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September
23
2019

Repo Rumpus Foreshadows a Short Squeeze on the Dollar
Rick Ackerman

The Fed’s so-far $128 billion intervention in the repo market slipped off the Wall Street Journal‘s front page Thursday evening, hardly a concern. Don’t be surprised if, years from now, the squeeze on short-term borrowers that caused this flurry of excitement is recalled as an early warning sign of the banking system’s coming collapse. On Tuesday, there simply weren’t enough dollars to keep short-term loans rolling.  This implies that the dollar short-squeeze I first wrote about in Barron’s and the San Francisco Examiner more than two decades ago may have begun.

This time the Fed handled the problem without breaking a sweat. The next time, however, the cost might run into the trillions. Which is to say, more funny money than the central bank can gin up on short notice. When this day of reckoning comes, the banks won’t open the next day, nor will credit card transactions clear. Although there is no way that even a prudent person can completely protect him or herself from the fallout, it seems likely that those who hold Treasury paper and bullion as insurance will fare better than those who don’t.

A Curious Thing

Regarding the run on repos, it is curious that a dollar shortage developed in one specific market at a time when dollars remain almost inexhaustibly available in so many others. Mortgage money is not tight, nor are 0% teaser loans for any credit card holder who is not in prison. Big companies have no trouble borrowing billions of dollars to buy back their shares. But borrowers in the repo market? They are potentially like short sellers of a stock that has suddenly become unavailable.  Which is to say, they will be dead ducks on that inevitable day when even a slight whiff of panic wafts through the Battery.

Although these paper-shufflers probably don’t give much thought to the aggregate size of the borrowing they do, it amounts to something like a quadrillion dollars. That is the notional size of the derivatives market, and every dollar of it is tied in some way to all the other dollars. But why even worry about such things? To calm everyone’s nerves if there’s a run on bank reserves, the Fed can simply sacrifice Goldman Sachs or some other financial biggie the way it did Lehman on September 15 (!), 2008.

Bullion Will Move

It’s hard to imagine that gold will sit still when this drama unfolds. Usually a rising dollar weighs bullion down. But notice that the two have been ascending in tandem since June. Is this very unusual dynamic foreshadowing a crisis ahead?  Regardless, gold looks like bargain-priced insurance at current levels. It actually went down Wednesday as Wall Street smugly contemplated a rescue seemingly well done by the Federal Reserve. We kid ourselves to think this will be the last of it.

 

 


Barron’s once labeled Rick Ackerman an “intrepid trader” in a headline that alluded to his key role in solving a notorious pill-tampering case. He received a $200,000 reward when a conviction resulted, and the story was retold on TV’s FBI: The Untold Story. But to the gang at CNBC, he’s been a pariah for the last ten years – a shoot-from-the-hip kinda guy whose irreverent style got him banned from the show after an interview on Squawk Box was alleged to have gone awry.

His professional background includes 12 years as a market maker on the floor of the Pacific Coast Exchange, three as an investigator with renowned San Francisco private eye Hal Lipset, seven as a reporter and newspaper editor, three as a columnist for the Sunday San Francisco Examiner, and two decades as a contributor to publications ranging from Barron’s to The Antiquarian Bookman to Fleet Street Letter and Utne Reader. His detailed strategies for stocks, options, and indexes have appeared since the early 1990s in Black Box Forecasts, a newsletter he founded that originally was geared to professional option traders.

Rick Ackerman is the editor of Rick’s Picks and a partner in Blue Fin Financial LLC, a trading firm.

 

 

 

www.rickackerman.com

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