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Today’s Points:

85% of Something Beats 100% of Nothing

National capitalism is here. Nvidia Corp. and AMD Inc. will be permitted to sell H20 chips to China in return for a 15% cut to the US government. Such crude intervention doesn’t, arguably, count as capitalism. And yet US stocks were largely flat for the day. Chipmakers themselves have surged ever since the administration’s 90-day tariff delay back in April. They’re unscathed:

For now, investors think they can put up with such interference. This even extends to the currency market, where backlash to US trade policy had been strongest. Trump 2.0 transactionalism damaged the dollar as foreigners questioned whether the US had the strong institutions needed to be a reliable counterparty. But the downward trend seems to be over, and the currency is in the beginnings of a recovery:

This is all the more remarkable as institutions believe US equities are overvalued. The share of global fund managers surveyed by Bank of America Securities who think so has risen to a record 91%:

And yet, the flow of money from US to European equities has stopped. Fund managers are stepping back into the US, and exiting the euro zone:

This is partly because economic optimism is back. Worries about a potential hard landing have been soothed by the global economy’s successful avoidance of any severe impact from tariffs to date. The odds of such an outright downturn are as low as they have ever been since BofA started asking this question more than two years ago:

The natural corollary is that the risk of overheating should rise. But in a bizarre conjunction, fund managers think both that inflation will rise, and that rates will fall:

Further — and this is extraordinary — most of BofA’s respondents believe the next Fed chair will resort to quantitative easing or yield curve control, desperate expedients that are hard to justify outside the hardest of landings:

QE is a desperation tactic of buying bonds and putting them on a central bank balance sheet that was pioneered during Japan’s deflationary morass. The Fed used it to inject liquidity, or effectively print money, after the Global Financial Crisis and during Covid-19. It continued — in hindsight unwisely — into 2022, allowing inflation to take hold. Years of unwinding the Fed’s balance sheet have only brought it back to its 2020 level. If there is a risk of inflation (of which we will learn much more in the July CPI report shortly after you receive this), then there’s no possible justification for QE — but most fund managers expect exactly that:

How to square this circle? Investors are grasping that fiscal dominance, or financial repression, is the order of the day. The US debt burden takes priority, taxes won’t be hiked to fix it, and so people will be forced to lend to the government for cheap (as happens with QE). Shareholders have to put up with the government muscling in on their share of the action, as with the cut of China sales that chipmakers are paying.

Guardrails against such behavior have all failed in the last seven months — neither Congress, nor the courts, nor (mostly non-existent) retaliation by other countries, nor the financial markets have thwarted the imposition of the highest tariffs in a century. The assumption is that the rest of the America First agenda will go through, too. 

Markets are taking this with equanimity because they can live with it. To quote Ian Harnett of Absolute Strategy: “85% of something is better than 100% of nothing.” Markets are inherently transactional. Others might have a problem with a government behaving this way, but traders can treat it as business as usual. 

Monday brought news that the White House has widened the field of candidates for the Fed chairmanship to include several current governors. Rather than firing the incumbent, Jerome Powell, which is legally and constitutionally dubious, this move maximizes leverage over the entire committee. Each knows that their chance of landing the big job will rise if they vote for a cut. Thus government control over the Fed is perceived to increase. 

Team of rivals? Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg

Financial repression isn’t great. The QE era from 2009 to 2016 was marred by sluggish growth and deepening inequality. But it was good for asset prices. 

There are still problems with the market’s equanimity. Russell Napier of Orlock Advisors argues that QE is directly inflationary. If prices continue to rise, as many expect, then the government will have to force savings institutions to buy government debt. They’ll need to sell stock to do so, so this QE might not help the stock market.

Second, national capitalism like this involves repatriation of capital. That would be a potential disaster for the US as foreign holdings of American stocks far exceed US stakes in foreign securities. Germany and Japan might be surprising beneficiaries. 

The story isn’t over. But for now, the US gets what it wants, and the stock market can rally on. 

Baked Alaska

The US-Russia summit on Friday will mark Donald Trump’s most serious attempt to get the Kremlin to ease back its aggression against Ukraine. It potentially paves the way for a ceasefire. The US president hasn’t kept his promise to end the war within 48 hours of returning to office, and his tactics of pressuring European allies while sidelining Kyiv haven’t yielded peace. The Oval Office humiliation of Volodymyr Zelenskiy prompted a sharp decline for the dollar as Europeans decided the US could no longer be relied upon. 

