BORN TO BE WILD: AMERICAN ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL BATTLEFIELDS © Leo Haviland November 2, 2020
President Donald Trump’s “Inaugural Address” (1/20/17): “This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.”
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OVERVIEW AND CONCLUSION
Marketplace connections and patterns, including convergence and divergence (lead/lag) relationships between financial realms, are complex and not necessarily precise. They can shift or even transform sometimes dramatically. Marketplace history is not marketplace destiny; history does not necessarily repeat itself, either entirely or even partly.
“Adventures in Marketland: Hunting for Return” (10/6/20) and “Marketplace Maneuvers: Searching for Yield, Running for Cover” (9/7/20) display the intertwined price trends in assorted financial fields in recent times. Such interrelated territories include United States and other stocks, US corporate bonds, lower-grade foreign dollar-denominated sovereign debt, and commodities “in general”. Prices in the S+P 500 and other benchmark US and global stock indices, lower-grade interest rate instruments, and commodities often have risen (or fallen) at roughly the same time. They frequently have climbed in bull markets (and fallen in bear markets) “together”. These thus have alternatively reflected bullish enthusiasm as “investors” and other traders hunted for adequate return (“yield”), and dismal bearish scenes as they scrambled frantically for safety. For example, the magnificent bull moves in the S+P 500 and these “related” financial areas established important tops in early to mid-first quarter 2020 (S+P 500 on 2/19/20 at 3394). Their subsequent murderous bear crashes entangled, finishing around the same time, around late March 2020 (S+P 500 on 3/23/20 at 2192). The ensuing price rallies in the S+P 500 and these assorted other key provinces thereafter united, establishing peaks around early September 2020 (S+P 500 top on 9/2/20 at 3588; subsequent lower high 10/12/20 at 3550). See those essays for a detailed presentation of these price moves and their relationships since first quarter 2020.
“Marketplace Maneuvers: Searching for Yield, Running for Cover” (9/7/20) concluded that various phenomena indicate that these marketplaces are at or near important price highs and probably have started to or soon will decline together. “Adventures in Marketland” reemphasized this bearish outlook.
What bearish factors for the S+P 500 and various related marketplaces (other stock signposts, US corporate bonds, lower-grade foreign dollar-denominated sovereign debt, and commodities such as petroleum and metals) did “Marketplace Maneuvers” and “Adventures in Marketland” emphasize? They include the probability of a feeble global recovery (the recovery will not be V-shaped), the persistence of the coronavirus problem for at least the next several months, and lofty American stock marketplace valuations (and the substantial risk of disappointing late 2020 and calendar 2021 corporate earnings). Democrats probably will triumph in the 11/3/20 American national election, which portends a reversal of the corporate tax “reform” legislation as well as the enactment of increased taxes on high-earning individuals and the passage of capital gains taxes. Also on the US national political scene, fears have grown of a political crisis and legal fights if President Trump disputes the November 2020 voting outcome. Other warning signals of notable price falls in the S+P 500 and various associated battlegrounds include vulnerable United States (and other) households (reduced consumer spending) and endangered small businesses, massive and rising government debt, a greater risk of rising US interest rates (at least in the corporate and low-quality sovereign landscapes) than many believe (even with ongoing Fed yield repression), and weakness in the US dollar.
This bearish trend in the S+P 500 probably will continue. Even if Congress answers widespread fervent prayers and enacts another large deficit spending (stimulus) package, the S+P 500’s 9/2/20 peak probably will not be broken by much, if at all. Given recent relationships, a sustained fall in the S+P 500 probably connects with declines in the prices of the other asset sectors currently closely linked to it.
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As always, in the context of these various marketplaces, money-seekers should monitor US Treasury and other high-quality government debt yield levels and trends as well as US dollar and other currency patterns.
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Born to Be Wild- American Economic and Political Battlefields (11-2-20)