The real risk of a Fed rate cut

Key Points

  • ADP National Employment Report estimates that the private sector shed 32,000 jobs in November.
  • Traders are pricing in an 89% chance of a 25-basis-point rate cut by the Fed on December 10.
  • ISM Manufacturing and Services PMI shows inflation is not yet under control.
  • A rate cut will likely weaken the Dollar, increase demand for real assets, and drive up long-term yields.

The ADP National Employment report estimates that the economy lost 32,000 jobs in November, the 3-month moving average turning negative for the first time since the height of the pandemic in August 2020.

ADP Private Sector Jobs

Losses are heavily weighted toward small firms, which have taken a hit from tariffs, shedding 120,000 jobs in November, while mid-sized firms added 51,000 jobs and large firms 39,000.

ADP Private Sector Jobs

The Fed is expected to announce a 25-basis-point rate cut on December 10 in response to weak jobs data. Markets are pricing in an 89% probability of a cut, with the discount rate on 13-week T-Bills falling below the Fed’s current 3.75% to 4.00% target range for the fed funds rate.

3-Month T-Bill Discount Rate

Other parts of the economy remain resilient, with the ISM Services PMI increasing to 52.6% for November, well above the 48.6% breakeven level typical of past contractions.

ISM Services PMI

New orders also signal expansion, but the rate slowed to 52.9%.

ISM Services New Orders

Employment has improved over the past four months, but remains in a contraction.

ISM Services Employment

Most importantly, from the Fed’s perspective, 65.4% of enterprises reported increased prices, down from 70% in October but still reflecting strong inflationary pressures.

ISM Services Prices

The Manufacturing sector reported similar price rises in November, though the rate of increase is slowing.

ISM Manufacturing Prices

Financial Markets

The Chicago Fed National Financial Conditions Index edged higher to -0.522 for the week ending November 21.

Chicago Fed National Financial Conditions Index

Dynamic indicators, however, like Bitcoin below, continue to warn of a sharp contraction in financial market liquidity.

Bitcoin (BTC)

The secure overnight financing rate (SOFR) jumped to 4.12%, above the 4.0% rate the Fed charges on its standing repo facility (SRF), signaling that the Fed is struggling to control pricing in the $12 trillion repo market. Repo lending is primarily secured by US Treasury Bills and Notes, and a spike in the SOFR repo rate would trigger a sharp sell-off in the Treasury market.

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) & Interest on Reserve Balance (IORB)

Rising long-term yields in Japan and Europe are sucking liquidity out of US financial markets. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is also expected to hike its policy rate on December 18, with the 3-month Japanese Government Bill discount rate jumping to 0.633%, well above the current 0.50% policy rate.

Japanese Govt 3-Month Bill Discount Rate

A BOJ rate hike would likely trigger a sell-off in US financial markets as hedge funds unwind large carry trades funded in Japanese Yen.

The US Dollar Index broke support at 99 and is expected to fall sharply in December, taking a double hit from a Fed rate cut and a BOJ rate hike, which would narrow the current spread by an estimated 50 basis points.

Dollar Index

Treasury Markets

Long-term Treasury yields are softening in anticipation of a Fed rate cut, but could face a sell-off amid tightening liquidity.

10-Year Treasury Yield

Stocks

The S&P 500  also rallied in anticipation of a Fed rate cut, but again, the rally risks being undone by contracting liquidity.

S&P 500

Mag 7 technology stocks continue to show gains over the past 6 months, apart from Meta Platforms (META), with Alphabet (GOOGL) building an advantage in the competition to lead AI.

Magnificent 7 Technology Stocks

Small caps are also strengthening, with the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) testing resistance at 250.

Russell 2000 Small Cap ETF (IWM)

Gold & Silver

Gold is retracing to test support at $4,200, with high prices taming investor enthusiasm for the present.

Spot Gold

Silver is consolidating in a narrow band above support at $58 per ounce. Respect of support would confirm our target of $62.

Spot Silver

Energy Metals

Energy metals are another prospective inflation hedge for investors.

The Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM) broke resistance at 56, joining copper and lithium miners in an uptrend.

Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM)

The Sprott Copper Miners ETF (COPP) broke resistance at 31.50, confirming a fresh advance.

Sprott Copper Miners ETF (COPP)

Sprott Lithium Miners ETF (LITP) is also in an uptrend since breaking resistance at 11.

Sprott Lithium Miners ETF (LITP)

Conclusion

Forced to choose between its two mandates, the Fed seems willing to prioritize maintaining full employment ahead of stable prices. Cutting rates while the unemployment rate is low (below 5.0%) may please President Trump, who wants to run the economy hot, but risks a sharp rebound in inflation.

High inflation would lower the debt-to-GDP ratio but would likely increase outflows from US Treasury markets and raise long-term interest rates as international bond investors demand a higher risk premium. It would also later necessitate a sharp increase in interest rates to get the genie back in the lamp.

Falling Bitcoin prices and rising secure overnight funding rates in the $12 billion repo market signal tight liquidity in financial markets. Unwinding carry trades may destabilize financial markets if the Bank of Japan hikes its policy rate on December 18 as expected. A Fed rate cut and a BOJ rate hike would narrow the current carry trade spread by an estimated 50 basis points, risking a sharp sell-off in several trillion dollars of US assets financed in Yen.

The danger is that the Fed may reintroduce QE to stabilize the repo market, as it did during the last Powell pivot in September 2019.

Demand for gold, silver, and energy metals — copper, lithium, and uranium — is likely to increase as concerns over inflation grow.

Acknowledgments

Stocks fall, gold rises

Key Points

  • Bitcoin broke support at 100K, signaling that financial market liquidity is contracting.
  • Major stock indices and ETFs declined as Fed officials hosed down prospects of a December rate cut.
  • Copper and uranium miners are falling, indicating doubts over the AI infrastructure buildout.
  • Gold rallied to $4,200 per ounce, signaling a flight to safety.

Bitcoin broke long-term support at $100,000, signaling a financial market contraction.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Repo markets continue to signal stress, with the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) above the rate paid on reserve balances.

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) & Interest on Reserve Balance (IORB)

The $7 trillion in money market funds is already tapped out, attracted by the sizable premium of the SOFR above the overnight reverse repo rate offered by the Fed.

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) & Overnight Reverse Repo Rate

In 2023, the Fed lowered the overnight reverse repo rate (pink above) to encourage money market funds to shift their investments to the repo market. The $2.3 trillion outflow into the repo market helped offset the effects of the Fed’s securities sales (QT), creating the illusion of monetary tightening without actual tightening.

Fed Reverse Repo (RRP) Liabilities

Stocks

The Nasdaq QQQ ETF fell more than 2.0%. The lower Trend Index peak above zero indicates secondary selling pressure, which will likely test support at 590.

Invesco Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ)

Demand for copper and uranium is expected to increase, with AI hyperscalers projected to invest an estimated $5 trillion in data centers and related infrastructure. Copper is required for both electrical and cooling purposes, so hesitation in the Sprott Copper Miners ETF (COPP) suggests growing doubts over the AI buildout. A breach of support at 28 would be a bearish sign for the AI-heavy tech sector.

Sprott Copper Miners ETF (COPP)

Demand for uranium is also projected to grow, with the IEA forecasting that global electricity demand from data centers will more than double by 2030 to approximately 945 terawatt-hours (TWh). However, declining Trend Index peaks on the Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM) warn of rising selling pressure.

Sprott Uranium Miners ETF (URNM)

Gold

Gold rallied to test resistance at $4,200 per ounce as financial markets shifted to a risk-off stance. A breakout above $4,400 would offer a target of $5,000.

Spot Gold

Conclusion

Financial markets are signaling tighter liquidity, which will likely cause a secondary correction in stocks.

We are overweight in gold and gold miners, and underweight in high-multiple technology stocks.

We see long-term growth in copper and uranium, but are wary of a correction in the short-term.

Acknowledgments

How the SRF could blow up the Treasury market

Key Points

  • The Fed’s Standing Repo Facility (SRF) is designed to provide backup funding to the repo market during periods of liquidity stress.
  • The $12 trillion repo market is secured by government securities, normally USTs, and has largely replaced unsecured interbank lending.
  • However, hedge funds are taking advantage of the SRF to finance highly leveraged basis trades.

Unsecured interbank lending has largely been replaced by repo financing after the breakdown of trust in the global financial crisis of 2008.

A repo is short for repurchase agreement, where the borrower sells government securities, typically US Treasuries, with an agreement to repurchase them at a slight discount the following day. The repo (discount) rate, formally known as the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), has increased in importance as the repo market has grown to almost $12 trillion, overshadowing the widely known Fed Funds Rate (FFR). Both the SOFR and FFR are managed by the Fed through its open market operations.

A sharp spike in the repo rate in 2008 threatened to collapse the entire financial system. The Achilles heel of the banking system, and the reason for the Fed’s existence, is maturity mismatch. Borrowers take advantage of low interest rates in the short-term market and invest in long-term assets, capturing the wide spread. That works well until the yield curve inverts. Short-term rates spike upward as available credit contracts, causing a fire sale of long-term assets as borrowers scramble to raise cash to repay loans. A spike in the repo rate effectively serves as a margin call on long-term assets.

The first instance occurred during the 2008 subprime crisis, when the repo market ceased functioning, leading to a panicked sale of assets. Then, in 2019, repo rates spiked after the Fed’s QT had lowered bank reserves, reducing the supply of bank credit available to fund repos. The spike led to the famous Powell pivot, where the Fed abruptly ended QT and expanded its balance sheet (QE) to inject liquidity into financial markets.

Again in March 2020, repo rates spiked during the COVID pandemic, causing a sell-off of US Treasuries financed through highly leveraged basis trades.

The chart below shows the spread between the repo rate (SOFR) and the fed funds rate (FFR) in 2019 and 2020.

SOFR-FFR

The Fed responded by establishing the Standing Repo Facility (SRF), through which borrowers can obtain repo finance directly from the Fed when there is a shortage in the repo markets. The SRF acts as a market stabilizer, limiting increases in the SOFR and preventing a repeat of earlier repo market collapses. The underlying purpose is to avoid a fire sale of US Treasuries if the repo market ceases to function.

Hedge funds have increasingly tapped the repo market to finance highly-leveraged basis trades, which take advantage of the spread between repo rates and the implied discount on Treasury futures. The SRF has encouraged these trades by limiting the downside risk. Hedge funds pocket the spread when repo rates are low, and rely on the SRF to save them if rates rise.

We suspect that the size of leverage investment in US Treasuries is greater than commonly believed. Over the past decade, offshore investment in US Treasuries has swung from foreign central banks to private sector investment, primarily through offshore financial centers favored by hedge funds.

Basis trades are likely to continue growing as long as the Fed maintains a standing repo facility to stabilize the repo market. The SRF enables hedge funds to enter profitable leveraged trades on US Treasuries with limited downside risk.

As Charlie Munger said, “Show me the incentive and I’ll tell you the outcome.”

Stocks

The S&P 500 remains tentative after last week’s contraction in financial market liquidity.

S&P 500

A contraction in the ADP’s four-week moving average of private sector job creation to -11,250 has not helped.

ADP Private Sector Jobs - NER Pulse

Financial Markets

The secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) remains above the rate paid to banks on reserve balances (IORB), indicating financial market stress.

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) & Interest on Reserve Balance (IORB)

Bitcoin is re-testing support at 100K, warning that liquidity remains tight.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Dollar & Gold

The dollar is weakening as prospects for a December rate cut improve.

