Are investors really buying bonds, betting on a squeeze higher?
Perhaps it’s just my Twitter feed. (Or are we calling it "X" now?)
I’m perplexed by the growing chatter around picking the bottom in bonds.
Warning: Picking bottoms is never a good look.
It’s unbecoming, especially when there are zero signs of a reversal. (The same applies to tops.)
I understand the Nasdaq 100 had its best first half – like, ever.
But what does that have to do with yield charts?
Rates continue to rise worldwide.
Here’s a look at Germany, France, Portugal, and US benchmark rates:
All are steadily grinding higher following explosive advances last year. Yet none have decisively resolved to the upside from their respective multi-month ranges.
Monday night, we held our July Monthly Conference Call, which Premium Members can access and rewatch here.
In this post, we’ll do our best to summarize the call by highlighting five of the most important charts and/or themes we covered, along with commentary on each.
We interrupt this raging bull market to update you on some historic positioning in the bond market that is sure to impact your portfolio, whether you like it or not.
Even if you don't trade bonds, this is really really important.
You see, I know it's easy to sit back and chill out with the S&P500 making new 52-week highs, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Dow Transportation Average making new 52-week highs and, of course, the Nasdaq100 making new 52-week highs after posting its best first half to a year EVER.
Market breadth continues to expand and sector rotation is frustrating the hell out of anyone trying to short this market.
The thing is, what even changed?
What happened that stocks have absolutely been ripping higher since last year?
Positioning.
It's not the economy that drives stocks. It certainly isn't fundamentals.
It's hard for me to have a conversation about the stock market without bringing up what's happening in bonds.
Think about it like this, the market cap of all US Stocks is somewhere around $40 Trillion. For the bond market it's over $120 Trillion.
Volatility in bonds tends to trickle down to other asset classes, especially stocks.
US Stocks really got going in the 4th quarter last year, once the US 10-year Note stopped falling in price.
I don't believe that was a coincidence.
But at this point, Large Speculators have on their most aggressive short position in bonds ever.
So in other words, what is historically the "dumb money", particularly at turning points, are betting more aggressively than ever that bond prices are going to fall and rates will now continue higher: