Deja Vu NOT All Over Again – Stock Market (and Sentiment Results)…

 | Mar 17, 2023 14:04

“Recency bias, or availability bias, is a cognitive error identified in behavioral economics whereby people incorrectly believe that recent events will occur again soon. This tendency is irrational, as it obscures the true or objective probabilities of events occurring, leading people to make poor decisions.” Investopedia

When the “news” came overnight that Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) was having difficulty, my initial reaction was, “what else is new?” Anyone who is not aware that Credit Suisse was challenged for some time must be sleeping under a rock. Every single Wall Street crisis, bad trade or scandal in the past decade has always included this bank front and center in the middle of the mess. Now they need some capital from their largest investor and the Saudi National Bank has said, “no mas.” So, the Swiss National Bank will step in to provide liquidity and likely backstop the bank in coming days.

For all of the recency bias of people running around talking “counter-party risk” and this is another 2008, think again (or for the first time). The key difference between now and 2008 is that everyone now understands what happened as a result of letting Lehman go. They wanted to punish Dick Fuld for not stepping up to help during the LTCM (Long Term Capital Management) crisis a decade earlier. They shot themselves in the foot. Dick, as far as I know, is doing just fine. As a result of this, we know global central banks will step in quickly and forcefully – as needed – to maintain stability.

If there’s any risk manager that has taken on major counter-party risk with CS, they should be looking for another career. To put it in perspective, CS is now an ~$8B bank. This compares to JPM at $377B, BAC at $227B and GS at $100B. CS is an irritating pimple on the rear end of the global financial system – not a catalyst for another 2008. The Swiss National Bank will prop it up, ring fence it and move on.

As for the regional banking “crisis” in the US (SVB and SBNY), you literally have a situation where management was more focused on providing “safe spaces” and pronouns for their employees than managing risk and protecting their stakeholders.

Unfortunately, the pronouns have now turned into adjectives – “unemployed” and “looking for work” as it relates to employees – and nouns “doughnut hole” and “goose egg” for owners/investors. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for pronouns and “safe spaces” if the employees want them, but not when the programs are run by the same employee that is supposed to risk manage the portfolio – or in the case of SBNY – the CEO that might have focused more on the business at hand…

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There’s plenty of blame to go around as I covered in my media appearances this week. The Fed acted like an insurance company that sells you a homeowners policy, burns your house down and then asks you what you were thinking when they have to pay out… There has been no basic understanding of the lagged effect of maniacal tightening until something broke and now they have to fix it.

As I said months ago, over-tightening could become more inflationary than not tightening enough as the interest costs to service the national debt and the bailout costs to fix things after they break them will far exceed to cost of running inflation above-trend for a few years – as we did the last time we had debt:gdp ~120% (post WWII).

The #1 thing you need to understand is this: If the Bank Term Funding Program (put in place over the weekend) existed last Wednesday, both SVB and SBNY would likely still be in business. They would have been able to borrow against the par value of their (government security) bond portfolios to meet any short term funding needs – versus spooking the capital markets with an equity raise.

Here were my media takes (from most recent backward):

Thanks to Phil Yin and Toufic Gebran for having me on CGTN America on Tuesday night to discuss SVB, SBNY, Inflation, Fed and two new picks:

On Tuesday Morning I went into detail on the chronology of what happened, why it happened, what fixed it, what still needs to be fixed and the opportunities lower bond yields and lower USD will create looking forward. Thanks to
Syarifah Dwi Rahma and Fitria Anggrayni for having me on CNBC “Closing Bell” Indonesia:

And finally, on Friday I joined Ann Berry on Public.com to explain the situation as it was unfolding and the implications it would have moving forward. Thanks to Mike Teich for having me on:

Canada has paused hiking rates, Indonesia has paused and so has Malaysia. No bank failures in those countries. Expectations for the Fed have gone from 125bps MORE of hikes just a week ago to between 0-25bps more before pausing. Markets are now also pricing in a cut or more before the end of the year.

After last week’s political pressure from Senator Warren and Congresswoman Pressley, it is becoming more and more apparent that if Chair Powell does not pause soon, he will be among the 2M job losses potentially coming as a result of his aggressive tightening cycle. As I have said for a year, he could have managed this liquidity withdrawal more effectively from unwinding the balance sheet more aggressively as opposed to mindlessly hiking rates until something broke. Well, he finally broke something last week and will now have to clean up his mess. Progress on the balance sheet has been minimal. Complete missed opportunity: