Bank of America (BAC) Brace for a 'Big Collapse' - Here's Your Plan

According to recent data released by payroll processing firm ADP, private sector jobs surged by 497,000 in June, coming in at more than twice the expectations and reigniting fears of resumption in rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, which markets have been ignoring during the latest bull run.

Consequently, as the 2-year treasury yield hits a 16-year high amid a broad market selloff, a recent note by Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist for Bank of America Corporation (BAC), that, rather than seeing a long-lasting bull market, the jump represents a “big rally before big collapse” is seeming more credible than ever.

After ten consecutive and aggressive interest-rate hikes over the past year, the Fed opted for a pause citing concerns regarding economic growth and the need to assess lagged impact of policy.

However, in his remarks to Congress a week after the June 13-14 FOMC meeting, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank has “a long way to go” to bring inflation back to the Fed’s 2% goal.

Moreover, according to the meeting minutes, almost all Fed officials concurred to indicate further, albeit slower, tightening as inflation remains elevated at 4.6% and job openings outnumber available workers by a nearly 2-to-1 margin.

Gita Gopinath, first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), also echoed that central bankers “should continue tightening and importantly [interest rates] should stay at a high level for a while.”

Hence, with pent-up demand for travel and leisure during the pandemic responsible for the expectation-crushing employment numbers, with Leisure and Hospitality leading with 232,000 new hires, it would take irrational exuberance to extrapolate it to perpetuity. With a plausible risk of this tailwind losing momentum, the broader economy could be left high, dry, and strangled with increased borrowing costs.

This could intensify the creeping malaise of defaults and bankruptcies. Corporate defaults rose last month, with 41 in the U.S. so far this year. That’s more than double the same period last year, according to Moody’s Investors Service, which expects the global default rate to rise to 4.6% by the end of the year and 5% by April 2024, higher than the long-term average of 4.1%.

There isn’t much optimism to be found away from home, either. With Chinese recovery after years of strict Covid lockdowns fast losing steam, the slump in the country’s real estate forecasted to last for years, and the government unlikely to pursue an aggressive fiscal stimulus package, it’s unsurprising that global commodities have seen a more than 25% slump over the last 12 months as reflected by the S&P GSCI Commodities index, with Brent crude plunging 34.76% year-on-year despite OPEC’s output cuts coming into play.

Moreover, with the 20-member Eurozone bloc reporting GDP growth of -0.1% for the first quarter, with Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, and Greece reporting an economic quarter-on-quarter contraction, it is difficult to see where the demand that could make the Chinese manufacturing fire on all cylinders and lift the commodity prices is going to come from.

Amid this general doom and gloom, HSBC Asset Management’s warning that a U.S. recession is coming this year, with Europe to follow in 2024, is gaining credibility with each passing day.

Counterpoint

Financial journalists, including yours truly, are often guilty of propagating expert bias in the psychology of human misjudgment by quoting and referring to (undoubtedly well-meaning) economists, who, just like the fabled Chicken Little, convince themselves and others that the sky is falling with every falling acorn.

However, most economists are conspicuously absent from the Forbes list of billionaires and, perhaps even more conspicuously, have not been able to spot a single recession (including the ones in 1990, 2001, and 2008) since the Philly Fed survey started.

Hence, we could attribute their (of late) misfiring forecasts of the recession that’s always around the corner to the tendency of our flawed human minds to first come to a conclusion and then selectively filter facts that strengthen the argument.

Hence, the fact that a resilient economy has been able to successfully weather Covid-19, the bursting of the crypto and the FTX fraud, geopolitical conflicts, a tech bubble 2.0, supply chain shortages, globalization, banking failures, office vacancies, and higher interest rates (just to name a few), is creating a vacuum of cluelessness that narratives such as “rolling recession” and “richcession” are rushing to fill.

In his book Sapiens, historian Yuval Noah Harari interestingly classified chaos into two categories: First-Order Chaos which is unaffected by predictions about it, such as the weather, and Second Order Chaos, which responds and adjusts to predictions about it, such as economics and politics. Therefore, the fact that measuring and forecasting can change the subject makes the latter category infinitely harder to gauge.

Hence, while it is true that some industries are surely shrinking while the overall economy remains above water and major job cuts have been concentrated in higher-paying industries like technology and finance, it might be the widespread cognition about those phenomena that makes the sinking of the broader economy far less likely.

For instance, the federal government and employers in the hotel, retail, and even railroad industries are seeking to hire people who have been laid off by the tech giants.

Bottomline

Howard Marks, in one of his famed memos, wrote about an impressively obvious reply he usually provides whenever he is asked whether we’re heading toward a recession: whenever we’re not in a recession, we’re heading toward one.

However, nobody has any clue when exactly we will bump into one.

Hence, rather than being generals who are good at fighting the last war by building models that incorporate previous problems while being constantly blindsided by new issues, being diligent investors confident enough to increase their stakes in fundamentally strong business when Mr. Market wants to sell his way out could be a time-tested method to navigate the madness.

