One of the most ironic and fascinating characteristics about an asset bubble
is that central banks claim they can't recognize one until after it bursts.
And Wall Street apologists tend to ignore the manifestation of bubbles because
the profit stream is just too difficult to surrender.
The excuses for piling money into a particular asset class and sending prices
several standard deviations above normal are made to seem rational at the time:
Housing prices have never gone down on a national basis and people have to
live somewhere, the internet will replace all brick and mortar stores, and
perhaps the classic example is that variegated tulips are so rare they should
be treated like gold.
I am willing to let the Dutch off the hook; back in the seventeenth century
asset bubbles were virtually nonexistent because money was still in specie.
But central banks have created the perfect petri dish for asset bubbles over
the past three decades. Therefore, it's imperative for investors to understand
the classic warning signs of a bubble so you can avoid the inevitable carnage
in the wake of its collapse.
As I identified in my book "The Coming Bond Market Collapse", there are three
classic metrics to determine when an asset has grown into a bubble: it becomes
extremely over supplied, over owned and overpriced compared to historical norms.
The real estate market circa 2005 was a great example of a classic bubble.
The supply of new homes boomed as new home construction rates peaked around
2 million units per annum in the middle of the last decade. That's about 400k
units higher than what would be considered the historical average.
Just prior to the start of the Great Recession the level of home ownership
in the U.S. soared. This rate hit a high of 69% in during 2005, after bouncing
around 64-66% for decades. Today's home ownership rate has fallen back to just
63.7%, which is the lowest in 25 years.
And finally, during the real estate bubble homes were massively overpriced.
According to Trulia, at its 2006 peak home prices were 39% overvalued based
on consumer incomes and cost to rent. On a national level the median home price
to income ratio shot to 4.7 in 2006, compared to the 2.6 historical average.
The current home price to income ratio has climbed back to 4.4 on a national
basis. However, even though home prices are currently vastly overvalued, the
housing market is not in a classic bubble because the real estate market is
not currently in the conditions of being over owned or over supplied.
But the bond bubble is a classic bubble thanks to Wall Street and the Federal
Reserve.
The bond market qualifies as being in a state of over supply because there
has been an additional $60 trillion in total global debt that has accrued since
2007.
During the first half of this year, $891 billion in bonds were issued in the
U.S. alone. That's up 7.5% from the same period in 2014, which was itself a
record year, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.
Higher-yielding "Junk Bonds" led the way with $185 billion so far in 2015.
Volume for June topped out at $29 billion from 60 issuers, the most for any
June on record. The previous June saw just $12.8 billion in volume from 31
issuers. June also follows the two busiest months of this year, with April
and May pulling in $39 billion and $37 billion, respectively. That makes for
a record quarter of $105 billion, the largest recorded quarterly volume ever.
Talk about being oversupplied!
But just as more risk was taken toward the final stages of the housing bubble
in the form of sub-prime mortgage issuance, for every speculative-grade company
that has had its credit rating upgraded this year about two others have been
downgraded. This is the worst ratio since 2009. U.S. companies that issue high-yield
debt posted two consecutive quarters without earnings growth for the first
time since the financial crisis. And their average level of debt-to-earnings
is at an all-time high as well.
Next, bonds are over owned because of investors are yield starved. In the
first quarter of this year alone, net cash inflows into bond funds totaled
$102 billion, that's the largest inflow since 2001. And last year investors
poured $204 billion into bond funds, surpassing inflows of $121 billion into
stock funds.
And finally, bonds are overpriced compared to historical norms. Bond yields
and prices are inverted; as bond prices fall, yields rise. Today, the yield
on the bench mark US 10-year Treasury sits at around 2.3%. This is very close
to its historic low and far below the 7% average over the last 40 years. Making
the price of bonds massively expensive at the current level--especially in
light of record debt levels and the increase in central bank balance sheets.
I first explained the classic signs of a bubble at the start of the real estate
crisis to help investors identify a problem before it grows too far out of
control. Perhaps the Fed should now take heed and ask the question if seven
years of zero percent interest rates could possibly lead to a bubble in fixed
income. But even more importantly, the question everyone should be asking is:
what happens when bond prices crash and who is going to buy all that debt?
Once the Fed starts raising interest rates investors may start to sell their
high-yield junk bonds in the same manner as sub-prime mortgages were the first
to crack in the housing bubble in 2008. This would exacerbate the drop in prices
and cause yields to rise yet further and faster.
Prices will also tumble because government regulations have stripped banks
of their proprietary trading desks; and bids for plummeting bond prices may
become as rare as a variegated tulip. Spiking debt service payments will crumble
the stock and real estate markets that have been built on synthetic, free-money
based economies.
The bottom line is that the bond market is the most dangerous bubble in history
precisely because every asset class derives its value from the cost of money.
Therefore, even though stocks and real estate aren't in a classic bubble they
have still become vastly overvalued due to the frantic search for yield over
the course of seven years. When, not if, this classic bond bubble bursts central
banks will be the only buyers left in the market. And this bid from central
bankers will have to be massive, protracted and unprecedented in nature. The
resulting market chaos should be vastly more baneful than the Great Recession
of 2008.