This Tuesday, Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen said in an interview that interest rates might have to rise a bit—not much—at some point in the future. This utterly mild and obvious statement instantly rattled stocks, bonds, gold, and other markets.
To be clear; there was no crash.
Nothing melted down or leapt in a big way.
The Secretary’s remarks were quickly walked back, but even before then, markets started reversing their initial, knee-jerk reactions.
I suspect that Yellen was doing Powell a favor, floating the notion as a trial balloon so they could see what the market reaction to even the tiniest hint of tightening might be. We’ll never know, of course, but officials like this always plan what they want to save very carefully in advance.
Whether this was deliberate or not, the market’s instant reaction provided very telling data; any talk about tapering will make the last tantrum look like a quiet sigh.
But there must be some tapering—and actual tightening—at some point. The Fed can’t just keep expanding its balance sheet forever. No government, not even the US government can print and spend without limit. “Everyone” knows this, at least at some level.
There are analysts on financial media calling for a healthy correction of 10% or so when the inevitable talk of tightening does come from the Fed.
I think it could be much worse than that.
I think we could finally see the other “COVID-19 shutdown shoe” drop, creating a bigger, badder, and meaner market crash on Wall Street than we saw in March of 2020.
Reasons why any substantial correction on Wall Street could easily turn into a major meltdown include:
My sense from monitoring financial media is that “everyone” is skittish. Investors are aware how fragile and artificial the high on Wall Street is. The most nervous ones—or those with the most to lose—will bolt at the first real sign of trouble. And then the avalanche should begin…
I’m not predicting this.
I’ve resisted doing so since this “second shoe-drop crash” failed to appear last year. It seems well-deserves, but the off-the-charts easy fiscal and monetary policies could keep the party going this year.
Maybe even next year.
I doubt that, but I’m sure that the longer the party lasts, the more wicked the hangover when it’s done.
Switching metaphors, what I’m saying now is that the market response to Yellen’s mild—intentional or accidental—words tells me that the market balloon is floating in a room full of pins.
As investors become aware that the party is ending, the rush for the doors is unlikely to be an orderly, healthy, 10% correction. It’s more likely to be a panicked stampede that leaves many crushed.
That would ultimately be very bullish for gold bugs like me—but we’d have to go through the crash with everyone else first.
This remains one of the most frequent questions I get. I’ve answered before, but here’s my take:
These sobering reminders lead to an inescapable follow-on question:
If nothing escapes a market crash, why invest or speculate in anything now?
The answer is simply that we don’t know when the next major crash will be. It’s true that it could happen at the drop of a hat—it could start tomorrow. But it’s also true that it might not happen this year, or next, or even for many years.
The opportunity cost of sitting on a huge pile of cash, waiting for the next market crash is high.
Given that there were clear warning signs before the crash of 2008 (well, maybe not clear to the likes of Ben Bernanke, but clear enough to contrarians), I plan to make money speculating until it’s time to head for the exits. I understand that I’ll take some losses when the bloodbath starts. But I use my Upside Maximizer strategy to take profits as I go, so unless the next crash does start tomorrow, I should be able to make more money before then.
That’s my plan, anyway.
Readers of the Independent Speculator will be able to see exactly how I implement it, down to the day I act and the price I pay for every speculation I make.
But I’ll continue covering the markets free of charge here in the Speculator’s Digest, so all my readers will know when I think it’s time to get out of harm’s way.
Caveat emptor,
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