Financials – Conspicuously Underperforming

Underperforming Despite Tailwinds

The financial cohort has conspicuously underperformed the broader market for the majority of 2018. The group didn’t participate in the broader market performance in Q3 where the S&P 500 had its best quarter since 2013. Banks have had domestic and global economic expansion tailwinds at its back while posting accelerating revenue growth, increasing dividend payouts, engaging in a record number of share buybacks and benefiting from tax reform. Augmenting this economic backdrop is a record number of IPOs, a record number of global merger and acquisitions, rising interest rates, deregulation, and tax reform. Banks are benefiting in unique ways due to the consulting fees regarding mergers and acquisitions and trading around market volatility. All of these elements provide an ideal confluence that bodes well for the financial sector. JP Morgan (JPM), Citi (C), Wells Fargo (WFC), Goldman Sachs (GS) and Bank of America (BAC) seemed to be poised to continue to benefit from the favorable economic backdrop. Thus far in 2018 the financials have performed terribly considering the broader market performance and the aforementioned economic tailwinds. There’s negative sentiment that’s placed the financials in a holding pattern for much of 2018 over concerns of rapid interest rate increases and an inverted yield curve.

The Federal Reserve, Rising Interest Rates and Economic Strength

The Federal Reserve expects the economy to continue to strengthen and inflation to rise shortly. The economic strength coupled with the threat of inflation provides an environment that’s ripe for rising interest rates. The Federal Reserve has been very bullish on the domestic front and signaled that rate hikes will continue and may even accelerate its pace of rate hikes contingent on inflation and economic strength. There’s no question that the financials benefit from rising interest rates, and Bank of America(BAC) has one of the largest deposit bases among all banks and serves as a pure play on rising interest rates. Goldman Sachs (GS) has even branched out into consumer banking with its Marcus product so needless to say all big banks will benefit from their deposit bases.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell stated that the unemployment rate currently stands at 3.9%, near a 50-year low while core inflation is right around 2%. Powell said that these two metrics are part of a “very good” economy that boasts “a remarkably positive outlook” from forecasters. The central bank approved a quarter point hike rate in the funds rate that now stands at 2.25%, and the committee indicated that another rate hike would happen before the end of the year. 2019 will likely see three more rate hikes and 2020 will see one rate hike before pausing to assess the delicate balance of rising rates in the midst of a strong economy while taming inflation. Continue reading "Financials – Conspicuously Underperforming"

IBM – Blockchain Technology Becoming Ubiquitous

Noah Kiedrowski - INO.com Contributor - Biotech - Blockchain Technology


“What the internet did for communications, blockchain will do for trusted transactions.”
— Ginni Rometty, IBM Chief Executive Officer

Introduction

I introduced International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) as a play on the emerging blockchain technology segment earlier this year to augment its transition away from its dependency on legacy businesses to the future of cloud, artificial intelligence, and analytics. IBM has struggled to restore growth, posting 20+ consecutive quarters of declining revenue however IBM has posted back-to-back quarters of revenue growth as of late. This growth has come on heels of its long-term imperatives beginning to bear fruit in emerging high-value segments that has fundamentally changed its business mix while evolving its offerings to align with new age information technology demands. A new frontier of growth lies in the nascent blockchain technology as IBM is a first mover in this promising, emerging technology. As IBM transitions to quarterly revenue growth, in the backdrop of its evolution to emerging high-value segments (i.e., blockchain) the company presents a compelling investment opportunity considering its suppressed valuation. In addition to the evolving business mix in strategic imperatives, IBM offers a great dividend, share buyback program while continuously acquiring companies to drive the business into the future. Continue reading "IBM – Blockchain Technology Becoming Ubiquitous"

IBM - Blockchain Technology Driving Growth

Noah Kiedrowski - INO.com Contributor - Biotech - Blockchain


“What the internet did for communications, blockchain will do for trusted transactions.”
— Ginni Rometty, IBM Chief Executive Officer

Introduction

International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) has struggled in recent years to transition away from its dependency on legacy businesses to the future of cloud, artificial intelligence, and analytics. Despite this long transition of posting 20+ consecutive quarters of declining revenue, IBM has finally posted its first revenue growth in nearly six years. Its long-term imperatives are beginning to bear fruit in emerging high-value segments that has fundamentally changed its business mix while evolving its offerings to align with new age information technology demands. New talent has driven these long-term business initiatives in these key areas as ~50% of its employee base has been added to the company within the last five years. A new frontier of growth lies in the nascent blockchain technology as IBM is a first mover in this promising, emerging technology. As IBM transitions to quarterly revenue growth, per the recent guidance of low single-digit growth, in the backdrop of its evolution to emerging high-value segments (i.e., blockchain) the company presents a compelling investment opportunity. In addition to the evolving business mix, IBM offers a great dividend, share buyback program while continuously acquiring companies to drive the business into the future.

Blockchain Technology and Applications

Blockchain technology is the architecture that underpins the volatile cryptocurrency markets. This technology applies to enterprise applications since it employs a decentralized database, open ledger, and incorruptible transactional capabilities. Blockchain applies to any transactional business model whether it’s financial or goods being transacted. The open ledger concept within the blockchain makes it incorruptible as any changes need confirmation from multiple parties and any changes can be seen at any time with a permission blockchain. As a function of the decentralization, there’s no central repository or clearinghouse to be hacked or accessed. The blockchain speeds up and by-passes these intermediaries (i.e., a clearinghouse of the bank) to achieve transactions within minutes and not days (Figures 1 and 2). Continue reading "IBM - Blockchain Technology Driving Growth"