Jim Bianco Profile picture
Apr 16 15 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/15

What's going on with the bond market?

It is not pretty.

And if the bond market is ugly, everyone else suffers.

🧵
2/15

First, let's remember how this year started.

On December 18, 2023, BofA published its December 2023 Global Fund Manager Survey.

This graphic shows that these managers were the most bullish on rates since they started asking the question 20 years ago (2003). Image
3/15

Global fund managers agreed that 2024 would be the best time to be long-duration (lower rates) in the last 2 decades.

They were more bullish on rates now than on the 2008 financial crisis or the 2020 global economy shutdown (both were massive gains, if long-duration).
4/15

How's it going? Bad!

Through April 15, the Bloomberg Domestic Agg Index YTD total return is -3.11% (blue)

This is the 49th year of data (1976). Only 1980, 1994, and 2022 were worse through April 15.

All those years were historically bad years.

Not good Image
5/15

Since it was a survey of GLOBAL managers, how is the Bloomberg GLOBAL Agg index doing? Also, bad!

YTD, it is down -4.25% (blue line)

This index started in 1990 (35 years ago). Only 2022 was worse; that was the worst year in the bond market since the Civil War (1865)! Image
6/15

And here is the 30-year Treasury Total Return.

YTD, it is down 9.80% (blue line).

The data starts in 1977, so 48 years of data. Only 2009, 2021, and 2022 were worse YTD through April 15.

Long TLT has been a horror show. Image
7/15

If these global fund managers had a meeting in December to position to LOSE AS MUCH MONEY AS POSSIBLE, how would it differ from what they have done YTD?

Why so bad? Because of their assumptions, they have been way off the mark. Image
9/15

They overwhelmingly thought the economy would have a soft landing.

As I like to say, "This was never the case." Image
10/15

They were also 90% sure inflation would fall in 2024 leading to an equally high conviction that central banks (the Fed) would cut rates.

How does that look now on April 15!! Image
11/15

So, when does this bond sell-off stop?

To put it bluntly, saying "soft landing," "last mile to 2%," and "the Fed will cut three times in 2024" becomes embarrassing in public.
12/15

When we get to this point, it will signal that all the positioning for these outcomes, which is killing their performance YTD, has become too painful and has been reversed.
13/15

Interestingly, as I'm writing these posts, I have Bloomberg TV on in the background, and they have fund managers from organizations that manage trillions in assets, still talking about a "soft landing" and "last mile to 2%" and "three rate cuts in 2024."
14/15

So, we are not there yet.

Global Fund managers still think reading from their 2024 outlooks published in January is a good idea.

They have yet to figure out that these are the roadmaps that got them into trouble in the first place.
15/15

Final thought, when do higher rates "bother" the stock market?

When the 10-year hits 4.50%. Or starting last week.

See below ... the S&P 500 close today (April 15) was its lowest close since February 20. Image
Here is the correct chart. Image

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Jim Bianco

Jim Bianco Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @biancoresearch

Apr 11
1/13

The street has had a tough 24 hours.

Rallied bonds/stocks into CPI, thinking they would miss the consensus (below). Instead, they beat the consensus (above).

This morning, they sold off stocks/bonds into PPI, thinking they would beat. Instead, they missed.

🧵
2/13

We need to ask why getting a handle on inflation is so hard.

My take ....

* Inflation is incredibly hard to predict. It might be the hardest of all economic indicators.

* Everyone believes inflation is the easiest to predict.
3/13

So, let's start with what I believe everyone still needs to understand ...

The COVID lockdown/restart of the economy was the biggest ECONOMIC event of our lifetime. Bigger than the financial crisis.

It changed the economy in ways we see but do not want to accept.
Read 14 tweets
Apr 5
1/8

Late afternoon🧵on the bond market

1-Day tick chart of the 10-year yield

The 10-year yield sold off back to the day's high yield, closing at 4.40%.Image
2/8

The 10-year yield closed on the 50% retracement (cyan line, 4.40%), the highest since Nov 27.

Will it hold?

Ultimately, I don't think it does.

