Spin Class

Risk was on the front foot Tuesday, as speculation about the timing of Russian military action in Ukraine morphed into speculation that Vladimir Putin ultimately “blinked,” perhaps deterred by the very “hysteria” Kremlin officials accused Western intelligence agencies of fostering.

The US and allies inundated the public with information about the purportedly imminent invasion, including details of an alleged Kremlin plot to stage a false flag in order to give Putin a pretense to pull the trigger — figuratively and literally. It’s possible the strategy worked. Russia has insisted, from the outset, that it had no plans to invade, but notwithstanding the protestations of countless unfortunate souls in Western democracies who’ve been duped by propaganda over the past five years, Russia is most assuredly a malign global actor.

“Whataboutism” is a very powerful propaganda technique, and the Kremlin is uniquely adept at harnessing it. At its core, Whataboutism appeals to our instinctual aversion to hypocrisy, but it always falls apart under scrutiny. It is, after all, predicated on a logical fallacy.

There are different levels of hypocrisy, and more often than not, comparisons are false equivalences or outright non sequiturs. Kremlin propaganda pretends as though no such distinctions exist. In Kremlin propaganda, someone who loudly espouses the virtues of walking around barefoot but who secretly sleeps in warm socks is every bit as hypocritical as a preacher who buys a Rolls Royce with money from the collection plate. “What about the socks?!”, says the priest in the Wraith.

Moscow is a little more clever about it than that, but not much. Most of the Kremlin’s Whataboutism is laughably ridiculous. But Western audiences are increasingly susceptible to it for a variety of reasons, not least of which is the simple observation that Westerners seem to be getting more gullible over time. That, in turn, is a function of undereducation, institutional decay, economic precarity and the decline of civic mindedness. Putin’s regime exploits the situation, and it does so very effectively.

I say all of that in the (sincere) hope that readers will cast a wary eye where a wary eye is warranted. While no one will ever know precisely what the Kremlin was or wasn’t planning over the past several weeks, you’d be a fool to believe a military incursion wasn’t on the table at any point. You’d be positively derelict in your implicit obligation to your own sanity if you trust the word of Kremlin officials like Maria Zakharova over the word of White House officials. Forget whether you trust the US government. It’s not about that. If you live in a Western democracy, you’re an adversary of Putin’s. Not personally, of course, but by default. You’re guilty by association. He’s not your president or your prime minister, and he damn sure isn’t your friend. He’s nobody’s friend, in fact. He’s a KGB agent. You laugh (and I laugh too, because it is funny on some level), but between despairing chuckles, spare a thought for the untold millions of Americans who lost this plot years ago.

As ever, I speak with an academic leg to stand on, but more importantly, I speak dispassionately. As longtime readers are aware, I have no editorial “agenda.” If I had to think about how to “spin” articles or otherwise bend reality in the service of some ulterior motive, I’d need to hire multiple writers and figure out a way to squeeze more than 24 hours out of a day. The only reason I can produce as much quality content as I do singlehandedly is because nothing is forced. It’s just me, on an island (literally), with a computer and a lot of gratitude for the fact that so many people seem to care what I have to say about markets, economics and politics. If I was beholden to some editorial slant that compelled me to carefully craft every article in an unceasing, around-the-clock attempt to perpetuate someone else’s spin, I would’ve died from exhaustion years ago.

In any case, as long as no lives are lost, it is somewhat gratifying to see geopolitics make a cameo in the market reel. The Fed obsession was getting rather tedious, and the intersection of geopolitics and finance was originally my raison d’être. I’d also note, as a kind of addendum to the preceding paragraph, that I deliberately scaled back opinionated coverage some years ago in a concerted effort at quality control. It’s not great for web traffic, but it’s great for reader trust. Besides, Trump killed satire and buried it in the South Lawn.

Barring an escalation, it seems markets are destined to forget about the Ukraine episode, even if Ukrainians certainly won’t. Although geopolitical risk made a comeback in BofA’s closely-watched Global Fund Manager survey, it barely cracked the top five on the tail risk list (figure on the left, below).

