Truly A Moron

We are into the name-calling phase of global trade policy. The “Stable Genius” Party told us to “reject the evidence of your eyes or ears” or even the ten trillion dollars of capital destruction. But, enough is enough. Or, so thinks DOGE-whisperer Elon Musk. The focus of his ire is the White House driver of Donald Trump’s trade tariff policies, Peter Navarro. Now, Peter is an interesting chap. He first came to my attention with a series of books featuring hard line views on China and US trade deficits generally.  He then served in the Trump 1.0 administration of 2016-2020 when his “fringe” economist status acquired an unusual qualification. Well, weird. It turns out the globally reputed economist, Ron Vara, quoted in many of Peter’s books was a fictional figure. Indeed, Ron Vara was not just supportive of Peter’s bonkers economics but also an anagram of his own name. No, seriously.

So, who’s surprised to read the Navarro tariff calculations are the work of a ChatGPT output which the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute (AEI) think could be out by a factor of four times(400%)? It’s a bit late now but Musk has just described Navarro as “dumber than a sack of bricks” and “truly a moron”.  You’ll note my view that Musk is too late to undo the damage of the Mad Orange King and the Ron Vara school of economics. In fact, it’s not actually my view.  Policy uncertainty paralyses business activity and the scores are coming in fast….

 

*Larry Fink, CEO of the largest asset manager on the planet, BlackRock Inc, with $10 trillion reasons to care says “Most CEOs I talk to would say we are probably in a recession right now.”

*Jamie Dimon, CEO of the most valuable bank on the planet, JP Morgan, in his annual letter to shareholders delivered a blunt warning – “The recent tariffs will likely increase inflation and are causing many to consider a greater probability of a recession.”

*Airline share prices are traditionally viewed as early warning signals of trouble ahead. So, when you see Delta, American and United stocks drop 35-45% this year we should pay attention. Larry Fink is anyway – “Airlines and air traffic are a canary in the coal mine. Right now the canary is sick”

 

Cheery stuff. However, these are US-focused observations. We have been here before and we should remind ourselves that capital markets can be quite effective in taming policy tyranny. Ask Liz Truss. Then check bond markets. Interestingly, if bond markets “believed” recession was imminent then bond yields(rates) would not be rising like they are right now. US 10 year Treasury yields have jumped from 3.87% to 4.52% in the past two trading sessions. This is highly unusual bond behaviour when equity markets are so volatile or declining. In fact, it’s the all-powerful bond market questioning the credibility of US institutions. Hence, you’ll soon be hearing Trump whining about the Fed lowering interest rates but, again, not quite understanding bond markets. Other markets are behaving in a more orthodox manner but could also upset the tariff toddler.

You might have noticed that Trump has refused the pre-‘Liberation Day’ EU offer of zero tariffs on industrial goods. Trump and his team are now switching focus to “non-tariff trade barriers” and demanding the EU buy $350 billion of energy to balance out trade deficits. The White House is rapidly losing the faith of its fossil-fuel friends who are staring down the barrel of $50 spot prices for oil. Ahead of inauguration, the reversal of Biden’s signature IRA act and decarbonisation/cleantech investment incentives sounded good to the oil barons but they didn’t plan on Trumpolini playing Texas Hold ‘Em with every trading partner in the world …..at the same time. And, don’t forget the Kremlin and its war economy is acutely oil price sensitive too.

Cryptocurrencies and their broligarch fan boys are also going to be a bit tetchy apart from “car assembler” Musk. Bitcoin is down 17% year-to-date with cryptocurrency ETFs (funds) suffering their third consecutive month of outflows. In fact, the big picture worry for all cryptocurrency evangelists is that on current pricing history evidence Bitcoin appears to have morphed into a tracking instrument for the tech-heavy Nasdaq equity index. It’s supposed to be a currency, as a quick reminder.  Go check the charts and then wonder how long before the broligarchs put pressure on Trump to move the markets into risk-on crypto-friendly mode. We will wait but private markets won’t stand still. In fact, big global structural themes (outside trade) will continue to play out in private. Just this week we spotted these three deals amid all the screaming red ticker-chyrons and panic headlines:

 

  • Faster research: San Francisco-based Rescale provides AI-powered R&D simulation software and has raised $115m from investors including Nvidia.
  • Content generation: Another Californian start-up with Spanish founders, Krea, uses generative AI for image content generation and design. They have just raised $83m from investors including Bain Capital.
  • Payment infrastructure: Juspay, an Indian payment infrastructure start-up has raised $60m from institutions including Kedaara Capital.

 

Humanity and innovation will keep moving forward irrespective of the headlines. Public markets gyrating violently are the real-time expression of capital flows, fears and policy paralysis but, in private, both in Washington and in private markets we can be far more optimistic. Nothing crystal clear right now but the waters will still be blue ahead…