From the Financial Times:
Scores of European parliament members earn income from second jobs in areas that overlap with their lawmaking, according to Financial Times analysis that raises questions about disclosure of potential conflicts of interest.
Parliamentary records show that 59 members of European parliament [MEP] in the 720-strong assembly are sitting on committees or working on policy areas that are related to their paid side activities, the analysis suggests. Only eight lawmakers openly declare potential conflicts of interest relating to laws they are working on.
The eight MEPs are among a total of 202 who have registered a paid job alongside their parliamentary duties, according to data [collected] by the NGO Transparency International. The highest earner receives about €641,000 ($744,000) in addition to his €130,000 MEP salary.
That’s going to leave a mark: Friday’s unruly price action spurred potentially lasting pain in the digital asset realm, with the Trump administration’s renewed tariff threats sending crypto’s aggregate market capitalization to as low as $3.66 trillion, a 12% selloff in just 12 hours. The ducats have since recovered roughly half of that lost paper wealth, but the rebound is little comfort for some washed out speculators.
At least $19 billion in leveraged positions were wiped out across all trading venues according to Coinglass, the largest such single-day rout on record. The data firm adds that “the actual total is likely much higher” as the Binance exchange only reports one liquidation order per second.
“During this crash, [market] depth evaporated and liquidation engines got overwhelmed,” Justin d’Anethan, head of partnerships at advisory firm Arctic Digital, told Bloomberg. Automatic deleveraging (ADL) systems, or risk management protocols designed to protect exchanges by automatically closing out certain positions during mass-liquidation events, “poured gasoline on the fire,” he added. “It felt less like a market and more like a trap snapping shut.”
With the White House subsequently dialing back its pointed trade-related rhetoric, will last week’s episode prove a one-off blip in an ongoing bull march? One potentially well-placed player isn’t counting on it: Citing data from HypurrScan, CoinDesk reports that a trader who scored a $192 million windfall by a “perfectly timed” short position ahead of President Trump’s market-disturbing social media post, reloaded with a fresh $163 million short position – leveraged tenfold – yesterday evening.
But for now, at least, “business as usual” remain the watchwords in the crypto complex, if a Monday press release is any indication:
House of Doge Inc., the official commercial arm of the Dogecoin Foundation, today announced it has entered into a definitive merger agreement with Brag House Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: TBH), the Gen Z engagement platform operating at the intersection of gaming, college sports, and digital media.
Pursuant to the terms of the agreement, Brag House will acquire House of Doge in a reverse takeover transaction. The proposed merger, which has been unanimously approved by both Boards of Directors, will advance mainstream Dogecoin adoption and institutionalize Dogecoin’s utility.
Stocks snapped back by 1.6% on the S&P 500 to recoup a bit more than half of Friday’s losses, while the bond market was closed for Columbus Day, or whatever it’s called now. WTI crude bounced towards $60 a barrel, gold legged higher by more than 2% to $4,108 per ounce with silver eclipsing the $50 an ounce threshold for the first time. Bitcoin levitated north of $115,000 while the VIX retreated three points to 19.
- Philip Grant
The efficient market theory on display, or something like that. From the Financial Times:
The Nobel Peace Prize organizers are investigating a potential leak after online betting surged in favor of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado just hours before she was announced as this year’s winner.
Machado was polling at about 3.7% on Polymarket, one of the world’s largest prediction markets, until just after midnight Oslo time on Friday.
But her odds jumped within minutes to 31.5% and then 73.5% despite Machado not having been tipped as a favorite — either by experts or by the media — ahead of the prize announcement at 11AM. . .
Experts had predicted organizations such as Sudan’s Emergency Response Rooms or various UN bodies could be the winner. U.S. President Donald Trump’s persistent claims that he should be awarded a Nobel Peace Prize had led him to be a favorite among many bookmakers.
The bull market vibes were put into sharp relief Wednesday with the return of Roundhill Investments’ Meme Stock ETF, which initially launched in December 2021 before shuttering two years later. The actively-managed vehicle, which will rebalance once a week, (re)debuts with a portfolio featuring Opendoor Technologies and Plug Power as its top two holdings with 11.9% and 10.7% weightings, respectively.
“In some ways, ‘meme’ is still perceived as a dirty word,” Roundhill CEO Dave Mazza told Bloomberg. “Many still scoff at what the retail community does on various forums. But that’s an entirely antiquated view. What didn’t fade is the relevance of the influence of retail in today’s equity market.”
Indeed, individual investors accounted for roughly 21% of U.S. stock market trading volumes in the second quarter according to Bianco Research, double that seen in 2010. Net inflows from that group accelerated to $7 billion over the seven days through Wednesday from a two-month weekly average of $5.7 billion, analysts at JPMorgan find. Perhaps most notably, retail-focused brokerage Robinhood stands as the S&P 500’s best performer in 2025 with a 273% rally, landing founders Vladimir Tenev and Baiju Bhatt on the 500 member Bloomberg Billionaires Index this week for the first time.
Wall Street is only too happy to help the bourgeoning retail cohort expand its horizons. CNBC reports today that Morgan Stanley “told its financial advisors that the firm was broadening access to crypto investments to all clients and allowing such investments in any type of account, including retirement accounts.” Prior to that pivot, Morgan Stanley’s wealth management pros could pitch digital assets only to clients with an aggressive risk tolerance and at least $1.5 million in assets.
Regulators are likewise loosening the screws. Late last month, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) announced it will scrap its pattern-day trade rule. Enacted in the aftermath of the dot-com boom in 2001, the stricture required investors to have an account of at least $25,000 to day trade, defined as opening and closing a position during the same session at least four times over a five-day stretch. “I think this is one of the most significant changes that FINRA has made to equity market structure in decades,” Adam Cohn, head of trading operations at TradeStation, commented to MarketWatch.
The regulation was partly designed to help brokerage firms manage margin requirement-related risks, a need largely obviated by subsequent advances in technology. Nevertheless, FINRA’s move left some observers cold. “Our markets have become casinos, and these changes will only benefit the house – [payment for order flow] firms and high-speed middlemen,” Dave Lauer, co-founder of Urvin Finance, told MarketWatch.
Stocks got smoked by 2.7% on the S&P 500 following a renewal of Sino-American trade tensions, with the blue-chip gauge settling at session lows for its worst day since April 10. Treasurys caught a vigorous bid with 2- and 30-year yields dropping to 3.52% and 4.63%, respectively, from 3.6% and 4.72% Thursday, while WTI crude cratered 4% to less than $59 a barrel and gold rebounded back above $4,000 an ounce. Bitcoin dropped below $116,000 while the VIX ripped higher by nearly six points to 22 and change.
- Philip Grant
Crashing symbols, via the Financial Times:
Europeans are at risk of cold showers after materials critical to hot water tanks were not included on an E.U. list of authorized substances, which was revised as part of the bloc’s sprawling environmental legislation.
Applia, the home appliance lobby group, has estimated that more than 90% of hot water storage tanks would no longer be marketable in the E.U. if hafnium, a highly heat-resistant metal, and its sister element zirconium are not recognized as safe for household use. The two elements were not listed in the bloc’s rules for drinking water, which enter into force in 2027 and aim to protect consumers and improve water quality standards.
The European Commission appears to have overlooked the fact that hot water tanks also hold potable water, with manufacturers warning they risk fines if they do not comply with the list of authorized substances.
Who else wants to be a millionaire? More than 24 million U.S. households sported a seven-figure net worth by the end of 2023, Bloomberg reports today, citing data from the U.S. Census. The share of households at or beyond that wealth threshold approached 18%, up from 12.3% in 2017, with the subsequent levitation in asset prices surely doing little to reverse the trend.
Of course, bounding inflation and eroding purchasing play their own, malevolent role in that dynamic. “The word ‘millionaire’ once implied automatic affluence,” Ashton Lawrence, director at Mariner Wealth Advisors, observed to Bloomberg. “The goalposts have shifted. It’s still a meaningful milestone, but for most people it’s no longer enough.”