Dollar Index

Silver rallied to test its previous high at $54 per ounce.

Spot Silver

Gold followed, with a rise to $4,230 per ounce. A breakout above the resistance level at $4,400 would offer a target of $5,000.

Spot Gold

Conclusion

Basis trades funded through repo markets are expanding as the Fed’s standing repo facility (SRF) enables hedge funds to profit with limited downside risk while the Fed acts as a backstop.

Basis trades increase the vulnerability of US Treasury markets as hedge funds are highly leveraged short-term holders of USTs. In the past, unwinding basis trades have caused a sharp rise in Treasury yields when repo rates spike. The SRF may prevent a repeat of past spikes but provides an incentive for hedge funds to take on greater risk, expanding the size of their basis trades and increasing Treasury market vulnerability.

Financial markets remain unsettled, with Bitcoin testing long-term support at 100K. Gold and silver rallied, and breakout to new highs would offer targets of $5,000 and $62 per ounce, respectively.

Acknowledgments

Better Buckle Up

Key Points

  • Bitcoin broke through the band of support at 110K, warning of a correction.
  • The secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) spiked above the interest rate paid on reserve balances at the Fed, warning of a sharp contraction in liquidity in financial markets.

Better buckle up. Bitcoin serves as the canary in the coal mine for financial markets.

A breach of the band of support between 108K and 110K warns of a correction that is likely to spread to major stock indices such as the Nasdaq and S&P 500.

Bitcoin (BTC)

The S&P 1500 Regional Banks Index fell sharply this week as markets were spooked by three large defaults, which appear to involve fraudulent disclosure. A peak below the 50-day weighted moving average and a Trend Index peak below zero both warn of selling pressure.

S&P 1500 Regional Banks Index

This week everyone is beared up on regional banks (again). Zions lost $50mn on a loan. A loan equal to 0.08% of their loan book. Yes, less than 0.1%. There have been a series of fraudulent loans uncovered and investors are worried these are signs of a bigger problem. The cockroach metaphor.

Yes, it’s scary for 3 fraudulent loans to come up all at once (Tricolor, First Brands and the Zions loan), but rather than it being a systemic problem is it possible that after the Tricolor loan went bad, every bank immediately began scrubbing every loan for irregularities and that is why these disclosures are coming up so quickly? On a practical basis it’s hard to have a systemically high level of loans be fraudulent. Possible, but hard. Bank loan underwriting has been around for a long time, and it’s pretty stringent, which is why private credit is doing so well. If you have an irregular profile and want a risky loan, go to a private credit fund, not a super regulated regional bank. (YWR)

Financial Markets

The secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) spiked to 15 basis points above the rate paid to commercial banks on their reserve balances at the Fed (IORB), indicating that large banks are reluctant to lend in the repo market despite the collateralized security.

Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) & Interest on Reserve Balance (IORB)

SOFR is the rate charged by banks on overnight borrowing secured by Treasury securities as collateral (repo).

Banks usually are comfortable lending in the repo market, and the SOFR typically trades at a discount to IORB because of the preference for high-quality UST collateral. The SOFR spike above the IORB warns that the financial markets are under stress, with a sharp contraction in liquidity as lending dries up.

The Fed will likely intervene, injecting liquidity to calm the markets, and a rate cut at the next FOMC meeting on October 28-29 is now almost inevitable.

Gold

Gold hesitated at $4,300 per ounce and will likely retrace to test support. A correction that respects support at $4,000 would signal a fresh advance with a target of $4,600.

Spot Gold

Conclusion

Be prepared for a volatile week ahead.

The Bitcoin breach of support at 110K and a spike in the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR) warn of a sharp contraction in liquidity. We expect a sharp fall in stocks unless the Fed intervenes to inject liquidity before markets open on Monday.

Acknowledgments