CLIENT TALKING POINTS

Yields

Post yesterday’s Oil pop, broad-based pop on the long-end of the curves, globally, with 10yr JGB and Bund yields in a dead heat at -0.02% - isn’t that riveting? If the Fed raises rates on “inflation” (and ignores the #GrowthSlowing data), they’ll crash oil and commodities again anyway. Big buying opportunity in long-term bonds this morning.

Oil

Pop, drop, #WickedChop – WTI fails at the top end of the @Hedgeye risk range ($42.86-48.61) and drops -1.3% this morning; supply data aside, we didn’t want to be short oil at the low-end of the range into slowing US economic data (Fed forced to pivot back to dovish = reflation) inasmuch as we don’t want to chase it at the top-end of the range.

Volume

Big US Equity Volume day yesterday (+21% vs. the 1-month average) – why? It was a down day. Volume comes back on the down days but SP500 still looks range-bound in the 2166-2190 risk range to me. If math changes on that, we will.

TOP LONG IDEAS

GLD

GLD

See updates below.

TLT

TLT

Income & Consumption

Slowing employment growth + a decline hours worked + deceleration in earnings growth will = a deceleration in aggregate income growth when the official data are reported at the end of the month.  Absent a significant decline in the savings rate and/or significant re-acceleration in credit growth, consumption growth can be expected to track income growth lower. 

UUP

UUP

Industrial Activity 

The -14K decline in manufacturing employment in August accords with the retreat in the employment subcomponent in the ISM manufacturing report.  Lower manufacturing employment and a slowdown in manufacturing hours worked also points to a sequential decline in Industrial Production when that data is reported later in the month.  In short (and in the short-term), bad economic data is good as falling rate hike expectations support asset price inflation.  Over the intermediate-term, "slower-and-lower-for-longer" continues to characterize the growth, inflation and interest rate outlook and support #GrowthSlowing allocations in bonds, gold, and dollars.   While incremental dovishness from the Fed may serve as a short-term headwind to the dollar, the structural case for the $USD amidst ongoing policy divergence between the U.S. and the balance of global DM markets remains intact.   

Asset Allocation

CASH US EQUITIES INTL EQUITIES COMMODITIES FIXED INCOME INTL CURRENCIES
9/8/16 59% 2% 4% 6% 23% 6%
9/9/16 58% 3% 5% 7% 25% 2%

Asset Allocation as a % of Max Preferred Exposure

CASH US EQUITIES INTL EQUITIES COMMODITIES FIXED INCOME INTL CURRENCIES
9/8/16 59% 6% 12% 18% 70% 18%
9/9/16 58% 9% 15% 21% 76% 6%
The maximum preferred exposure for cash is 100%. The maximum preferred exposure for each of the other assets classes is 33%.

THREE FOR THE ROAD

TWEET OF THE DAY

Live Q&A "Medicaid for the Middle Class?" @HoweGeneration @HedgeyeHC 12PM ET #ACA *Access: app.hedgeye.com/insights/53673… pic.twitter.com/V3XTH8mjrG

@Hedgeye

QUOTE OF THE DAY

I think that the team that wins game five will win the series.  Unless we lose game five."

-Charles Barkley

STAT OF THE DAY

Trevor Siemian completed 18 of 26 for 178 yards and 1 TD last night.