So the war grinds on, though it has largely fallen from the headlines. With fatigue setting in on all sides, a resolution is urgent, but neither nation is willing to make meaningful concessions. Having calmed India-Pakistan and Armenia-Azerbaijan, among others, the president’s confidence in his conflict-resolution skills is sky-high.

Aftermath of a Russian attack in Kyiv. Photographer: Tetiana Dzhafarova/AFP

It’s safe to say the stakes in the Russia-Ukraine war are higher. As Tina Fordham of Fordham Global Foresight notes, European leaders’ initial reaction to Ukraine’s exclusion from the meeting shows that they view this as very important. Without Kyiv’s involvement, it’s hard to see anything meaningful emerging from Anchorage:

Their immense concern is that a bilateral Trump-Putin meeting would result in a fait accompli, a deal that Ukraine would be forced to take, which would only mean an almost guaranteed relapse of the conflict. And that is a disconnect between Trump’s objective, which is to end the war and the bloodshed.  

European defense stocks give another clue as to how important this. Germany’s historic move in March to relax borrowing limits and increase defense spending sparked a huge rally, which the summit has at last prompted investors to reassess. The odds of a ceasefire remain low, but the market thinks demand for weaponry could fall:

European leaders also reject Trump’s suggestion of a swap of territory between the combatants, arguing that “international borders must not be changed by force.” But the EU says current battle lines should be the “starting point of negotiations.” Christopher Smart of the Arbroath Group raises several questions:

What if Putin gives in to European demands for an immediate ceasefire without committing to withdraw Russian troops? What if Europeans promise never to station troops on Ukrainian territory? What if Putin agrees to allow some limited European weapons sales to Kyiv, betting they will run out of money soon enough?

Ultimately, Smart notes that European defense stocks would fly on any lopsided deal that rewards Russia’s aggression, with oil prices likely to slump on even the whiff of looser sanctions on Russian oil — and fulfilling a key Trump goal in the process. If it prompted a renewed flight from holding assets in the US, it would fulfill another administration goal by weakening the dollar. 

Individual companies will have to interpret what the outcome means for their operations and risk exposure. That could be difficult. Westwood Group’s Drew Miyawaki emphasizes that understanding a company’s exposure to authoritarian regimes is crucial.

Beyond Europe, markets appear to have long since moved past the 2022 invasion, implying Friday’s meeting has little potential to trigger a significant market shift. BCA Research’s Marko Papic argues that for markets, the war ended in September 2022:

That is when the last bit of alpha evaporated. It was when Ukraine managed to reconquer Kharkiv that their [Russia] offensive stalled. That was the moment when everybody realized that Kyiv was not going to fall. The Russians and Ukrainians were kind of equally matched, more or less. And that there was no real danger to the Western alliance, NATO, oil supply, and soft commodities like wheat. 

This dashboard shows how much trouble the conflict wreaked on markets:

Regardless, potential sanctions on Russian oil importers could change things — and may well have brought Putin to Anchorage. Currently, India faces an additional tariff for its imports from Russia. Papic warns that the sanctions could expand to other countries if Anchorage doesn’t live up to Trump’s expectations. In that scenario, prices could rise by as much as $10 per barrel, testing the president’s preference for lower prices — which may convince Putin that the sanctions won’t happen.

Richard Abbey

Survival Tips

A few weeks of summer are left. Here are recommendations to cool yourself on the beach with some Icelandic noir. Apart from Arnaldur Indridason, I’d recommend Blackout by Ragnar Jonasson (set in the remote north coast of Iceland, featuring kidnapping, murder, sexual abuse and suicide, by a writer who recently co-authored a book with the prime minister), Thirty Days of Darkness by Jenny Lund Madsen, about a Danish literary novelist who goes to Iceland to write a murder mystery and (you guessed it) stumbles across a murder, and The Legacy by Yrsa Sigurdardottir, which starts with the most breathtakingly dark scene I’ve ever read. How did she even think of it? I get the feeling Iceland would have a much bigger population than 400,000 if they would just stop murdering each other — and yet apparently it has the world’s lowest murder rate. I really want to go there. Enjoy.

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