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Vix complacency...a crisis to be hoped for?

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  • Vix complacency...a crisis to be hoped for?

    This Happened Twice Before, And Each Time Stocks Crashed Thursday, May 22, 2014 at 1:23AM The Testosterone Pit

    Stock market participants and the players around them cling to every word proffered by the Fed that might reveal its secret plans because everyone knows that the words from the Fed and the money it prints and the interest rates it sets have been the fuel for the stupendous rally that started over five years ago. Wall Street wrings the last drop of hype and hope out of these words and spins them and doctors them to rationalize ever higher stock prices.

    But recently, there has been one word that has moved up on the central-bank public worry list. As so often, it did so in a coordinated manner, and within days, it cropped up at the Fed, the Bundesbank, the Bank of England, the ECB....

    “Complacency.”


    It’s a condition of super-low volatility where the markets have become a one-way ticket to heaven, when market participants think that asset prices can only go up, that stocks will always rise, that a 4% decline is a correction, that even the worst junk bonds won’t ever default, that inflation doesn’t exist – and no one demands being paid for the risks they’re taking on because there are no more risks. Just look at the VIX volatility index, or fear index as it’s called: it has descended into a state of somnolence.

    Central bankers are now worried that this creature of their making – this happy state of complacency amidst gorgeous and plump asset bubbles – might cause the next crisis. They’re worried that no one will be prepared for when it all turns around.

    Alas, beneath the surface, stocks have already turned around.


    Volatility is already tearing into stocks, and those holding them outright, rather than safely out of view in some confidence-inspiring fund, have watched “wealth” and dreams go up in smoke. But they know their formerly red-hot darlings will soon reach new highs, and that’s when they’ll sell them to a greater fool, and so they’re hanging on by the skins of their teeth, and others are buying because complacency still rules the day.

    LinkedIn skidded 40.6% from its 52-week high, Twitter 57.5% in five months. It’s not just a few fallen angels. The Russell 2000, which tracks the 2000 smallest stocks in the Russell 3000, is down 9.1% from its 52-week high. The FDN Internet Index 16.1% in three months, the NBI Nasdaq Biotech index 16.5%, the Social Media Index SOCL 24.4%. Stock after stock has taken a brutal licking, papered over by the Dow and the S&P 500 whose components, the largest companies in the US, have largely held up so far. But beneath them, the Fed’s illusory “wealth effect” has begun to reverse.

    And just as these stocks were coming off their peaks in March, the one thing that wasn’t supposed to happen, happened: margin debt, after having spiked for months, declined.
    Margin debt – newly created money that is plowed into stocks – is the great accelerator on the way up. It inflates values and increases leverage, and when it spikes, it performs miracles. But it has a terrifying habit: after going into a majestic spike, it reverses abruptly right around the time stocks crash.

    Over the last 15 years, margin debt had three spikes and reversals:


    The first spike peaked in March 2000 at a record of $278.5 billion, or 2.66% of GDP. By the time it reversed in April, the stale air was hissing out of stocks with epic speed.
    The second spike peaked in July 2007 at $381.4 billion, or 2.60% of GDP. In November, stocks began to swoon. No one will ever forget what happened next.
    The third spike – the most phenomenal yet – peaked in February 2014 at $465.7 billion, beating the prior record by 22%. It reached 2.73% of GDP, the highest ratio ever! In March, the spike reversed. And in April, it declined again.

    And it's forming an increasingly terrifying chart:










    Is this what we are waiting for?

  • #2
    Re: Vix complacency...a crisis to be hoped for?

    Ya I've been watching this margin debt for a while now. It's turn around is not to be taken lightly.

    I can't find the article any more... Oh wait here it is.
    Stock caution urged as margin debt levels hit new highs


    So basically turns in Margin debt lead market turning points by 2 to 6 months. This could be just an intermittent drop, indicating an up coming correction of some size, or it could be the beginning of the end of the bull.

    In either case, it's definitely something to watch closely. Especially with Treasuries yields falling. Complacency out there is getting huge.

    btw, interesting aspect of the market watch cart, Margin debt seems to be having diminishing returns on the S&P with larger corrections each time. 50%, 60%, are we now in for a 70% drop? Wow, that will be nasty.

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