 this morning, and the VIX settled just north of 19.
- Philip Grant
Don’t do the rhyme if you can’t do the time. From CoinDesk:
The crypto industry's most notorious rapper, Heather Morgan – more widely known as Razzlekhan – released a new music video as U.S. authorities stand ready to imprison her for criminally laundering portions of the crypto loot her husband was convicted of pilfering from Bitfinex.
In the song, 'Razzlekhan vs. The United States," Morgan's outlandish and [provocatively] clad musical persona gyrates and scowls into the camera. Despite the legalese of the song's name, its lyrics don't make an overt attack on the investigation and court proceedings that landed her a federal sentence of 18 months in prison.
"This ain't no free country; it running on money; capitalists chummy; old white men hella grumpy," raps Morgan, bound in red ropes. The aggressive image strikes a sharp contrast with the conservatively dressed defendant that wept in a Washington courtroom as she apologized for her role in concealing and cashing out parts of the stolen fortune of almost 120,000 bitcoin.
Let’s make a deal: News of a prominent corporate merger splashed across the wires Friday morning, with Constellation Energy agreeing to purchase closely held peer Calpine for $16.6 billion in cash and stock along with the assumption of nearly $13 billion in debt. The combination “creates the [country’s] largest coast-to-coast power generator,” as S&P Global analyst Aneesh Prabhu puts it, boosting Constellation’s share of the crucial California and Texas markets to 23% and 10%, respectively, from 11% and near-zero.
In response, Constellation shares vaulted higher by 25% in an otherwise sloppy tape, underscoring the extent to which the artificial intelligence revolution renders power generation front of mind for Mr. Market.
The Wall Street Journal points out that queries on large language models such as ChatGPT can require up to 10 times the energy as a conventional Google search, while data centers may account for 9% of domestic energy demand by 2030 per estimates from the Electric Power Research Institute, roughly double their current share of consumption. Total domestic power demand will rise 20% by 2033 if estimates from consulting firm ICF hit the mark, marking a decisive shift as that metric has remained virtually inert for more than a decade.
Instructively, today’s AI-induced commercial imperative extends to the power industry’s red-headed stepchild. On Tuesday, coal-fired producer Hallador Energy Co. (HNRG on the Nasdaq) announced a commitment agreement with an unnamed “leading global data center developer” to deliver energy and capacity to an Indiana-based facility. The parties entered an exclusive, 105-day negotiating window beginning Jan. 2., with a definitive agreement likely sufficient to lock in the majority of Halldor’s energy and capacity for the next decade at a price premium to the forward curve, the company advises.
Buoyed in part by a 7% rally in reaction to that news, HNRG shares have returned 62% since Grant’s Interest Rate Observer laid out the bull case in the May 24, 2024, edition. Over that period, the S&P 500 has returned 11%. “It’s exciting,” CEO Brent Bilsland told Grant’s last spring. “We spent the last 19 years in a contracting market. Now, we’re entering a market that’s expanding because, for the first time in 25 years, demand for electricity is growing in everything, from electric vehicles to AI to the onshoring of industry.”
A red-hot December payrolls report served to dim hopes for future Fed rate cuts, in turn throwing asset prices for a loop with the S&P 500 down 1.5% to push the broad index into negative territory for January. Treasury yields jumped to 4.4% for the two-year note and 4.96% on the long bond, up 13 and four basis points, respectively, while WTI crude approached its October highs at just below $77 a barrel and gold posted its fourth straight green finish at $2,692 per ounce. Bitcoin rose to near $95,000 and the VIX wrapped up the week a bit below 20.
- Philip Grant
Talk about a close shave. From Reuters:
Country Garden has proposed a deal to its offshore creditors that will cut its debt by $11.6 billion, paving the way for the property developer to seek more time from the high court in Hong Kong to implement a restructuring plan. . .
Once China's biggest property developer, Country Garden defaulted on $11 billion in offshore bonds in late 2023, deepening a debt crisis in the sector that had already experienced defaults by many developers, including China Evergrande Group.
Country Garden had $16.4 billion of offshore debt at the end of 2023, including $10.3 billion in bonds and three syndicated loans with an outstanding principal amount of $3.6 billion. Both are covered by the restructuring.
The proposal, announced on Thursday, outlines options for creditors, including a conversion of debt into cash with a 90% haircut or receiving new debt instruments with delayed maturity.
