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wabuffo

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Everything posted by wabuffo

  1. Rising yield might also push indicies higher Indeed - this is the weakest part of my forecast. That's why I threw in the tax changes as well. It is the one-two combo of a rising discount rate PLUS change in the federal corporate tax rate that will pinch stocks. wabuffo
  2. Yields are lower (as predicted). Gold hit a recent low at the end of March and has rallied (pretty much as predicted). Stocks are also higher (as predicted). Rather than quit while I'm ahead - the signal that I will be watching is the US Treasury general account level and waiting for it to fall to $150b or so. You can follow that level daily at the US Treasury's daily statement website (current TGA level as of May 27th = $746b). https://fsapps.fiscal.treasury.gov/dts/issues The one-two growth in reserves from both the Fed doing QE every week and the US Treasury spending without a commensurate level of debt issuance is flooding reserves into the banking system. This is a one-timer, though til the US Treasury gets to its must-achieve level of $120b or so by end of July. The banking system is like a big bathtub that has its drain plug in and the water level is rising too high. That's why there is a recent spike in reverse-repo. Reverse-repo is the overflow drain at the top of the tub that prevents the water level from flowing over the top of the tub and onto the bathroom floor. When the TGA hits target, I think issuance will pick up which will help long-term rates start to climb again. That should happen sometime in early-mid July. The last part of this three-act play is to watch to see if the rising yields in August-September start to slow down the advance of the broad equity indicies. Of course, I'm not a macro guy and most of the time macro is quite random and hard to forecast. But every once in awhile, things like this TGA rebalancing is going to have some predictable effects. Of course, I could be wrong about all this. wabuffo
  3. After years of the Fed trying to create it, its been done. Fed didn't create inflation (if there is any).... Fed really can't, actually. One has to look at the US Treasury for that. wabuffo
  4. What happens starting Aug and why? Demand for 10 years treasury shouldn't go down starting August. The US economy is too large and complex for single-variable projections. But I would expect that after August, the supply of US Treasury securities will begin to match deficit spending and Treasury securities held by the private sector will begin to go back up. All things being equal, long-term yields should resume their rise that we saw earlier in 2021. That's not a bad thing - the economy is heating up and Treasury securities are in demand as collateral for lending. wabuffo
  5. Seems like a game of musical chairs with not enough chairs. Fed buying treasuries (in exchange for reserves) then repo'ing reserves in exchange for treasuries. I guess it all makes sense, but does it accomplish anything? I doubt it. I think you are right Spek. The Fed used to run a corridor system to control short-term rates pre-GFC to control rates - buying/selling Fed funds (reserves) to keep rates in a tight range. This was at a time when there were no excess reserves. The conceit of the Fed after it did QE was that it now could control both the price and quantity of the money supply - not just price. But here we are - back where the Fed started. It really can't control the supply of money - only the price. It has to do reverse repo to keep its target rates from falling below the zero floor. Its a fugly corridor system once again. wabuffo
  6. Could somebody explain to a 5 year old what is going on right now with the reverse repo purchases? A reverse repo is a swap of assets between the Fed and the US banking sector. The banks give the Fed a reserve asset (ie - Fed funds (ie, reserves) from their deposit accounts at the Federal Reserve) in exchange for a Treasury security from the Fed. These are typically overnight (or over-the-weekend) durations - but since mid-March, they are constantly rolling over and growing so in effect its kinda perpetual for now. The reason for this is because US Treasury spending and Fed open-market buying of Treasury securities due to the Federal government's pandemic response has flooded the banks with excess reserves. Before the pandemic started, the US banking system had $1.7t in total reserves (9% of total banking sector assets). Today, total reserves are a shade under $4t (or almost 18% of total banking sector assets) and continuing to grow. Ok - so why now? Why are the banks doing more and more reverse-repo after not doing much if at all before mid-March? Here it gets a bit more technical and it involves something you haven't heard about lately - the Congressional limit on US Treasury securities outstanding - aka - the "debt ceiling". The US debt ceiling was suspended on Aug 1st, 2019 for two years as part of the last set of budget negotiations. The US Treasury thus had no upper limit for how much it could issue in net, new Treasury securities. This came in handy during the pandemic as it ramped up its issuance and ran its Treasury general account (TGA) balance at the Fed to a high of $1.83 trillion during the summer of 2020 by issuing way more securities than it needed to fund pandemic spending. But the debt ceiling toggles back on this Aug 1st. because the two year limit is ending. In addition, the rules say that the US Treasury must have an account balance at the Fed = to what it was before the debt ceiling was suspended (basically to prevent the sort of thing that actually happened - i.e. running up the TGA balance). The US Treasury's balance back then was $117.6b. Its current balance is $832.9b. So in theory, it must deficit spend $715b between now and then WITHOUT any net issues of US Treasury securities. (IOW, new issues cannot exceed maturity redemptions). In reality, if it spends the same amount over this period (May 21 - July 31st) as last year = $638.9b - that won't be enough and it will have to net redeem a further $76.5b of US Treasury securities (ie maturities less new issuance). But tax receipts are running higher this year than last year - so it may have to net redeem more than $76.5b because this year's deficit could be slightly smaller than last year for the same period. But the Fed is still out there buying Treasury securities from the open market and removing them from the private sector (in exchange for bank reserves). I reckon at its current pace the Fed will buy $177.9 b of Treasuries during this May 21 - July 31st period. So to summarize - the US Treasury will deficit spend around $639b (probably less). In the old days when the US Treasury used to run with a small TGA at the Fed - its net issuance equaled the deficit spending. But not this summer. Not only will the US Treasury not remove that $639b of new bank reserves by adding new Treasury securities -- between it and the Fed, they will WITHDRAW another combined $254b of US Treasuries from the private sector. Unless the debt ceiling moratorium gets extended, that's a lot of cash and reserves sloshing in the system looking for yield. And they are now starting to crowd at the Fed's reverse repo window. If the Fed didn't do this, short-term rates could not be supported and we'd start to see negative rates at the short end. Here's some data to illustrate what I'm talking about. I've divided the pandemic and recovery into several periods. When the pandemic hit the economy in March - June 2020, the US Treasury unleashed very heavy spending (Stimmie I). It also more than covered its spending with huge Treasury security issuance in order to run up its Fed TGA. But the Fed was also out there massively buying Treasuries. The net result was that about 78% of the spending was covered by net supply of Treasuries (between the Fed and the US Treasury's buying and issuing). But since the economy was ice cold, demand for US Treasury's after an initial panic was lower too. But look at the period coming up now (May 21 - end of July 21). A fast-recovering US economy needs US Treasuries, not just for more yield than cash, but as collateral for increased financing/lending. But supply is actually going to shrink vs new reserve creation via deficit spending. Its no wonder everyone is piling up at the reverse-repo window since mid-March. That demand is only going to continue to go higher every week. I think the pressure on yields will also be felt at the long end of the yield curve. Its no wonder that the yields rising were stopped in their tracks in mid-March (right at the time of that massive one-day deficit due to Stimmie III checks/deposits plus the US Treasury starting to ramp down its TGA). Happy to answer any questions if I can. wabuffo
  7. Assuming the 'fed printing' premise is overblown, to what degree do you see asset inflation (housing, stocks, etc) being driven by government policy? Is that overstated in your opinion? My biggest insight from all this is that QE <> money printing. QE at best creates an "unnatural" interest rate curve but it does not put money in anyone's pocket. I think you guys get it now - so I don't have much to add. You are armed with more knowledge about how the US monetary system works than probably 99% of the various financial/economic commentators on TV and the web. Its really simple - you have to take a consolidated view of the Fed/US Treasury and then examine how they interact with the private sector. There are basically three transactions: 1) US Treasury deficit spends - this is asset creation for the private sector. (the only source of liquidity). 2) US Treasury issues a debt security - this is an asset swap with the private sector. 3) Fed buys a Treasury debt security - this is an asset swap with the private sector. Finally, all of these transactions happen through the Fed's processing of transactions through reserve accounts (deposit accounts at the Fed). And by the way - job 1 of the Fed is to manage the US payments system through its management of the reserve accounts. Back to Spek's original question of what this has to do with anything investing related. Probably not much. But it has helped me focus on the stuff that counts and perhaps just as importantly - ignore the 99% of the zerohedge and even mainstream economist comments that are just pure hand-waving. But thankfully - understanding any of this stuff won't prevent one from doing fundamental analysis on specific stocks. wabuffo
  8. This is all interesting, but why should the average investor care about this? I don’t see any relevancy for myself and probably the vast majority of investors. I didn't mean to bore everyone with explanations of how the system actually works. I'll stop posting about it. wabuffo
