Fund Manager Expects Markets to 'Break Badly and Painfully' Within a Year

bomb made of money

“Come winter, come spring next year, we’re going to have, I believe, forced sales everywhere,” he said. “We’re going to come into a realm where we have distressed sellers.” 

3. European War Escalation

Investors need to understand what’s happening in Europe, said Taylor, who considers it likely that Russia’s war in Ukraine will escalate in a matter of months.

“Putin’s game is A) I exit in a pine box, B) I strangle Europe so bad that it begins to fracture. And so he’s gunning on B. There’s no peace deal, it’s not going to happen,” he said. “In my view the probability of, at the end of winter or during the winter, that we see a major escalation in defending Europe is extremely high.”

Various factors make escalation likely, Taylor said, noting that political leaders in Europe, who range in age from about 60 to 75, remember the story of then-U.K. prime minister Neville Chamberlain’s disastrous negotiations with a dictator in the runup to World War II.

“The probability of them wanting to negotiate with Putin is unlikely,” he said.

“There’s the war machine, and the war machine would love to get paid by an escalation,” he added.

Taylor also cited political incentives for leaders to escalate their defense of Europe, saying they’d likely lose their seats in office if they caved to Putin. With an escalation, political leaders can create a distraction from a “really miserable economy” and an energy crisis, he explained.

“War and an escalation is a really nice political out to rally around the leaders,” he said. “It might be convenient for them to escalate. And I’m sad to say it.” 

See also  Andrew Mais to Lead State Insurance Regulators Into Fiduciary Rule Arena

4. Troubles in China

China faces a serious problem in its housing market and a major inflationary problem, Taylor said, noting the nation is seeing the consequences of rising energy and materials prices amid longer-term issues.

The country’s command economy has made “a massive, multi-decade-long malinvestment in order to keep their wheels moving,” with housing the predominant vehicle, he said. “Right now, it is blowing up, blowing up to the degree where this is exactly what happened in the U.S. in ‘07, ‘08, ‘09, where they stopped paying the mortgages, and said fine, take the property.”

“Or in the case of China, they’re paying mortgages for properties that they may or may not ever receive. In China they buy all these properties up front before they’re even built, and so you get the financing, you’re paying the mortgage,” and now builders in China “don’t have the funding to build a property that people have already bought. And honestly people don’t even want delivery now,” he said.

Taylor also suggested China’s strict lockdowns, which the country has announced to contain COVID-19 outbreaks, really may be intended to prevent inflation. “They’re being successful at that,” he said. “Of course at the same time they’re destroying their economy and they probably don’t have a choice either way on that outcome.” 

5. Troubles Around the World

Taylor expects “off-menu events” to happen in China, Europe and many other places, including El Salvador, as economies deal with multiple pressures.

“I expect meaningful off-menu events to happen in the next eight months to a year and maybe sooner, between food, energy, materials, the cost of capital. All of these things are happening all at the same time in a global fashion.” 

See also  LPL Puts AI Center Stage at Yearly Event

The U.S. economy in 2008 is the best proxy, he said, noting that was a “localized” situation.  “There is a lot of china being broken by the elephant in the china shop right now and things are going to very likely break badly and painfully,” Taylor said.

Taylor said people ask him why bonds are selling off globally while “stocks are not down remotely as much as they should be.” He cited low U.S. jobless claims as a major reason why market correlations are out of sync. In addition, people may be underestimating “persistent dip buying” from new retail investor money, he said, adding that dip buying is getting weaker “as their ammo gets all used up.”

He expects the disconnect between stocks and bonds to run out when jobless claims start to go soft. “We are going to have quantitative tightening ongoing at $90 billion a month, a fracturing credit market globally, a three-alarm energy crisis and consumption crisis in Europe — in my view the U.K. is going to be the worst. And as I said jobless claims and U.S. consumption going down.”