No 2%, no problem. Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller delivered an unmistakably dovish message yesterday despite a U.S. Core PCE Price Index which has shown no less than 2.6% annual growth during the 44 months through November: “this minimal further progress [towards the Fed’s self-assigned annual target] has led to calls to slow or stop reducing the policy rate. However, I believe that inflation will continue to make progress. . . and that further reductions will be appropriate.”
Waller – appointed to his post by Donald Trump in 2020 and rumored by Bloomberg last fall as the President-elect’s choice to succeed chair Jerome Powell – echoed the sentiments of his once-and-potential-future benefactor, who opined Tuesday that “interest rates are far too high.”
Meanwhile, one pillar of the outgoing Biden administration sounded the alarm over the shoddy state of Uncle Sam’s finances. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told CNBC yesterday that “fiscal policy needs to be put on a sustainable course,” adding that “investors around the globe count on the United States to be responsible in managing its fiscal policy. . . and I certainly hope that the new administration will take this seriously.”
The federal shortfall rose to $1.83 trillion over the 12 months through September from $1.7 trillion in the prior fiscal year as outlays reached $6.7 trillion, up 10% year-on-year. Yellen, who has overseen a $7 trillion uptick in debt held by the public over the past four years to $28.8 trillion, struck a skeptical tone with respect to Elon Musk’s and Vivek Ramaswamy’s much-ballyhooed goal to trim upwards of $2 trillion in federal fat via the newfangled Department of Government Efficiency: “it’s hard to see how the math on that works.”
For his part, the Tesla boss himself backtracked on those ambitions in a Thursday interview on X, deeming the $2 trillion bogey “the best-case outcome” and commenting that “we’ve got a good shot” at $1 trillion in spending cuts. Nondiscretionary line items such as social security, health care, defense and interest expense gobbled up nearly 80% of the fiscal 2024 budget.
Indeed, the citizenry’s appetite for personal sacrifice in service of government “right-sizing” appears to be in short supply, if sentiment within one jurisdiction adjacent to the nation’s capital is any indication.
Thus, a Gonzales Research and Media poll of 811 Maryland-based registered voters conducted over the week through Jan. 4 found that 73% of respondents opposed an increase in the sales tax to help close the state’s $3 billion budget deficit, with 77% balking at an upsized levy on properties. As local news source Mayland Matters also notes, “that majority opposition cuts across political affiliations, racial and age demographics.”
See the analysis “Race against compound interest” in the current issue of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer dated Dec. 20, 2024, for a closer look at the daunting arithmetic facing Trump, Musk, Ramaswamy and other stewards of the public credit, along with “The inflation we choose” in the Feb. 2, 2024 edition for more on the inherent predilection across Washington, Wall Street and Main Street alike for policies that serve to keep the price level humming.
Treasurys wiggled in indecisive fashion during today’s abbreviated session, with the long bond ticking to 4.92% from 4.91% Wednesday and two-year yields edging lower by a basis point to 4.27%, while the stock market was closed in honor of former President Jimmy Carter. WTI crude flipped back above $74 a barrel, gold ground higher again to $2,670 per ounce and bitcoin slumped towards $92,000.
Owing to the delayed release of the Fed’s weekly balance sheet data, the QT progress report will appear tomorrow.
- Philip Grant
Eat your heart out, CDC. From the New York Post:
People living in an Italian village are banned from getting sick.
Residents of Belcastro in the southern region of Calabria — one of the poorest regions in Italy — are “ordered to avoid contracting any illness that may require emergency medical assistance,” a decree from Mayor Antonio Torchia stated.
The ordinance also instructs residents not to take risks or get in accidents that could end up endangering their health, local media reported.
No time like the present: Corporate borrowers are looking to get while the getting’s good, with investment-grade supply in the U.S. poised to reach $200 billion in January, if Bloomberg-compiled estimates of Wall Street dealers prove accurate, the highest on record for the opening month of the year.
“Issuers are taking advantage of calm markets, low volatility and tight spreads before January 20th,” Palinuro Capital CIO Alfonso Peccatiello told Bloomberg, referencing Donald Trump’s imminent return to the Oval Office. Option-adjusted spreads on the ICE BofA US Corporate Index settled Tuesday at 84 basis points, down from 108 basis points at this time last year to hover near their tightest of the post-Lehman Brothers era.