  9. Since the end of March, very little net reserves have been added to the financial plumbing, on a net basis, even if the TGA has been steadily decreasing (minus 261.2B since March 31st to May 19th). There's definitely some weird stuff going on in the monetary system - but I think a lot of it is explainable in terms of how the plumbing works. First - since the end of March, there has been quite a bit of deficit spending with correspondingly little net Treasury security issuance to soak it up. This is as you correctly noted because the US Treasury has a mandate to run its account balance to ~$100b by the end of July (due to the snap-back of the debt ceiling legislation by the US Congress which was temporarily suspended on Aug. 1st, 2019). More about the lack of new Treasury debt in a second.... As we know, Treasury deficit spending creates both a new deposit in the banking system (bank liability) and a new reserve on deposit at the Fed (bank asset). So the banks have received ~$300b of new reserves of which they are stuffing half of it in reverse-repo transactions with the Fed. (Note the difference is because the Fed is also still buying Treasuries in the open market which also creates new reserves). Why are they doing this? They are doing this, because the US Treasury in its desire to run down its account balance, isn't issuing enough new Treasury securities to soak up the excess reserves from the deficit spending like they normally do (meanwhile, the Fed continues to buy Treasury securities in the open market -- which swaps a reserve to the bank for a Treasury security from the bank). In the old days (pre-GFC), when the US Treasury would keep its account balance extremely small (~$5b), net debt issuance roughly matched deficit spending (in excess of tax receipts). But not now. Because the US Treasury needs to get its balance down, you can see that only ~12% of its spending (and reserve creation) was removed by net debt issuance. This is what is flooding the system with too much cash and not enough interest-earning Treasury securities. So there is a rise in reverse repo and a general compression of Treasury yields along the curve. This will get worse before it gets better until the US Treasury is done with getting its account balance to target (unless Congress extends the debt ceiling moratorium). You notice that Treasury yields were rising early in the year but reached their peak on or about March 17th when the US Treasury simultaneously started Stimmie Checks III and started to run down its TGA. I think this sets up an interesting dynamic for a whipsaw in the markets - sometime in July. Yields will very slowly compress through early summer but when the TGA account hits its target and debt issuance surges to match deficit spending, yields could surprise the markets from their current complacency with an explosion upwards through the back half of 2021. If there is also a move to raise corporate tax rates that the market perceives as real (I'm not sure the votes are there for that in Congress) - it could get ugly for equities (that's because $1 of pre-tax earnings will be worth a bit less after-tax plus the discount factor will go up). That's not a prediction - just a scenario to think about among many scenarios for the macro environment. wabuffo
  10. Live shot of current new ideas landscape for me right now. wabuffo
  11. does anyone know if overall Berkshire Hathaway had a good return on Wells Fargo since it got involved a decade ago... I don't know the answer to this - but Buffett first made WFC a major holding in 1990-91 when the double whammy of a national recession and a severe downturn in the SoCal defense industry post-Cold War raised fears about potentially large WFC's loan book losses. Wells was mainly a California bank back then. Keep in mind that this is also before Norwest bought/merged with WFC in the late 90s and took the Wells Fargo name for the combined bank. Norwest's leaders were Kovacevich/Stumpf and they pushed out the old WFC management and brought in their aggressive/arrogant style to the WFC. I think it was like a 10-20 bagger for Buffett til the Norwest merger. After that it wasn't a great CAGR right up to the GFC but before the crash (though both Buffett and Munger were buying more right up to 2007, IIRC). And of course, while it did fine from a low-cost base after the GFC, it has an asset-cap now due to its bad behavior. These are turning points one sometimes has to pay attention to as the brand can endure for awhile while new management ruins the franchise. Boeing/McDonnell Douglas is another good example of this. Even though Boeing "took over" McDonnell Douglas in the late 90s, it was the McDonnell Douglas execs who really took over and some say replaced the engineering culture of Boeing with more of a financial/engineering culture of McDonnell-Douglas. It can take a decade but the rot starts to emerge. wabuffo
  12. Thanks for this great idea Wabuffo - and explanation on DISCK vs A/B - sold at the open. Interesting. I had sold half my position in DISCK when it hit $65, then bought it back in a tax-deferred account at $30-$31 after the Archegos blow-up thinking it was a trading sardine. But I'm going to hold now. Malone and his managers have a great track record maximizing very large, underperforming assets they acquire from smaller base businesses (CHTR + TWC cable). There's a lot of pro-forma cash flow here to play with in the combined HBO/Turner/Discovery/HGTV media assets. I was less enthused about Discovery by itself but am more enthused about the combination. Plus - Discovery is collapsing its multiple-class share structure into a single class after the merger, so owning the K-class, I think one gets an additional scoop of return via the arb to the single class. wabuffo
  13. Where was the last time that they did the secondary offer? In 2017. History repeats because in late 2015, early 2016 - everything oil-related collapsed in price (KNOP included - down to single-digits, IIRC). Mgmt waited for the stock to recover in price and did a couple of secondaries in 2017 (at ~$22) for a few dropdowns. wabuffo
