Shell-Shocked Stocks Confront 2024’s First Real Deleveraging Event

Weary market participants hungover from one of the more rollicking stretches in recent memory get a data reprieve in the week ahead. The US macro docket's almost entirely empty. The only notable release is ISM services. Of course, ISM services could be interesting. If it looks anything like last week's appalling ISM manufacturing report, the update on services activity could move markets. Consensus is looking for 51 from the services headline. Another contraction-territory print (i.e., sub-

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8 thoughts on “Shell-Shocked Stocks Confront 2024’s First Real Deleveraging Event

  1. The last 30 minutes of equity trading on Friday hinted that the panic hedging had run its course for the moment.

    I wonder how much “dry powder” was raised by the vol fund managers last week. I recall you recently showed a chart from Mr. McElligot showing vol sales had reached a high percentile before this round of caution started. The ETFs are more permanent, but I wonder how sizable they are relative to the big players who are moving hundreds of millions in and out of the market every few days. Or so it seems. And how much dry powder do the ETF managers normally sit on so they can grab oppoutunities like this.

    1. The market seemed to follow the playbook I have observed on big sell off days. The final leg down is between 2-3pm when the margin calls go out. Between 3-3.30pm you often see the bottom and then a bounce up into the close after the bodies have been carried out to the morgue.

  2. My biggest concern in the markets is the fact that credit default swap costs are increasing. If credit spreads continue to widen, I would read that as a confirmation that a bigger problem is in the process of taking hold. A us treasury bond yield curve inversion, then steepening/ un- inversion followed on with credit widening is almost a lock for an economic downturn. Throw in the Sahm rule trigger, shake and stir.

    We are not there yet, and the unemployment numbers, despite some denials could have been influenced by hurricane Beryl. This is all likely to shake out by September and the next FOMC meeting.

  3. these events tend to end when the vol-sellers smell max blood and hedgers monetize, taking down rich vols, putting a floor [under] the market [and] getting dealers back their gamma

    Strangely enough, these are also the lyrics to a King Crimson song from the early 70s. I believe it was on “Starless And Bible Black”.

    1. Uh, maybe you are mixing it up with that roof top sequence near the end of Blade Runner? Where Rutger Hauer spoke of all the amazing things he’d seen out in the galaxies? Didn’t he mention volmagedon?

      (I sympathized with the character. I mentioned to a colleage and friend of many years about how, on a much smaller level, we’d also witnessed and been part of some really wild market events.)

      1. Mmmmmmm, I see your point, but I don’t think so. If I was going to get Rutger Hauer mixed up with any King Crimson vocalist, it would have been Adrian Belew. Not Greg Lake.

        For a second I did think at first it might’ve been from a track off of Genesis’s “Nursery Crime”, though.

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