Ready access to cash, meanwhile, presents a challenge for large swaths of that fast-growing cohort. Liquid assets (including bank accounts, stocks, mutual funds and bonds) compose only 17% of total wealth for the 12 million households worth $1 million to $2 million, with that share rising to 22% for the 8.5 million households worth $2 million to $5 million and 24% for the 3.5 million at $5 million-plus. The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances likewise finds that home equity and age-restricted retirement account balances have grown as a share of millionaire net worth from 1989 to 2022.
On that score, Thursday brought a potentially instructive sighting from an avatar of conspicuous consumption. Shares of Ferrari sank as much as 16% after the automaker forecast 6% annual growth in earnings before interest and taxes through 2030, downshifting from the 10% pace presented during their prior capital markets event held three years ago. Ferrari generates nearly $500,000 of revenue per vehicle, sold, compared to $313,000 a decade ago.
Keep your eyes on the prize: Toronto-based, Nasdaq-listed Quantum BioPharma (ticker: QNTM) laid down the gauntlet via a Wednesday press release, offering up to $7 million in cash “to any individual or entity who can provide definitive and verifiable proof that they were asked, instructed, hired or otherwise induced to manipulate the company’s stock.”
In order for whistleblowers to cash in, such information must “contribute significant evidence” towards a victory or settlement in Quantum’s $700 million lawsuit against CIBC, RBC and other lenders filed last fall. The firm alleges that the banking cabal artificially suppressed its shares via spoofing, i.e., “the submission and cancellation of buy and sell orders without the intention to trade in order to manipulate other traders.”
Pre-revenue Quantum, which posted a $18.5 million net loss over the six months through June, sports a $59 million market capitalization, up some 50% over the past five years even as the stock price has declined 92% thanks to persistent dilution. Might a favorable court ruling deliver relief to beleaguered shareholders? Management announced plans in June to distribute up to 50% of any net proceeds from the litigation via a special dividend.
Stocks came under modest pressure to the tune of 0.3% on the S&P 500, continuing this week’s see-saw price action, while Treasurys flattened a bit with two-year yields ticking to 3.6% from 3.58% Wednesday and the long bond staying at 4.72%. WTI crude again fell below $62 a barrel, gold pulled back nearly 2% to $3,976 per ounce, bitcoin ebbed to $121,000 and the VIX stayed at 16.
- Philip Grant
From CNBC:
The Motion Picture Association on Monday urged OpenAI to “take immediate and decisive action” against its new video creation model Sora 2, which is being used to produce content that it says is infringing on copyrighted media.
Following the Sora app’s rollout last week, users have been swarming the platform with AI-generated clips featuring characters from popular shows and brands. . .
Concerns erupted immediately after Sora videos were created last week featuring everything from James Bond playing poker with [Sam] Altman to body cam footage of cartoon character Mario evading the police.
Records were made to be broken, 2025 edition: Investors maintain an insatiable appetite for U.S. exchange traded funds, with the category scoring $917 billion of net inflows in the year-to-date through Sept. 29 according to FactSet. That’s on pace to comfortably surpass last year’s peak of $1.1 trillion and nearly matches the $920 billion influx logged during the 2021 everything bubble. Total assets in stateside ETF’s reached $12.19 trillion on Aug. 31 per data firm ETFGI, equivalent to 19.1% of Wilshire 5000 market capitalization. At the end of last year, that share was just under 18%.
Regulators are set to further fuel the frenzy. The Securities and Exchange Commission announced last week that it will permit Dimensional Fund Advisors to offer dual share class funds, paving the way for managers to replicate existing mutual fund portfolios with ETFs.
The green light would permit mutual fund investors to transact throughout the trading day rather than waiting for the market to close, while potentially trimming transaction costs and conferring tax advantages. “We see this as a win,” Brian Daly, director of the SEC’s Investment Management Division, told Reuters. “We are increasing choice. We are reducing expenses. We are increasing tax efficiency, and we are making the innovation of the ETF – which is now decades old – more accessible to the average retail investor.”
Ready ETF accessibility manifests in telling fashion. Outflows from the SPDR S&P 500 Trust (ticker: SPY) have reached $32.7 billion this year according to the Financial Times, bucking the larger adoption trend alongside fair-weather financial conditions.
The retail cohort’s growing prominence drives that counterintuitive development, the pink paper relays, with individuals flocking to Vanguard’s rival S&P 500 fund – which charges three basis points per annum rather than 9.45 basis points for SPY – to the tune of $84.5 billion in 2025 inflows.
SPY has long appealed to professionals thanks to its abundant liquidity, tight bid-to-offer spreads and robust derivatives infrastructure allowing for easy portfolio hedging, but individuals controlled 75% of U.S. ETFs at the end of July per Broadridge Global Market Intelligence, up from 56% a decade ago. “Everywhere you turn. . . ETFs are the neon lights” for retail investors, Andrew Guillette, vice-president for global insights at Broadridge, told the FT.
Today’s bull market-minded regulatory apparatus may add further flair to those fluorescent financial products. A pair of issuers have petitioned the SEC for permission to offer thrice-levered, single stock ETFs, Bloomberg reported Monday, putting the agency in position to reverse its 2020-era guidance capping single stock leverage at double the underling equity.
“This is a natural progression of the ETF market right now – [issuers] try to push as far as they can go, one-up each other,” wrote Bloomberg analyst Athanasios Psarofagis. “Before, it was undercutting each other on fees. Now, it’s upping on things like income, yield or leverage.”
Stocks came under some pressure to give back yesterday’s advance on the S&P 500 with a 0.4% drop, while Treasury yields declined by three to five basis points across the curve to likewise largely reverse Monday’s move. WTI crude ticked above $62 a barrel, gold advanced to $3,980 per ounce, bitcoin ebbed to $122,0000 and the VIX settled north of 17.
- Philip Grant
From The Guardian:
Deloitte will provide a partial refund to the [Australian] government over a $440,000 report that contained several errors, after admitting it used generative artificial intelligence to help produce it.
The Department of Employment and Workplace Relations confirmed Deloitte would repay the final instalment under its contract, which will be made public after the transaction is finalized. It comes as one Labor senator accused the consultancy firm of having a “human intelligence problem.” . . .
University of Sydney academic, Dr Christopher Rudge, who first highlighted the errors, said the report contained “hallucinations” where AI models may fill in gaps, misinterpret data, or try to guess answers.
Move over, artificial intelligence: the rip-roaring rally in gold and bitcoin has reached a new crescendo in recent days, with the yellow metal topping $3,900 for the first time on Monday as year-to-date gains approach 50%. That’s far above the 18% return for the Roundhill Magnificent 7 exchange traded fund and nearly matches the 53% advance for Goldman Sachs’ basket of unprofitable technology stocks.
“It’s gold-plated fomo,” Pictet Asset Management chief strategist Luca Paolini put it to the Financial Times Monday, referring to the fear of missing out. “There becomes a level where it is impossible not to own it.” Underscoring that sentiment shift: strategists at Morgan Stanley now advocate a 60/20/20 portfolio allocation rather than the conventional 60/40 split, with gold attaining equal weight to fixed income. Gold-themed ETFs attracted $13.6 billion in net cash over the past four weeks per the World Gold Council, a substantial chunk of the $60 billion inflow for 2025 which already represents the highest full-year figure on record.
So-called digital gold enjoys its own season of abundance. The price of bitcoin punched through $125,000 for the first time over the weekend to leave the leading cryptocurrency with a near 30% advance so far this year, while bitcoin backed ETFs enjoyed $3.5 billion of inflows last week according to CoinShares, the largest on record.
On Friday, analysts at JPMorgan categorized those moves as “the familiar pattern of dollar debasement against alternative reserve assets amid Washington dysfunction,” referring to the ongoing government shutdown. Of course, the U.S. has no monopoly on political chaos, underscored by today’s resignation by French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu after less than a month on the job, marking the shortest term since the Fifth Republic was established in 1958.
French President Emmanuel Macron, who now seeks his fourth PM since summer 2024, oversees a government which is running a fiscal deficit equivalent to 5.4% of projected GDP for this year. “The governability of France is declining,” Jean-François Robin, global head of research at Natixis CIB, told the FT. “No caretaker prime minister will have the majority to cut significantly into public spending.” Creditors are voting with their feet as 30-year bond yields hover at 4.4%, up 100 basis points from early December to exceed the 4.27% paid by Greece.
Freewheeling fiscal policy likewise looks to be on the menu in Japan following the election of Sanae Takaichi, a noted proponent of fiscal and monetary stimulus, to leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic party. That development spurred a 3% rally in the Topix index and outsized gains from defense industry firms poised to benefit from increased government largesse, while 30-year Japanese government bond yields vaulted 14 basis points to 3.31%, easily the highest of this century.
“We can already guess that she won’t bring inflation down, because if she’s going to double down on Abenomics of the past, which means a sharply weaker yen, which means more government spending, that arguably means more inflation,” commented Tokyo-based journalist William Pesek on CNBC this morning.
Whither global interest rates in this era of synchronized fiscal profligacy? “The transition to software from smokestacks changed the nature of capital and may have contributed to the length and power of the post-1981 bond bull market,” contended the June 16, 2023, edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer (“Return of the tangible”).
A lasting reversal of that trend could similarly reverberate: See the analysis “Bond markets on edge” in the current issue dated Sept. 26 for more.
Stocks caught another bid with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 advancing by 0.4% and 0.8%, respectively, while Treasurys saw a bear-steepening move with 2- and 30-year yields rising two and five basis points, respectively. WTI crude rebounded towards $62 a barrel, gold settled near $3,960 per ounce, bitcoin stayed just above $125,000 and the VIX ebbed toward 16.
- Philip Grant
From Reuters:
The much-needed modernization of the U.S. Army’s battlefield communications network being undertaken by Anduril, Palantir and others is rife with “fundamental security” problems and vulnerabilities and should be treated as a “very high risk,” according to a recent internal Army memo. . .
“We cannot control who sees what, we cannot see what users are doing, and we cannot verify that the software itself is secure,” the memo says. . .
The report says the system allows any authorized user to access all applications and data regardless of their clearance level or operational need. As a result, “any user can potentially access and misuse sensitive” classified information, the memo states, with no logging to track their actions.
Other deficiencies highlighted in the memo include the hosting of third-party applications that have not undergone Army security assessments. One application revealed 25 high-severity code vulnerabilities. Three additional applications under review each contain over 200 vulnerabilities requiring assessment, according to the document.
A steeper Treasury curve is on the way, DoubleLine Capital global sovereign debt portfolio manager Bill Campbell predicts, as still-elevated inflation and a spendthrift federal government will apply upward pressure on Uncle Sam’s long-dated borrowing costs. The federal funds rate, meanwhile, will ebb to just over 3% by this time next year from the current 4% to 4.25% range if interest rate futures are on point, down from a market-derived guesstimate of 3.2% three months ago.
“Even in a downside economic shock, I still think the curve will steepen,” Campbell told Bloomberg yesterday. “We have increasing fiscal deficits, rising uncertainty about inflation [and] rising questions about U.S. policy – anywhere from Fed independence to. . . the tariff and trade outlook.”
Recent musings from President Trump crystalize that ambiguity, as the commander-in-chief again floated the idea of sending tariff rebate checks to U.S. Citizens yesterday, telling the New York Post that “we’re thinking maybe $1,000 to $2,000 — it would be great.” The federal budget deficit tipped the scales at 6.4% of GDP during the economically fair-weather fiscal 2024, not so far from the 9.8% output adjusted shortfall logged in the annulus horribilis of 2009.
Though such a “dividend to the people of America,” (which would require Congressional approval) augurs no bullish tidings for U.S. sovereign creditors, other constituencies stand to reap the benefit. As CoinDesk notes today, so-called altcoins thrived during the stimmy-soaked Covid lockdown era: aggregate cryptocurrency market capitalization ballooned to $2.46 trillion in May 2021 from less than $500 billion six months earlier, while bitcoin dominance, meaning its share of total digital asset market value, sank to 39% from 73% during that stretch.
Attention value investors: the World Liberty Financial token, which launched last month under the auspices of World Liberty Financial co-founder Donald Trump Jr., has since traded lower by just over 10%. See “Trump exasperation syndrome” in the current edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for more on the president’s all-too prominent role in today’s economic and financial affairs.
Stocks were unable to hold their gains this time, with the S&P 500 settling unchanged after sitting higher by 0.5% around lunchtime, while Treasury yields ticked higher by two to five basis points across the curve. WTI crude remained stuck below $61 a barrel, gold rallied again to $3,884 per ounce, bitcoin pulled back a bit to $122,000 and the VIX remained just south of 17.
- Philip Grant
From Sports Illustrated:
As the Seattle Mariners gathered for their first scrimmage of the week on Wednesday, a familiar face was roaming the outfield at T-Mobile Park. A little older and a little grayer, 51-year-old Ichiro Suzuki still looked great in action, as the Hall of Famer continues to support the franchise [for which] he played the majority of his career. . .
Approximately 5,000 fans attended today's event at just $10 per ticket. Not only did the admission money go to charity, but those who attended the event were treated to a bonus when they saw Ichiro trot out with the team. He even flashed the famous 'No-Fly Zone' gesture made by All-Star centerfielder Julio Rodriguez. . .
“I mean, he knows I'm the center fielder,” Rodríguez said, jokingly, when asked if he would call Ichiro off of any fly balls. “I don't think age really matters a lot between the lines. But I'm still going to let him catch one... probably.”
Everything’s bigger in Texas, data center edition: behold the blockbuster debut of Fermi, Inc. (FRMI on the Nasdaq), with shares enjoying a 55% rip yesterday to leave the nine-month-old firm with a $19 billion market capitalization.
Fermi, which counts former Texas governor turned Trump 1.0-era energy secretary Rick Perry among its cofounders, plans to construct the world’s largest energy and data facility, which could generate 11 gigawatts of energy – twice that currently serving New York City – by 2038 per CEO Toby Neugebauer.
Tenant revenues are unlikely to take shape prior to 2027 according to the prospectus, a noteworthy detail considering the firm is structured as a real estate investment trust, which must earmark 90% of taxable income towards shareholder dividends. Neugebauer told the Financial Times that Fermi has snagged a deal with “one of the most valuable and respected technology companies on the planet.”
In any event, Wednesday’s closing price confers a $6 billion paper windfall on Neugebauer, the son of former Texas congressman Randy Neugebauer and who previously helmed the ill-fated, “anti-woke” banking startup GloriFi, which filed for Chapter 7 liquidation in 2023 alongside a torrent of investor litigation. Perry and his son Griffin, who holds no formal role in the company, reaped some $3 billion in paper wealth from their combined stakes. The deal “speaks to the gold rush happening in AI infrastructure right now. It's a cash geyser," Matt Kennedy, senior strategist at Renaissance Capital, told Reuters.
Considering those facts, it is little surprise that investors continue to roll out the red carpet for the AI revolution’s avatar. OpenAI has completed a $6.6 billion secondary share offering to institutions including T. Rowe Price and SoftBank which values the ChatGPT startup at $500 billion. That’s up some 60% from a March funding round to establish a new private markets valuation peak, surpassing the $400 billion figure achieved by SpaceX in July.
OpenAI had authorized employees to sell up to $10.3 billion of shares, the FT relays, but many bulled-up staffers opted to hang on to their stakes in anticipation of further price appreciation. The firm projects $20 billion in annual recurring revenue by year-end but also pegs cumulative cash burn at $115 billion through 2029, an increase of $80 billion from its first quarter forecast (see the Sept. 12 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for more on the troublesome unit economics in force for OpenAI and other industry players).
Last week brought a telling signpost regarding returns on investment, via a report from The Information that Meta is negotiations with Google “about the possibility of using Google’s AI models to improve Meta’s ad business.”
That bulletin is remarkable in several respects, as advertising accounts for nearly all of the Facebook parent’s revenue, while Meta has regularly splashed out huge sums in its AI ramp-up, including doling out several $100 million-plus signing bonuses to coax senior staffers from Sam Altman’s outfit. Meta’s capital expenditures are set to vault to $97 billion next year from $37 billion in 2024 if the sell-side consensus proves accurate, with free cash flow poised to drop to $28 billion, half that achieved last year.
Notably, those outlays do not include the monster four million square foot Hyperion data center, which Meta will occupy under a 20-year lease. A Pimco-led $26 billion debt financing will underpin the project, which is structured as a joint venture and remains off the social media giant’s books.
