INSANITY Nothing is Real: A Visual Journey Through Market Absurdity

Hfcomms

EN66iq
September 14, 2021
By Matthew Piepenburg

When it comes to modern markets, risk assets and the now normalized yet twisted tango of fiscal and monetary policy gone wild, it’s safe (rather than sensational) to simply confess that nothing is real.

As I recently watched BTC drop by 16% in one hour from $50K to $43K, only to reach back up to $46K in 20 minutes, my 20+ years of Wall Street experience watched with bemused yet experienced awe at what amounted to just another day of leverage, emotion and institutionalized front-running as the big money whales in crypto pulled off yet another media and SEC-ignored pump-dump-and-pump trade.

In short, the unreal has simply become business as usual.


Real Education vs. Surreal Facts

By 1997, I had graduated from a steady, iconic and expensive list of higher educational institutions which emphasized critical thinking, objective data, historical context and basic math.

But had I told a single professor back then that one day we’d see the simultaneousoccurrence of Treasury Yields at 1.35%, and

Negative treasury yields occur when nothing is real in the economy.


….an “official” YoY CPI (inflation) growth rate of 5.4%, and

Inflation is soaring.


…an S&P reaching all-time highs above 4000,

Traders announce Nothing is real! as equity valuations repeatedly hit record levels.


…despite negative annual GDP rates, and

GDP is falling


… consumer sentiment tanking,

Consumer sentiments tank as consumers catch on that nothing is real.


… it’s likely they’d ask me to return my diplomas.


Why?

Because everything I (and all the rest of us) had been taught long ago was that rising risk assets reflect healthy economic growth, vigorous natural demand and a robust confidence in continued productivity and hence free-market price discovery.

That, at least, was the “reality” that nine years of secondary (post high-school) education gave me before I began my first toe-dip into the public exchanges (i.e., asset bubbles) of 1999.


Experience vs. Theory

What did I learn after watching the NASDAQ rise to the moon in 2000 before puking by greater than 80% in 2003, and a sub-prime bubble that had investors giddy in 2006 yet on their knees by the autumn of 2008, or far more recently, a decade+ bull market hitting needle-peak highs on the backs $28T in national debt and a Fed balance sheet that had bloated from $800 billion in 2000 to over $7 trillion by 2020?

The answer is simple: Nothing I learned in school was “real” and nothing about our current moment in time has even the slightest resemblance to anything remotely characterized as natural, free-market or fair-price-driven.

Nothing. Not even close.

Instead, we live in a dystopian world of engineered markets, centralized economiesand dis-information in which extreme money creation by 5 central banks have increased their balance sheets by 12X like this

Central banks grow their balance sheets to counteract the forces of nothingness.



…leading to un-natural (i.e., “accommodated”) credit markets in which sovereign bonds offer negative (and technically defaulting) yields like this

Negative yields are possible when nothing is real.


…which makes the cost of debt free for a select minority, allowing corporations and their grossly advantaged and over-paid executives to live (and bloat) off their own stock buy-backs at levels this

Buybacks reinforce nothing being real.


…which directly results in central-bank-created risk asset bubbles like this

Nothing_is_real_9.jpg


…in which greater than 86% of that market wealth is enjoyed by just the top 10% of the population, leading to wealth disparity at record levels like this

Wealth inequality is rampant when nothing is real in the economy.


…while the self-serving central bankers like this

Greenspan


…who directly caused this historical distortion of capitalism, congratulate themselves on hubris-saturated book tours like this

Ben Bernanke The Courage to Act


… or subsequently become the directors of Treasury Departments like this.

Janet Yellen



Mass Media, Mass (and Deliberate) Hysteria

Meanwhile, a feckless media owned by just a handful of corporate boards with direct ties to governments, tech billionaires, bad Davos skiers and Wall Street, and which more resemble the “nothing is real” propaganda profiles of Joseph Goebbels and Pravda than the “truth to power” stewards of Woodward and Bernstein, continue to headline tweets from crypto front-runners like Musk or fear-porn mask mandates for children from a locked-down Sydney to a head-down New York.

All this, despite the confirmed science that children present near zero risk of serious illness from a global flu whose case fatality rates are less than ½ of 1 percent.


Crazy.

But as every tyrannical, autocratic and corrupt regime has always perfectly understood, when the truth is a threat, feed the masses fear, anger and lies instead.

This is history 101 for anyone who reads a book rather than tweet.

But rather than rage against the architects of so much distortion of honesty, math, science and social contracts, the media and policy makers distract the masses with bread, circus, fear and anger, stoking the fires of racial division and invisible death from above, pointing their woke and increasingly sanctimonious fingers at everything from a rapidly defunded police force to the “criminally selfish unvaccinated” who apparently live in caves and don’t believe in science or their fellow man.

Meanwhile, that oxymoron otherwise known as “modern culture” (rich in opinions but poor in questioning or earning them) cancels everything from Little House on the Prairieand Dr. Seuss to Robert E. Lee’s statue in Richmond, Virginia.

Confederate statue


Sadly, however, if the broke and legitimately angry masses in the new feudalismnow somehow passing for capitalism or constitutional democracy (at least the kind I studied in law school) were informed rather than just frustrated and manipulated, then instead of blaming these angry and easy-to-denounce faces

MAGA protesters


…they could simply blame the smug and harder to justify faces of anti-heroes like this

The faces of nothing is real.


