Market Structure is Distorting Reality as Inflation Builds | Weekly Roundup
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Wartime capital allocation favors scarce resources - Geopolitical instability and long-term inflationary pressures are driving a fundamental shift toward assets that cannot be printed, such as energy and metals.
โThis is wartime allocation of capital. And this isn't just about the Iran situation, this is about what's been building for three years, four years, five years. It just favors scarce resources you can't print.โ
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Oil is trapped in an inflationary 'no man's land' - Current price levels are high enough to keep inflation sticky but remain below the threshold required to trigger demand destruction, leaving central banks paralyzed.
โOil prices aren't high enough for demand destruction, but they're high enough for inflation. You can make the argument, it's actually almost better for it to go higher. Then you get the demand destruction, like the central bank's gonna actually do something. We're stuck in the corridor of everybody's frozen.โ
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Aggressive market de-leveraging limits immediate downside - Significant de-grossing by systematic funds and high hedging costs suggest that the incremental seller is exhausted, making further shorting difficult despite a bearish medium-term outlook.
โthe market has de-levered and de-grossed a fair bit amount, like so much so that shorting at these areas is a very tough place to make money when you see these types of moves and factor in on top of that.โ
