Idiosyncratic or Systemic?

Do you believe the current banking ‘crisis’ is idiosyncratic or systemic? The short answer is it’s still far too early to know. Hopefully it’s more of the former and less the latter. Because if it’s the latter, that’s a problem. Last week’s issues will become multiplicative (vs additive). 2008 was a global systemic banking crisis…. this is not 2008. At least not yet…

The Fed Must ‘Choose their Poison’

The collapse of SVB and tightening financial conditions has put the Fed in a very difficult spot. For example, prior to the collapse they had a green light to raise at least 25 bps. Not now. Tightening rates could cause further pressure in the banking sector. However, if they choose not to – what signal does that send. There are no easy choices…

Powell’s Punch

In what was supposed to be a ‘vanilla’ testimony to Congress – Jay Powell turned this into a market moving event. Not pleased with how market participants interpreted his previous address – he set the record straight that rates will be higher for longer. His testimony left no room for ambiguity – it was full hawk. Markets quickly revised their forecasts for the peak Fed funds rate – with some now thinking 6.00%. What’s more, the 2/10 yield curve is now negative 107 basis points. We have not seen that since 1981. Soft landing? Good luck.

10-Year Yields Continue to Rise… Why this Matters

The bond market has connected the dots – rates are likely to stay higher for a lot longer. This has seen yields all along the curve surge… with the 10-year now back above 4.0%. The 2-year has moved 100 bps in just 4 weeks. This has implications for stocks and their valuations… none of it great. Look for the 10-year to push higher – perhaps to 4.4% – which represents opportunity for investors.

For a full list of posts from 2017…