The Doomsday Loop

  • Rule of thumb: When central bankers fret, you should panic
  • Why ETFs will add fuel to the next market meltdown: A case study
  • Gold bugs breathe easier
  • A whiff of inflation
  • Vintage tobacco ads as a health department violation… a reader challenges David Stockman’s ETF thesis… the proper rejoinder to “You can’t eat gold”… and more!

Yikes… If central bankers are worried about panic selling in the markets, the problem must be worse than they’re letting on.
After all, the Federal Reserve is the last bunch of people to figure anything out. Ben Bernanke dismissed the notion of a housing bubble in 2005: “We’ve never had a decline in house prices on a nationwide basis. What I think is more likely is that house prices will slow, maybe stabilize.”
In the aftermath of the housing/financial crisis, the Fed has confidently predicted — year after year — that the U.S. economy would soon return to “robust” annual growth of 3% or more. It remains stuck in low gear around 2%.
So if Fed economists are catching onto a risk in the markets, you can be sure it’s an even bigger deal than they make it out to be.
“N.Y. Fed Warns Asset Managers Are Vulnerable to ‘Runs’,” says a headline in this morning’s Financial Times.
Research by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York takes on the conventional wisdom that an open-ended investment fund will never experience a run and will never have to dump its assets in a fire sale.
“The concern,” sums up the salmon-colored rag, “is that while most funds have cash buffers to deal with redemptions when they suffer smaller losses, big hits can cause withdrawals that overwhelm these cash reserves and force asset managers to sell hard-to-trade securities.
“That may in turn require them to sell at fire sale prices, hurting the fund’s performance further. This means that investors have an incentive to withdraw their money early — triggering a similar dynamic as in a bank run and hurting markets more widely.”
The New York Fed researchers focused largely on bond funds. But what they’re describing is the same phenomenon David Stockman was telling us about here yesterday. Only he was applying it to the biggest financial innovation of the 21st century.
We speak of the exchange-traded fund. “The number of ETFs has grown from about 600 to 5,500 in the last 12 years,” says David, “and assets under management (AUM) have exploded from $450 billion to $3 trillion.
“That’s a 21% compound rate of growth since 2005. Even more significantly, almost all of that growth occurred after the 2008 financial crisis.”
It’s David’s contention that whenever the next stock market crash arrives, ETFs will serve as a “doomsday loop” that will accelerate the selling like so…

  • As the market declines, day traders and computer algorithms will sell ETFs
  • The managers of the ETFs will have to dump small illiquid stocks within the ETFs to meet redemptions
  • The selling of those stocks will drag down the indexes that underpin the ETFs
  • And that will beget only more selling of the ETFs.

As the old commercial used to say, “And so on, and so on, and so on…”
For an example of a vulnerable ETF where this “doomsday loop” phenomenon will be in play, look no further than one of the big biotech ETFs — the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB).
When you buy IBB, you buy a “basket” of 150 biotech stocks. But what are you getting, exactly? “Even a cursory review of its particulars demonstrates that its current $1 trillion market cap has absolutely no rhyme or reason,” says David.
“This wildly diverse basket of biotech companies posted collective net income of about $26 billion in the most recent last 12 months period.” But all of that income was generated by just four companies — the “Big Four” biotechs of Amgen, Gilead, Celgene and Biogen.
“By contrast,” David goes on, “the bottom 125 companies in this ETF basket had more than $15 billion of aggregate net losses. Moreover, a high share of these red ink generators didn’t even have any revenues, let alone profits!
“Dozens and dozens of them, in fact, are science experiment startups burning venture capital and IPO proceeds and may never see the light of day as real operating businesses. For example, upward of half the companies in the IBB basket have not yet reached Phase 3 clinical trials at the FDA. This means that they do not even have a commercial product.
“The truth is even more farcical,” David continues.
“It turns out that roughly $13 billion of the $26 billion of profits posted by this entire ETF basket of 150 companies is accounted for by just two drugs!” They are Sovaldi and Harvoni, Gilead’s two drugs that treat hepatitis C.
“Remove Gilead and the other members of the Big Four from this ETF basket and take a gander at what you have left. Namely, $600 billion of market cap attributable to 146 other biotech companies that mainly produce rivers of red ink and scant revenues. There is no possible rational basis for their current valuation.”
The last seven years have been great for ETFs. The stock market went up, pushing ETFs up, pushing the market up further and so on. But now?
“We believe the dynamic will begin playing out in reverse,” says David. “The reason is straightforward. The $3 trillion world of ETFs is not an investor marketplace. It is a casino where the fast money moves in and out of short-term rips, bubbles and flavors of the moment. And also a dangerous place where naive retail investors have been lured to roll the dice on their home trading stations.”
Then there’s the matter of all those small illiquid stocks within the ETFs. “Retail investors may be faced with painful episodes in which ETF shares gap down violently to deep discounts relative to their net asset value,” David explains. “Accordingly, if shareholders have attempted to protect their portfolios with stop orders, they may be handed sharp losses. Or they may just panic and sell.”
There was a hint of this with IBB back on Aug. 24 — the day many ETFs experienced a “flash crash.” At its worst, IBB was down 16% on the day. But its underlying index, the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index, was down only 11%. As we explained yesterday, many other ETFs gapped down even worse relative to their underlying indexes — a phenomenon that in theory shouldn’t happen.

This Time It Bounced Back

David is keen to sound the alarm about the coming ETF implosion… but he’s also eager to signal an opportunity that results. Play it right and you could quadruple your money over the next 14 months.
Already, David’s readers have had the chance to parlay the turmoil in IBB for a gain of 69% in less than four months. Another ETF-related play was good for 54% gains in only two weeks.
We’d hate to see you miss out on the next chance to thrive amid volatility. So David’s hosting a live online workshop just five days from now — Wednesday, Feb. 24 at 7:00 p.m. EST. Participation won’t cost you a thing. Just shoot us your email address and you’re in. Here’s where to sign up.
It’s a “meh” day in the U.S. stock market. At last check, the Dow and the S&P are down a bit, the Nasdaq and small-cap Russell 2000 up a bit.
Any cheer among crude oil traders is evaporating as the week winds down and the Saudi Arabian-Russian agreement to freeze production looks irrelevant. At last check, a barrel of West Texas Intermediate is down more than 4%, at $29.42.
Treasury yields sit around where they did 24 hours ago, the 10-year at 1.75%. Gold perked up after we went to virtual press yesterday and is holding onto those gains today at $1,233.
So the break above $1,200 gold appears to be “the real deal,” as Greg Guenthner of our trading desk was telling us last week.
Yes, after zooming past $1,250 a week ago yesterday, it was testing $1,200 by early Wednesday. But it passed the test.
“No parabolic rally can last forever,” Greg reminds us. “Whenever a chart starts to look like a hockey stick, you can expect some wild action to spring up. And that’s exactly what happened with gold after last week’s big breakout.”
The move back to $1,200? “That’s fairly common — especially when it comes to a dangerously overbought chart. Traders with shorter time frames cash out (they don’t want to leave that hot money on the table).”
Ditto with yesterday’s action. Gold pushed past $1,240 and has given up about $10 of that move. But $1,200 has held. Stay tuned…
Don’t look now, but the Fed is a bit closer to getting the inflation it wants.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics regaled us this morning with the consumer price index. While it was flat in January and it registered a year-over-year change of 1.4%, that’s not what the Fed’s looking at.
It’s looking instead at the “core” rate, excluding food and energy. The year-over-year increase here is 2.2% — up from 2.1% the month before. Increases were evident across the board — health care, housing, apparel.
“These results may prove to be a game changer” for the Fed, says a summary from Econoday. Well, Jim Rickards has been saying all along the Fed would raise rates again in March….
The regulatory state, Australian edition: Health regulators recently told Paul North to take down the vintage cigarette ads that decorate the bar he owns.
Inspectors from the Western Australia Health Department stopped by the Irish pub J.B. O’Reilly’s in West Leederville. They said the collectibles ran afoul of the Tobacco Act. Never mind the brands no longer exist and the bar doesn’t sell tobacco — North faced prosecution and fines up to US$28,000.
Sanity, however, has prevailed. The case came to the attention of Western Australia’s premier — who has overturned the ruling.
“The whole thing was absolutely f***ken stupid,” North tells the Brisbane Times.
We have nothing to add…
“I have complete and fundamental disagreement with David Stockman over how he, in my view, very incorrectly describes ETFs,” a reader writes after yesterday’s episode. “What he is describing, I believe, is mutual funds.
“The critical advantage of ETFs versus mutual funds is that ETFs do not have to sell anything, ever! The ETF shares are sold from one investor to another, based on the value and/or income that ETF provides. There is no requirement to sell underlying assets based on stock price fluctuations — ever!
“Yes, if the NAV performance is not keeping up with expectations, there may be adjustments in the ETF’s portfolio, but forced sales at huge losses do not apply to ETFs like I own — such as IGD, HTY, DNI, STK and the like.
“Please set this straight.”
The 5: This is a common trope of Wall Street’s. “ETFs generally do not buy and sell stocks,” says the industry mouthpiece Investment Company Institute. “Rather, they exchange blocks of shares, usually 25,000–100,000 shares, to certain ‘authorized participants’ (generally broker-dealers or other trading firms) for a proportional amount of the ETF’s underlying securities.”
But here’s the thing about the last several years, says David Stockman: “Every time an ETF started trading above the net asset value of the underlying stocks due to speculator buying, fund providers issued new ETF shares to market makers. These market makers, in turn, bought up a basket of shares on the stock exchanges representing the asset mix of the fund. They then swapped them for the ETF shares.
“We call this the Big Fat Bid that helped undermine the two-way market forces that ordinarily keep speculation in check. But now that the worldwide financial bubble is cracking, we believe the dynamic will begin playing out in reverse. That is, ETFs will now become the Big Fat Offer that takes the market down at an accelerating pace.”
By the way, all four of the ETFs you mention tanked badly on Aug. 24. If you’re OK holding onto them, that’s your prerogative.
But for anyone who feels itchy — and David ought to know, because he had a hand in the creation of ETFs during his Wall Street career — we suggest now’s the time for a course correction.
“It’s true you can’t eat gold and silver,” a reader writes on a topic that’s dominated this week’s mailbag. “But you can’t eat cash either. (You could, but it probably would not taste that good.)”
“What’s the current yield on physical cash?” quips another.
And with that, our time’s up…
Have a good weekend,
Dave Gonigam
The 5 Min. Forecast
P.S. We just intercepted an amazing letter posted online by Daymond John, star of ABC’s hit show Shark Tank
The contents of this letter will anger many. Businessmen, self-help gurus, television executives, Wall Street, even some politicians… all of them are going to be royally ticked off at what Daymond has to say.
Nevertheless, the contents of this shocking open letter are simply too important to keep secret.
If you are an investor, this is obviously a must-read. If you have children or grandchildren, then you should also read so you can give them sound financial advice.
WARNING: This explosive letter could come down anytime. Don’t miss it…
“An Open Letter to Anyone Willing to Invest 21 Minutes to Become the Hero of Their Own Life, by Daymond John”

Dave Gonigam

Dave Gonigam

Dave Gonigam has been managing editor of The 5 Min. Forecast since September 2010. Before joining the research and writing team at Agora Financial in 2007, he worked for 20 years as an Emmy award-winning television news producer.

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