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GM, this is Milk Road Macro PRO, the newsletter that jams its finger down on the ‘zoom out’ button so you can see the full picture. |
We’re in the middle of a key turning point in the macro picture. |
Key turning points only occur maybe once or twice a year. |
A number of variables are pointing towards a positive medium-term picture for risk assets like stocks and bitcoin. |
And to celebrate Milk Road All Access launching next week, we’ve decided to share a sneak peak of the very first Milk Road Macro PRO Report ever created. |
We’re talking 30+ charts from across the macro landscape! |
Everything from liquidity to the business cycle to sentiment and positioning. |
The purpose is to zoom out and think bigger picture about where the market is and where things might be going over the coming months. |
Ongoing news events like the Middle East war and trade deals often distract us from the bigger picture. |
Today, we'll remove the distractions and look at what the data is telling us in terms of where asset markets might be heading next. |
Let's start with the biggest driver of markets, liquidity. |
LIQUIDITY |
Liquidity remains very constructive across the board. |
The dollar has weakened considerably since the start of 2025. |
This is liquidity positive (I explained why here) and generally leads risk assets by 1 to 4 months. |
This leading inverse relationship is still signalling higher prices to come for US stocks, if the correlation holds. |
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And it’s the same picture for Bitcoin. |
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Gold, on the other hand, generally moves coincident with the dollar. |
Gold moved strongly upwards earlier this year at the same time as the dollar was tumbling. |
But it then stopped rising when the dollar stopped plunging in late April. |
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This dollar weakening has caused popular dollar-denominated “global M2 money supply” measures to increase further. |
With risk assets following along on a lag (so far). |
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The long-term dollar-denominated “Global M2 money supply” cycle is now also picking up due to the recent dollar weakness. |
Below you can see it overlaid with the S&P 500 year-on-year (YoY) percentage change. |
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And here it is overlaid with Bitcoin YoY percentage change. |
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A note on the dollar: |
Positioning has swung violently from ultra-long in early 2025 to ultra-short currently. |
Everybody is now bearish on the dollar. |
I would think this is likely to be a contrarian indicator. |
The dollar may be due for at least a correction upwards, or a period of consolidation, in the coming weeks - now that everybody is short. |
Due to the inverse correlation with risk assets discussed above, this could then feed in to become a headwind for risk assets in a few months time. |
Bank of America analysis shows Fund Managers are the most underweight the dollar since 2005. |
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Goldman Sachs analysis indicates dollar short positioning is extreme. |
Only matched by one other occasion since 2014. |
That was early 2018, which marked a multi-year low in the dollar. |
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Switching to central bank liquidity, Federal Reserve Liquidity has essentially been largely flat over the past few years. |
This is because the Fed’s ongoing Quantitative Tightening has been “negated” by various “stealth QE” measures, including more than $2 trillion moving out of the Fed’s Reverse Repo facility (more information here). |
We are currently in a small localised “upswing” that started on January 1 2025 (roughly +$470bn so far) - which is generally supportive for risk assets. |
This is being caused by a draining of the Treasury General Account (TGA) as the US Government has hit its debt ceiling. |
The Government is using its “savings” (TGA) to fund spending, pushing “new” liquidity into the market and pushing up bank reserves. |
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This current Fed Liquidity “upswing” will continue until a new debt ceiling agreement is reached, which will likely be some time between July and September. |
Net Federal Reserve Liquidity will then start falling as the Treasury “refills” the TGA. |
This TGA rebuild process could become a headwind for risk asset markets, as the Treasury floods the market with hundreds of billions of dollars of new debt to replenish the TGA. |
The TGA rebuild process could also put upward pressure on long-term US Treasury yields. |
But “liquidity boosting tools” are being prepared, including a likely adjustment to the Supplementary Leverage Ratio (I explained the TGA rebuild and the SLR in more detail here). |
The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) aka: the central bank of China - has also been injecting liquidity into Chinese money markets. |
In December 2024, the PBoC made a rare move in officially changing its monetary policy stance from "prudent" to "moderately loose". |