Out of sight, out of mind? Not quite, according to a Sept. 5 Bloomberg bulletin: “If [Meta] decides to terminate the lease early or opts to not renew it and the value of the data center falls below a pre-determined threshold, [Meta] will reimburse investors for potential losses.”A $16.8 billion weekly decline in Reserve Bank credit leaves the Fed’s portfolio of interest-bearing assets at $6.544 trillion. That’s down $12 billion from the beginning of September and is 26.7% below the March 2022 peak.
Stocks traded just above flat on the S&P 500 in a low-wattage session, with Treasurys flattening a bit as the long bond dipped three basis points to 4.69%. WTI crude fell below $61 a barrel, gold logged a modest pullback to $3,857 per ounce, bitcoin ripped above $120,000 and the VIX ticked towards 17.
- Philip Grant
It all comes full circle, via the Financial Times:
Meta will use conversations people have with its chatbots to personalize advertising and content across its platforms, in a sign of how tech companies plan to make money from artificial intelligence.
The owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp on Wednesday said it would use the content of chats with its Meta AI to create advertising recommendations across its suite of apps.
“People will already expect that their Meta AI interactions are being used for these personalization purposes,” said Christy Harris, privacy and data policy manager at Meta.
A New York district court dealt the latest setback to a jilted Credit Suisse junior creditor cohort yesterday, throwing out a lawsuit from some additional tier 1 (otherwise known as contingent convertibles, or CoCos) bondholders seeking $370 million in damages. Recall that the Swiss government wiped out some $17 billion of Credit Suisse CoCos following the besieged lender’s March 2023, all-stock shotgun marriage with local peer UBS, even while preserving $3.25 billion in equity value, which typically resides at the bottom of the capital structure.
“Switzerland’s first argument for dismissal is that it is immune from suit under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,” wrote Judge David Ho. “The court agrees.” The zeroed-out creditors, who vowed to appeal the ruling, have also pursued more than 100 claims in Switzerland and elsewhere in Europe “with little success so far,” Bloomberg notes.
Yet that March 2023 mini-banking crisis has ushered in a windfall for other AT1 holders, as Bloomberg’s Banks Tier 1 CoCo Index has since returned 57% in dollar terms, blowing past the iShares High Yield Corporate Bond ETF’s 33% return and marking the niche credit category’s strongest ever bull run. “AT1s are well positioned to continue outperforming, supported by robust technical factors, declining rate volatility and solid fundamentals in the European banking sector,” commented Sébastien Barthelemi, head of credit research at Kepler Chevreaux.
Those fair-weather conditions have redounded to the benefit of Deutsche Bank’s 10% junior subordinated perpetuals. The object of a bullish Grant’s Interest Rate Observer analysis (“A kind word for ‘CoCos’”) on April 7, 2023, those securities have since rallied above 110 cents on the euro from 96 while delivering that double-digit coupon.
“The bank has evolved into a more focused, profitable, and resilient organization, with management recently emphasizing franchise growth and operational leverage,” S&P Global concluded in July, with its Common Equity Tier 1 ratio improving to 13.8% of risk-weighted assets as of March 31 from 13.4% at year-end 2022. For reference, those CoCos are designed to be converted to (presumably worthless) equity if Deutsche Bank’s CET1 ratio slips below 5.125%. The rating agency projects modest annual loan losses of 25 to 35 basis points through 2027, below the 38 basis points reported last year.
Even so, today’s percolating risk appetite elicits alarm in some quarters, as option-adjusted spreads on Bloomberg’s AT1 gauge have ebbed to 245 basis points – the narrowest since at least 2014 – while a mid-August, $1.25 billion tier 1 offering from Allianz SE drew a bustling order book of more than $12 billion.
“What we learned from 2003 to 2007 is that exuberance from very strong technical [factors] can drive down investor protection,” Laurent Frings, head of European credit research at Aegon Asset Management, told Bloomberg late last month. “A lot of investors are still taking the view that this is a bull market, there’s still a lot of cash and therefore you still want to be invested and taking those structural risks, rightly or wrongly. That may work in the short term, [but], over the long term, history tells you you’re in for a surprise.”
The fiscal fourth quarter began in typically bullish fashion, with stocks shaking off modest early weakness to grind higher by another 0.3% on the S&P 500, while Treasurys also caught a bid led by a five-basis point dip on the two-year yield to 3.55%. WTI crude slumped below $62 a barrel, gold chugged higher to $3,864 per ounce, bitcoin advanced to $117,500 and the VIX stayed above 16.
- Philip Grant
Your headline-cum-subhead of the day, from the Financial Times:
Switzerland agrees with U.S. not to manipulate its currency
Rare joint statement with U.S. Treasury seen as ‘green light’ for further currency intervention by Swiss central bank
President Trump took to Truth Social to trumpet waning mortgage costs on Saturday, after Freddie Mac’s 30-year, fixed rate figure ticked to 6.3% last week from 6.75% in mid-July and just over 7% on inauguration day.
As Bianco Research founder and eponym Jim Bianco pointed out on X, placid bond market conditions have helped drive that downshift: the ICE BofAML MOVE Index – a VIX type volatility gauge for fixed income – has ebbed to its lowest reading since early 2022, helping drive compressing mortgage spreads relative to Treasurys. On that score, Bianco writes, the E-Z money loving commander in chief may be tempting fate after firing off another not-so-subtle message to put-upon Fed chair Jerome Powell:
Prospective buyers need all the help they can get. Previously owned homes fetched a median $422,600 sales price in August per the National Association of Realtors, up 1.8% from the same period last year to mark the 26th consecutive month of annual price gains. “Record-high housing wealth and a record-high stock market will help homeowners trade up and benefit the upper end of the market,” commented NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun. “However, sales of affordable homes are constrained by the lack of inventory.”
Indeed, the annual income needed to afford the median-priced home, assuming a 31% housing debt-to-income ratio and a 30-year mortgage with a 3.5% [sic] downpayment, reached $126,700 last year per a June analysis from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, up from less than $80,000 in 2021. Meanwhile, single family and apartment affordability now lag their respective historical averages in 99% of the 580 national regions surveyed by ATTOM, the property data firm relayed Friday. Housing related expenses consume 33.3% of the typical American wages, up from 32.2% at this time last year.
Today’s potent political impulse towards lower interest rates, in the face of measured inflation rising above the Fed’s self-assigned 2% annual target for 54 months and counting, may spell little relief on that score.
Fed governor Michelle Bowman, a voting member on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, offered some instructive commentary at the Forecasters Club of New York Luncheon Friday. After flagging a sluggish pace of housing transactions on account of “very low. . . affordability,” Bowman added thus: “I am concerned that declines in house prices could accelerate, posing downside risks to housing wealth and inflation in the years ahead.”
Treasurys saw a bull-flattening move with the long bond dropping a half dozen basis points to 4.71% and two-year yields holding at 3.63%, while stocks fluttered higher by another 0.3% on the S&P 500. WTI crude tumbled nearly 4% to $63 a barrel, gold continued its rampage with a near 2% advance to $3,829 per ounce, bitcoin rebounded above $114,000 and the VIX jumped back above 16.
- Philip Grant
From the Financial Times:
An influential financial think-tank has called on the U.K. government to amend a bill to force workplace pension default funds [as in pre-set or standard] to invest more in U.K. equities, proposing an allocation that could drive more than £75 billion ($101 billion) into British stocks by the end of the decade.
New Financial said on Thursday that there is a “window of opportunity” for the government to create U.K.-weighted default funds across the defined contribution (DC) pension system, suggesting a target domestic allocation of 20 to 25% of all equity holdings, up from a current level of less than 9%.
British pension funds have rapidly moved away from U.K. equities in recent years, with DC fund allocation to UK stocks falling from more than 40% of total equities in 2013 to 9% by 2023.
It’s been a week to forget in the cryptocurrency complex, with digital assets logging a 7.5% aggregate decline since Sunday morning per data from Coinmarketcap.com, equivalent to $300 billion in market value. Bitcoin logged its worst weekly showing since March with a 5% dip, while a 12% decline in ethereum left that token below $4,000 yesterday for the first time since early August. The store of value known as fartcoin fell to $0.58 this morning from $1.67 in late July.
