Stocks Rising, Gold Easing But I’m Not Worried

 | Jun 03, 2020 09:34

Gold has eased a bit in the last few days as the broad market has exploded up. Why?

Because traders really want everything to get back to normal, including getting indices back to their pre-COVID highs.

Does it make sense? That’s a topic I’ve discussed endlessly. No, in that consumer spending accounts for more than 80% of U.S. GDP and there’s no way it can pick up to pre-virus levels quickly. Lots of consumers lost their jobs; many more will not be willing to pursue the same spending (read: activities) that they did before COVID showed up, at least until there’s a vaccine.

But it also does make sense because the Fed is making it make sense. The Fed is backstopping every market other than equities, which are soaring as a result. If the Fed is going to backstop all corporate debt, then crisis-based insolvency ain’t an issue, so cheap stocks are bargains headed higher!

I mean, the Fed is buying junk bond ETFs. By protecting the junk bond market, the Fed is literally protecting every pubco out there, even zombie companies. That’s not a term I made up – zombie companies are those that pay more servicing debts than they make from businesses. Zombie companies have to borrow money just to pay interest on debts they already have.

The prevalence of zombies before COVID highlights how much low interest rates had already disturbed the market: according to Ned David Research, 36% of companies in the Russell 2000 Index of small cap companies were unprofitable before the pandemic. Investors ditched these stocks in a hurry in March, but once the Fed made clear it was going to backstop everything, investors jumped back in. After all, the biggest losers can generate some of the biggest wins if there’s suddenly a reason for a rebound. And so zombie companies on the Russell 2000 are outperforming the overall index this year.