The Stock Market’s Seven-Year Itch

Excerpted from ‘Tangible Ideas’ via Sean Corrigan of  Diapason Commodities,

So where does this leave us, in financial markets, at the mid-point of the year, other than with asset prices through the roof?

As can be gathered from the faux lamentations issuing forth from those central banking Uriah Heeps who sit wringing their hands at the dangers inherent in a ‘search for yield’ which they themselves have driven, sovereign bonds are currently at their lowest yields, longest durations, and hence most adverse risk:return settings of the past half-century.

In turn, this has led to a similar compression of credit spreads to the point that junk yields are trading sub-5% nominal, sub-3% deflated for the first time in history, levels at which they spread to US treasuries has also gone blow the 250bps area which marked the eve of the last three major credit events in 1994, 1997, and 2007. Needless to say, they are also historically cheap to stock earnings yields, actually trading below them.

Stock multiples are also among the most favourable vis-à-vis corporate yields in three decades, while dividend yields – though themselves in only the 5th percentile of the last six decades’ range – are atypically well in excess of both the Fed funds rate and the 3-month T-bill rate – again for the first time in over half a century. This, as we shall shortly see, is perhaps the single most compelling reason why stock markets seem to have an inexhaustible supply of bidders.

What is good for junk is also becoming true for emerging market bonds, even if the broader indices, such as the EMBI is still some 60bps above the post-2007 lows of 220bps. Similarly, though Bono and BTP spreads have seen some profit-taking since hitting four-year lows early in June, crashed to their lows, they still trade at or through UST equivalents at the lowest nominal yields in history. For all the rumblings about debt traps, after-CPI yields in Italy, at around 2.5%, are smack on the midmean of the whole EMU era and thus substantially reduced from the 6.5% average which was laid down in the last decade of the lira’s life.

When it comes to equities themselves, it might appear that, just looking at P/E ratings – added to a little eternal optimism regarding the prospect fro the growth in the denominator, whether as a result of buybacks or earnings growth – the market has not yet gone beyond the bounds of sanity.

What we can say, however, is that the fraction of profits rung from each dollar of sales has become greatly elevated – running at just under 10% for manufacturing companies, for example, which is twice the 5% typical of the last four decades of the 20th century. This has allowed earnings to grow enough to keep the buy-side happy, even though revenue growth has become very lacklustre of late, to the point that it is barely positive in deflated terms, often a harbinger of a more widespread economic malaise.

Fundamentally, if profits are growing as a share of sales, we must be deducting less from those receipts. As a share of EBIT, both the tax take and the interest pay-out have fallen substantially over the cycle. Whereas, in the mid-1990s, interest was eating up half of pre-tax operating income and taxes were taking a third of the remainder, currently the former reduction has fallen to around 30% and the latter to a highly depressed 20%. Note, however, that in 2013, the ROIC was a creditable 5.4% nominal, 3.3% real, while the realized cost of capital (using dividends and tax-adjusted interest paid) was 3.3% nominal, 1.2% real. This, you will note, nevertheless left the residual ‘economic’ profit rate at 2.1% nominal or precisely zero after taking account of the intervening general rise in prices.

The point here is that this is a finite, if long-lived, process: the tax rate cannot continue to fall without limit while interest costs are already at historic lows (so much so, in fact that corporates, as we have noted are hardly shy about increasing their susceptibility to any future adverse changes in them). Whenever the day arrives, there will necessarily come a point when earning cannot grow faster than revenues and if, when that occurs, revenue growth itself remains enfeebled, earnings, too, must begin to disappoint.

Something of the sort may perhaps be found a parsing of the latest Duke/CFO Magazine survey of US business executives. This 405-strong sample found that the outlook for both revenues and earnings had darkened appreciably in the pact six months. Last autumn, sales were seen to be about to quicken to a 6.8% rate of increase taking earnings up to a 14.3% rate of climb. Now, revenue growth is forecast to reach only 5.7% yoy, with the earnings outlook slashed to 4.1%. That latter is the worst such outcome of their prognostications since the third quarter of 2009 and stands in stark contrast to sellside expectations, as reported by S&P, for a 25% gain.

As if that were not enough, the price to book of equities is also rising alarmingly, especially price to tangible, replacement cost book, a measure which has only been higher in the run up to the Tech bubble peak. So, to sum up, little account has been taken of the fact that a couple of the main factors which have allowed margins to expand so greatly are presumably fast approaching their expiry date; the price to forward earnings being bandied about only seems reasonable on a Street guesstimate which is no less than six times that offered by corporate insiders; price to cash flow is in the topmost six percent of the distribution; the liquidation value of the average company would leave creditors well under water, while net debt as a proportion of either cash flow or net worth is approaching previous highs.

That all hardly makes for a compelling investment case, even without wondering about the herding effects currently at work in the market.

Which only leaves us with commodities – bastard children of the last few years’ bull market, still greatly despised, outside of the energy sector, at least. In truth, in the year so far their returns have been anything but lacklustre. As of writing in the last week of June, the basket has returned a healthy 7.7%, led by Ags on 12.5% and lagged by industrial metals on just 1.3%. With such a score, they have so far outpointed US bonds (3.4%), Junk (5.6%), US Small Cap (2.7%), EM equities (5.5%), World ex-US stocks (6.1%), and the US itself (7.2%). Only EM bonds – plus-8.5% – have done any better among the major asset classes.

*  *  *

What this long preamble is aimed at doing is alerting the reader to the possibility that while the trend line chugs on upward with the bond market at ~6% nominal, any divergence of other asset class returns too far from this line may well sow the seeds of their own dampening and subsequent phase reversal. Here we would ask you to squint at the accompanying, start date-normalized plot of returns to see if you, too, can make out what appears to be a tantalizing, seven-year waxing and waning of equity returns away from and back to the trend, alternating Blue Sky bull markets like the one we have been in for much of the past five years with more short-lived, Icarus-like descents of the order of 50% where they converge not just with bonds, but commodities, too.

 

If past is indeed sometimes prologue, this simple chart might be hinting that a rally similar in arithmetical range and time-span – if not in percentage gain – to the Tech bubble itself is becoming dangerously overripe and that, if so, the most propitious time to effect an exit is not when the fat lady interrupts her warbling of the anthem to shriek, ‘Fire!’ at the audience instead.




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The Hobby Lobby Case as Political Clickbait

The Supreme Court’s decision in
the Hobby Lobby case this morning was bad news for the Obama
administration, which sought to defend its rule that large
employers have to provide contraceptive coverage under Obamacare’s
essential benefits rules. But there was a silver lining for the
president’s party: The ruling created an opportunity for fund
raising, as well as a political talking point going into this
year’s midterm elections.

Via Politico, the fundraising appeals have
already started
:

Shortly after the court’s 5-4
decision in
 Burwell v.
Hobby Lobby
, which said for-profit employers with
religious objections can opt out of providing contraception
coverage under Obamacare, the liberal fundraising emails went
flying. Democratic candidates and liberal groups were seeking to
collect scores of new email addresses and bank last-minute cash
contributions in advance of the monthly FEC deadline at midnight
Monday.

“It’s disgusting: The Supreme Court just ruled that corporations
can deny women insurance coverage for birth control,” the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said in a fundraising
request less than two hours after the decision.

“It’s a shameful day for our country. But we CAN’T let the GOP
use this to steal the momentum, erase our lead, and take over the
Senate. The consequences would be dire. With just 14 hours to go
before the most critical FEC deadline of this election, please
pitch in to stop a GOP Senate takeover,” the Senate Democrats wrote
in an email with the all-caps subject line “SUPREME COURT
DECISION.”

Welcome to the bizarro world of modern fundraising, where even
bad news can be good for the bottom line. A loss in a big policy
fight means outrage, anger and lots of small-dollar campaign
contributions from riled-up grass-roots supporters.

It’s not just a fundraising tool, either. Democrats are also
likely to lean on the decision in their get-out-the-vote efforts
this November. The decision is already generating a lot of
controversy with single women, a demographic that Democrats are
heavily targeting
ahead of the next election
. Senior Democrats are already making
an issue of the case, with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
(D-Nev.) and others in his party
signaling
that they may pursue a legislative response.

“I will introduce legislation that requires all corporations
using this Supreme Court decision to deny or limit contraception
services to disclose this policy to all employed and applicants for
employment,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Il.), the Senate Majority Whip,
said in a statement today,
according
to Roll Call. “Workers have a right to know
if their employers are restricting the availability of a full range
of family planning coverage.”

You can expect to hear a lot more along these lines as the
election nears.

To be clear: I am not at all suggesting that the
administration was hoping or intending to lose in court. But this
does help explain, at least somewhat, why the administration was so
eager to pursue the case, which in the immediate future will have
relatively little practical impact (it impacts only closely held
corporations, and only four specific forms of contraception)
instead of just letting Hobby Lobby have an exemption and not
making a Supreme Court case out of it.

It’s the political/legal equivalent of online clickbait; it
grabs the attention of large numbers of people, sparks their
interests and passions, and gets them engaged (or at least
enraged). That doesn’t mean the administration set out to lose, or
doesn’t care about having lost. But it does potentially change the
calculus about whether and how hard to press an issue like this by
offering some real benefits just for fighting the fight, even in
the event of a defeat.

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Ira Stoll on Obama’s Culture Wars

One of the sad legacies of President Obama, who
rose to prominence on the basis of a 2004 speech announcing,
“there’s not a liberal America and a conservative America; there’s
the United States of America,” is that American political
polarization has spread to vast new areas of life. What happened,
asks Ira Stoll, to the Obama who promised to make America less
divisive?

View this article.

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P.M. Links: Obama Promises Immigration Action, NYT Says Low Evidence Standard ‘Justified’ in Campus Rape Trials, ‘Adios Amigos’ = Racist?

  • KLMPresident Barack Obama will
    take executive action
    on immigration reform. Calling his plan
    “administrative action,” he promised to direct law enforcement
    resources away from deportation and toward border security.
    Republicans forced his hand by blocking meaningful legislation on
    the issue, he claimed.
  • The New York Times editorial board
    endorsed new federal government mandates
    for how colleges must
    handle sexual assault investigations. The government is perfectly
    justified in requiring campus judicial bodies to use a low burden
    of proof, according to the NYT.
  • The Democratic Party
    took the release
    of the Hobby Lobby and Harris v.
    Quinn
    Supreme Court decisions as an opportunity to reignite
    its base for the upcoming November elections. DNC promotional
    material warned that a GOP takeover of the Senate would cement the
    gains made by conservatives at the Supreme Court today.
  • Dutch airline KLM
    apologized for tweeting
    “Adios Amigos!” after Mexico’s loss to
    the Netherlands. No offense was intended, according to a KLM
    spokesperson, though some had construed the Tweet as racist.

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Shorts Squeezed Most In 11 Months As Russell Surges But Outperformed By Gold In H1

Gold is the best performing asset in H1 2014 (just beating crude oil). The USA is the worst-performing macro-economy in the world's majors in H1. The S&P 500 is up now 6 quarters in a row – its best run since 1998. The Russell 2000 had its best month since September but Trannies are leading the Dow by over 900bps year-to-date. "Most shorted" stocks had their 'best – biggest squeeze' month in 11 months. Gold and silver had great months. Today saw stocks rally then fade and bond yields rose then fell (down 1-2bps). The dollar slipped markedly on the day to 2-month lows as commodities surged (ex Oil) with Gold, silver, and copper all reaching multi-month highs (amid short-covering and CCFD unwinds). VIX closed the month higher.

 

June was quite a month for The Russell 2000 (best since Sept)…not so much the Dow…

 

As "most shorted" stocks were squeezed their most in 11 months!!

 

Year-to-date, Trannies are beating the Dow by over 900bps!

 

In H1 2014, Gold wins…

 

In H1 2014, USA's macro-surprise index is the worst… (yes worst!)

 

The S&P 500 has now been up 6 quarters in a row – its best run since 1998…

 

On the day… Stocks rose and fell… (seemingly not happy about GM)

 

Bond yields rose and fell…

 

Commodities surged (ex Oil)…

 

The USD was hammered today – its worst 2-day drop in months…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: GM "Total Recall" fallout…

 




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Missourians Freak Out Over Cheeky Fireworks Billboard (Which May Be Driving Up Local Meth Use!)

A billboard in Jefferson
County, Missouri, is stirring up local outrage by
obliquely referencing the drug Molly
. The Highway 30 ad for
Molly Brown’s Fireworks stand reads in big block letters: MOLLY
AHEAD. The fine print between these words says “Black
Market.” 

It seems pretty obvious that this is a play on words, designed
to draw maximum eyeballs and peak passersby’s interest—as good
advertising does. But local busybodies are concerned that the
billboard “sends mixed messages” and helps normalize the idea of
drug use. 

“The unfortunate thing about that is many kids will see that,
they’ll know the relation to the drug Molly and it just builds the
idea that this drug is no big deal, that it’s ok to take, that it’s
something we can joke about,” Jared Opsal, a spokesman for the St.
Louis branch of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse,

told Missouri news station KSDK
.  

Opsal’s comment is, amazingly, one of the less insane
ones in KSDK’s story. The local news account quickly escalates from
cheeky fireworks-stand billboard to kids on Molly getting
dehydrated to kids are dying to oh my god this billboard could fuel
the local heroin and meth epidemics. Ahem: 

Some Molly users have even died.

Fenton and the surrounding communities have been battling drug
epidemics for years. It started with methamphetamines. More
recently heroin has joined the mix. Now people are concerned the
sign may lead to more problems.

“When I see Molly black market, to me that sounds like drugs,”
said Michele Van Tuyl of the Rockwood Drug Free Coalition.

“You put the fireworks with the drug insinuation and it sounds
like a big huge party, you know?” 

A big huge party where everybody gets together and
insinuates about drugs—chilling. 

For its part, the company that owns Molly Brown’s is denying any
insinuation was intended. “Molly’s Ahead has absolutely nothing to
do with a drug called molly,” spokeswoman Anita Kell told a
concerned community member in an email. She said she didn’t even
know molly was a drug and that Black Market is a brand of
fireworks. 

I don’t buy Kell’s explanation—she conveniently adds the
possessive in all of her Molly mentions, which is not what the
billboard actually says. But it’s probably a good strategy with
this crowd. 

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Forget ‘Shrugged’; Atlas Just May Throw Up His Hands

Submitted by Mark St.Cyr,

Financial markets do the one thing better than nearly any other form of protest or lauding of government policies. When the financial markets are falling that’s a tell-tale sign something somewhere is wrong. Same for the lifting, where the rise lifts all giving policy makers as well as the general public at large explicit feedback of what is, as well as, what’s not working.

Yet, once those indicators become an adulterated vehicle with the ability to mask true economic information, the underpinnings of that very same economy at some point will inevitably give for it allows more, and more burdensome tax policies, regulatory initiatives, along with a host of other parasitic fee structures that have the ability to thrive as they in turn kill business.

Just how pungent does today’s economic corpse need to stink before everyone understands it hasn’t been resting, or recovering, but has been dead for who knows how long? With a print of nearly 3% negative GDP, sustaining, or plodding along, or any other descriptor stating “recovering” is ludicrous.

These are not just troubling issues rather, the implications contained going forward are far more frightening. Just take a look at the current economic landscape from the purview of someone trying to start, run, or sustain a business in today’s climate.

Where is a person to go that is both industrious as well as endowed with the self initiative to take on the world and go out and start their own business? At one time that question had a reflexive answer: anywhere in America. Today? Not so fast.

Look at the once shining city of New York as just one example. Remember when you would sing with reverence: “If you could make it there, you can make it anywhere?” Now, is it the first choice? Hardly.

Ever more growing regulations are being foisted upon business owners as well as other entrepreneurial minded individuals. The more you make – the more they’ll take seems to be the lyrics of today.

Want to hire or need to fire? Better check on that for you may be in violation via some code if you do either, regardless if it’s in your best interest or not. But don’t worry for that other mantra that recited at you is: “You’re rich! You can afford it! And you’re going to pay even more!” Makes you feel all warm inside for taking on all that risk doesn’t it? And besides, New York has been, and is continuing to experience an outflow of wealth and business. So don’t worry, if you’re feeling you can’t pay more, don’t worry, they believe you can. And you will.

Want to skip the harsh northern climate for a little fun in the sun? California is the place to go for a beautiful change in climate. But in regards to a business climate? As fast as they can proclaim the earth is getting warmer the business environment is chilling at an even faster pace.

With the announcement of large employers such as Toyota® moving their entire corporate headquarters out of the state entirely not to mention the outpouring of other small and medium-sized business, who’ll be left to pay all those great and wonderful benefits allowed the citizenry?

Ask most people and they’ll say: “The government.” As if they can print money from thin air. But wait, they can via the Fed. So as long as the wheels on the presses whirr – who needs business!