“We are seeing a de-risking across the board,” Lex Sokolin, managing partner at Generative Ventures, told Bloomberg. “Memecoins, or assets without strong fundamentals, are the first to get hit and tend to be more reflexive up and down. A lot of the positive catalysts – regulation, digital asset treasury [companies], interest rate cuts – have been priced in and so the market needs a fresh narrative to continue the momentum.”
The corporate bitcoin bid has indeed ebbed substantially from its feverish mid-summer pace, with net purchases by publicly-traded treasury firms registering at 15,500 in September compared to 64,000 in July according to data firm CryptoQuant.
A bearish reversal of fortunes accompanies that stark slowdown. Shares of Strategy – the original crypto treasury outfit helmed by bitcoin evangelist Michael Saylor – have seen a 57% year-to-date advance as of July 16 whittled to 7%, now trailing the underlying token’s 16% gain for 2025. The FT likewise relayed Tuesday that at least five crypto treasury outfits have turned to stock buybacks in hopes of stemming share-price declines below the value of their digital asset portfolios. “It’s probably the death rattle for a few [of these companies],” Adam Morgan McCarthy, senior research analyst at crypto analytics company Kaiko, told the pink paper. “A lot of these [firms] are like a house of cards and are going to collapse very quickly.” See “Bitcoin goes corporate” in the June 20 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a closer look at the financial fad.
Alongside the growing prospect of a crypto-Treasury winter, industry players contend with rising regulatory heat. The Wall Street Journal reports that the Securities and Exchange Commission and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority have each “raised concerns about what they say were unusually high trading volumes and sharp stock-price gains” ahead of key corporate announcements. FINRA has sent formal communiques to several firms, a move which often augurs deeper scrutiny, former SEC enforcement lawyer David Chase told the WSJ: “When those [missives] go out, it really stirs the pot. It’s typically the first step in an investigation.”
Stocks staged a solid rebound from recent weakness with a 0.6% advance on the S&P 500, while Treasurys steepened a bit with two-year yields ticking to 3.63% from 3.64% yesterday and the long bond rising two basis points to 4.77%. WTI crude stayed above $65 a barrel, gold rallied to $3,765 per ounce, bitcoin consolidated its recent selloff near $109,000 and the VIX sank 1.5 points to 15 and change.
- Philip Grant
From The Art Newspaper:
The billionaire philanthropist, financier and collector Thomas S. Kaplan is in advanced discussions to fractionalize his Leiden Collection, the world’s largest private collection of Dutch Golden Age paintings, and launch it as an IPO.
“I'm looking to see whether I can take the entire collection public,” he tells The Art Newspaper: “I think assets, such as really great art, are going to multiply manyfold because they are truly scarce, and there's so much money sloshing around that will need a home and this is a great value proposition. To my mind the best way to evangelize for Rembrandt is by giving millions, maybe tens of millions, of ordinary people the opportunity to own a Rembrandt.”
Pretty soon you’re talking about real money: Mr. Market’s insatiable enthusiasm for all things artificial intelligence has kicked into another gear in recent days, as Bloomberg points out that Nvidia’s recently-announced $105 billion of combined investments in OpenAI and Intel spurred a $320 billion, three-day updraft in the chipmaker’s own market capitalization. Yesterday, Alibaba enjoyed a 10% share price bump – tacking on $35 billion in market cap – after saying it would exceed its prior $50 billion AI spending bogey, without specifying a new figure.
“The market has been super friendly to allow these companies to go on this investment spree, [on the belief that] AI presents a foundational opportunity not only for these companies but for the broader economy,” Tejas Dessai, director of thematic research at Global X Asset Management Company, told Bloomberg. “The biggest risk right now is underspending, especially if you are a category leader.”
Freewheeling conditions in corporate credit do little to dissuade that impulse, with option-adjusted spreads on ICE BofA’s investment-grade gauge hovering at 75-basis points, near the lowest since 1998. Domestic high-grade issuance reached $57 billion on Monday and Tuesday alone, relays Bank of America credit strategist Yuri Seliger. That two-day tally already approaches the $70 billion figure logged the week after Labor Day, which is typically the year’s busiest period. September supply is on pace to tip the scales at $230 billion, which would mark the month’s heaviest output on record.
An AI darling stands as Grand Marshal of that issuance parade, as Oracle Corp. raised $18 billion yesterday in a six-part bond offering, the second largest single transaction in the year-to-date. Demand for the deal was five times oversubscribed per Bloomberg, well above the 3.8 demand-to-supply ratio seen on average in 2025. That allowed Oracle to tighten pricing by 25 to 30 basis points across each of the half-dozen tranches, with the longest-duration issue due in 2065 sporting a 137-basis point option-adjusted pickup.
To be sure, Larry Ellison’s corporate brainchild is the toast of Wall Street these days. Shares are up 77% so far this year, far ahead of Nvidia’s mere 33% advance, with the bulk of that move following news that Oracle inked a monster $300 billion, five-year agreement with OpenAI to sell computing power to the ChatGPT parent beginning in 2027. It’s one of the largest cloud contracts ever signed according to The Wall Street Journal.
Yet the lunar bound stock price hardly moves the needle for creditors, who share no AI-related upside beyond the return of principal and contractually-stipulated interest payments.
To that point, Moody’s Ratings warned of substantial “counterparty risk” from that deal with OpenAI, which disclosed a $10 billion annual revenue run-rate in June, still a fraction of the $60 billion average annual sum it intends to pay Oracle. Peers at S&P likewise warned in July that Oracle’s capex is set to ballon to 40% of revenues in fiscal 2026 from 17% two years ago, with “weak” cash flow generation imperiling its credit profile “if the company needs to fund rising capital spending with new debt issuance.” Both of those agencies rate Oracle at the equivalent of triple-B, the last full stop before junk, alongside a negative outlook.
So goes the AI boom, so go the credit markets? Worldwide data center capital spending will total $2.9 trillion through 2028, analysts at Morgan Stanley estimated over the summer. Hyperscaler cash flows will cover less than half of that bill, with other funding sources including corporate debt issuance and private credit needed for the remainder.
“Two things everyone has to acknowledge,” Michael Gatto, head of direct lending and restructuring at Silver Point Capital and author of The Credit Investor’s Handbook, told the audience at the Grant’s Interest Rate Observer private credit event in spring 2024. “When there’s a lot of capital and the emotion is greed and there’s fear of missing out, bad deals get done. When there is a lack of capital and the emotion is fear, great deals get done.”
Reserve Bank credit remained near $6.56 trillion for a fourth straight week, with the Fed’s portfolio of interest-bearing assets down $9 billion from late August and 26.5% from its early 2022 peak.
Stocks came under moderate pressure for a third straight day, leaving the S&P 500 lower by 0.5%, while the Treasury curve flattened with two-year yields jumping seven basis points to 3.64% and the long bond ticking to 4.75% from 4.76% Wednesday. WTI crude ticked above $65 a barrel, gold rose to $3,750 per ounce, bitcoin fell below $110,000 and the VIX approached one-month highs near 17.
- Philip Grant
From the Financial Times:
Regional U.S. casinos are benefiting at the expense of Las Vegas as gamblers cut back on expensive vacations to the city, in another symptom of the growing consumer caution sweeping the U.S.
Gross gaming revenue — the difference between sums wagered and the winnings paid out — was up 5% in July and by 6% in August at casinos outside Nevada, compared with the same months in 2024, according to published state gaming reports collated by Barclays Research. . .
Almost 8% fewer people visited Vegas in the year to July compared with the same period in 2024, according to figures from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.
Number go up, and up. . .The stock market’s rapid post Liberation Day ascent leaves the S&P 500 priced at more than 40 times its cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, eclipsing the 38.6 times logged in fall 2021 to mark the richest reading in history after the dot-com bubble, which saw a 44.2 CAPE in fall 1999.
With that metric up some seven turns over the past six months, Wall Street has labored to keep pace, with the average sell-side strategist’s year-end price target roughly 3% below current levels per Bloomberg. Only in 1999 and 2024 have those typically-optimistic forecasts lagged current prices at this time of year, even after strategists at Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and other firms have “repeatedly” boosted their year-end bogey in recent months. “What we have been surprised by is the unrelenting nature of the advance, without any material pullback at all,” Julian Emanuel, chief equity and quantitative strategist at Evercore ISI, told Bloomberg.
The virtually-uninterrupted rally spurs a growing supply response, as initial public offerings have raised $14.6 billion since July 1 according to Renaissance Capital. That’s the best quarterly showing since late 2021, with September’s $7.6 billion output itself approaching the highest subsequent single quarter of $8.9 billion logged from April to June of 2024. “With a solid quarter of activity behind us and more deals lining up in the pipeline, the long-awaited IPO pickup appears to be underway,” analysts at Renaissance conclude. “Solid returns, stable market conditions and a robust private backlog bolster a strong outlook for the rest of the year.”
Today’s freewheeling backdrop likewise helps flip the leveraged finance issuance machine into high gear, with the month-to-date supply of new junk bonds topping $35 billion as of this morning by Bloomberg’s count, on pace to log the most active single month since September 2021. An eye-catching deal, meanwhile, took shape across the Atlantic this morning, as Renault SA sold €850 million ($1.04 billion) in green bonds due 2030 at a 3.875% yield, as a €3.4 billion order book allowed the double-B-plus rated automaker to slash 50 basis points off initial price talk. For context, Bloomberg’s European high-yield gauge changes hands at 5.64%, while French five-year government bond yields top 2.8%.
Stateside, cash-flush creditors turn to derivatives to enhance returns. Citing data from Barclays, Bloomberg reports that net sales of the investment-grade CDX Index (which consists of credit default swaps on a collection of 125 North America-based entities) have reached $110 billion, up 29% from the same time in 2024 and the highest such tally in at least three years.
Informing that build-up: the sum of interest and principal payments has outpaced new supply by some $75 billion in the year-to-date according to BNP Paribas, spurring managers to get creative in deploying new capital as option-adjusted spreads on the ICE BofA U.S. Corporate Index crouch at just 74 basis points, their lowest since 1998. “The money keeps coming in, and it needs to be invested,” Travis King, head of U.S. investment-grade corporates at Voya Investment Management, told Bloomberg.
Stocks came under some pressure, with the S&P 500 retreating 0.6% to give back a piece of its recent gains, while Treasurys enjoyed a bull-steepening move with 2-year yields dropping eight basis points to 3.53% while the long bond ticked to 4.73% from 4.77% Monday. WTI crude pushed towards $64 a barrel, gold rose another 1.2% to $3,786 per ounce, bitcoin slumped below $112,000 and the VIX remained on the front foot, approaching 17.
- Philip Grant
From Reuters:
China's securities watchdog has advised some local brokerages to pause their real-world asset (RWA) tokenization business in Hong Kong, said two sources, signaling Beijing's concerns of a euphoric drive towards a booming digital assets market offshore.
The RWA tokenization process usually converts traditional assets such as stocks, bonds, funds and even real estate, into digital tokens traded on a blockchain. A raft of Chinese firms, including brokerages, have launched RWAs in Hong Kong over the past few months.
At least two leading brokerages have received informal guidance from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) in recent weeks to refrain from conducting RWA business offshore, said the sources with knowledge of the matter.
Newly minted Fed governor Stephen Miran continues to put his dovish bona fides on full display, declaring on CNBC Friday that “I don’t see any material inflation from tariffs” after logging a dissenting vote for a 50-basis point rate cut.
Speaking before the Economic Club of New York this morning, Miran advocated for a benchmark funds rate in the mid 2% range (more than 150 basis points below current levels and south of the 2.9% year-over-year headline reading for August CPI), adding thus with respect to President Trump’s trade levies: “relatively small changes in some goods prices have led to what I view as unreasonable levels of concern.”
Of course, “relatively small” and “unreasonable levels of concern” are in the eye of the beholder. Goods sector inflation ticked to a 1.49% year-over-year clip in August from zero this spring, the Bureau of Labor Statistics finds, with the three-month annualized pace accelerating to 2.77%.
As Bianco Research points out today, privately-compiled metrics paint an even starker picture: Data sifted by Truflation show a 1.98% rise in the price level since April 2 “Liberation Day,” equivalent to a 4.22% annualized rate. Then, too, price data from four major U.S. retailers show a 3.7% annual uptick in imported goods impacted by tariffs over the same period per research firm PriceStats, while products originating from China are tracking at a 5.1% annual rate of inflation. “This is a problem,” Bianco concludes.
Recent developments in the Treasury complex may reflect those concerns, with 10- and 30-year yields levitating towards 4.15% and 4.76%, respectively, from 4% and 4.6% immediately following last week’s rate decision. Uncle Sam’s long-dated creditors “don’t want the Fed to be cutting interest rates,” OnePoint BFG Wealth Partners CIO Peter Boockvar contended on CNBC Friday, as such easing suggests the central bank is “taking [its] eye off” inflation risks.
Recent developments crystallize that risk. Last Thursday’s auction of $20 billion in 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities priced at a yield of 1.734%, some five basis points north of its when issued levels seen just prior to the sale. Total investor demand ebbed to $42.8 billion from $52.1 billion at the prior auction in late July according to Bloomberg, leaving the bid-to-cover at just 2.2:1. Outside a single auction during the post-Covid inflation spike in summer 2022, that’s the weakest ratio for 10-year TIPS in more than five years.
Stocks ripped off another chunky gain with the S&P 500 logging fresh highs, up nearly 15% in the year-to-date and 35% above its early April nadir, while Treasurys remained under pressure with 2- and 30-year yields rising four and two basis points, respectively, to 3.61% and 4.77%. WTI crude remained stuck near $62 a barrel, gold again legged higher to $3,748 per ounce and bitcoin sank below $113,000. Bucking the bull market vibes, the VIX popped higher by nearly a point to settle at 16 and change.
- Philip Grant
Don Draper, call your office. From ARS Technica:
Days after someone revealed the news on social media, Samsung confirmed today that it is showing advertisements on some U.S. customers’ smart fridges. Samsung said the ads showing on some Family Hub-series fridges are part of a pilot program, but we suspect that they may become more permanent additions to Samsung fridges and/or other types of screen-equipped smart home appliances.
In a statement sent to Ars Technica, Samsung confirmed that it is “conducting a pilot program to offer promotions and curated advertisements on certain Samsung Family Hub refrigerator models in the U.S. market.”
From green to red: overseas investors are shedding U.S. dollar exposure at “an unprecedented pace,” Deutsche Bank relayed on Monday, with rolling three-month inflows into currency-hedged exchange traded funds outpacing those of unhedged products for the first time this decade.
“The FX implications are clear – foreigners may have returned to buying U.S. assets. . . but they don’t want the dollar exposure that goes with it,” wrote Deutsche Bank’s global head of currency research George Saravelos. “For every hedged dollar asset that is bought, an equivalent amount of currency is sold to remove the FX risk.”
That dynamic may help explain the greenback and stock market’s diverging fortunes, as the U.S. Dollar Index is down 11% in the year-to-date with the S&P 500 up a near reciprocal figure. With the Fed telegraphing more rate cuts following Wednesday’s quarter-point downshift as the European Central Bank enters stand pat mode and the Bank of Japan considers tightening policy in the coming months, those currency hedges could grow more alluring for foreign investors. “My sense is [that] the bulk of the adjustment is still ahead,” Sahil Mahtani, London-based director at Ninety One Asset Management’s Investment Institute, told Bloomberg today.
The Trump administration’s asset price-minded, E-Z money push has already ushered in a major adjustment in a certain yellow metal, with the price of gold logging more than 30 daily record highs so far this year on its way to a 40% gain. That heady move has roused the heretofore-sleepy mining complex to the tune of a 110% year-to-date rip for the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index.
That gauge, which finally broke above its 2011 highs on Sept. 5, has tacked on 8% of upside over the past two weeks (including a 4.5% advance today). Underscoring the group’s potent momentum: VanEck’s Gold Miners ETF saw its Relative Strength Index top 70 – signaling overbought conditions on a technical basis – for 13 consecutive sessions earlier this week, the longest such streak since the vehicle’s 2006 inception, according to Bloomberg.
Yet on a fundamental view at least, the sector is hardly out over its skis. Global mining firms are now collectively valued at $550 billion according to analysts at Bank of America, equivalent to 0.39% of worldwide stock market capitalization. That’s roughly equivalent to the ratio logged five years ago and far below the 0.71% seen in 2011. “We wonder,” muses the BofA team, “if the current cycle were to continue for a sufficient period of time, could the 0.71% [ratio] be seen again? It seems possible in our view.”
Hasten the day! In the meantime, see the current edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a bullish analysis on a pair of gold industry players sporting unimposing valuations alongside clean balance sheets, while operating in friendly jurisdictions and presenting potential upside in their respective production profiles.
Stocks enjoyed another 0.5% rise in the S&P 500 with notably disparate results elsewhere, as the small-cap Russell 2000 dropped 0.8% while Goldman Sachs’ basket of heavily-shorted names jumped 1.4%. Treasurys saw some bear steepening with the long bond ticking to 4.75% from 4.72% Thursday, WTI crude fell to $62 a barrel, gold advanced to $3,682 per ounce, bitcoin hovered above $115,000 and the VIX finished at 15 and change, up slightly on the week.
- Philip Grant
From the Financial Times:
The European Central Bank has sold more than €150 million [$177 million] of bonds of Worldline SA, an embattled payments processor that was recently accused of turning a blind eye to fraudulent customers, according to people familiar with the sales.
The ECB, which acquired the bonds as part of its quantitative easing program a number of years ago, began sounding out credit investors towards the end of last week and sold the debt on Monday. It was still marketing some of the company’s bonds to investors on Tuesday and intends to sell its entire stake, the people said. . .
The ECB purchased the bonds when they were rated as investment grade as part of its massive asset purchase program. Chunks of a €500mn bond due in 2027 and another €600 million note maturing in 2028 remained on the central bank’s books immediately after the allegations were made against the French company in June.
Après nous, le déluge? Cryptocurrency aficionados will soon enjoy a supersized menu of digital delicacies, after the Securities and Exchange Commission rubber-stamped a proposal from the NYSE, Nasdaq and Cboe permitting the bourses to adopt streamlined listing standards for spot commodity ETFs.
Reuters relays that yesterday’s ruling “removes the last remaining hurdle for dozens” of new products tracking the likes of dogecoin and solana, while truncating the filing-to-launch period to no more than 75 days from the current 240-plus day wait. “This is a watershed moment in America’s regulatory approach to digital assets, overturning more than a decade of precedent since the first bitcoin ETF filing in 2013,” declared Teddy Fusaro, president of Bitwise Asset Management.
Washington’s wholesale embrace of all things crypto has certainly proved a boon for hodler’s, with the industry’s collective market value now topping $4.1 trillion, up nearly 80% since Donald Trump won re-election last fall.
Yet the air has come out of one high-profile category of late, with investors suddenly turning up their noses at the formerly-celebrated crypto treasury complex pioneered by bitcoin evangelist Michael Saylor. Shares of Strategy have ebbed by some 22% over the past two months, while Japanese and British players Metaplanet and Smarter Web Co. have each absorbed a near 70% drawdown since mid-June. For context, 331 firms around the world have opted to stockpile the pre-eminent cryptocurrency per Bitcointreasuries.net, up from 131 in mid-June (see “Bitcoin goes corporate” in the June 20 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a closer look at the then-burgeoning phenomenon).
“This whole thing is starting to show big cracks,” Eric Benoist, tech and data research specialist at Natixis CIB, told the FT last week. “The weaker players are going to be basically wiped out by the market, most likely.”
One Nasdaq-listed entrant is taking that “only the strong survive” mantra to heart. On Tuesday, FG Nexus (ticker: FGNX) announced shareholder approval for plans to issue one trillion (with a “t”) new shares to further its designs on “becoming the largest corporate holder of Ethereum by an order of magnitude,” as the company, which sports a current share count of just over 35 million, put it in an SEC filing.
Notably, those bold ambitions elicited little more than a golf clap from Mr. Market. Shares of Nexus, which sank below $7 Monday from $38 in early August, have subsequently ticked to $8 and change.
Reserve Bank credit stands at $6.559 trillion, little changed from a week ago. The Fed’s portfolio of interest-bearing assets is down $18 billion from the middle of August and stands 26.5% below its early 2022 peak.
Buy the rumor, buy the news: stocks enjoyed another push higher following yesterday’s widely anticipated rate cut, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.5% and the Nasdaq 100 rising 0.9%. though Treasurys came under some pressure with 2- and 30-year yields jumping five and six basis points, respectively, to 3.57% and 4.72%. WTI crude dropped retreated towards $63 a barrel, gold slipped to $3,644 per ounce, bitcoin climbed to $117,500 and the VIX stayed slightly below 16.
- Philip Grant
From CNBC:
Frontier Airlines CEO Barry Biffle fired back at his counterpart at United Airlines who said the deep discount model in the U.S. is dead. “That’s cute,” Biffle said Wednesday at the Skift Global Forum, a travel conference in New York. “If he’s good at math he would understand that we have a [flight] oversupply issue in the United States.”
Biffle’s comments were a response to United CEO Scott Kirby, who said last week at an airline conference in Long Beach, California that he thought the largest U.S. discounter, Spirit Airlines, would go out of business. Spirit in August entered its second bankruptcy in less than a year after failing to find sturdy financial footing.
When Kirby was asked why he thought Spirit would shut down, he responded, “Because I’m good at math.” . . Both Frontier and United, along with other airlines like JetBlue Airways, have announced that they’re adding new flights on major Spirit routes to win over its customers as it struggles.
Open sesame: Americans gave their wallets a workout this summer according to the Commerce Department, which reported yesterday that advance retail sales jumped by 0.6% month over month in August, topping each of the 67 economist estimates collected by Bloomberg, who collectively called for a 0.2% gain. The government agency likewise revised the July and June sequential growth rates to 0.6% and 1%, respectively, from 0.5% and 0.6%.
“We’ve all been spooked by a slower jobs market, [but] the consumer data are telling us that households are still spending,” Wells Fargo economist Shannon Grein told Bloomberg, adding the following caveat: “some of that is just due to higher prices of product, not necessarily more volume.”
Some find those higher product prices easier to swallow than others, as the post-Covid inflation alongside rollicking asset prices renders today’s economic edifice increasingly top-heavy. The wealthiest 10% of consumers by income distribution accounted for 49.2% of total spending during the second quarter, Moody’s Analytics found earlier this week, up from 48.5% during the first three months of the year to mark the highest reading on record dating to 1989. “As long as [the well-to-do] keep spending, the economy should avoid recession,” Moody’s chief economist Mark Zandi commented yesterday on X. “But if they turn more cautious, for whatever reason, the economy has a big problem.”
Beyond those wealth-effect beneficiaries in the upper crust, signs of strain grow more visible. Average 30- and 60-day delinquency rates among subprime automobile lenders stand at 11.1% and 5.2%, respectively, Bloomberg relayed last week, marking the highest for each data series since at least 2018 and far above the 4% and 1% levels seen during the Covid-era stimmie-fueled sugar rush.
“Elevated vehicle prices continue to support bonds backed by auto loans but are squeezing affordability, leading to more late payments,” Bloomberg strategist Rod Chadehumbe wrote last week. Average new vehicle prices tip the scales at $49,100 according to Cox Automotive, up nearly 33% from the summer of 2019, while the tally of new models offered at $25,000 and below has shrunk to just five from 25 a decade ago.
Yesterday brought a broader signpost of consumer balance sheet erosion, as the nationwide average FICO credit score slipped to 715 in April from 717 in the same month last year, marking the largest drop since 2009 and the second consecutive annual decline following more than a decade of steady improvement. “We’ve seen a K-shaped economy where those with wealth tied to stock market portfolios and rising home values are doing well and others are struggling with high rates and affordability problems,” Tommy Lee, senior director at Fair Isaac Corp., told CNN.
Treasurys and stocks alike saw a status quo-type response to the Fed’s 25 basis point rate cut, with 2- and 30-year yields each ticking higher by a single basis point to 3.52% and 4.66%, respectively, and the S&P 500 finishing just below unchanged for a second straight session. WTI crude pulled back to $64 a barrel, gold slipped to $3,660 per ounce, bitcoin stayed near $116,000 and the VIX ebbed below 16.
