Showing posts with label bitcoin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bitcoin. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Some random thoughts

The global macro landscape remains in flux. A strange mix of structural deflationary forces is colliding with equally powerful inflationary pressures. Technology, demographics, geopolitics, and policy responses are all pulling in different directions — making this one of the most complex investing environments in decades.

I am not competent enough to decode where the current conditions are driving us. Nonetheless, I would like to share some random thoughts with the readers and seek their views on these.

Inflation vs Deflation: The great tug of war

At the structural level, Artificial Intelligence, aging demographics, and the rapid adoption of renewable energy are profoundly deflationary for the global economy.

·         AI is driving efficiency, collapsing cost structures, and displacing traditional labor models.

·         Demographics in most major economies — from China to Europe to Japan — are suppressing consumption growth and wage pressures.

·         Renewables are gradually reducing marginal energy costs.

Yet, short-term inflationary winds continue to blow.

·         Fiscal profligacy, especially in the US and large emerging economies, ensures that governments remain the biggest spenders.

·         Deglobalization and parochial geopolitics — from tariffs to tech embargoes — are reversing decades of supply-chain efficiency.

·         Rising defense spending, both in the West and the East, adds another layer of price rigidity.

Ironically, even AI — while deflationary in the long run — is pushing up energy prices in the short run, as data centers consume unprecedented power.

The result is a macro paradox: consumer inflation may stay moderate, but asset price inflation looks inevitable.

Japanification — slow growth, aging demographics, and low yields — already grips China and the EU. In contrast, the US remains the lone outlier, buoyed by fiscal stimulus and a technology cycle.

Gold: Monetary alchemy or bubble in waiting?

Gold remains the ultimate barometer of trust in fiat systems. As the world lives with near-permanent fiscal deficits, the case for gold as a hedge against monetary debasement remains compelling.

However, a curious distortion has emerged:

The total volume of paper and digital claims on gold — ETFs, futures, tokenized products — now vastly exceeds the quantity of physical gold available. This means that, in the event of a systemic rush for redemption, the notional market could implode under its own leverage.

While dedollarization and rising central bank purchases continue to support the short to mid-term case for physical gold, the near-term structure looks speculative. A bubble in gold positions cannot be ruled out, just because of over-financialization.

Bitcoin: The digital store of value narrative

Bitcoin’s journey from fringe curiosity to mainstream asset continues. Institutional acceptance is growing; sovereigns are experimenting with it as a reserve diversifier. Banks like J. P. Morgan Chase, which termed Bitcoin “fraud’ not long ago, have now embraced it. The key driver remains distrust in fiat money and political money printing.

Yet, the coming wave of official digital currencies (CBDCs) could complicate the landscape.

Governments will likely pitch their CBDCs as “stable digital cash,” competing for legitimacy and mindshare.

If Bitcoin manages to retain its decentralization ethos and scarcity narrative, it could coexist as the digital equivalent of gold — a hedge against monetary mismanagement rather than a transactional currency.​



Bonds: The calm before a possible storm

Central banks across major economies have begun cutting rates again, signaling confidence that inflation is under control. Markets have bought into this narrative. However, no one seems positioned for a reversal — a renewed spike in inflation due to energy, wages, or geopolitics.

If inflation re-accelerates, the bond market could face a brutal adjustment. Duration-heavy portfolios, built on the assumption of declining yields, remain vulnerable.

The irony is that sovereigns need low yields to fund ever-rising deficits — and this need might override pure inflation management. That tension will define fixed income in the years ahead.​



Equities: Between resilience and fragility

Global equities are not in bubble territory — though certain US pockets (AI, mega-cap tech) show unmistakable signs of exuberance.

The greater risk lies in a material correction in US markets, which could reverberate globally through portfolio rebalancing and risk aversion.

However, there’s a counterweight: if developed market central banks ease more aggressively than expected, it could unleash a wave of liquidity toward emerging markets. The result might be a sharp rerating of EM equities, particularly those offering growth and currency stability.

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The Big Picture

We are living through a multi-speed world:

·         The US remains inflation-tolerant and growth-driven.

·         China and Europe slide deeper into disinflation and demographic stagnation.

·         Emerging markets stand at the crossroads of opportunity and volatility.

·         Markets are oscillating between the two poles of fear (inflation) and faith (liquidity).

Navigating this phase will demand humility, optionality, and patience — and an acceptance that the next decade will likely reward flexibility over conviction.


