Amazing isn’t it? It was only back in H2 2018 when everybody but you (because you are as smart as I think you are or because you read NFTRH or nftrh.com) and me was unbelievably bearish about the TREASURY BOND BEAR MARKET!!!
Today… not so much. The herd is absolutely pile driving bonds right now.
I know this all too well because while my SHY (cash equiv.) position is doing well it’s not anything like the above and is basically – given relative position sizes – offsetting a position in this, which I am still holding with all the stubbornness of an angry contrarian.
The two positions are part of my at least temporarily interrupted yield curve steepener. Hilariously the spread is up almost 500% today and just barely not inverted.
And so the Continuum continues downward.
Here, let’s magnify it so see what it actually looks like with respect to recent history.
While I am not a bond expert I do know that the 30-year US Treasury bond is the debt riddled Uncle Sam’s promise to pay and in mass herding into the long bond investors are seeking the safety of UNC’s good faith and promises. No seriously, this is the last time they are going to conspire to break the bank and spend well beyond their means.
Spend, spend, spend, Bush, Obama, Trump, Congress: The chart above mentions the Fiscal Cliff and I distinctly remember laughing at the hissy fit the markets were having with all the hand wringing about ‘will they or won’t they?’ continue to spend off the charts. Oh yes, right. They. Always. Spend.
Anyway, you’re buying bonds right now? You’re funding a spend-o-holic that just keeps adding layers of excess, talks some talk about fiscal restraint and then adds more layers routinely until the thing rolls over, wheezes and exhausts itself – or until bond yields rebel.
Speaking of which, when – and it could still be a wait – the bond revulsion materializes, the herds clustering in bonds will be the food, the dupes funding the system yet again. A knock-on effect for me personally is that while the stock market is fairly bearish at the moment and could get more so (did you see FOX and CNN last night babbling on and on about the inverted yield curve as the cause of the market correction and its predictive powers about recessions?) this bond bubble makes me suspect of a hardened bear view on stocks.
If this is finally the great deflation, that’ll be one thing. But if it’s yet another inflationary operation in the making, the gun is loading for yet another cycle. The continuum has broken below all-time lows. Ooh, that’s scary. So is it real (deflationary crash) or Memorex (a shakeout of the inflationists before yields tear in the other direction with the force of a thundering herd breaking out of the slaughterhouse pen)?
This feedlot of bond investors is so massive you need to take an aerial view.