Every morning, we run The Narrative Machine on the past 24 hours worth of financial media to find the most on-narrative (i.e. interconnected and central) stories in financial media. It’s not a list of best articles or articles we think are most interesting … often far from it.
But for whatever reason these are articles that are representative of some sort of chord that has been struck in Narrative-world.
May 8, 2019 Narrative Map – US Equities
Renewed China trade fears send U.S. markets tumbling [UPI]
Futures fall on U.S.-China trade uncertainty [Reuters]
Global stocks slip, bonds rally as U.S.-China trade fears grow [Reuters]
Frequent readers will be familiar with our three recurring trade and tariffs arguments:
- The narrative on tariffs has been complacent for the last several months – coherent and positive. Investors who have a contrarian (read: negative) view of outcomes could benefit from the resulting asymmetry.
- If it ends up as a major market event, it is likely that traditional diversification techniques continue to work like they have historically (i.e not a ‘new’ zeitgeist).
- We don’t think anyone should be in the business of having those contrarian OR consensus views on the topic, because it’s a GAME OF CHICKEN. You don’t know the odds, because there aren’t any.
None of that has stopped financial media from updating their assessments of the odds on a daily basis, of course.
These are the sectors that worry Wall Street analysts the most if there’s a US-China trade war [CNBC]
None of that has stopped the sell side from pushing new ways to play the odds, either.
Goldman Sachs – Hardline Retail Stocks
UBS – Softline Retail Stocks
Cowen – Chemical Stocks
Credit Suisse – Auto Parts Stocks
Bank of America – Automobile Stocks
Needham – Semiconductor Stocks
Baird – Chemical Stocks
Let’s get trading, fellow muppets!
Data Gumbo Secures $6M in Series A Funding from Venture Arms of Leading International Oil & Gas Companies [Press Release]
HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Data Gumbo Corp., a Houston-based technology company that has developed a Blockchain-as-a-Service (BaaS) platform to streamline smart contracts management for industrial customers, announced today completing a $6M Series A equity funding round co-led by Saudi Aramco Energy Ventures, the venture subsidiary of Saudi Aramco, and Equinor Technology Ventures, the venture subsidiary of Equinor, Norway’s leading energy operator.
Wait, what?
Sysco’s Earnings Beat Estimates but Revenue Comes Up Shy [The Street]
I wonder why this perfunctory note scored so high on the Zeitgeist.
Americans mimic Russian disinformation tactics ahead of 2020 [The Hill]
The Widening Gyre is only beginning.
And this is how it widens – as always, with the best intentions.
AIG Unit Rebounds After an Overhaul [WSJ]
What is dead may never die.
I’d love to take the other side of you on the widening gyre as it is sucking the life blood out of me, but you guys are so right on (and were so early to) the call. Everything - Every. Single. Thing. - widens it.
Mueller’s report would have widened it either way: It was favorable to Trump, so the left lost its mind; had it been deleterious to Trump, the right would have. It is absolutely awful and frightening to live through this.
This isn’t perfectly responsive to the present article, but I just had an interesting thought about a mechanism that might have some contribution to the development of widening gyres:
People who disagree with you can be pretty annoying, pointing out real or imagined inconsistencies in your positions, putting words in your mouth, etc. You bump into each other every once in a while, butt heads, and maybe when you part you both feel a little worse off. This is the first order game. It can feel like a lose-lose proposition.
The second order game is where you present a facade that is a caricature of your actual self, so exaggerated, so very annoying that the other guy decides just not to deal with you any more. They stop annoying you, you stop annoying them, win-win! In the short term, anyway. There are externalities…
“Full hearts” is an even higher-order strategy that tries to realize a genuine, durable win-win.
Sorry if I’m rehashing an old ET article, I promise it’s merely negligent.