www.armstrongeconomics.com
This coming week is what we would call in horse racing a trifecta
with former FBI director James Comey’s testimony, the U.K. election, and
the ECB monetary-policy meeting. Then our capital flow models seem to
be picking up European buying of both US shares and bonds taking
advantage of a rally in the Euro. The big money seems to have no faith
in the Euro and is looking at rallies as an opportunity to divest more
out of Europe.
On Friday, the government bonds remained in rally mode, pushing the
benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield to a seven-month low as American
pundits on Wall Street keep rubbing their eyes to make sure they are
really awake. Stocks up and bonds up is a very strange thing for them to
experience. The simultaneous run-up in stocks along with government
paper has many just scratching their head. Does this mean the Fed will
not raise rate? They are hard pressed for explanations when they only
look domestically.
The 10-year Treasury yield fell from -2.17% to 2.15%, which is its
lowest level since mid November. Even the Dow is starting to make new
all-time highs at the same time. Some have watched the unemployment
number drop to a 16-year low at 4.3%. Some just think that equity and
bond investors are not talking to each other and have been looking at
different data. The bond pundits are watching the jobs numbers. Wall
Street is pricing in two additional increases to benchmark interest
rates in 2017. Others fear that Trump is in trouble and this puts at
risk his whole agenda of deregulation, tax cuts and an increase to
infrastructure spending, had tempered policy expectations.
The uninformed analysts actually think that weaker numbers will cause
Congress to get behind Trump and push his agenda forward. That seems to
be the least likely outcome. The likelihood of Republicans getting
their act together when the smell blood in the White House is highly
unlikely. Politics and posturing always come before the people.
The bottom line? Simply, we show capital inflows were running rather
strong with Europeans looking to buy the bargains and china attacked the
shorts in the yuan because of too much capital outflows. It may be a
Comey testimony where he can say whatever he wants and the press will
take it and run. But in Europe, the risk of the ECB collapsing is rising
and this is why the sudden move to create a consolidated bond for
Europe to find buyers to sell off what the ECB has bought and for
European states to find funding when the ECB stops buying.
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