Crypto and tech are the first dominoes to fall as stimulus liquidity dries up, says this money manager. Here's what could happen next.

Crypto and tech are the first dominoes to fall as stimulus liquidity dries up, says this money manager. Here’s what could happen next.

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Markets probably didn’t need another more brick on the 2022 wall of worries, but got one anyway as FTX, the world’s third largest crypto exchange, is teetering on a collapse that could upend already shaky broader risk appetite.

Read: Sequoia on its FTX investment: Some surprise to the upside, and some surprise to the downside

JPMorgan is predicting a “cascade of margin calls, deleveraging and crypto company/platform failures” linked to FTX that could last for weeks, and another 25% drop for bitcoin. On the bright side, strategist Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou says the overall crypto hit will likely be smaller than post Terra, given previous deleveraging.

Read: Technical analyst Tom DeMark says bitcoin low could come as early as Friday

Our call of the day from Stock Traders Daily and portfolio manager at Equity Logic, Thomas H. Kee Jr., links up the latest crypto selloff and selling of tech names this year to drying up of stimulus-related liquidity.

“When excessive amounts of flood the economy excessive risk-taking is a natural byproduct, but when the liquidity spigot dries up those assets that experienced irrational exuberance often reprice to more prudent levels quickly,” Kee told MarketWatch in emailed comments on Wednesday.

“Two obvious groups that benefited from the excessive liquidity influenced by stimulus were big tech, and cryptocurrencies.  Each of these is being repriced now, because each of these were excessively valued due to stimulus, but these do not represent the overall market,” he said, adding that that selling could be a “precursor to conditions ahead.”

“Although crash conditions are isolated to stocks like Amazon
AMZN,
Tesla
TSLA,
Meta
META,
etc., and virtually all cryptocurrencies, the reason this is happening can affect other asset classes too, just not as acutely or immediately.  The broader market, housing, private equity, bonds, all of these assets rely on new money inflows to appreciate too, and the new money from stimulus is gone,” said Kee.

What connects them all is that “new demand for these assets has dried up.”

Read: Tesla stock removed from Wedbush Best Ideas list over ‘Twitter train wreck disaster’

And with central bank stimulus no longer reliable for providing new money inflows, asset demand is now dictated by natural flows. The amount of fresh cash invested in the economy measured by the so-called Investment Rate, he said.

Dating back to 1900, that marker indicates what happens when liquidity peaks and troughs. Kee notes that the peak marks the best time to sell and troughs vice versa, for the purposes of longer-term investing.

“The immediate conditions in our economy today are not crash-like, but the excessively priced assets, those with little or no value, and those that have been hyped, are no longer able to be supported by fabricated demand.  That is why big tech is down, that is why crypto has been crushed, but that does not constitute a market crash,” he said.

Kee’s proprietary Evitar Corte Model, designed to flag market crash conditions, isn’t suggesting an imminent meltdown environment right now. But he says the repricing of risk he flagged in his Dec. 21, 2021 Global Liquidity Report has happened. That report also outlined higher volatility associated with low-liquidity environments, also seen this year though it’s “not a market crash, at least not yet.”

“I expect this to spread eventually, but thus far the economic data doesn’t support a need for concern.  I will be watching the FOMC and economic data for signs that this will spread.  I do expect deflation to exist in retail,” he said.

As for tech, Kee said valuations matter and “those with good valuations can do just fine.” He has buy recommendations on Google parent Alphabet
GOOGL
and Apple
AAPL
(read what he said about Apple in September), but warns crypto is “an all out avoid.”

“There was nothing to value in the crypto market, it was pure speculation, and when free money exists, the speculation peaks. Now the free money is gone, and the speculators are not able to push it up anymore,” he said.

The markets

MarketWatch

Stock futures
ES00

YM00

NQ00
are modestly higher, with bond yields
TU00

BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
easing back and the dollar
DXY
also softer. Oil prices
CL

BRN00
are down. Losses on Wall Street spilled over to Asia, with the Hang Seng
HK:HSI
dropping 1.6%.

As for bitcoin
BTCUSD,
the No. 1 cryptocurrency was bouncing off lows not seen since 2020, but still down 8% over the last 24 hours after Binance confirmed it’s not buying rival ETX’s assets.

Read: Binance CEO in internal memo: ‘I had very little knowledge of the internal state of things at FTX’

The buzz

It is one busy econ day. At 8:30 a.m. we’ll get CPI data, weekly jobless claims and average hourly earnings, with the federal budget later. Economists forecast that headline year-over-year CPI growth will fall to 7.9% from 8.2% in September, and that core CPI will dip to 6.5% from 6.6%.

Shares of China EV-maker NIO
NIO
is up after posting a wider loss, but better delivery guidance. Stock in U.S.-listed Li Auto
LI
and XPeng
XPEV
are also up, after getting knocked in Asia on worries about China COVID-19 restrictions.

Elsewhere, Six Flags
SIX
is dropping on an earnings miss, WeWork
WE
reported a loss of $568 million and US Foods
USFD
said profit nearly doubled, though was below consensus. After hours earnings news is expected from Toast
TOST,
Aurora Cannabis
CA:ACB
and Leafly
LFLY
among others.

Shares of Apple supplier GoerTek Inc.
CN:002241
fell again after the China electronics group said it was told to stop producing a product for a major overseas client. Analysts believe those to be AirPods Pro 2.

Fed Gov. Christopher Waller cast doubt on the U.S. government developing its own cryptocurrency. Fed presidents speaking on the economy throughout the day include Philadelphia’s Patrick Harker, Dallas’s Laurie Logan, Cleveland’s Loretta Mester, Kansas City’s Esther George and New York’s John Williams.

Best of the web

‘Is there anything about crypto that is as it seems?’ FTX failure threatens industry’s reputation in D.C.

The world’s biggest car makers are set to build millions more diesel and gasoline autos than climate goals allow.

More than a dozen wives of Russian soldiers stormed a Ukraine border town, demanding the military return their husbands

The chart

More on crypto…


Twitter

The tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

Ticker

Security name

TSLA Tesla

AMC AMC Entertainment

GME GameSteop

AAPL Apple

DWAC Digital World Acquisition Corp.

NIO NIO

MULN Mullen Automotive

AMZN Amazon.com

APE AMC Entertainment Holdings preferred shares

META Meta Platforms

Random reads

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KFC in Germany “accidentally” told customers to treat themselves on the anniversary of Kristallnacht.

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