Hello my friends, today is June 29th and this is Markets Weekly. So this past week we had a lot of chop in the markets and on Friday it looked like we had a pretty big reversal. I remain very cautious on the equity markets. But today I want to talk about three things. First, last week we had our first presidential debate and it seems to have changed the political landscape in the US and that's affecting certain markets. So let's talk about what happened last week there. Secondly, I've been hearing a lot of whispers about the demise of the petrol dollar. Let's talk a little bit about what the petrol dollar is and why I think it's mostly nonsense. And lastly, we have pretty important French elections happening this weekend where the two leading parties in the legislative elections are on the opposite sides of the political spectrum. So no matter what happens, it seems like we're on the cusp of big changes that will also filter into global markets. So let's talk a little bit about what's happening in France.
Okay, starting with the US. So last week President Trump met President Biden on the debate stage. So if you've been following President Biden for the past year, you can see there are many videos on Twitter of him having senior moments. But at the same time, if you've been reading the legacy media, they've been telling you that actually Biden is fine behind closed doors. He's running things. He's super sharp. Don't be ageist and so forth. But on that debate stage, the American public immediately saw that President Biden is just too old and that the public has been lied to for some time. Now there are many videos of that debate on the internet, but let me play the last few seconds. So, as you can see, President Biden seems to have trouble getting off the stage himself. Now the betting markets took one look at that debate and immediately increased the odds of a Trump victory in November to around 60%. And at the same time, lowered the odds of a Biden victory to about 30%.
Now President Trump very clearly has been telling you that he wants to run inflationary policy. He wants to cut rates. He wants to cut taxes. And he wants to basically be more protectionist. So I think that seems to be filtering a bit into the rates market where on Friday, we saw the 30-year yield rise notably. Now some of that is no doubt due to quarter-end as well, but it could also be due to the market realizing that there's a better chance now of a Trump victory. Now if you look at some specific Trump trades like prison stocks, they also surged on Friday. Prison stocks have been a favorite Trump trade since 2016 as Trump is a self-proclaimed law and order candidate. Now my only view though is that I think that presidential debate actually increased a lot of uncertainty in the markets and it should be risk negative. Because right now it seems like there's a pretty good chance that President Biden may actually be replaced as the Democratic nominee.
Now right after the debate, there seems to be a coordinated effort by the media and elements of the Democratic Party to basically full-court press we need a new nominee because President Biden, he's not going to cut it. And I think this is pretty understandable after all the presidency really, really important price but not just that. There are a lot of people who are running down ticket to President Biden. So in the US, when you vote for election, you're presented with a piece of paper. Again, you choose your president but you also choose Congress, Senate and so forth. So a lot of times politics being a team sport is that when you have an unpopular president, people don't show up to vote for that candidate and everyone downstream say the congressmen, the senators, they suffer as well. So you have a lot of people in the Democratic Party who are running for reelection on November. They're really worried that maybe Biden will take their chances. So everyone is trying to do something to try to at least help themselves. So the betting markets are saying that, hey, there's a good chance that President, so Governor Gavin Newsom of California could be the nominee, maybe vice versa and Kamala Harris. And there's even a chance that Hillary Clinton could come back as a candidate. Now, just a couple of weeks ago, there was actually an op-in in the Washington Post reminding everyone that, hey, Hillary Clinton, not so bad, maybe she could be a VP or something.
So there's a lot of power centers in the Democratic Party trying to merge and reach for that price of being a presidential nominee. At the same time though, Biden seems to be standing firm saying that he is going to run for president and most notably, President Barack Obama on Twitter seemed to show support saying that, you know, Biden just had a bad night. We have bad nights. He's going to be our presidential nominee. President Obama is probably the most influential person in a Democratic Party. I don't know if he's able to keep the troops together, but right now it seems like we're in a period of turmoil where we're not really sure who's going to be running against President Trump. And that type of uncertainty I think should be a bit destabilizing for the market. Now the other potential candidates for president, we all know who they are, but I think there's a bit more uncertainty as to how they play among the general public. And you know, right now it looks like the markets think that Trump is probably going to win, but these dynamics are fluid, maybe a debate, let's say against Gavin Newsom or someone like that could really change the public's perception. So we are, I think, in a period of turmoil for the next few months, it's going to be interesting.
