Is A Global Crash Just Around The Corner?
Is A Global Crash Just Around The Corner?
Central Banks Are Cutting At The Fastest Rate Since The Financial Crisis
By Tyler Durden Sun, 12/08/2019 -
There is something very fishy about the world's economic situation. On one hand, US president Trump keeps repeating that the US economy is the strongest it has ever been, with global strategists, economists and officials parroting as much they can, repeating that the world economy is also set to rebound sharply any minute now. And yet, two things stand out.
As we pointed out first last month, and as Convoy Investments echoed last week, with the US economy allegedly doing very well, the Fed's balance sheet is now expanding at a rate matched only briefly by QE1, and faster than QE2 or QE3, in the aftermath of September's repo fiasco which provided Powell with an extremely convenient scapegoat on which to hang the return of "NOT QE" (which, we now know, is in fact QE.)
The Fed's unprecedented balance sheet expansion in a time of alleged economic stability and solid growth is a handy explanation why the S&P has been soaring in the past two months, and as we pointed out, a remarkable correlation has emerged whereby the S&P is up every week the Fed's balance sheet is higher, and down whenever the balance sheet has declined.
And so, while helping us understand what has been the fuel for the market's recent blow-off top meltup, the Fed's emergency intervention does beg the question: is there something amiss more than just the repo market, and is Powell telegraphing that a far more serious crisis may be looming.
It's not just Powell, however. It's everyone.
As Bank of America's Michael Hartnett notes in his latest Flows and Liquidity weekly, global monetary policy has flipped from Quantitative Tightening (net 42 hikes & $650bn liquidity removed in 2018) to aggressive Quantitative Easing (net 53 cuts) and represents that fastest pace of central bank cuts since the financial crisis.
Of course, back then, there was a legitimate reason for central banks to be cutting rates as if their lives depended on it: they literally did, because absent stabilization at any cost, fractional reserve banking, modern economics and the entire western way of life was on its way out in the aftermath of the Lehman failure.
Yet now there is none of that.... or so conventional thinking goes. In fact, the global economy - while sputtering - is supposedly doing just fine. And yet, central banks are acting as if a global financial crisis is just around the corner.
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