Of course, that shrinking risk premium tells only part of the tale, as benchmark 10-year Treasury yields have vaulted more than 100 basis points since the Federal Reserve commenced its rate-cutting cycle in mid-September, reaching 4.7% today for the first time since last spring.
More broadly, the post-Covid era has proven decidedly unremunerative to long-dated Treasury bulls, as the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF has generated a minus 37% total return over the past four years. During that stretch, the lynchpin vehicle has seen net assets climb to just under $50 billion from $18 billion in January 2021.
“By now, plenty of faces have been ripped off by the most recent bond-market tantrum,” Thomas Tzitzouris, director of fixed income research at Strategas, commented to Bloomberg. “Even though we’d love to say that the worst is over, there’s no indication that shorts are exhausted or that data is supportive” of a rebound. Tzitzouris added that the combination of upward pressure on yields with the narrowest default-risk compensation for corporate creditors of the cycle leaves both speculative and default risk-free assets in the “danger zone.”
Strategists at Bank of America reach a similar conclusion, writing that last January’s $192 billion in fresh corporate supply – which blew past the prior record for the month established in 2017 – “were in part due to very strong investor demand, which ultimately allowed investment-grade spreads to tighten.” This time, the skimpy pickup is itself bringing borrowers to the fore. Thus, “the environment of still-tight spreads but higher interest rate volatility could result in more supply but weaker demand.”
A solid long bond auction, which priced at just above 4.91% compared to a 4.92% When Issued, helped the Treasury complex erase its early losses to finish unchanged to slightly stronger on the day, while stocks likewise settled down to the tune of a flat showing following the recent spurt of volatility. WTI crude retreated towards $73 a barrel, gold powered higher at $2,663 per ounce, bitcoin dropped below $94,000 and the VIX edged below 18.
The stock market is closed Thursday on account of the National Day of Mourning for Former President Jimmy Carter, with the bond market set for a truncated session ending at 2PM ET.
- Philip Grant
Enter the leveraged real estate speculator. Here’s President-elect Donald Trump, who will assume the reins of power in 13 days, channeling the duality of man at a Tuesday press conference in Palm Beach:
Inflation is continuing to rage, and interest rates are far too high.
Investors seem to quibble with that second contention. Tuesday afternoon’s auction of benchmark 10-year Treasurys priced at 4.68%, marking the highest yield for a new sale since 2007 and contrasting with the sub-1% figures seen during 2020.
That result followed a hotter-than-expected data set including 8.1 million job openings in December as measured by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, topping all 29 economist guesstimates, as well as a near two-year high for the inflation-measuring prices-paid component of the Institute for Supply Management’s December Services PMI, “reinforc[ing] the market’s view of a strong U.S. economy and rates [that] are not restrictive,” Brandywine Global Investment Management portfolio manager Tracy Chan told Bloomberg.
Let’s make a deal: McDonald’s doubled down on its embrace of budget conscious consumers Tuesday, rolling out an expanded value offering including a “Buy One, Add One for $1” breakfast, lunch and dinner offer, along with other discounts for those who download its in-house app.
Mickey D’s will likewise run its $5 Meal Deal (which includes a McDouble or McChicken sandwich, small order of fries, small soft drink and four-piece order of chicken nuggets) through the summer, marking the promotion’s second extension following its July 2024 debut.
Those efforts are a long time coming to some observers. Menu prices at the Golden Arches rose by 40% on average over the five years through last fall, helping spur back-to-back annual same store sales declines in the second and third quarters after an uninterrupted run of growth from the virus-wrecked spring of 2020. “The industry environment remains challenging, there’s no doubt about that,” CFO Ian Borden lamented on the October earnings call. “Consumers are under pressure.”
The fast-food giant has company in its latest overture towards cash-strapped diners. As Jonathan Maze of Restaurant Business Online documents today, sandwich outfit Subway recently debuted its own “Meal of the Day” discounted offerings, including $9.99 for a footlong sub and drink along with either two cookies or chips, while poultry behemoth KFC revived its $5 bowls replete with various chicken, starch and vegetable combinations.
Restaurant-wide same store sales showed a 2.8% year-over-year increase in November according to data compiled by Black Box Intelligence, with foot traffic ticking higher at a 0.9% clip, leaving each of those metrics at their strongest in over a year. Yet the firm points out that calendar-based tailwinds helped drive that improvement as the Thanksgiving weekend spilled into December, making for easier comparisons and nudging slower business days into the following period. Indeed, sales and traffic trends weakened once more relative to 2023 during the early stages of last month.