Okay, the next thing that I want to talk about is the demise of the so-called petrol dollar that it seems like many people are talking about. So what exactly is the petrol dollar? So as you guys know, historically the US imports a lot of oil historically from the Middle East. Now in the 1970s, during the Cold War, the US was basically fighting on behalf of what it perceived to be the free world. And it was running huge deficits in order to finance its big war. So it went around to many countries and basically said, hey, I'm providing security, I'm trying to fight the good fight. Can you support this by buying more Treasury securities? And so they basically spoke to many Middle Eastern countries. And what seemed to emerge is that the US will continue to buy oil from Middle Eastern countries, send them dollars in the Middle Eastern countries in return will buy US Treasuries. And that was a source of stability for the Treasury market.
Now you can see this became really important. Let's say in 2007 when oil prices were surging. Now oil prices back then were around $150 today, they're about $80. Now here's some work from the Fed back then showing that the surplus, the trade surplus that the oil exporting nations had in that period was about a trillion dollars a year. So they were earning tremendous amounts of dollars. So what were they doing with those dollars? Well part of it of course was used to invest in Treasury securities, but part of it was also used to buy goods and services throughout the world. So in a sense dollars went left the United States and then they came back in and everyone was happy.
Now there's been some concern that going forward maybe what if the oil producing countries like Saudi Arabia, what if they don't want to buy Treasuries anymore, what if they don't invoice their oil exports and dollars anymore? So what's going to happen? And you know is that going to mean that the dollar system is going to collapse, the Treasury market is going to collapse and so forth? And I think those concerns are totally overblown for a couple of reasons. First, now oil is traded in dollars but it actually really doesn't matter what it's traded in. Now let's say for example, let's say that oil was traded in Yen. Now let's say the Saudi Arabia and sell the whole bunch of oil and end up with a whole bunch of Yen. Now what really matters is what they do with that Yen afterwards. After all if they have a whole bunch of Yen, what if they don't really want that Yen? They could always just sell that in buy dollars and invest in Nvidia, invest in Treasuries and so forth.
So what the, actually the commodity is invoiced in or priced in, I don't really think it's that important. What really is important is what the seller does with the currency that they receive in exchange. Now over the past few decades, a lot of the times what the oil producing countries have done is take those dollars and buy US assets. Is it because they are great friends with the US and the State Department forces them to? You know, I'm not sure maybe there are some reason, maybe that's some of it, but also US markets are the most liquid markets in the world. If you have say a hundred billion dollars, there's really not many places you can put it. Let's say that they start to earn a whole bunch of RMB. Are they going to invest that in China? Well in China, markets are not that liquid. You can't easily take money out and at the same time yields are actually pretty low there.
So it doesn't seem to make sense. Are you going to invest in Euroland? Well, there's not that much growth in your land and their markets are not that deep in liquid. At the end of the day though, in terms of global capital markets, it's really the dollar markets that are the most deep in liquid, regardless of how the US manages its public finances. Now you could say that the US fiscal deficit, unsustainable, Treasury's terrible investment and I would totally agree with you. But that doesn't necessarily mean that you just get rid of your dollars. It could simply mean that instead of buying Treasury's, you buy something like the S&P 500. Now there is real political risk though, where if you have too much dollar exposure, maybe the US government could sanction you. I think that is a real risk and that is some cost for diversification, but that is separate from this whole selling oil for dollars thing.
