‘Was That It?’: Bearish Psyche Versus The Right Tail

It could be an afterthought by the end of the week depending on how patient rates are with what was almost guaranteed to be yet another scorching read on US inflation, but as of Wednesday afternoon, equities looked a semblance of sure-footed.

Stability is something stocks haven’t seen a lot of in 2022. Lest we forget, the S&P suffered its worst 16-session start to a calendar year in history. (Define: Inauspicious.)

If it’s an unabashedly bullish take you’re after, confirmation bias will be difficult to come by. At the same time, overtly bearish forecasts were ironically blunted by January’s correction. Indeed, you might even suggest bears were caught wrong-footed by the very selloff they predicted.

“[Our] S&P target was achieved in week three; were we wrong or early?”, BofA’s Savita Subramanian wondered. “Elements of our too bearish call last year are playing out today.”

That was late last month. It was another way of asking, “Was that it?”

Most strategists would say “no.” There’s nothing especially cathartic about a 10% move lower after one of the most spectacular rallies in a century (figure below).

Ultimately, the market is gripped by the kind of cognitive dissonance that sets in when everyone wants to be cautious based on a seemingly bulletproof fundamental bear case, but at the same time fears a scenario where the market runs away to the upside, as it so often has in recent years.

This is captured in the options space. “SPX Skew and Put Skew continue to get mushed, while Call Skew maintains a substantial relative bid as recent client deleveraging has accounts increasingly concerned about missing ‘right tail’ despite being bearish in psyche,” Nomura’s Charlie McElligott said.

“The selloff in equities has taken a breather, VIX has normalized and measures of SPX volatility skew and convexity have declined in recent weeks even as fixed income markets are pricing a 50bps hike in March and five 25bps hikes by end of year,” Barclays’ Maneesh Deshpande remarked, in his latest.

He continued, noting that “hedgers appear to have monetized their protection and have not rolled.”

Importantly, positioning is now much cleaner, where “cleaner” is perhaps better described as “cleaned out.” Hedge fund nets are just ~38%ile. And Nomura’s model suggests vol control’s stock allocation sits in just the 20th%ile, while CTAs’ equity exposure is an outlier-ish ~4th%ile (figure on the left, below).

Meanwhile, Tuesday’s moderately constructive session pushed dealer positioning back towards long gamma territory. Even getting back to neutral would be a welcome development, as it would help anchor spot, mitigating the extent to which every day is a roller coaster.

Remember, gamma is the cornerstone. “We’re close to adding the ultimate ‘Vol compressor’ to the backdrop for the S&P 500,” McElligott went on to say Wednesday, referencing SPX’s approach to the neutral gamma line. “That means prior ‘accelerant’ hedging flows which helped create overshoots in both directions [are] now closer to… a position which is supplying liquidity, further neutraliz[ing] volatility through less erratic price action,” he added.

Again, this is still very tenuous. Indeed, that’s the point. Modern market structure is self-referential at every turn. Stability is needed to promote more stability, and eventually, stability breeds instability. Once the dominoes tip, it can take a while for equities to reestablish the virtuous feedback loop.

“Stocks were making a lot of progress in that regard, right up until January’s CPI report” — is what we may all be saying by the end of the week.


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4 thoughts on “‘Was That It?’: Bearish Psyche Versus The Right Tail

  1. Short covering into CPI? Although in the old days we ignored CPI and just looked at PPI which deserves a more intense scrutiny on Monday (subject to discernibility!)

  2. H-Man, tomorrow tells the tale. Hot number, expectation, inflation falling. No matter what the print, it reads ugly. The shorts have smothered this market . Short squeeze, maybe. Until the news gets better, this is no market to be long. The Ides of March will tell us where we are going.

  3. Market structure factors (gamma, vol strategies, CTAs, L/S, etc) may be temporarily exhausted, and warnings are largely done, which leaves the market without a near-term direction.

    February CPI report and central-bank speak may push the market in one direction or another, but every week brings us closer to the March FOMC meeting and lift-off / QT.

    For all the spinning, declaiming, pontificating, proclaiming, and front-running that has been done, investors cannot confidently discount what is next, because we haven’t been in or near this position before.

    The combination of high inflation, near-zero rates being lifted, immense CB balance sheets being shrunk, and near-record valuations, is unique. The outcome is thus very uncertain.

    In 2H we could have >3% 10 yr, still-high inflation, and a Fed emboldened to step harder on the brakes. Or we could have a stalling economy, the Fed pulling off the brakes, the 10 year lower on recession fears, and the 2-10 curve inverted.

    Investors would want to be positioned very differently in each scenario, but how many can say right now which it will be? Look at the divergent strategist outlooks, from JPM to BAC/MS, all well-reasoned but 180 degrees apart.

    I think we will have to exercise some patience before making big bets. Sure, buying good companies at washed out valuations is always the right thing to do, but there are precious few of those – there are plenty of good companies at still-high valuations, and some good companies at sort-of-fair valuations, but my search for bargains is yielding little that is buyable in size.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints