Why global markets are collapsing right now, and who you should blame for it
- Markets are falling all over the world but this should not come as a surprise.
- From Trump's trade war to Chinese debt, global markets are full of hair-triggers waiting to be pulled.
- You are to blame also. All that mindless ETF-buying in your retirement account has created an unsustainable momentum boom in stocks.
- The US Fed may be making an historic mistake about the bond yield curve signal.
- And you're probably going to be surprised to learn about the $2.5 trillion in risky leveraged loans that corporations are sitting on.
Global markets are falling so fast it's difficult to keep up with the numbers.
- The Dow Jones Index in the US fell 3.2% yesterday.
- In China, the Shanghai Composite was down 5.2% overnight.
- Virtually all European indices lost more than 1.5% Thursday.
- Britain's blue-chip FTSE 100, lost 1.6% in midday trading.
This is not random.
A major correction in the asset markets has been building for a while. There has been 10 years of economic growth since the great financial crisis of 2008, and a bull market in stocks of pretty much the same length. That's a long time in terms of economic cycles, and we were overdue for a "reversion to the mean," as statisticians say.
But it is not merely the case of the pendulum naturally swinging back. Ten factors have distorted global markets over the last few years, priming the global economy for a sharp pullback.
Here is who you should blame if this correction turns into a full-blown rout, or - worst-case scenario - a recession:
1. President Trump, for starting a global trade war
America voted for a race to the bottom, and now we've got it.
Putting up barriers to competing foreign goods, and taxing the services of other countries, may feel great in the short run. Who doesn't want to protect the workers at home from their cheaper competitors abroad? But in the long run, it means domestic production becomes more expensive, imports become more expensive, inflation goes up, less trade gets done in global aggregate, and investors reduce their expectations - and their actual investments - for the future. The global pie gets smaller, and markets are finally reacting to that.
2. The Chinese government and its love of theft
The trade war didn't come from nowhere. Trump is angry for a reason. For years, China has allowed its companies to steal Western technology and to rip off Western intellectual property. For years, the West did nothing about it. Finally, the Trump Administration has gone to war against China for its flouting of international trade norms. Now we are living with the result.
3. The Chinese government and its love of debt
Chinese debt of all types is nearly 320% of its GDP, according to Pantheon Macroeconomics. At the same time, its GDP growth has slowed. For years, the Chinese government allowed its state agencies and supported industries to take on cheap loans to fuel growth. That produced an economic miracle that has propelled the Chinese economy into the most important on the planet. But debt is debt. It doesn't go away. Someone either has to pay it (and become poorer) or suffer a default (and become poorer). Debt merely pushes problems into the future. As Chinese debt rose, the growth it got from that debt has declined. So now the country is stuck with a slowing economy but a much larger debt pile than 10 years ago. Investors don't like what they see, and Asian stocks are hurting as a result.
4. Venture capital: excessive private valuations have created a non-transparent, illiquid market
Softbank, the vast Japanese venture capital investor, wants to invest $50 billion each year mostly in tech startups. It intends to raise $100 billion every few years on a rolling basis to do this. Ten years ago, if a startup in San Francisco or London received a $10 million investment it was considered a big deal. Now, companies struggle to generate headlines unless they are receiving cash injections in the hundreds of millions.
$100 billion here, $100 billion there, and pretty soon we're talking about real money.
To sustain and justify these investments, the valuation of these companies has gone through the roof. There are more "unicorns" - private tech companies worth more than $1 billion - than can be counted.
The problem is that this is all occurring in the non-transparent private market. It is difficult for outsiders to get information about these companies. Are they successful? Are they profitable? Are they growing? Do their business models make sense when scrutinized in the light of day (Case study: Tesla.) VC-funded companies sustain their valuations because VCs tell us they are valuable. The market for privately held equity is illiquid and opaque. This all works just fine in a market that is rising. But in a downturn, it will be very difficult to sell some of these stakes. So a lot of money from the large institutions - banks, retirement funds - is tied up in illiquid VC investments. Good luck, everyone!