Now the second reason why this petro dollar system collapsing is really a non issue is that if you look at the public finances of say Saudi Arabia, they actually aren't really earning that much dollars on net. So they're earning a lot of dollars, but then they're also importing a lot of goods and services. So their current account is basically flat. Actually if you look at the public finances of Saudi Arabia, you'll see that they've been borrowing a lot. They've been going more and more in debt because they're spending so much money on all these other projects and public welfare and stuff like that. Now looking at their Treasury holdings over the past decade, you'll also notice that they're pretty stable. So as far as I can tell, there doesn't seem to be a big disturbance in the dollar system based on whatever you want to call the petro dollar trade. Further disturbance I think could be caused by political sanctions and stuff like that, but I don't think that has anything to do with what oil was invoiced in or anything like that. So I think the demise of the petro dollar system is greatly exaggerated. On the one hand, they simply don't have as many petro dollar as have your boss of Bloomberg noted.
Okay, so the last thing that I want to talk about is the French elections this Sunday. So as we discussed before, the French are having new legislative elections, but the two leading political forces are on the opposite side of the political spectrum. We have the Rasamblebong Nationale, the Right-leaning Party, far ahead in the polls with the possibility of actually having an outright legislative majority. And right after them, you have the front popular, which is basically a very socialist, somewhat communist party. Below them all, of course, is Macron's centrist party and they are not going to make it. Now in France, legislative elections are done in two stages. The first stage is Sunday and afterwards, the two winners will go off and face a run-off in the second stage. And sometimes there's a third person running as well, depending on how well that person performed during the first stage. So we won't know the final results until later in July, but what it seems to pretend is big changes.
Now the Rasamblebong Nationale is mostly about migration. That's their big issue. They're seeing tremendous migration in France, changing culture. They don't like that. They are more nationalistic. They have an economic platform as well, but it doesn't seem to be their main focus. But the front popular though, they are very much an economic-based party. Classically, they want to increase social benefits, so more lower than retirement age, raising minimum wage, more benefits and so forth. And they want to pay for it, of course, by taxing the rich. So they want the marginal income tax to go as high as 90%. And they want to roll out a higher wealth tax level. A wealth tax is basically like property tax, but for everything you own. And so their proposal, I think, is perceived to be very negative to economic growth.
Now right now, there's a tremendous amounts of uncertainty as to how this could turn out. But there is a chance that maybe these economic policies get some way enacted. And so I think that's significantly impacting the French markets. If you look at the French stock market, it's totally tanking. After all, high taxes are bad for the stock market, bad for economic growth. Now at the same time though, both parties are proposing a lot of fiscal spending, and that's impacting the bond market. If you look at French tenure yields as a spread to German bonds, they've been blowing out pretty significantly. Now the ECB has special mechanisms where they're going to come in and save the bond market, but they're not going to do that right away. After all, the European Union wants the member countries to have fiscal discipline.
So what we could see is that spreads continue to widen out if we have a fiscal policy that that's just too much spending. Now there's no risk of disaster because if spreads really, really explode higher, you can be sure that the ECB is going to come in and maintain financial market stability. But what I think we're looking at right now is just the fundamental collapse of the establishment in a core European country. Now that means that the future is going to look very different from the past. And so the possibilities become very wide. At the very least, this heightened uncertainty should be negative for global risk assets, for the Euro. But depending on what we find out after the end of the second stage in elections, it could really reverberate. And the worst case scenario, we could have a banking sector in Europe not doing well because yields are selling off so much and that could have some contagion fears to the global financial system. Again, we'll find out in the coming weeks. But what it is though is for sure some interesting times.
Now, as I've been saying over the past few months, I think going forward, the biggest drivers of markets are not going to be the central banks, but what happens with the politics. Because at the end of the day, economy, markets is downstream from politics because the government sets the rules and is the biggest economic actor. Alright so that's all I prepared for today. If you're interested in reading more about my thoughts, check out my blog at saidguy.com. And if you're interested in learning more about markets, check out my courses at centralbanking101.com. Talk to you all next week and don't forget to like and subscribe.