See the analysis “With a side of debt” in the July 5 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for more on the fast-food industry’s aggressive balance sheet machinations during the bygone zero-interest rate era which now complicate efforts to contend with post-Covid inflationary pressures, along with “Here’s the beef” in the Nov. 8 issue for a bearish look at one richly valued operator crowned America’s most-overpriced chain restaurant via a Preply-conducted analysis of Google keywords.
A sell-the-news reaction to Nvidia’s CES presentation Monday evening (shares dropped 6% after an 11% rally over the first three days of the year) helped spur a 1.1% downdraft on the S&P 500, with the broad averages finishing just off their worst levels of the day. Treasurys also remained under pressure with the long bond rising six basis points to 4.91% and the two-year note edging to 4.3% from 4.28% Monday, while WTI crude flipped back above $74 a barrel and gold advanced to $2,650 per ounce. Bitcoin sank below $97,000 and the VIX ripped nearly two points to finish just below 18.
- Philip Grant
Call them unlimited partners. From the Financial Times:
Chinese venture capitalists are hounding failed founders, pursuing personal assets and adding the individuals to a national debtor blacklist when they fail to pay up, in moves that are throwing the country’s start-up funding ecosystem into crisis.
The hard-nosed tactics by risk capital providers have been facilitated by clauses known as redemption rights, included in nearly all the financing deals struck during China’s boom times.
“My investors verbally promised they wouldn’t enforce them, that they had never enforced them before — and in ’17 and ’18 that was true — no one was enforcing them,” said Neuroo Education founder Wang Ronghui, who now owes investors millions of dollars after her childcare chain stumbled during the pandemic.
While they are relatively rare in U.S. venture investing, more than 80% of venture and private equity deals in China contain redemption provisions, according to [estimates from] Shanghai-based law firm Lifeng Partners. They typically require companies, and often their founders as well, to buy back investors’ shares plus interest if certain targets such as an initial public offering timeline, valuation goals or revenue metrics are not met.
“It’s causing huge harm to the venture ecosystem because if a start-up fails, the founder is essentially facing asset seizures and spending restrictions,” said a Hangzhou-based lawyer who has represented several indebted entrepreneurs and asked not to be named. “They can never recover.”
Out of the frying pan, into the fire: a torrid earnings outlook may serve to further inflame today’s scalding stock market, as the sell side collectively anticipates 14.8% earnings growth from the S&P 500 this year, FactSet-compiled data show. For context, the estimated 11.9% year-over-year growth rate in the just-completed fourth quarter marks the broad index’s best single-quarterly showing since the final three months of 2021, while the 10-year average growth rate stands at an even 8%.
Meanwhile, Wall Street pegs net profit margins across the blue-chip gauge for this year at 13%, which would surpass 2021’s 12.6% reading to mark the highest on record dating to 2008.
An imminent downshift from the lynchpin mega-cap technology complex adds a further degree of difficulty to those ambitious figures. The Magnificent Seven’s outsized earnings growth is poised to ebb to 21% in 2025 from 33% a year ago, FactSet finds, leaving the remaining 493 index components to pick up the slack with a 13% earnings uptick compared to 4.2% in 2024.
“That deceleration in growth may surprise some of the diehards who are betting on these very high double-digit earnings numbers” Morgan Stanley Wealth Management CIO Lisa Shalett predicted on Bloomberg Television last week. The celebrated septet accounted for 55% of the S&P 500’s gains last year following a 63% performance share in 2023.
Indeed, a diffusion in earnings growth could be just the ticket for the fat and happy bull crowd, after the top-heavy distribution of global stock market returns reached rarified air last year. Thus, Bloomberg chief equity strategist Gina Martin Adams points out today that the MSCI All Country World Index’s 18%-plus return for 2024 lapped the median stock’s 8% advance by more than 1,000 basis points, a divergence which “eerily resembles the period just before the tech bubble collapse in 2000.” The ACWI ground out a 1% rise in the fourth quarter while its median performer lost 3.7% over that stretch, with the 470-basis point differential marking the largest such gap since 1998.