…or this

Musk


…or this:

Powell



Returning to the Nonsense

For now, the pablum and doublespeak from these so-called experts continues to float like jetsam from the polluted currents flowing out of an increasingly discredited FOMC as the markets pretend to brace themselves for a potential “tapering” of the otherwise blatant money addiction (and counterfeiting) still masquerading as policy support.

Angry crowds, however, typically have no time for hard policy facts, economic history or founding father ideals; instead, they are educated by 50 word-count tweets and the latest celebrity wisdom or virtue-signaled headline. It is easier to live as though nothing is real.

Unknown to many in those angry crowds gathering around Robert E. Lee or Dr Seuss, for example, the Atlanta Fed just cut its q3 GDP forecast by 50% in matter of days.

government payments create fake income.


From where I sit in terms of both history and economics (at least until these subjects are equally “canceled” from the modern curriculum), falling GDP as indicated above effects all our lives far more than falling statues or controversial children’s books.

But as we’ve written so many times, the powers-that-be are clever little foxes, and even crashing GDP and skyrocketing debt, which are objectively time-proven cancers for society, can be a boon for their false narrative of governmental or central bank “guidance,” which is nothing more than increasing social control hiding behind a Covid mask.


Debt to GDP: The New Distortion

After all, one way to address the appalling 135% debt to GDP ratio in the U.S. is to simply reduce the productivity component rather than debt component of the ratio, akin to telling a man with only one arm that his shirts will fit better if we remove the remaining arm.

A “bad” debt to GDP figure is just veiled anchoring for more QE “stimulus” and more ludicrous fiscal spending of money which governments don’t in fact have but which a mouse-click at the Eccles Building can produce in seconds.

In simple speak, this latest GDP “bad news” looks like an open as well as carefully planned piece of “good news” for a QE-addicted, fully Fed-supported and ultimately rigged to fail stock bubble.


The Pointless Taper Debate

As for Fed tapering, even the hawks at that same Atlanta Fed can’t keep their message or ethics straight for more than a week.

Nothing at all shocking or new there…


Another Fed Two-Step

Back in August (8/27), for example, Atlanta Fed President, Raphael Bostic, bravely declared: “Let’s start the taper and let’s do it quickly.”

But fast forward just a few days to September 2, and that same Fed President, like so many other fork-tongued masters of doublespeak within the FOMC, back peddled with fabulous elan, declaring instead that “we’re going to let the economy continue to run until we see signs of inflation.”

The amount of “duplicitous dumb” within this single sentence defies both belief and this report’s word count, but for simplicity’s sake, and despite “signs of inflation” literally everywhere, Bostic’s latest semantic two-step translates to this: Don’t expect a “taper” of the free money spigot anytime soon.

Besides, and as we wrote last week, even if a “taper” in Fed QE were to occur, such hawkish optics won’t stop the Fed from dumping ever-more dovish liquidity into the system via clever little tricks up the sleeves of its Reverse Repo Program.

In short, the Standing Repo Facility (or SRF) is just QE by another clever acronym, so please: Don’t let the headlines or double-speak from above fool you.

Taper or no taper, the dollar in your wallet is about to drown under even more currency-killing liquidity from on high.
In short, nothing is real.

 

SSTemplar

Veteran Member
It’s a good thing I invested in living because when the financial shit hits the fan I got nothing to lose. I think I will just sit down and watch another parade. Let me know when it’s time to start shooting.
 

The Snack Artist

Membership Revoked
Great post. Thanks for that.

The answer is simple: Nothing I learned in school was “real” and nothing about our current moment in time has even the slightest resemblance to anything remotely characterized as natural, free-market or fair-price-driven.

I remember the buttons being worn on the trading floor. "Free markets for Free men." That was the last I saw of advocacy to unmanipulated markets. If the markets were able to function correctly, without interference, things would look a lot differently. But, like everything else .gov does, it's all dots, dashes, and manipulation. We go from 667 to 4200 in the S&P in 13 years? Ridiculous. I don't think there were any significant pullbacks either.

It smells like a fix like a fish mkt on a hot day. It will crash, but when?
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
Its bound to happen, buckle your seat belts, its gonna be a rocky ride. The waiting is hell.

God is good all the time

Judy
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
God doesn't invest so don't pray to him for money. Jesus saves. No offense nomifyle!
What the hay, I wasn't praying for money, let the chips call where they may. I always feel that God is good, no matter what its through him that we get our strength to deal with stuff.

God is good all the time

Judy
 

The Snack Artist

Membership Revoked
What the hay, I wasn't praying for money, let the chips call where they may. I always feel that God is good, no matter what its through him that we get our strength to deal with stuff.

God is good all the time

Judy
No. I know you weren't. Hence the no offense. You would never do that nor would I. I agree with your thought that God is good all the time. Egotistical Man thinks he can create. He can only create using the tools and substances God has given him. People are foolish to think otherwise. Anything that is good has come from God.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Are Markets Manipulated? (linkedin.com)

Are Markets Manipulated?

Tim Taschler
Tim Taschler
Investment Advisor | Money Manager | Technical Analyst | Risk Manager | Natural Resources | Metals and Miners | Stocks | Bonds | Options
Published Sep 16, 2021

Are capital markets manipulated? The evidence would say yes, they are, and they probably have been since markets started trading. Here is CNBC’s Jim Cramer talking about his own manipulation back in 2013:
/snip/
 
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