Lance Roberts: This Market Is Like A Tanker Of Gasoline

Wednesday, May 31, 2017
By Paul Martin

by Adam Taggart via PeakProsperity.com,
ZeroHedge.com
May 30, 2017

Lance Roberts, chief investment strategist of Clarity Financial and chief editor of Real Investment Advice has authored a number of impressive recent reports identifying potential failure points in today’s financial markets.

In this week’s podcast, Lance explains how the massive flood of investment capital into passively-managed ETFs, along with record amounts of margin debt, has the potential to set the markets afire:

Fundamentally, there’s nothing different in today’s markets because, at the end of the day, they are about evaluations, earnings — those types of things. Technically, the market is very different today because of quantitative easing, computerized trading etc.

What we see are two things happening, in particular, that people should be paying attention to. One is that investors are herding into passively-managed ETFs now, which is creating a dislocation between the underlying realities of individual stocks and their prices, because the piling into ETFs is requiring stocks like Facebook, Amazon, and Google to be bought in much greater volumes than they otherwise would. And people are making an assumption that there will always a buyer for every seller in the market.

Now that’s absolutely true. But it’s often argued by the mainstream media that “For every buyer there’s a seller, so it doesn’t matter when the market turns. You’ll be okay.” But you won’t, because, yes, at some point there is a buyer for every seller, but it always begs the question: At what price? And because of all the piling into these ETFs, when the market eventually breaks, yes, there will be a buyer; but that buyer could be at many percentages lower than where prices were before. We could very well see a vacuum appear in prices, with a gap down so sharp and so fast that it not only paralyzes most investors who may be hoping to get a little bit of recovery to sell into, but then will start triggering margin calls.

There’s been numerous articles written about margin debt: “margin debt is not a problem; don’t worry about margin debt.” Well, margin debt is not fine. We’re at record levels of margin debts. It’s like a can of gasoline. If I set a can of gasoline in the middle of a room and nobody touches it, it’s fine. But drop a match into that can of gasoline you have a different story.

The Rest…HERE

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