That said, perceptions of the risk to financial stability posed by geopolitics rose to the highest in quite a while (figure on the right, above).

This particular flareup had an obvious connection to the most important issues facing traders and investors. The world is staring down an energy crisis, and Russia relies on its status as an energy powerhouse to retain something that’s supposed to count as relevance on the world stage. Higher energy costs would feed inflation, force the Fed’s hand and undermine Joe Biden’s domestic approval rating. That, in turn, has implications for the midterms and thereby fiscal policy in the US.

Another takeaway from the February vintage of BofA’s survey: The percentage of respondents expecting an unfavorable outcome for Democrats in the midterms jumped sharply.

On Tuesday afternoon, Biden said he and Putin agreed to ongoing engagement. Hopefully not the military kind. He also said the US hasn’t verified Russian claims that troops are returning to bases, and he reiterated that any Americans in Ukraine should leave now, “before it’s too late.” As for any hypothetical attack on NATO territory or US forces, Biden said simply that America would “act.”


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10 thoughts on “Spin Class

  1. I assumed Putin was playing the oil market. As far as false flags, it must be a concern in multiple respects. Fully loaded wounded airplane can fall very far from where it belongs . Dangerous game Putin is playing.

  2. H-Man, great piece and yes, Putin was, and still may, invade Ukraine. Sending ships from the North Artic down the English channel, around Spain, into the Med and ending up in Crimea is one helluva training exercise. But then to make the training more realistic, Putin builds military field hospitals.

    Our government did a good job of releasing intel that could be verified by commercial satellite photography. When Putin invaded Crimea, Obama was not permitted to use the intel on the public relations front prior to the invasion.

    All that being said, methinks he will still move on Ukraine but under a new timeline. He knows NATO is not going to lift a finger other than to assert other ‘”sanctions”.

    And this market is not going to digest an invasion very well.

  3. My cynical view: markets care about corporate profits, period.

    So the question is, how will Russia invading Ukraine and the ensuing response affect corporate profits?

    The impact on energy and other commodities is the obvious factor. Even if a company doesn’t use Russian NG or Ukranian wheat, an inflation shock could intensify pressure for tightening, even if such an exogenous shock really shouldn’t dictate CB policy.

    The blow to Biden’s stature and the Dems’ midterm chances is another impact, but likely a positive one for many companies.

    Emboldening China to move on Taiwan would be negative for semis and electronics, but that depends on the West’s response.

    Other than those macro impacts . . . will the typical Nasdaq company’s profits be affected, and how? Is it going to affect GOOG MSFT AAPL FB etc?

    In the short term, sure, war = reflexive risk aversion. But that’s not a lasting impact.

    Russia/Ukraine matters hugely – but I’m just not convinced it matters hugely to stocks.

    1. Others who benefit from the heightened tensions are:
      – US based gas exporters: with Europe’s low trust of Russia, less gas will flow through the Nord Stream 2. With no conflict, Gazprom is poised to control a larger share of the European gas market.
      – Ukranian-based gas distributors: challenges (and delays) to the Nord Stream 2 cause gas to continue flowing through Ukraine

  4. A pack of cape wild dogs will patiently chase a wildebeest for miles. At times during that chase, the wildebeest may stop and confront a dog, even chase it for a bit, but then the pack of dogs resumes the chase of the wildebeest. Eventually the wildebeest tires, and the pack of dogs closes in. Let us hope that the West is not a wildebeest.

  5. I am watching the Russians compete at the Olympics, not as Russians but as ROC. Their 15 year old protégé skater, who tested positive for an illegal drug on Dec 25 but did not publish the results until a few days ago, was allowed to compete because the Olympic committee decided to relax the rules due to her being younger than 16.
    “Russia is most assuredly a malign global actor”.
    Yes, indeed. And so is the International Olympic Committee.

  6. I’m sorry that you had to give up scotch but it’s been a huge plus for those of us who depend on informative and concise commentary. Keep it up and don’t smoke cheap cigars.

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