The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

The Credit Cycle: Phase Two Accelerating

~by Sean Paul Kelley

Here are today’s Phase Two developments. Many are ominous. Things not looky so goody.

The smartest guys in the room, i.e., Goldman Sachs had this to say about AI: “Massive investment in AI contributed basically zero to US economic growth last year.” What will they predict next? An oil price spike if we go to war with Iran? Oh wait. 

Dario notes that the liquidity crisis is going global: “Middle East liquidity crisis in the financial system is surfacing.”

He cites Rashid ben Saeed who elaborates: “Citi and Standard Chartered literally evacuated their offices this week. Told staff go home, work remote. HSBC closed their Qatar branches. Hedge funds are in “contingency mode.” That’s a polite way of saying they’re bricking it. Analysts are saying customers could pull out $307 BILLION if this goes on another month.” 

First Squawk writes that both JP Morgan and Goldman are offering Hedge Funds ways to short private credit. That’s just weird.

Ripplebrain conveys just how devastating the attack on QatarEnergy’s LNG production is:17% of QatarEnergy’s production is 3.4% of the world’s LNG production.” Ending ominously saying, that it’s “gone in the blink of an eye, perhaps for years.”

The irrepressible Matt Stoller highlights a video that highlights “straightforward market manipulation.He also points our attention to the #2 story at the Wall Street Journal:U.S. Regulators Propose More Lenient Capital Rules for Big Banks.” This kind of proposal is in direct contravention to the ‘stress test’ rules put in place after the 2008 Financial Crisis. It also clearly foreshadows liquidity and/or solvency issues that the commericial banks will soon face. 

In another clear phase two clusterfuck is this story from the WSJ, cited by Unicus Research. The upshot: “Stone Ridge’s LENDX fund just told investors it would honor only 11% of redemption requests.” The post on X also includes what kind of garbage is in the fund. Go take a look. It’ll engender a ton of schadenfruede. Enjoy! 

As pending crises morph into full blown disasters investment banks often prepare by enacting the following policies. First, they raise production quotas for their employees while simultaneously cutting their commission payouts. It’s a cut-throat business. Payout cuts are painful. I’ve lived it. And they always cut payouts right before or during bear markets. I endured this twice at Morgan Stanley. Guess what: Goldman has begun that process, as First Squawk reports: “Goldman plans performance-based job cuts in late April.” This we can infer two important factoids from this: Goldman is worried about cash-flow. You don’t plan to run employees off if you’re flush with cash. Two: timing, Goldman clearly sees this credit cycle accelerating rapidly with an April inflection point.

Shashank Joshi catches an excellent highlight from the Economist:Average prices of petrol and diesel have reached $3.88 and $5.09 a gallon, compared with $3.11 and $3.72 at Mr Trump’s inauguration. Republican support for the war is strong, but softening.”

More Perfect Union informs us “the cost of vegetables jumped 49% last month as inflation hit hard and companies raised prices.” Its source is BLS data. Now I know, some will dispute how the CPI is computed. I thinks it full of balderdash and male bovine excrement. So does Ian. So I post and you decide. 

Sohrab Ahmari notes, unconfirmed but entirely plausible, that “force majeur [has been declared] on Qatari LNG contracts for up to five years.” Five years? That’s going to pile Pelion atop the already messa Ossa of the energy markets globaly. 

CORRECTION: according to EarlyGray the video below does not say anything about Japan buying Russian oil. Mea culpa. I regret the error. SPK

Richard posts a video and apparently translates it. If true, it’s a bombshell: “Japan is now openly buying Russian oil with the yuan.” Why not with JPY? I would imagine that China has already set up a Yuan based transaction system for buying and selling oil to steadily chip, chip, chip away at dollar hegemony. Yeah, Japan has said it publically and officialy. That’s pretty much like pissing on the petrodollar. Our closest North East Asian Ally. That’s fuckery on an hitherto unseen level. 

Meanwhile, to Japan’s northwest, South Korea is considering resuming imports of Russian oil.

And I make the observation, in utterly obscene Russian fashion that “with these high oil prices the Russian Treasury has certainly Как бога за яйца поймал.” Translated idiomatically: Russia is in the catbird seat. Translated directly:they got God by the balls.