5. Private equity: leveraged loans are recreating the junk bond crisis of the early 1990s
The global total of "leveraged loans" has reached about $2.5 trillion. The Bank of International Settlements is worried about them. The Bank of England is worried about them. Credit Suisse recently wrote a letter to its clients defending its investments in them. Yet few normal people - people outside the world of finance geeks - know what they are.
Basically, it's high-risk, low-quality debt. As central banks have held interest rates near zero for years, private equity (PE) has been on the hunt for investments with much higher interest rates. But higher rates come with higher risks. A typical example of a leveraged loan looks like this: A PE firm finds a company that is already carrying debt, but is still in trouble. Perhaps it is an old company that has been badly run. It is in need of restructuring, and it might succeed if you can inject a bit of cash. So the PE firm partners with a bank which arranges a loan, underwrites the loan, and maybe packages it with a bond. The PE firm then bundles that with its own money, and takes over the firm. At this point, it restructures the company, which is a polite way of saying that it probably lays off a lot of workers, ousts the incumbent management, and sells off the useless bits. After a while, the PE firm finds itself in charge of a smaller but more functional company that has a future ahead of it. So it sells the company, or floats it with an IPO. In the sale, the PE company gets rich and the bank gets its loan money back.
The problem with leveraged loans is that they have a low credit rating, and the rating resets - downwards - if interest rates go up. And interest rates are going up. A lot of investors automatically sell their debt holdings when they get down-rated ... so this is a pile of $2.5 trillion in high-risk debt resting on a series of negative rating triggers.
If this sounds a lot like the junk-bond crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s, that's because it is.
6. You and your addiction to ETFs: Mindless buying has created a boom in stocks based on momentum, not fundamentals
You probably have a retirement fund, like a 401(k) in the US or a private pension fund in the UK. And inside that savings account, you are probably pouring a percentage of your salary every month into an exchange-traded fund, which is an investment that simply tracks a major market index like the S&P 500.
They are good investments. Most "active" fund managers fail to beat the market each year, so an ETF guarantees that your return is the same as the market. For years, the market has been good. The more good it is, the more people pile into ETFs. It's a boom based on momentum, and no one who owns an ETF actually examines the stocks inside it for their fundamental flaws or values.
Booms come to an end, of course, and momentum can reverse. We might be seeing that now.
7. The US Federal Reserve, which was warned against misreading the bond yield curve
The bond yield curve is an infamous predictor of recessions. If it inverts - meaning that if the yield on the 2-year T-note becomes more than the yield on the 10-year note - recessions often follow, because such an inversion suggests that investors are very worried about the near-term economy. But US Fed chief Jerome Powell said recently that the flattening curve was less important than the neutral rate of interest. many serious people believe that is a mistake, or at least a version of "this time it's different." The yield curve has trended toward an inversion and a lot of people think the Fed is misreading that signal.
8. Italy, for failing to reform its politics or its banks
Italy is the third largest economy in Europe and the 9th largest globally, and yet it's a basket case. It's bank system is riddled with sketchy debts. And the Italian economy is not growing fast enough to solve its problems. Its government is on a fiscal collision course with the EU. The EU wants to force it to set a budget that its elected government does not want. It cannot extract itself from the euro currency system without defaulting. And its people have refused to vote for reforms to their own electoral system that might end the country's infamously sclerotic governance. Italy is shuffling toward a crisis and it has neither the will nor the ability to change course. On its own, that's not a huge problem. But in times like these, it's just another layer of uncertainty that tells investors to flee.
9. Britain: Brexit has left the 5th largest world economy without a plan
The UK is the fifth-largest economy on the planet and yet it does not have a functional economic or trade plan for after March 2019, when Brexit happens.
That's madness.
10. Chickens coming home to roost in Turkey, Argentina, Venezuela, and Pakistan
You can blame the individual, idiosyncratic governments of all these emerging market (EM) countries for their current economic crises but that would be like blaming the trees for being in the woods. The underlying fact is that all these EM countries took on big US dollar-denominated debts for inward investment purposes, and as the US Fed has strengthened the dollar those debts are now onerously expensive. Currency crises don't come from nowhere. In the short term, it's bad for each individual country. But in the long term its bad for the US and the West, too. EM countries grow faster than the developed economies, and if that growth disappears then that will slow down the larger economies too.