âShort sellers are the marketâs police officers. If the idea of short selling were to go away, the market would levitate even more than it does.â
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â August 17, 2023 |  [View Online]( |  [Sign Up]( When Seeing Red is Seeing Green⦠And Shorting the Market is Cool, Again âShort sellers are the marketâs police officers. If the idea of short selling were to go away, the market would levitate even more than it does.â â Seth Klarman Dear , Whatâs in a ânarrativeâ anyway? Over the past few weeks, weâve been preoccupied with summer stuff⦠a few conferencesâ¦college visits⦠getting new apartments set upâ¦some beach time for the kids (even though our own more Northern skin hides under hats and umbrellas). We freely admit that we took our eye off the ball a bit. Nothing compared to trying to get stuff done during August in France⦠but enough to be surprised upon our return. POWERED BY INVESTING DAILY Check out this 7-year win streak Seven years. That's how long this reclusive millionaire has been using his secret trading strategy. And despite all the volatility and uncertainty of the last few yearsâ¦â¦he still hasn't closed a losing trade since July of 2016. I've cornered the man behind this secret and got him to reveal on camera exactly how he has done it. This is the can't-miss interview you need to see to believe. [Click HERE to watch it for yourself.]( CONTINUED... During our summer siesta, the narrative regarding Americaâs âmost telegraphedâ recession in history has, well, shifted. A month ago the Chicago Mercantile Exchangeâs (CME) FedWatch Tool dinged a 52% chance that interest rates would hold steady until March 20, 2024. The only chance rates would be brought down is if American banks and corporations showed significant stress through âcontractionâ⦠or, recession. Today, according to the CME tool, the Fed is likely to keep rates high until Mayâs meeting next year. The minutes from the last meeting, released yesterday, even indicate more rate hikes are likely either during the next FOMC meeting September 19-20 or during the October 31-November 1 meeting. Jerome Powell indicated they didnât think theyâd âwhippedâ inflation yet, as then president Gerald Ford proudly boasted heâd do in 1974. So⦠the most-telegraphed recession will have to wait a few more months.  Hereâs Shah Gilani from [this weekâs Wiggin Session]( As rates have been working their way higher, the problems that existed for banks in March has gotten worse. The value of the loans on their balance sheet, the value of the securities they held, and yes, US treasuriesârisk-free treasuriesâthe value of those treasuries that they held⦠all that comes under stress. Rates are continuing to tick upâand {the Fed tells us] weâll see them going higher for longer now. The value of those loans on bank balance sheets, the value of the securities that they hold are under stress already. Treasuries, for example, that they hold yield 2%, when you can get five, 4% now in a 10-year⦠so theyâre already underwater. The problem that banks are having is, as rates continue to tick higher, their balance sheets look worse. And worse. In other words, we havenât seen the end of the banking crisis of 2023. In fact, the Fedâs plan to keep rates âhigher for longerâ is a recipe for whatâs known as âbalance-sheet recession.â With consumerâs burning through their pandemic savings and racking up credit to keep up âappearances,â big consumer stocks, like Target this morning, are projecting lower earnings for the first time since 2019. At the rate consumers are getting tapped out, the question regarding a recession now is âwhen-and-not-if.â   Stock losses accelerated into the close yesterday after the minutes from the Federal Reserve revealed âmostâ officials still see upside risks to inflation. So what do you do? We asked the same question of Shah. Shahâs convinced of two things: first, that the Wiggin Sessions are host to a gaggle of âgloom and doomers,â perhaps, but that heâs also convinced there areâalwaysâways to make money in any market. POWERED BY CRYPTO 101 MEDIA Musk Is Building A New World Order of Finance⦠The brightest minds in crypto aren't putting their focus on Bitcoin right now⦠No, the coins that they are buying up like CRAZY are actually smaller coins known as 'Altcoinsâ¦' Some of these coins have been projected to make moves up to 1,000x during the coming bull run. You'll learn all about these unbelievable opportunities at the upcoming free online event The Crypto Community Summit. We've gathered 27 of the world's top crypto experts to share their top picks and predictions as we see our financial system changing before our eyes. [Click here to register now.]( CONTINUED... You can look at the VIX and tap on volatility signals for answersâor take a look at some substantial bets being placed by the âwhales.â A whale as you may already know is a trader or hedge fund manager, who may or may not agree with you on the marketâs direction, but when they put their bets down itâs in the billions.   Well, the whales are also back in town. We might be back from Memphis and Boca Raton. Theyâre back from their toodling around the Mediterranean in their uber yachts. One of them⦠Michael Burry of Big Short fame, played by a scruffy Christian Bale in the movie⦠just bet $1.6 billion on a stock market crash⦠sort of. Burry placed bets that the S&P 500 would drop below 4,000 and the Nasdaq 100 would drop below 300. If you want to get technical, his hedge fund Scion Capital made the bets by buying put options on the $SPY, an ETF which tracks the S&P 500, and $QQQ, which tracks the top 100 stocks on the Nasdaq. Itâs not clear the amount Burry paid for the puts. Or the expiration date. He did lay down a combined total of $1.6 billion on the two trades. The bets Scion Capital made represent a formative action against the American economy. Because Burry made a boatload of money in his big shortâhe made a personal profit of $100 million and some $700 million for investors investors in his fundâa lot of traders are following his lead. You could even say that since 2008, Burry is one of the main actors that has made betting against the American economy âcool.â You might remember a scene we observed at the New York Stock Exchange in April. From [the April Missive]( On the wall a picture showed four young menâ traders, presumablyâ gussied up in suits with ties pulled out from their necks in tired exasperation, half the frame covered by a Wall Street Journal paper emblazoned âMarket Bloodbath.â But they didnât want to hide their faces. In fact, the photo gave the impression that losing money was actually something to be proud of, getting in trouble for some perverted spectacle. The economist John Maynard Keynes once called this market dance a âbeauty contest.â Keynes, in his General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, 1936: It is not a case of choosing those faces that, to the best of one's judgment, are really the prettiest, nor even those that the average opinion genuinely thinks the prettiest. We have reached the third degree where we devote our intelligence to anticipating what the average opinion expects the average opinion to be. And there are some, I believe, who practice the fourth, fifth and higher degrees. How predictive can a whale like Burry be? You may also remember, he recommended in January of 2023 that people âsell the marketâ... only to recant and apologize in March. Some other notable bears right now⦠the usual suspects, Jeremy Grantham and David Einhorn. So it goes, Addison Wiggin The Wiggin Sessions P.S. Oh, but Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) creeps in⦠and we have to admit we spent a fair amount of time yesterday considering options on SPY and QQQ ourselves.  Michael Burry, did, after all, make a lot of money subverting the market narrative once before. And you only really need one of those trades to go your way⦠hmmnâ¦Â POWERED BY DEMISE OF THE DOLLAR The Daily Missive from The Wiggin Sessions is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to The Wiggn Sessions delivering daily email issues and advertisements. 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