Rory Johnston notes just how high Dubai crude prices have risen: “Cash Dubai crude (balance of the month) just broke above $170 per barrel.”

Here’s what I’ve previously written on this credit cycle. I stand by it all. The only comment I’ll add at present is this: if the exogenous shocks to the US economy continue and the energy shock intensifies, all bets are off on the proximate cause of the end of dollar hegemony.

 

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18 Comments

  1. Feral Finster

    Seems a USAF F-35 was shot down or damaged. Good.

    Gold and silver remain in the (relative) doldrums. Not sure what is up with that, and that is an honest question, since I would think that investors would rush into metals as the war drags on.

  2. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Feral Finster: there is an enormous amount of actual government chicanery in the paper markets, both oil and metals, at present. It’s fuckery most foul, sole purpose to preserve Trump’s presidency. He knows if oil, meaning WTI-West Texas Intermediate-goes over $150 he is fucking toast.

  3. Feral Finster

    @SPK: I am normally loathe to attribute price movements in a large and liquid public market to “fuckery”, secret government intervention or conspiracy, but I did ask an honest question and you answered honestly.

    I really do not know.

  4. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Feral Finster: we are in complete agreement re: conspiracy, gov intervention and fuckery. But this time it’s gospel truth. I can’t find the link, but Trump said he authorized the Treasury to intervene in the domestic oil and gas markets so as to preserve “price stability.”

    Now that is some seriously epic fuckery. He’s not talking about draining the SPR. He authorized the Treasury to use public funds to keep oil from lifting off like a SpaceX Starship. There is more, but I’m tired. And frankly, the light at the end of the tunnel that is this credit cycle is not the exit, it’s an oncoming train, one that will make the 2008 Financial Crisis feel like a rom-com. This one is going to hurt bad. Wall Street and Main Street will sufffer. Not equally, but both will pay a price.

  5. TacJack

    Hmmm,…questions, questions, questions.

    Oil is rising while gold and silver falter.

    The dollar remains a fiat currency.

    Additionally, BRICS wants to destroy the dollar’s hegemony – which I wholeheartedly support, along with the destruction of the SWIFT system, the IMF, World Bank, and WTO.

    Given these conditions, where would you place money for capital preservation?

    My answer is Bitcoin and associated cryptocurrencies. I think Bitcoin and associated cryptocurrencies are the answer that best serves the goals of BRICS and all peace loving people across our planet.

  6. TacJack

    NOTE TO FERAL FINSTER ON F-35 shoot down report

    I am a decorated combat veteran of the US military and I take exception to the idea that an F-35 being shot down or damaged is “GOOD.”

    That’s an unacceptable statement that shows a blatant disregard for human life.

    That airman is doing his job – as despicable as that might be.

    And here’s a question for you to ponder: did you ever think that maybe the airman finds his job despicable?

    I can state categorically that I came to despise while deployed to Afghanistan in 2002. However, I was “captured” by “stop loss” and could do little about it. However, on 2/1/03, I resigned because I refused to be party to the invasion of Iraq on the grounds that it was unnecessary and unjust, i.e., illegal.

    Summarizing, it’s admirable of you to hate the war. It is unacceptable to wish death or harm to those tasked with the unenviable job of conducting war.

    My strongest suggestion is that you demand that our elected officials end to this illegal war. Write letters. Sign them. Protest. Hell, throw a brick through the office window of your congressional representative.

    But please, for the love of humanity, don’t wish harm on the pawns and proles directed to fight or defend – on any side.

  7. spud

    Sean Paul Kelley

    Feral Finster:

    you have to remember, in a deflating economy, wage deflation that is, and inflation is like pouring gasoline on a bonfire in a economy where wages have been deflating for years exacerbating wage deflation , many assets you thought were bullet proof and growing in value, must be liquidated by many people who borrowed to buy them, and now can’t service their debts, or must liquidate to pay bills and eat.

    or dump grandma’s silver, and grandpa’s coin collection to eat and pay the rent.

    money is becoming scarce for many. even when inflation is raging. and the inflation will rage till the federal reserve can no longer bail out the rich, and their wars for exploiting the labor and resources of people of color.

    we will know when that happens when no matter how much money the federal reserve, the treasury and congress rain down on the parasites and leeches, it will take a wheel barrow full of money to buy a loaf of bread.

    i have watched every bailout since 1993, each time more money had to be rained over the rich than the last time, and bought less bang for the buck.

    complete collapse will ensue.