Stocks gapped higher at the open to spark the best-two-day showing since the election, though the indices lost a good bit of steam in the afternoon to leave the S&P 500 0.6% to the good, while long-dated Treasurys remained under pressure with 10- and 30-year yields settling at 4.62% and 4.85%, respectively, up two and three basis points on the day. WTI crude pulled back below $74 a barrel, gold ticked slightly lower at $2,637 per ounce, bitcoin advanced towards $102,000 and the VIX settled just above 16.
- Philip Grant
Back to the old salt mine: The first full week of 2025 brings no shortage of potential market-moving events, headlined by Jensen Huang’s Monday evening keynote speech at the annual CES technology conference. The Nvidia CEO will bring “his trademark leather jacket and an unwavering vision” (as the corporate press release puts it) to the Las Vegas Convention Center Stage, with Wall Street expecting big things following a 900%, two-year share price rampage.
The bond market will likewise present its share of potential catalysts, with the Treasury set to auction $58 billion in three-year notes Monday, followed by a $39 billion 10-year note reopening Tuesday and a $22 billion long bond sale Wednesday (that compares to $52 billion, $37 billion and $21 billion respective auctions for those three tenors in early 2024). “Forward guidance” aficionados are likewise in luck following the holiday lull; seven separate Federal Reserve members are scheduled to hold forth.
Tesla bulls received an unwelcome surprise Thursday, as the electric vehicle mainstay announced that fourth quarter vehicle deliveries totaled just under 496,000, trailing the consensus estimate of about 505,000. The full year tally registered at 1.77 million, down from 1.81 million in 2023 to mark its first annual decline by CNBC’s lights.
To be sure, the world’s most richly valued automaker (market cap: $1.24 trillion) continues to dazzle its devoted shareholder base with unique assets such as an extensive charging network, to say nothing of Elon Musk’s now-prominent influence within the incoming Trump 2.0 administration. Even so, Thursday’s figures reflect Tesla’s continued struggles with “the nuts-and-bolts job of being a car company,” Patrick George, editor in chief of industry publication InsideEVs, told the financial news network.
In fairness to Musk’s corporate pride and joy, the automotive industry at large is making heavier weather of it these days as persistent inflationary pressures and the post-Covid updraft in borrowing costs turn the screws. Citing data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, The Wall Street Journal’s Spencer Jakab pointed out last month that average annual vehicle sales registered at roughly 15.5 million over the past four years, down from 17.7 million just before the bug barged in. The average passenger car is now 13.6 years old, compared to 8.4 years in the mid-1990s.
Consumers’ growing reluctance to spring for new wheels is no surprise, as freshly released data from Edmunds illustrate. Thus, the automotive research firm relayed Friday that new car shoppers financed a record $42,113 for their vehicles on average in the fourth quarter, up 5.3% from the same period last year. The share of consumers taking on loan payments of $1,000 per month and above likewise reached an all-time high of 18.9%, up from 17.9% year-over-year and 15.9% during the final three months of 2022.
“It’s getting more and more difficult for the average shopper to walk into a new-car dealership and leave without a set of keys without feeling like they are forced to create extra room in their budget from some other aspect of life,” commented Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds’ head of insights.
Stocks enjoyed a strong 1.3% bounce on the S&P 500 as the broad index recouped roughly one-third of its post-Dec. 16 pullback, though rates continued higher with 2- and 30-year Treasury yields each rising three basis points to 4.28% and 4.82%, respectively. WTI crude remained on the hop at $74 a barrel, its highest since mid-October, while gold gave back about half of yesterday’s gains at $2,637 per ounce and bitcoin advanced above $98,000. The VIX sank to just above 16, down near two points on the day.
- Philip Grant
The share of U.S. home listings on the market for 60 days or longer reached 54.5% in November, a Monday report from real estate database Redfin finds, up from 49.9% year-over-year to mark the highest reading for the month since 2019. Concurrent with that growing share of aged inventory, total listed supply advanced 12.1% from November 2023 to reach its highest since the plague year of 2020.
Meanwhile, benchmark 30-year fixed mortgage reached nearly 7% at year-end compared to 6.14% three months earlier per the Mortgage Bankers Association. That moves further aggravates an affordability picture that already remained near its bleakest since at least the mid-1980s as of Sept. 30 by the National Association of Realtors’ lights.
“I explain to sellers that their house will sit on the market if it’s not fairly priced,” Portland, OR-based broker Meme Loggins commented to Redfin. “Homes that are priced well and in good condition are flying off the market in three to five days, but homes that are overpriced can sit for over three months.”
