Asset allocation should be based on liquidity cycles, not economic cycles like GDP growth, as they are out of sync. An increase in liquidity precedes economic acceleration by 12-15 months. Strong economic data can even be a negative signal for asset markets as it means money is leaving financials for the real economy.
Official liquidity measures like Fed balance sheet levels are too slow to be tradable. A better approach is to monitor the symptoms of liquidity conditions in real-time market data. Indicators like SOFR spreads, commercial paper spreads, and unusual yield curve shapes reveal the health of private credit creation.
The ratio of leading-to-coincident economic indicators is at historic lows seen only in deep recessions (1982, 2009). However, this may be skewed by the leading indicators' reliance on extremely negative consumer sentiment surveys. This divergence suggests we might be at the bottom of a cycle, not the beginning of a downturn.
The common narrative of the Federal Reserve implementing Quantitative Tightening (QT) is misleading. The US has actually been injecting liquidity through less obvious channels. The real tightening may only be starting now as these methods are exhausted, signaling a significant, under-the-radar policy shift.
Keith McCullough's core process categorizes the economy into four "quads" based on the accelerating or decelerating rates of change for GDP growth and inflation. Each quad has a predictable asset allocation playbook, with Quad 2 (both accelerating) being the best and Quad 4 (both slowing) being the worst for investors.
A powerful market signal is the "quad count," or the forecasted sequence of economic regimes. A progression from Quad 4 (recession fears) to Quad 3 and then to Quads 2 and 1 creates a powerful contrarian setup. This allows investors to buy assets like small caps when recession probabilities are priced at their highest.
The long-held belief that Bitcoin's price follows a predictable four-year cycle is obsolete. The primary drivers are now global liquidity (M2) and broader business cycles, specifically manufacturing sector performance. Investors clinging to the old halving model risk mis-timing the market.
Before stress appears in repo markets or equity volatility, Bitcoin's price acts as a leading indicator. It is the "last functioning smoke alarm" for tightening global liquidity, making its price action a crucial, early signal for macro investors to monitor.
While markets fixate on Fed rate decisions, the primary driver of liquidity and high equity valuations is geopolitical risk influencing international trade and capital flows. This macro force is more significant than domestic monetary policy and explains market resilience despite higher rates.
The era of constant central bank intervention has rendered traditional value investing irrelevant. Market movements are now dictated by liquidity and stimulus flows, not by fundamental analysis of a company's intrinsic value. Investors must now track the 'liquidity impulse' to succeed.
When asset valuations are elevated across all major markets, traditional fundamental analysis becomes less predictive of short-term price movements. Investors should instead focus on macro drivers of liquidity, such as foreign exchange rates, cross-border flows, and interest rates.