- Philip Grant
A pair of recent headlines from Bloomberg:
Quant Fund That Added ‘Alpha’ to Its Name Drops 11.4% This Year
Hedge Fund Qube Starts Charging Some Staff 35% Incentive Fees
All aboard! As the rumbling bull market conferred a fourth consecutive record high for the Nasdaq 100 Monday, professional money managers are increasingly along for the ride according to Bank of America’s latest Global Fund Manager Survey.
Thus, equity overweight positions reached a seven-month high in September despite 58% of respondents deeming the stock market to be overvalued. Long bets within the tech sector in turn logged their largest single-month increase since July 2024, even as managers dubbed the Magnificent 7 cohort today’s “most crowded trade.”
Of course, that trade is crowded for good reason: the mega-cap tech septet has returned more than 50% since April 8, Bianco Research points out today, powering the S&P 500’s 30% rebound from those post-Liberation Day lows. The Mag7 has generated more than 40% of the blue-chip gauge’s 10.8% increase in market capitalization for the year-to-date, leaving its share of the cap-weighted S&P 500 at about 35% compared to 20% at the start of 2023. The hallowed group collectively changes hands at nearly 37 times trailing earnings, compared to 27.4 times for the S&P 500 at large, with Wall Street projecting 17.1% annual earnings per share growth over the next five years compared to 10.7% for the broad index.
Yet thanks in large part to eye-watering costs associated with the artificial intelligence revolution, justifying those gaudy figures could prove a tall order. Last week, investment firm GQG Partners laid out the bear case for Silicon Valley’s leading lights, drawing unfavorable comparisons between today’s euphoric backdrop and the dot-com bubble.
“We believe the sector stands at a significant inflection point, with investors seemingly making a one-way bet on the AI mania while appearing to ignore alarming fundamental issues,” wrote the team at GQG (which counts Nvidia as a top portfolio performer since 2016 and were “comparatively larger buyers” of the chipmaker in 2023).
Among the areas of present-day concern: ebbing growth in digital advertising, a cornerstone revenue source for big tech. The electronic medium now accounts for more than 70% of all ad spending, meaning “the penetration-driven growth story could be approaching its final innings.”
Indeed, industry growth will ebb to a 9% compound annual rate through 2030, analysts at Morgan Stanley predict, less than half the 20% CAGR logged over the five years through 2019. Meanwhile, “countless new competitors have entered the digital advertising sector, including Walmart, Netflix and Uber” alongside Chinese national champions such as ByteDance.
Today’s AI arms race likewise changes the game for those firms that largely achieved their dominant positions without undertaking major capital spending. Big tech’s capex now tips the scales at 50% to 70% of Ebitda, approaching AT&T’s 72% ratio at the top of the telecom bubble in 2000 and Exxon’s 65% figure as the shale tidal-wave crested in 2014. “Historically, companies experiencing higher capital intensity tend to be structurally poor investments,” GQG warns (see the July 4 edition of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for more on that critical dynamic).
Facing the prospect of diminished returns on capital thanks to AI-related outlays, big tech has responded by extending the depreciation period on investments such as Nvidia GPUs. Yet those cutting-edge chips are released annually, and competitive considerations virtually dictate purchasing the latest edition. “Once reality sets in, investors may find that earnings are massively inflated due to much higher depreciation,” the authors contend.
On the other hand, questionable earnings quality represents a high-class problem relative to certain corners of the private markets: In July, AI startup Thinking Machines raised $2 billion in seed funding at a $12 billion valuation. Founded by OpenAI’s former chief technology officer Mira Murati, the seven-month-old outfit “has yet to reveal what it’s working on” as TechCrunch puts it.
Treasurys enjoyed some bull steepening ahead of tomorrow’s Fed decision, with two-year yields dipping three basis points to 3.51% and the long bond ticking to 4.65% from 4.66%, while stocks snapped their long winning streak by the narrowest of margins, as both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 logged microscopic declines following listless, narrow-range trading. WTI crude advanced towards $65 a barrel, gold approached $3,700, bitcoin rose to near $117,000 and the VIX rallied for a second day in an otherwise placid tape, settling at 16 and change.
- Philip Grant
From Reuters:
Exxon Mobil is introducing a unique shareholder voting mechanism that will allow retail investors to automatically cast ballots in step with board recommendations during annual meetings, a move that may help the top U.S. oil producer fend off activist campaigns.
On Monday, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said in a letter that it would not object to the plan from Exxon as long as the company met certain conditions, including providing annual reminders to investors who opted into the mechanism about their participation. . .
Nearly 40% of the company's shares are held by individuals but just a quarter of them vote during proxy season, though they mostly support the board, Exxon said. Retail investors hold about 30% of most large U.S. companies. They are a sought-after pool when companies face close board elections or campaigns for ideologically charged shareholder resolutions.
It’s good enough for government work: Municipal bonds are all the rage these days ahead of the Fed-telegraphed rate cuts, as state and local government debt funds logged $3.09 billion in net inflows over the seven days through Sept. 10, EPFR finds. That’s the strongest single-week figure since late 2020.
Bloomberg’s benchmark muni gauge and its high-yield peer racked up 148 basis points and 174 basis points of returns last week, respectively, each marking their second-best weekly showings of 2025. Long-dated bonds accounted for 63% of tax-exempt trading volume on the secondary market over that stretch. Comparing to a three-month average of 57%, the uptick “signal[s] a clear bid for duration” per Bloomberg analyst Karen Altamirano. S&P’s Municipal Bond Index settled on Friday at a 3.63% yield-to-worst, down 30 basis points in just over a week and nearly a percentage point below its early April highs.
Notably, today’s brisk demand persists in the face of a potent supply impulse, as year-to-date issuance reached $400 billon Friday, up 17% from last year’s record pace (full year 2024 volumes registered at $513.6 billion per the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association). With the Trump administration opting to maintain municipal debt’s tax-advantaged status in the One Big Beautiful Bill package which passed over the summer, a solid value proposition takes center stage.
On a yield-to-worst basis, the 3.63% on offer from S&P’s muni index equates to just under 90% of the (taxable) 10-year Treasury note, well above the 65% to 70% ratio that has typically served as fair value according to David Hammer, head of municipal-bond portfolio management at PIMCO. See the Feb. 14 and May 21 editions of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer for a look at several potentially attractive investment opportunities within the famously fragmented debt category, which span some 1.1 million securities across 55,000 different issuers. “Whoever dreamt up the strong form of the efficient market hypothesis probably wasn’t thinking of tax-exempt bonds,” Grant’s quipped in May.
Indeed, recent events starkly illustrate the importance of prudent security selection. A Friday Bloomberg bulletin documented the travails of the Easterly Funds’ ROCMuni High Income Municipal Bond Fund, which saw half its net asset value evaporate last week after the vehicle was forced to sell unrated positions “for pennies on the dollar to meet investor redemptions.”
Easterly, which focuses on obligations financing private sector projects with public benefits (e.g., waste treatment and assisted living facilities), advertised a 6.7% yield as of May 31, the richest on offer among more than 60 high-yield muni funds tracked by Morningstar.
Yet roughly one-third of its 90-odd bond holdings were in default as of that date, SEC filings show, including debts backing a Kentucky biodiesel plant and a Texas wharf, which changed hands at 3 cents and 6 cents, respectively, over the summer. Easterly had last marked those positions at 70 and 90 cents, respectively, based on third-party assessments. “A lot of [illiquid asset valuations are] in the eye of the beholder, but what makes it definitive is if someone tries to transact on the valuation and the market gives you the Mike Tyson punch in the face,” Municipal Market Analytics founder Tom Doe told Bloomberg.
Stocks maintained their seemingly-perpetual upward momentum as the S&P 500 tacked on another half-percent advance, while Treasury yields ticked lower by one to two basis points across the curve with the Federal Open Market Committee set to gather tomorrow. WTI crude climbed above $63 a barrel, gold charged higher to $3,681 per ounce, bitcoin ebbed to $115,000 and the VIX rose towards 16.
- Philip Grant