  14. Given it's still paying 10%+ dividend, why not just keep it to continue to collect the divs... Its not a 10% yield - this is a melting ice cube. Part of its dividend is return of capital. If it doesn't do any more dropdowns, then it would be in run-off and slowly liquidating. Per their IR website, only two-thirds of the distribution is a return of profits, the other third is a return of capital. So you have to adjust the yield. It's really paying you a $1.37 dividend on, say, a $20 share price -- or a 6.8% yield (still attractive). The rest of the quarterly distribution is giving you back your capital. That's why KNOP has to continue to make capital calls on you to finance more dropdowns. To its credit, mgmt has been very good about only doing those secondaries when cost of capital is low enough. Unlike others in the shipping industry who routinely soak their shareholders at the worst times. wabuffo
  15. Getting close to unloading KNOP. Somewhere between $20-$22, KNOP will do a secondary as part of funding the dropdowns that are sitting with its sponsor right now. KNOP has managed this beautifully. wabuffo
  16. I'm sure I'm going against the consensus here but I'd rather own Chinese RMB than USD, today and for the next decade(s) to come. The last person I remember making such a definitive statement was Giselle Bundchen ("pay me in Euros! I don't even get out of bed for USD!") I think it was in Nov. 2007.... https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-491838/Supermodel-Gisele-Bundchen-I-wont-bed-US-dollars.html Sad trombone song for Giselle...... Good news is I hear her husband gets paid well...and in USD! wabuffo
  17. I personally think we should crater the economy every once in a while because it's healthy ... The United States used to be on a gold standard, had no central bank and no income tax. I mean what could be better than that Ayn Randian ideal ("really low taxes, sound money")? And yet, we would have a depression every 15-25 years. Is that healthier? Now we debase the currency bit-by-bit and come in with fiscal guns blazing at the first sign of economic trouble. MMTers say that's better. I honestly don't know if it is. Perhaps its too early to know for sure how this new "model" will do. Not to get political, but we like to think that as a democracy we want freedom. As I get older, I sometimes think that's not what we actually want. We don't want freedom, we want comfort - and we are willing to trade some freedom for it. That's because true freedom - in the purest libertarian ideal of no government involvement - is just too wild, wild west for most people. So we settle. wabuffo
  18. why not just run virtually unlimited deficits We already do - pretty much year-in, year-out. We tried to run a surplus in 1998-2001 and cratered the economy from 2000-2002. For the public sector (Fed govt) to run a surplus, the private sector has to run a deficit (i.e, borrow to maintain consumption). To this day, I am convinced that the surpluses of '09-01 were one of the primary factors that led to the borrowing binge that was the mortgage crisis of the early aughts. wabuffo
  19. More CASH, at 3X what I paid a year ago. 10% position now. Diamond hands, never sell...... LOL wabuffo
  20. I don't know if its transitory or not.... but to play devil's advocate. You have three things that are causing an absolutely booming economy 1) very good fiscal policy (to put it mildly - two stimulus checks in one quarter) 2) for now, terrific tax policy (low personal and corporate tax rates) 3) recovery from shutdowns That's a policy cocktail for 6% GDP growth, if not more in 2021. Meanwhile supply chains are trying to ramp back up while demand outstrips their initial start-up curves. I'm not surprised that price is being used to clear demand for the time being. In addition, demand for US dollars and US dollar assets are through the roof. We've got to stop thinking in terms of Phillips Curve nonsense - ie that strong economic growth is inflationary. Now perhaps inflation is coming - but IMHO, it won't happen unless fiscal policy makes a big mistake like implementing the full suite of Biden tax increases being proposed. That will definitely be inflationary. Of course, I really don't know and could be wrong. wabuffo
  21. Dr. Gold doesn't seem worried..... FWIW wabuffo
  22. https://apps.newyorkfed.org/markets/autorates/tomo-results-display?SHOWMORE=TRUE&startDate=01/01/2000&enddate=01/01/2000 31 participants enter into $142b of reverse-repos with the Fed. That's a new recent record since the Fed bumped up the limits. So in reverse repo, the banks give the Fed bank reserves and receive from the Fed a one-day borrow of US Treasury securities. Since banks are sitting on $3.7t of bank reserves - this represents almost 4% of total US commercial banks reserve balances. BTW - this reverse repo number is growing just about every day. Sucking and blowing, the Fed is..... wabuffo
  23. I'll start a new topic to discuss - if you like. I think their technological edge will last for quite a while. wabuffo
  24. IDN - Intellicheck. Very speculative micro-cap. Could be a mistake.
  25. 10yr/30yr yields are already back towards pre-COVID levels so while it is nice to see the extended issuance Unfortunately the Bank of Canada bought a large portion of them - thus converting long-term fixed government debt to extremely short-term variable government debt. For example - the Govt of Canada has issued $14.9b 2.75% bonds due in 2048 and the Bank of Canada bought 40% (~$6b). In so doing, the BoC swapped central bank reserves to acquire these. At some point, the BoC (and therefore the Federal govt) will be paying more than 2.75% on that $6b - perhaps for a long time and at much higher rates. Some of you may say - "well by buying 40% of that issue, the BoC helped the Federal Govt get that low rate on the other 60%. That is false. Federal govt's spend first, creating financial assets in the private sector banking system. The debt issuance (as I've explained before) is just a bank reserve maintenance function and not actual borrowing. Central bank policy makes no sense to me. wabuffo
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