Thursday, August 21, 2025

A visit to the street

2025 is proving to be an interesting year for traders in the Indian stocks. The traders have faced multiple challenges in the past eight months; and had some good opportunities to make extraordinary profit. More notably—

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Straitjacketing a crisis-2

Continuing from yesterday…(see here)

As I mentioned that the old narratives of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (Tariff protection for domestic businesses), New Deal (Fiscal profligacy to stimulate economy) and Plaza Accord (fiscal and monetary manipulation by government/central banks to balance trade) do not fit the current circumstances, given the vastly different context. The efforts to fit the current U.S. President’s economic actions (and promises) related to trade, tariffs, and fiscal policy into historical molds, don’t align with today’s reality, and may be an exercise in futility.

For example, consider the following:

·         In 1930, global trade was 5% of U.S. GDP, and the world economy was already in freefall post-1929 crash. In 2025, trade is a larger share of GDP (e.g., ~25% for the U.S.), but global supply chains are far more integrated, making outright trade wars costlier and less likely. Modern trade agreements (e.g., USMCA, WTO) and digital economies add complexities that were not present in 1930.

Smoot-Hawley’s tariffs were sweeping and indiscriminate (40–60% increase across the board). Current U.S. tariff proposals (e.g., 10–30% on imports, higher on China) are targeted; negotiable; and used more as leverage rather than permanent barriers. Retaliation risks exist (e.g., EU or China tariffs), but multilateral frameworks mitigate escalation.

The 1930s lacked modern central bank tools like QE or quicker rate adjustments. In 2025, central banks globally can counteract trade shocks swiftly; unlike the gold-standard-constrained 1930s.

Critics overstate Smoot-Hawley’s relevance, projecting a worst-case scenario without acknowledging 2025’s resilience (e.g., diversified U.S. economy and tech dominance). The analogy ignores that tariffs today are often diplomatic tools, not ideological commitments, unlike Smoot-Hawley’s protectionist zeal.

·         The New Deal addressed 25% unemployment and a collapsed banking system. In 2025, U.S. unemployment is low (4–5%), and banks are stable, though inflation and debt ($36T) pose challenges. The urgency for New Deal-scale intervention is absent.

The New Deal was a comprehensive overhaul of the extant system. Adherence to Keynesian theory was at core of the New Deal. Trump’s infrastructure spending may echo WPA projects, but without the New Deal’s social safety net expansion or unified vision. Besides, current policies are often stalled by partisan gridlock or judicial review, unlike Roosevelt’s legislative dominance.

The New Deal’s trade liberalization (1934 Act) countered Smoot-Hawley’s damage. In 2025, trade policy is biased towards protectionism, not liberalization; and global allies are skeptical of the US leadership, unlike the 1930s’ pre-WWII alignment.

·         In 1985, the G5 shared aligned interests (Cold War unity, Japan’s deference). In 2025, the Sino-US rivalry, EU autonomy, and BRICS expansion (e.g., India’s growing role) complicate cooperation. A coordinated currency intervention (like in Plaza Accord) is unlikely given China’s managed yuan and the US political volatility.

The Plaza Accord used currency markets, not tariffs or fiscal policy. Current US actions emphasize more on tariffs and sanctions, not multilateral agreements, reflecting unilateralism over 1985’s teamwork.

The Accord strengthened the US’s exports but sparked Japan’s asset bubble and a lost decade. In 2025, similar interventions risk unintended consequences (e.g., inflation from a weaker dollar), but global economic fragmentation reduces the Accord’s replicability.

G-5 has now been replaced with G-20, which is not necessarily aligned with the US on trade or geopolitical issues.

·         Unlike 1930 or 1985, today digital economies (e.g., AI, e-commerce) and global supply chains dominate trade. A 1930 like trade war would disrupt tech flows (e.g., semiconductors), not just goods, with broader fallout. Similarly, a New Deal’s public works may be much less transformative today when remote work and AI are reshaping labor markets.

·         Current US political polarization and debt levels materially constrain a New Deal-scale ambition, while cultural shifts (e.g., distrust in institutions) differ from 1930s’ unity or 1985’s optimism.

In my view, rather than forcing old frameworks in the current crisis, it would be more useful if the US policymakers craft a “new solution” suitable to 2025 conditions. The new solution may, for example, include:

·         Fair taxes on trade: Tax goods from some countries but let allies like India sell clothes or spices without extra costs. This keeps prices low for Indian shops and helps American workers.

·         Green projects: Build solar panels, electric car batteries and chargers, like new roads in the 1930s, to create jobs and fight climate change.

