This post The Next Financial Crisis Is Right on Schedule (2019) appeared first on Daily Reckoning.
After 10 years of unprecedented goosing, some of the real economy is finally overheating: costs are heating up, unemployment is at historic lows, small business optimism is high, and so on — all classic indicators that the top of this cycle is in.
Financial assets have been goosed to record highs in the everything bubble.Buy the dip has worked in stocks, bonds and real estate — what’s not to like?
Beneath the surface, the frantic goosing has planted seeds of financial crisis which have sprouted and are about to blossom with devastating effect. There are two related systems-level concepts which illuminate the coming crisis: the S-Curve and non-linear effects.
The S-Curve (illustrated below) is visible in both natural and human systems.The boost phase of rapid growth/adoption is followed by a linear phase of maturity in which growth/adoption slows as the dynamic has reached into the far corners of the audience/market: everybody already caught the cold, bought Apple stock, etc.
The linear stage of maturity is followed by a decline phase that’s non-linear.Linear means one unit of input yields one unit of output. Non-linear means one unit of input yields 100 unit of output.
In the first case, moving one unit of snow clears a modest path. In the second case, moving one unit of snow unleashes an avalanche.
The system isn’t stable. It’s brittle and fragile. Eventually some non-linear dynamic manifests: a blight that’s resistant to the herbicide destroys the crop, an insect that’s resistant explodes out of nowhere and eats the crop, etc.
Pushing the system to an extreme only made it more vulnerable to an increasingly broad range of disruptors.
Systems made to appear stable by brute-force application of extremes will never be stable. Stability arises from all the features erased by brute-force application of extremes.
The previous two bubbles that topped/popped in 2000-01 and 2008-09 both exhibited non-linear dynamics that scared the bejabbers out of the central bank/state authorities accustomed to linear systems.
In a panic, former Fed chair Alan Greenspan pushed interest rates to historic lows to inflate another bubble, thus insuring the next bubble would manifest even greater non-linear devastation.
Ten years after the 2008-09 Global Financial Meltdown, analysts are still trying to understand what happened.
For example, the new book Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World by Adam Tooze is an attempt to autopsy the meltdown and investigate the mindset and assumptions that led to the panicky bailouts and frantic goosing of a third credit/asset bubble — the bubble which is about to pop with even greater non-linear effects.
This is the nature of non-linear dynamics: everything is tightly tied to everything else. Tightly bound/connected systems are hyper-coherent, i.e. every component is tightly bound/correlated to other components.
This is how the relatively modest-sized subprime mortgage market ($500 billion) almost toppled the entire $200 trillion global financial market.
The vast imbalances created by 10 years of unceasing goosing will unleash a non-linear avalanche of reversions to the mean and rapid unwinding of extremes.
Consider the impact on hedges, a necessary function of the financial system. With yields so low, the cost of hedging negatively impacts returns, so hedging has been abandoned, trimmed or distilled down to magical-thinking (shorting volatility as the “can’t lose” hedge for all circumstances).
With shorting volatility being the one-size-fits-all hedge, the signaling value of volatility has been distorted. The same can be said of other measures: the information value of traditional financial signals have been lost due to manipulation and/or goosing.
The interconnectedness of global markets means a small blaze in a distant market can quickly become a conflagration. Put these two together and you get a perfect setup for crisis and crash:
Nobody really knows anything because the signals have been distorted, but everyone thinks they know everything — sell volatility and buy the dip. It works great until it doesn’t.
Meanwhile, beneath the “best economy ever” the rot is accelerating. For example, empty storefronts are proliferating throughout New York City’s neighborhoods, This is an example of the distortions that will be unwound in the next financial crisis.
Desperate for yield in the near-zero yield world engineered by central banks, investors have piled into commercial real estate and overpaid for buildings as the bubbles in rents and valuations expanded in tandem.
These owners are now trapped: their lenders demand long-term leases that lock in nosebleed rents, but back in the real world, no business can survive paying nosebleed rents, and agreeing to long-term leases in this environment is akin to committing financial suicide.
If you actually want to make a profit, it’s impossible to do so paying current commercial rent rates. And if you want to retain the absolutely critical flexibility you’ll need to adjust as conditions change, you can’t sign a long-term lease.
Everyone signing a long-term lease today will be declaring bankruptcy in 2019 when the recession trims sales but leaves expenses unchanged.
In other words, neither small business nor the bottom 90% of households can afford this “best economy ever.”
The financial markets have completely disconnected from reality, and the process of reconnection will unravel all the imbalances and extremes and deflate every interconnected bubble.
The current fantasy is that bubbles will never pop and recessions are a thing of the past; financial engineering can maintain bubbles and “growth” forever.
Everything is distorted to the point that those wandering the hall of mirrors believe they know everything they need to know to continue reaping fat returns on capital.
Conventional thinking that performs well in linear eras is disastrously ill-prepared to navigate non-linear eras like the one we’ll be entering in 2019 — right on schedule.
Regards,
Charles Hugh Smith
for The Daily Reckoning
The post The Next Financial Crisis Is Right on Schedule (2019) appeared first on Daily Reckoning.
From:: Daily Reckoning