Echoes Of Financial Crises From The Late ‘90s

The fickleness of financial markets is truly amazing at times.

Back in May, I suggested that investors were downright sanguine. I even cautioned that the markets may be too calm.

But today, things are distinctly different…

The price of crude oil has crashed. The Russian ruble is experiencing a proper currency crisis. Emerging markets are getting routed.

The situation is reminiscent of the events leading up to the Asian financial crisis in 1997 and Russian default in 1998.

Some are even saying that a major blowup, like the one Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) experienced in 1998, is lurking. The collapse of LTCM, a massive hedge fund, prompted a bailout organized by the Federal Reserve.

A similar blowup is certainly possible, but the market has been sending critical warning signs that have been largely ignored…

In September, I showed the following chart:

I warned that currency market volatility can be a “harbinger of doom.”

Since sharing that chart, the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index ETF (EEM) has declined around 15%, and the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) has also spiked above 20 on two separate occasions.

Now, emerging market corporate bonds are really taking it on the chin. As you can see below, EM corporate credit spreads have blown out to the widest levels in over two years:

Globally, we're starting to witness the unintended consequences of ultra-easy monetary policy.

Stability Breeds Instability

Quantitative easing – the Federal Reserve's bond-buying program – did a great suppressing volatility, boosting stock prices, and narrowing credit spreads.

For instance, it aided energy firms in issuing $550 billion in new bonds and loans since 2010.

So in actuality, the stability bred instability, a process that economist Hyman Minsky examined in his work.

The currency markets were the first to portend a phase shift in volatility and the potential for improbable or unforeseen events.

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