·         Global teamwork: Create a new group with India, China, and others to agree on development of a neutral digital currency for international trade settlements; framework for global digital payments, like a global UPI, as an alternative to SWIFT, so no one country controls everything. These ideas can help the US to grow together with its trade partners, without repeating past mistakes.

These are just a few of the suggestions. A pragmatic approach, rather than adopting whimsical and jingoistic measures to achieve MAGA goals, will lead all down, including the US.

 

Also read

Straitjacketing a crisis-1


Wednesday, April 2, 2025

FY25 – All’s well that ends well

Financial Year 2024-25 (FY25), may be recorded in the annals of history as a watershed year for global politics, geopolitics, markets and the financial system. The events that occurred during the past twelve months have opened up significant possibilities for emergence of a new global order. Although the contours of the likely new global order are yet to begin taking a shape, it appears that fight for dominance over technology; endeavor to gain fiscal strength; interventionist democracy where the state exercises intensive control over citizens; and top priority to energy security would be four key characteristics of the new order.

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Alternatives continue to remain attractive

Traditionally, the asset allocators have considered the potential return of the various alternatives (to equity and fixed income) to determine the portfolio structure of investors. Of course, the factors like size of portfolio, feasibility of investing in assets like real estate, risk appetite of individual investor, and liquidity requirements etc., influence the allocation to some alternatives. However, dematerialization of assets like real estate (through REITS), Gold (ETF) Bonds (bond funds, RBI direct investment platform etc.) now makes the alternatives relevant even for small investors.

In the past one year, the alternatives assets (e.g., gold, bitcoin) have performed significantly better than equities. Even the average yield of long duration bond funds has been similar to the Nifty50 return. The investors may therefore want to evaluate the return prospects of these alternatives in future to determine their asset allocation strategy.

 


In this context, I note the following to review my asset allocation strategy for 2025.

Bonds

Bond yields have consistently outperformed the equity yields in the past three years. In 2024, even the return on long duration bonds matched the Nifty50 returns. The consensus currently is that the RBI rate cut cycle in 2025 would be shallow with 25-50bps overall cut. Doubts are emerging on continuation of the Fed rate cut cycle also. The resilience of stock prices despite earnings downgrades, implies low chances of any material rise in equity yields. Bonds might thus remain an attractive asset class in 2025 also.



Gold

The World Gold Council (WCG) has forecasted a “positive but much more modest growth for gold in 2025”. The yearly outlook paper of WCG notes that “Upside (in gold prices) could come from stronger than expected central bank demand, or from a rapid deterioration of financial conditions leading to flight-to-quality flows. Conversely, a reversal in monetary policy, leading to higher interest rates, would likely bring challenges.”

The best case for Gold appears reversal in rate cycle with forecast of “higher for longer”. A dovish Fed, de-escalation of conflicts in the middle east and Europe, and lower intensity of trade wars, as compared to the present estimates, could be very negative for gold prices.



The weakness in USDINR, capital controls to manage balance of payment and change in duty structure are some additional factors to be considered for the Indian investors buying gold in INR. To me Gold appears less attractive in 2025.

Real Estate

The demand for housing remains robust, driven by resilient end-user interest and favorable macroeconomic factors. Inventory levels are now low in the ready to move category in most key markets. With new launches in mid segment slowing in the key markets, the prices are expected to remain firm in 2025.

As per Kotak Securities, Commercial real estate in top Indian cities saw healthy traction in 2QFY25. Vacancy levels inched lower. GCCs continue to lead the demand for commercial real estate, even as IT companies increased their headcount in 2QFY25 after six quarters of reduction; utilization rates remain high. Occupancy levels across asset owners have improved, aided by floor-wise denotification and consequent leasing of SEZ areas and a stronger push towards “return-to-office” by IT employers. Despite the recent price uptick, office REITs offer an attractive yield + appreciation play within Indian real estate. For me Real Estate (REITS) will thus continue to remain a preferred asset in 2025.

Crypto

More and more governments are now inclined to view crypto as a legitimate asset. President-Elect Trump has also hinted towards a favorable regulatory regime for crypto assets. As per the global investment major Fidelity, “Liquidity metrics have turned back to positive year-over-year growth, and we have entered another interest rate-cutting cycle. Inflation is still elevated above the Federal Reserve's 2% target and so I personally think there is still a risk of inflation coming back in a 'second wave.' Both of these things would be tailwinds for bitcoin.”

Despite a sharp up move in bitcoins, and high volatility it is difficult to ignore this emerging asset class in overall portfolio allocation.