It’s lonely at the top: the mega-cap technology complex’s ongoing dominance helped push stock market bifurcation to rarified air as 2024 went by the wayside. Thus, SentimenTrader’s Dean Christians finds that the share of S&P 500 components outperforming the index on a rolling 21-day basis reached 14.71% last week, approaching July’s all-time nadir of 14.51%.
As the potent two-plus year bull stampede rolls along to the tune of a 24.5% total return for the Russell 1000 Index last year after 2023’s 26.5% showing, Mr. Market hasn’t been shy about playing favorites. According to data compiled by Charlie Billelo, Chief Market Strategist at Creative Planning, the Russell 1000 growth stock cohort lapped the value factor by 19 and 31 percentage points during the past two years. That’s the most lopsided such showing since at least 1979, eclipsing the cumulative 48.9-point gap seen during the acute phase of the dot-com mania in 1998 and 1999.
Might the calendar turn help bring brighter days to investors left behind by this cycle’s winners? So-called bitcoin dominance, or the digital ducat’s share of total cryptocurrency market capitalization, hovered just below 57% on New Year’s Eve according to Coinmarketcap.com, up from 40% at the end of 2022.
On that score, Thursday brought one hopeful sign, sort of. The price of bitcoin reached $97,526 as of lunchtime, up 2.9% over the past day, trailing so-called altcoins Ether, Ripple and Dogecoin, which each logged 4%-plus 24-hour gains as of mid-day, while peer Solana advanced just over 8%. Fartcoin likewise changed hands at $1.32, up 43% from noon Wednesday.
“Heading into the new year, market participants have started to diversify their exposure by allocating capital to representations of more speculative narratives,” Cumberland Labs director of research Chris Newhouse put it to Bloomberg.
Stocks took the scenic route to begin 2025, as an overnight jump in S&P futures gave way to a mid-session selloff before the broad index pared its losses to 0.2%. Treasurys followed a similar intraday pattern but managed to finish a bit stronger on the long end, with 10- and 30-year yields wrapping up the day at 4.57% and 4.79%, respectively, while WTI crude rose above $73 a barrel and gold jumped 1.3% to $2,659 per ounce. Bitcoin sits at $97,000 and change, and the VIX settled at the cusp of 18.
- Philip Grant
From the U.K. Telegraph:
Firefighters spend record amount on cats up trees
London’s flame-eaters dealt with 716 such feline arboreal incursions between Jan. 1 and Halloween, exceeding that of any prior full-year period. “The amount of cats needing to be saved by firefighters around London has more than doubled since 2020, and the cost to the taxpayer has almost tripled,” the Telegraph notes.
U.S. credit card firms wrote off $46 billion of bad debt over the first three quarters of 2024, reports the Financial Times, citing research from BankRegData. That represents a 50% uptick from the same period last year and marks the highest comparable nine-month figure since the Great Recession’s aftermath in 2010.
Though total consumer debt as a percentage of income ebbed to 82% as of Sept. 30 from 86% at the end of 2019 per the New York Fed, overall credit card balances reached $1.17 trillion in the third quarter, up a chunky 26% over the prior two years.
“High-income households are fine, but the bottom third of U.S. consumers are tapped out,” Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi told the pink paper. “Their savings rate right now is zero.”
Today’s divergent backdrop, driven by the ferocious post-Covid inflationary surge alongside zooming asset prices and a largely heathy labor market, spurs some cordons of corporate America to choose sides. “As we head into next year, 100% of our innovation will be at the medium and higher price point,” Chris Peterson, CEO of Newell Brands (manufacturer of products such as Krazy Glue, Sharpie pens and Mr. Coffee) told The Wall Street Journal last week. “We’re not innovating at all [at] the lower price points anymore.”
Mushrooming government liabilities usher in a similar sea-change on Wall Street. Bloomberg points out that the roster of primary dealers (i.e., U.S. Treasury-designated counterparties who are obliged to bid in all auctions at “reasonably competitive prices”) stands at 22 firms, roughly half its 1988 peak.
Though a wave of industry consolidation partially explains the downshift, the fast-rising stack of marketable Treasury debt, which stands at $28.8 trillion, alongside a burdensome post-2008 regulatory regime, serves to diminish the appeal of that imprimatur for some industry players. Witness Citadel’s September decision not to pursue primary dealer status.