For months, I have been in the camp since the 10-year trades 5.00% (last year's high) to 5.50% later this year.

Still thereImage
3/8

1-day tick chart of the 2-year yield

The 2-year sold off hard in the afternoon and closed at 4.75%.Image
Read 9 tweets
Apr 4
1/5

Payroll Report Preview 🧵

Economists’ median estimate for tomorrow’s payroll release is 215k. Estimates range from 150k to 250k.

Note that February was initially reported as 275k. So, every one of the 61 forecasts has payrolls declining from last month. Image
2/5

Since the beginning of 2022, economists have often underestimated the actual payroll release.

During these 26 months, economists underestimated payrolls 22 times. Image
3/5

The BLS surveys 120k "establishments" employing about one-third of the US labor force.

Lately, the survey’s response rate has been falling and becoming an issue.

The February payroll report’s initial response rate was 66.9% (blue line), which is higher than January's 56% (and December's 49%) but remains low compared to past decades.

As the red and purple lines show, the BLS follows up in the ensuing months to get the missing responses. But even these are falling.Image
Read 5 tweets
Mar 30
1/10

Grant Williams (@ttmygh) said we are a "Society of Speculators."

He is 100% correct, ir maybe more than 100%.

And if you understand this, many things start to make sense ... from TV viewership to markets.

🧵
2/10

Sports gambling is booming! And it is changing culture.

statista.com/chart/29332/gr…
Image
3/10

Where is this sports gambling showing up? Selected ratings of TV shows.

93 of the top 100 TV shows in 2023 were NFL games



And the Super Bowl smashed its old TV ratings with 123 million viewers.sportico.com/business/media…
Read 10 tweets
Mar 28
1/4

Here are a couple of thoughts on tomorrow's PCE report (remember, there will be no market reaction as they are closed).

I will focus on what the Fed focuses on: Core PCE.

Below are the 57 economist forecasts, as surveyed by Bloomberg.

For the February Core PCE measure, the median estimate is 0.3%.
52 of the 57 are projecting 0.30%.
1 of 57 is projecting 0.4%
4 of 57 is projecting 0.2%

At his March 20 Presser, Powell said he expects 0.30%

Last Night, Governor Waller said in his speech that he also expects 0.3%.

So ... let's take a wild guess as to what everyone is looking for 🤔Image
2/4

PCE is compiled from the same survey of prices from which CPI and PPI are derived.

So, once these reports are released, it is an exercise to reweight them for core PCE. This produces a fairly accurate forecast.

For the February Core PCE report, this is 0.3%, with a few forecasts rounding to 0.2% or 0.4%.

3/4

This next chart shows Core PCE ... year-over-year as the line and month-over-month are the bars.
Blue is actual through December.

Red is January, which is subject to revision (and expected to be slightly higher; see @NickTimiraos above), and February (released tomorrow morning).

Orange is a projection for the next several months, assuming the upcoming month's average is 0.33%, its two-year average (orange bars).

If the assumption of 0.33% monthly Core PCE is accurate, again, it is the average of the last two years, and the last two months, then Core PCE should bottom around 2.8% and move well above 3%.

Why? See the green bars in the bottom panel. These are the monthly measures to be dropped from the year-over-year calculation (known as the base effect).

They are falling, and the "hurdle" to keeping Core PCE "sticky" at 3+% this year is getting easier to jump over.

If so, this should end the discussion of rate cuts.Image
Read 4 tweets
Mar 19
1/4

The national average of gasoline prices jumped again yesterday by over two cents to $3.49/gallon.

How it matters

short 🧵 Image
2/4

This caused the Cleveland Fed to raise its forecast for March CPI.

* March Monthly CPI is projected to rise 0.30% from 0.26% y'day.

* March Yearly CPI is now projected to rise by 3.37% from 3.34% y'day.

Gasoline prices are estimated to add 0.17% to March's monthly CPI. Image
3/4

Can the Cleveland Fed Nowcast for CPI get it wrong?

Sure, but so can any other way to project March CPI, and this projection is no better or worse than any other attempt.

clevelandfed.org/indicators-and…
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(