  8. Feral Finster

    I also don’t feel sorry for dead SS men.

    The pilot can resign.

  9. EarlyGray

    > Richard posts a video and apparently translates it. If true, it’s a bombshell

    As a Japanese speaker, I can tell you that video says nothing about Japan buying Russian oil or using the yuan. All it basically says is that the US requested help from allies to open the Strait of Hormuz. The Japanese government acknowledges receiving the request and is taking it under consideration.

  10. Sean Paul Kelley

    @earlyGray: thank you. I will make a correction right now.

  11. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Feral Finster: here is a link backing up my assertion of government manipulation in the oil market, writ large. https://x.com/FurkanGozukara/status/2034840196718473349

  12. ventzu

    On gold / silver price drop, there is also the argument that Gulf regimes, with no cash inflow from oil sales, need to sell liquid assets to cover the USD outflows. This may be true for other investors who are leveraged as well, and need to meet margin calls.

    Feral Finster: totally agree on F-35. They are bombing civilians, so they get what they deserve.

  13. Preston

    Mr. Kelly: Can you comment on John Kiriakou’s post on the plan to revalue U.S. gold in Fort Knox? I don’t understand how a US gold repricing would make worldwide gold prices rise. Mostly this looks like someone trying to market a report and get contact info.

    https://johnkiriakou.substack.com/p/the-great-gold-reset-trumps-13-trillion

  14. ProNewerDeal

    Using testfol dot io website, here’s the nominal exclude-dividend USD return of various ETFs. To me this is counterintuitive, I would expect to see at least 1 non-GSG assset to increase, likely gold, in a “flight to safety”. My guesstimate/hypotheseis is that there is excessive leverage in all these financial markets except US Treasuries, and leveraged investors were hit with forced selling.

    Sean Paul/others, “for informational and not fiduciary/legal purposes”, care to opine on this odd financial market during these last few weeks?

    Note I have avoided ever investing in the GSG commodity index, because of its derivative usage. From what I understand a commodity index has to use derivatives, because many commodities like oil/corn/etc are not indefinitely stored in a warehouse/vault like precious metals. For what I read, at times the return of the derivatives can be opposite (positive vs negative) from the return of the actual underlying commodity. Recall during peak Covid (2020-2021?) the oil barrel price for a period of several days went negative.

    Return, Asset
    -4.5%, EDV (20-30 year Zero Coupon Us Treasuries)
    -11.8%, SGOL (gold)
    -22.7%, SIVR (silver)
    -5.6%, VT (global (incl US) stock index)
    -3.9%, VTI (US stock index)
    -10.2%, VNQI (ex-US REIT real estate industry stock index)
    20.6%, GSG (commodity index, uses derivatives for many of the commodities in the index).

  15. Sean Paul Kelley

    @Preston: dude is totes trying to sell you some fucktishousnessly enshittified investment crap.

  16. spud

    in a deflating economy, many asset classes are facing liquidation scenario’s, to raise scarce cash to service debt, rent, heat, electric etc., and eat.

    its called a depression.

    only assets that are not on the table, are those that are essential for survival, and those being propped up by federal dollars and bailouts for the rich parasitical leeches.

    but the bailouts are losing the bang for the buck very fast now.

    its not government debt, except the balance of international payments, think what free trade did to us, its private debt.

    that’s why the bailouts are quickly losing the bang for the buck.

  17. Jorge

    The topic you’re all talking about is called a “Minsky Moment”, after the economist Hyman Minsky. When too many players borrow from each other, then lend it to each other, there comes a terrible time when they all are forced to sell whatever they can to stay afloat. And that’s gold & Treasuries.

    One definition of “liquidity” is “the ability to sell what you prefer to sell, rather than what you would prefer to keep”. When liquidity disappears, you can only sell the family silver, not your old wedding dress.

    I’m not really feeling the Minsky Moment vibes at this time, but there may be a few gold sellers in such a bind.

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