“Issuance has gone up almost threefold in the last 10 years and the anticipation is for it to [reach] $50 trillion outstanding in the next 10 years, whereas dealer balance sheets haven’t grown at that magnitude,” Casey Spezzano, head of the New York Fed-sponsored Treasury Market Practices Group, told Bloomberg. “You’re trying to put more Treasurys through the same pipes, but those pipes aren’t getting any bigger.”
The likes of Citadel, Jane Street and Hudson River Trading – sophisticated electronic outfits who operate without the banking system’s post-2008 capital constraints – have duly stepped into the breach as market makers, yet that cadre may prove fair weather friends for Uncle Sam. “We’re now relying on principal trading firms to do a lot of the intermediation, but they’re. . . not obligated to make prices” in periods of turmoil, Vanguard senior portfolio manager John Madziyire observes. “I worry about the Treasury market.”
Out with the old, in with the new. See “The race against compound interest” in the current edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer dated Dec. 20, along with “Disturbance in the weeds” in the Oct. 25 issue for more on the Treasury market’s precarious backdrop into 2025 and beyond.
Friday’s ADG featured a noteworthy typo, relaying the move in Japanese 10-year government bond yields to 1.11% represented their highest since 2021. Indeed, that figure marked a post-2011 peak.
Stocks reversed an overnight bounce to nurse a 0.5% loss on the S&P 500 with an hour left in the session, when your correspondent knocked off for 2024, leaving the broad index up by a shade less than 24% for the year. Treasurys were likewise unable to sustain yesterday’s bounce with the 10-year yield hovering near 4.57%, while WTI crude climbed towards $72 a barrel and gold advanced to $2,625 per ounce. Bitcoin changed hands just below $94,000 and the VIX remained above 17.
- Philip Grant
The bond vigilantes are extracting a pound of flesh from some parts of corporate America, if commentary from Lennar CEO Stuart Miller last Friday is any indication (hat tip, The Transcript):
Overall, the economic environment, which we believed last quarter was constructive for the homebuilding industry, has certainly turned more challenging as longer-term interest rates along with mortgage rates have climbed steadily since our last earnings call.
The holidays have proven no respite on that score, as the long bond wrapped up Friday’s session at 4.82%. That’s the highest since October 2023 and up nearly 50 basis points over the past three weeks. On the bright side for rate sensitive firms, misery loves company. Ten-year gilt yields reached 4.64% this morning, leaving benchmark borrowing costs in the U.K. within a dozen basis points of their post-Lehman Brothers peak. Japanese 10-year government bond yields likewise soared to 1.11%, their highest since July 2011.
It’s not me, it’s you: limited partners are set to issue walking papers to their private equity fiduciaries en masse in 2025, as 88% of respondents to a Coller Capital-conducted survey plan to decline so-called re-up investments with at least one of their existing managers over the next 12 months, up from a 79% share at this time last year. Investors primarily cited disappointing performance for those prospective changes, with in-house capital constraints representing the second most widely-cited spur to action.
A sickly stream of payouts informs both the LP’s tight funding backdrop and broader pangs of dissatisfaction. Thus, Cambridge Associates estimates that investor distributions have tracked at about 10% of total investments in the year-to-date, roughly half their long-term average. Overall payouts have trailed their historic baseline by roughly $400 billion on a cumulative basis since the end of 2021, an annum famously marking the denouement of the zero-interest rate era.
Today’s fallow conditions force the buyout barons to get creative in hopes of cashing in, increasingly by shifting aging assets from one portfolio to another. Such so-called continuation fund deals will represent a record 14% of all PE exits in 2024, Jefferies-compiled data show, compared to only 5% three years ago.
Indeed, the industry’s ill-timed, $1 trillion plus shopping spree in 2021 casts a looming pall: “You have a huge amount of capital that has been invested on assumptions that are no longer valid,” one LP told the Financial Times this week, while Goldman Sachs Asset Management’s Michael Brandmeyer added that PE “in general is still over-marked, which is leading to this situation where assets are still stuck.” See “Reversion to the boom” in the Sept. 27 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for more on this phenomenon.
