Nightmare On October’s Street….

Hallowe’en has provided its fair share of horror movie classics, but Hollywood does not have exclusive rights to October fears. Wall Street is nervous every year. No pagan myths needed. The historic data shows that financial markets are at their most volatile this month. However, do not confuse volatility with sudden downward moves for stock markets. Yes, two of the worst market crashes in 1929 and 1987, and three of the four 10% + monthly falls for the benchmark Dow Jones Index over the past century all beat Freddy Krueger to the fear punch at the end of the month. However, as a professional risk observer it’s important to know that volatility and risk includes upside moves too. As gold, bitcoin, the German Dax, the S&P 500 and Nvidia hit, or threaten, all-time-highs this week you’d think the volatility this month is only going one way. I’m not so sure. Four things bother me….

1. US ELECTIONS: Maybe it’s the seasonal pumpkins, but my mood is more orange than blue. Foremost in my mind is that the polling for the US presidential election has increasingly moved into toss-up territory. I’m in danger of going into denial mode (and consistent with earlier articles) when I take comfort from German stock markets(Ukraine) at all-time-highs, bond market stability (inflation) and utilities/ electricity stocks (climate) smoking every sector in the US including technology over the past 3 months. None of these should do well in the event of a Trump regime taking power. Yet, betting markets with real money (Polymarket) are showing Trump a full 12% ahead of Harris in the probability stakes. Of course, this just reflects weight of betting on a Musk mate’s betting platform (and backer of JD Vance) rather than votes. Anyway, it feels like there’s a few things not quite in the price of various US financial assets right now. Here’s a list of US institutions and voting cohorts who could suffer a major crisis of confidence if Trump wins:

 

  • US Federal Reserve – Trump making explicit noises about “control” of interest rate policy.

 

  • US Supreme Court – the ship has sailed on the nation’s highest court swinging violently to the right. But, the five extreme “Justices of the Apocalypse” on the Court will be emboldened to interfere further with federal laws governing female health, the environment, public safety and corporate governance.

 

  • US Media – Trump is talking about taking away licences from national broadcasting networks.

 

  • US Clean Energy sector – the irony of Governor Ron DeSantis banning mention of climate crisis in Florida’s text books won’t be lost on many this week. But, expect Trump to try to undo many of Biden’s signature industrial initiatives in decarbonising the US economy.

 

  • US Department of Justice – senior DOJ officers, the rule of law and 91 felony convictions could be about to ‘go through some things”.

 

  • US Stock Markets – Trump’s plan to apply import tariffs across the board is not just inflationary, but could cause chaos for US manufacturing supply chains.

 

2.CHINA CYCLE: Trump is pretty clear about being “a dictator on day one” but what about his other autocratic heroes? Well, it looks like the Donald has been in touch reasonably regularly with his Kremlin handler (thanks Bob Woodward) which does not augur well for the defence of Ukraine’s sovereignty. However, we really should be watching China closely. The Beijing administration has launched a massive fiscal stimulus to lift China’s economic activity, with a further $238 billion economic package to be announced this weekend. Chinese stock markets have rocketed by 25% since mid-September and added $3.2 trillion of value to companies listed on the main Shanghai stock exchange. My fear is that this “whatever it takes” move by President Xi fails to alleviate the stresses in the Chinese property market and domestic economy weighed down by an estimated $15 trillion of debt owed (and much of it hidden) in local government financing vehicles (LGFVs).

Maybe it’s coincidental, but there is a distinctly soggy feel to lots of manufacturing activity data around the world – see September PMI in US, German GDP downgrades etc. So, it’s not just China which needs a boost, and a global cyclical slow down might be the least of our worries. If the Chinese economy continues to stall and Xi becomes worried about his ability to keep power, then the ultimate distraction is war. And, Taiwan is in the crosshairs of that option. Then, note that 90% of the world’s most advanced chips are made in Taiwan and 20% of global goods trade goes through its surrounding waters. Xi might even be watching developments in the Middle-East….

3.MIDDLE-EAST UNKNOWN: Israel’s Bibi Netanyahu seems quite keen on a permanent state of war, and staying in power. And, possibly out of jail. Sound familiar? Answers on a postcard to Mar-A-Lago. Meanwhile, Lebanon looks like the sixth country or region after Iraq, Yemen, Kurdistan, Syria and Gaza to face mass destruction and population displacement through a combination of rogue leadership and external powers forcing regime change miltarily. Now, we await Israel’s response to recent mass-missile attacks by Iran. The chat is Israel’s critical ally, the US, has asked for restraint. Apparently, Netanyahu might not be in agreement with that approach. Meanwhile, Israeli tanks are firing at UN peacekeeping bases in Lebanon. Bizarrely, these events could be described as fitting previous experiences – it’s Israel’s third invasion of Lebanon, and Iran actually attacked US bases and injured 100 servicemen during the Trump presidency. However, my real fear is that the pace of events is increasing rapidly and could potentially upset the “chaotic equilibrium”. I’m sensing an “unknown unknown” could be on the cards and create a whole new paradigm.

4.AI CONCENTRATION: Finally, we know AI can’t solve the leadership and power problems above. But, AI itself is inspiring financial markets and business spend. Be careful. A recent Fortune article flagged the dwindling number of contenders in the AI large-language-model (LLM) race. Yes, OpenAI just raised $6.5 billion at a whopping $157 billion valuation for the largest VC raise in history. Elsewhere, the numbers might just be getting too big. Or… should I say costs. Start-up Character.AI has abandoned its attempts to build an LLM to compete with Google, Amazon or Microsoft/OpenAI citing the model training costs as “insanely expensive”. In fact, the Character.AI team and its founder Noam Shazeer have been acquired (kinda) by Google. I say ‘kinda’ because other commentators have been saying this is, in reality, a monster $2.7 billion re-hire of the former Googler, Shazeer. Big bucks. Anyway, if the field of LLM contenders is shrinking, there’s a possibility we end up with concentrated Big Tech 2.0. On that basis, there is a real danger billions will be wasted trying to take on Big Tech in the LLM space. Even for the big wallets there are increasing reports of data limitations for LLMs. In other words, the exponential demand for data to optimise performance is now generating relatively small/linear improvements. Not quite what Moore or other technology scaling laws had in mind. Oh, and the tech sector’s weighting in the S&P 500 hit 42% this month, a record which puts TMT dotcom “bubble” levels of 32% into perspective.

Perspective indeed, maybe Hallowe’en has spooked my normal optimism. On a slightly more positive front and addressing my biggest current destabilising fear – a Trump win – here’s a few things probably not in the AI training models or the current US polling surveys. Don’t forget pollsters are facing an embarrassing hat-trick of misses, after under-polling Republican votes ahead of the 2016 and 2020 elections.  What are the chances they have over-compensated this time? Here’s a few consoling changes in electoral intentions which could surprise on November 5th:

Female vote: All actual votes in the last 12 months at a state level have missed the huge turnout of motivated female voters alarmed by the assault on healthcare choices waged by the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v Wade. See votes in Kansas, Michigan, Ohio, Montana and Kentucky as good lead indicators of what motivation means.

White college graduates: Apparently wild fantasies about eating pets, visits to Gaza, Hannibal Lecter and election denial is not a vote getter for non-cult GOP voters.

Senior vote: Like in the UK election, we can miss the senior votes. Literally. Approximately 12 million Americans have died since Trump lost in 2020. Many will have succumbed to old age. Given the average age of a Fox News viewer is 67, there’s a reasonable chance millions of Fox viewers/MAGA cult voters will miss this vote.

A slightly morbid end, but there could be a happy ending where the ghoulish baddie disappears as the cops arrive.

Who needs Freddy!