Since then, the PBoC has injected more than 8 trillion RMB (more than $1 trillion) into Chinese money markets, according to Crossborder Capital. |
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The PBoC should have “breathing room” to continue injecting liquidity as the dollar has weakened so rapidly. |
China was likely curtailed from adding liquidity in 2024 due to the strength of the dollar and the need to keep its currency strong. |
China needs to stimulate, because its economy is faltering and is verging on deflation. |
China is integral to the global economy - so Chinese stimulus is good news for the world economy as a whole. |
Back in the US, private liquidity creation is also expanding. |
Bank credit is flowing at the fastest rate since early 2023. |
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Liquidity is also still being bolstered on an ongoing basis by a continuation of “Yellen-omics”. |
This is a technical subject, but I will do my best to explain it. |
Previous Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen leaned heavily on a special trick to funnel liquidity into markets. |
She dramatically shifted the Government’s “debt issuance mix” away from longer-term debt and towards short-term Treasuries (T-bills). |
This type of “bill financing” is generally stimulative to the economy and asset markets. |
It is thought of as a textbook “debasement” tactic. |
Heavy T-bill issuance can at times resemble a form of light “debt monetization” or “money printing”, because bills are often financed through balance sheet expansion by financial institutions. |
This tactic also means issuing less long-term debt, which crimps the supply, suppressing long-term yields. |
Current Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent previously hammered Yellen for her controversial debt issuance switch, directly accusing her of “stimulating markets” in the run-up to the 2024 election. |
But since taking office earlier this year, he has continued with her tactic of leaning on short-term debt. |
The next “forward guidance” we will receive on this debt issuance strategy will be the Treasury’s Quarterly Refunding Announcement in mid-July. |
I expect it’s likely that this stimulative “heavy bill financing” will continue. |
In a recent interview, President Trump said: |
“What I’m going to do, is I’m going to go very short-term - like six months.” |
“Wait until this guy [Powell] gets out, get the rates way down, and then go long-term.” |
What he’s telling you here is that the plan appears to be to continue issuing lots of very short-term debt, or T-bills, (liquidity positive) until Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term ends in May 2026. |
And then appoint a dovish Fed Chair who will lower rates quickly, allowing the Government to begin to “term out the debt” and issue more long-term debt. |
FINANCIAL CONDITIONS |
Financial conditions tightened considerably through March and early April as the tariff war intensified. |
My financial conditions index rose (tightened) to its highest level since the 2020 pandemic disruption. |
But it has since fallen (loosened) significantly. |
It’s now officially back to “loose” (green: below zero) again. |
Although, we haven’t yet reached the same levels of “looseness” that we saw through large parts of 2023 and 2024. |
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Here’s a deeper look showing the four separate components (VIX [red], MOVE [green], credit spreads [orange and purple]). |
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The ongoing Middle East conflict barely made a dent in financial conditions - compared to the huge “tariff spike” we saw in April. |
If we can remain “loose” over the coming weeks and months, it bodes well for more upside price action for the S&P 500. |
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And it also bodes well for more upside price action for Bitcoin. |
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WHERE ARE WE IN THE BUSINESS CYCLE? |
Many people believe we are still in the same cycle that started in early 2023. |
This is largely due to business survey measures such as the ISM Manufacturing PMI. |
The lowest recent reading on the PMI was June 2023 and we’ve been grinding upwards ever since - but largely remaining in “contraction” (below 50). |
This is now one of the longest periods of time spent below 52 in history. |
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But maybe there’s another explanation. |
Uh, Oh… 😧 The rest of this report is exclusive to Milk Road PRO members! | Already a PRO member? Log in here. | WHAT’S LEFT INSIDE? 👀 | Where are we in the business cycle? What happens when the 90 day pause on tariffs ends? What could happen if bond yields hit 4.5%? Is this a good environment for risk assets? | And remember, starting August, Macro PRO will be a paid subscription. | But if you upgrade to Crypto PRO this week, you’ll be automatically upgraded to PRO All Access, unlocking Crypto, Degen and Macro PRO all for the price of one subscription ($25/month $250/year) | After July 1, it’ll be $100/month (ouch!). So this weekend is your final shot to lock in 3 PRO subscriptions for the price of one. | | Already a PRO member? Log in here. | WHAT PRO MEMBERS SAID LAST WEEK: | |
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