Yet while painful stasis pervades in the private realm, a rampaging stock market serves to salve the industry’s wounds. Executives at the seven largest PE firms in the U.S. have seen their wealth collectively expand by a snappy $56 billion in the year-to-date, the FT relays, as S&P’s Listed Private Equity Index has rallied by 23%, nearly matching the S&P’s brisk 26% advance.
As they say, you need to love yourself first.
Pronounced curve steepening headlined the proceedings as 10-year yields jumped to a 33-basis point premium to three-month bills after first emerging from a two-plus year inversion in mid-December, while stocks came under pressure to the tune of 1.1% on the S&P 500 and 1.5% for the Nasdaq 100. WTI crude ticked back above $70 a barrel, gold ebbed to $2,616 per ounce, bitcoin hovered a bit below $95,000 and the VIX settled at 16.4, up just under two points on the day.
- Philip Grant
Nobody beats the fizz? From The Wall Street Journal:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wants to take sugary drinks out of the shopping carts of food-stamp recipients. Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and Keurig Dr Pepper are mobilizing to stop him.
Kennedy, the president-elect’s nominee to run the Health and Human Services Department, aims to remove soda and processed foods from federal programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as food stamps. The move could have big repercussions for the beverage industry.
Lobbyists for Coke and its biggest rivals are pressing their case on Capitol Hill, highlighting the fact that the soda companies are selling more zero-sugar drinks. These, combined with clear calorie labels on beverages, allow consumers to make healthier choices, they say.
Gentlemen, start your engines. Continued economic growth is a cinch in 2025, Torsten Slok predicts, per the Apollo chief economist’s newly minted list of risks to global markets for next year.
Tariffs, an earnings-related disappointment from Nvidia and a consensus-defying rate hike for the Federal Reserve each feature in that collection of so-called gray swans, though Slok assigns precisely a zero percent probability of a recession.
That eye-catching call evokes a recent exercise in misplaced certainty. Utilizing a model composed of 13 macroeconomic and financial indicators, a pair of Bloomberg economists concluded in October 2022 that the odds of a downturn over the following 12 months had reached 100%. Instead, quarterly GDP growth registered at a 3.2% annualized rate over the four quarters through Sept. 2023.
It’s a probabilistic world, though Tuesday does follow Monday – for certain.
The fixed is in: Global bond funds attracted a net $617 billion in the year-to-date through mid-December, EPFR-compiled data show, blowing past 2021’s near $500 billion haul to mark the largest full-year influx on record dating to 2007. Investors’ shine towards the asset class is no fair-weather friendship, as the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index has eked out a 1.3% total return in the year-to-date, leaving its five-year performance at minus 1.4%. Over those periods, the S&P 500 has returned 27% and 100%, respectively.
“U.S. equities have been sucking up flows like there’s no tomorrow, but as interest rates have normalized investors have started to move back into traditionally safer bets,” James Athey, a bond portfolio manager at Marlborough, told the Financial Times. “Inflation has come down pretty much everywhere, growth has softened pretty much everywhere. . . and that’s a much more friendly environment to be a bond investor.”
Fattening coupon income likewise brightens the backdrop, after 10-year Treasury yields climbed to 4.59%, their highest in more than six months and nearly double the 2.5% average level seen over the past decade. “The market views bonds as cheap, certainly relative to stocks, and sees them as representing insurance against an economic slowdown,’ Citadel Securities global head of rates trading Michael de Pass mused to Bloomberg. “The question is, how much to you have to pay for that insurance?”
Memo to those of a bullish bent: See “the other side of the boat” in current edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer dated Dec. 20 for a look at one capital efficient way to position for lower rates ahead.
Meanwhile, the sharp post-Covid updraft in borrowing costs makes for an uneasy companion with today’s booming equity market backdrop, some observers believe. “The last time U.S. [valuations] were this high was in 2021 when the 10-year yield was a supportive 1%,” writes Société Générale global strategist Albert Edwards. “Any further rise in yields would be problematic for stocks."
Santa Claus is back in town, as stocks forged higher by a further 0.6% following Friday’s 1% bounce to recoup roughly half of steep selloff seen in the middle of last week. Treasurys remained under pressure with 2- and 30-year yields rising three and six basis points, respectively, to 4.34% and 4.78%, while WTI crude remained stuck just below $70 a barrel and gold edged lower at $2,613 per ounce. Bitcoin retreated below $94,000 and the VIX settled south of 17, continuing to rapidly retrace Wednesday’s spike higher.
- Philip Grant