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Fears of grandpa coming true

In the past couple of weeks, I have heard more market participants talking about alternative assets like precious metals, cryptocurrencies, and bonds as compared to equities and equity derivatives. The trend has been more conspicuous, particularly after the first phase of voting for the 18th Lok Sabha. The participants who were confident about an overwhelming majority for the incumbent government and strong equity rally post declaration of final results on 4th June are now finding a need to hedge their exposure to equities. Surprisingly, none of the non-institutional investors/traders mentioned using equity derivatives to hedge their investment portfolios or trading positions.

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

A man and an elephant

For many weeks, global markets have been behaving in a very desynchronized manner. Non-congruence is conspicuous even in the behavior of the same investor/trader operating in different market segments, e.g., equities, bonds, commodities, currencies, cryptocurrencies, etc.

For example, until a month ago an investor with a balanced 50:50 debt-equity asset allocation invested in bonds as if a soft landing was imminent leading to a series of policy rate cuts over the 12-15 months. The same investor invested in equities believing that earnings growth would surpass the estimates and stocks of top technology companies would continue with their dream run. The investor was content investing in USD assets assuming green greenback would strengthen and at the same time he was buying bitcoins expecting the demise of the extant monetary system by independent crypto or digital currencies.

Last week in the US, equities reached their all-time high levels as if all is well in political, geopolitical, climate, economic, and financial spheres. It felt that the Fed was about to begin a sharp rate cycle, earnings growth had rebounded, Sino-US relations had normalized, the Gaza ceasefire had been announced, and El Nino had ended. However, across the street, the bond market was selling off as if prices were going out of control forcing the Fed to push the rate cuts to 2025. Back street, the bullion market announced that a recession was imminent. Across the Ocean, crude prices were rising as if a war was imminent with Iran threatening to escalate. In dark streets, crypto traders were laughing at conventional investors/traders rushing to bullion markets to hedge against recessionary weakness in USD.

Back home, last week equity indices reached their all-time high. Nifty Small Cap 100 gained over 7%. Commodity stocks rallied as if a bullish commodities cycle was imminent. Ignoring RBI's concerns over prices and credit, bond prices corrected only marginally. No one bothered to care about political manifestoes which are promising fiscal profligacy of gigantic proportion. USDINR appreciated marginally ruling out any pressure on the current account and balance of payment due to the sharp spike in energy & gold prices (two major imports of India) and FPI flow reversal due to the narrowing yield differential between India and developed market yields. People are also rushing to buy Silver (up 10% last week) to make some quick gains.

One of the largest asset management companies is running equities weight close to the lowest permissible in their balanced fund. It has also restricted flows to their smallcap fund. The top fund manager at this AMC is one of the most respectable names in the industry. Considering that the Smallcap index was up 7% last week against the 0.8% rise in Nifty, it seems, no one is listening to his sane advice.

We have all heard the story of an elephant and six blind men. It goes like this.

Once upon a time, there lived six blind men in a village. One day the villagers told them, "Hey, there is an elephant in the village today."

They had no idea what an elephant is. They decided, "Even though we would not be able to see it, let us go and feel it anyway." All of them went where the elephant was. Every one of them touched the elephant.

"Hey, the elephant is a pillar," said the first man who touched his leg.

"Oh, no! it is like a rope," said the second man who touched the tail.

"Oh, no! it is like a thick branch of a tree," said the third man who touched the trunk of the elephant.

"It is like a big hand fan" said the fourth man who touched the ear of the elephant.

"It is like a huge wall," said the fifth man who touched the belly of the elephant.

"It is like a solid pipe," Said the sixth man who touched the elephant's tusk.

They began to argue about the elephant and every one of them insisted that he was right. A wise man was passing by and he saw this. He stopped and asked them, "What is the matter?" They said, "We cannot agree on what the elephant is like." Each one of them told what he thought the elephant was like. The wise man calmly explained to them, "All of you are right. The reason every one of you is telling it differently is because each one of you touched a different part of the elephant. So, the elephant has all those features that you all said."

"Oh!" everyone said. There was no more fight. They felt happy that they were all right.

The story's moral is that there may be some truth to what someone says. Sometimes we can see that truth and sometimes not because they may have different perspectives which we may not agree to.

But I am witnessing a different phenomenon. No six blindfolded men are feeling different parts of an elephant this time. It is only one person who sees different parts of an elephant with open eyes and is not able to tell that it is an elephant.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

FY24 – Resilient growth and positive sentiments

FY23 was mostly a year of normalization. After two years of disruptions, uncertainty, and volatility, both the markets and the economy regained a semblance of normalcy in terms of the level of activity, trajectory of growth, direction, and future outlook.