Then again why should anyone worry? You’ll be able to flip burgers at a “living wage.” However, if you own that burger joint, restaurant, or the other myriad of establishments that many have now been deemed “evil.” Your payroll is now going to possibly double. Regardless if you can afford it or not.

Have a few too many employees that makes your healthcare costs soar? You can possibly try as to downsize, but it has been expressed you might be in violation of some edict incorporated into the new laws where doing just that for the sole purpose as to reduce your costs (or the necessity as to be able to keep your doors open) you may find yourself being fined. Costing you even more!

Just look up the law for clarity on these matters you say? Sorry, they change at the whim of whoever is wielding a pen. You had just better get your own pen at the ready to sign that check payable to ___________(fill in the blank) Better check your ink supply. Just saying.

There isn’t enough space nor time to list all the other ancillary fines, regulations, and more being hurled at business at such an alarming rate. It’s becoming near impossible to keep up let alone know what the cost of doing business will be next month, let alone next year.

The exacerbating enabler to most of this problem and why no one can put 2+2 together and understand the impact is for the very reason I and others have expressed ad nausea. The intervention of the Federal Reserve and their monetary policies within the capital markets.

The Federal Reserve has absolutely adulterated and is nearly obliterating the one and only mechanism powerful enough to keep many of these business killing interventions in check. i.e., Market forces expressed via the capital markets.

Currently the only force being expressed is the “forcing” of Fed. provided liquidity to levitate stocks to heights never before seen in history as the GDP plummets to levels in a fashion reminiscent of a lead zeppelin.

How in the world can any so-called “business analyst” state publicly that stocks are “fairly valued” against such a back drop? It’s beyond moronic, and to me, it’s damn near criminal.

Today I also find more people who will proclaim they understand business better than most because they’re sporting a piece of parchment from some Ivy league school. Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, many newly minted MBA’s know nothing more than “theory.” e.g. This economy will support jobs plentiful enough, at salaries robust enough, to pay off all that accrued student debt within their lifetime. Best of luck turning that theory into fact in today’s economic climate is all I’ll say.

What many just don’t seem to realize is what’s currently taking place is not capitalism via free market forces, rather, it’s crony capitalism leveraged and maintained by monetizing debt to allow winners and losers to be chosen by some elite body or bureau. This has never been so, at this level, ever in the history of our nation. Ever.

This form of capitalism is reducing, not expanding opportunities. Or said another way: This is a race to the bottom, not the top. But the stock market levels allow the main stream media to keep printing “everything is just dandy” more times, while at an even more furious pace, than the Federal Reserve can print or digitize the fuel that keeps the hot air in this balloon aloft.

And so in lies the dangerous mindset being propagated throughout the business landscape. However this mindset is not borne out of a vacuum. It’s being institutionalized in principle throughout the country. You get doe eyed responses when you try to explain without the Fed.’s facilitating, there is no market. But alas, it once again falls on deaf ears.

At some point reality is going to have to be faced. You can only adulterate the metrics so many times, change the calculations where bad equals good for only so long. Sooner or later far too many will no longer accept the burden of creating businesses, let alone expanding them. And Atlas won’t shrug – He’ll throw his hands up entirely.

And when that happens the turmoil that will result will explain quicker, and with more understanding to today’s “smart crowd” than any Ivy league lecture hall ever produced.

I penned this years ago and I feel it’s more true today than ever…

“Markets right themselves with pain… That’s Capitalism.

 

Backroom manipulation to avoid that pain only increases the severity to be felt down the road.”

There comes a time when the weight of business regulations and burdens make it far too heavy to continue, or even worth the effort to start. Rather than waiting to prove how much weight Atlas can bear we should be doing everything within our power to ensure he still wants to even try. And at a near -3% historic negative  print in GDP. We had better hope he doesn’t drop the world and decide to fill his spare time with social media or gaming apps.

Just look at how productive they are for business.




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Atlanta and New Orleans Mayors Pick Uber to Win in Fight with Traditional Taxis

a screenshot of UberDMVs and taxi unions nationwide have been
attacking Uber over the past several months, accusing the
peer-to-peer ridesharing service of being unsafe and unfair to the
taxi business. The D.C. Taxi Operators Association
held a protest
in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, blocking the
traffic downtown for a few hours. Virginia’s DMV issued a
cease-and-desist letter to Uber and Lyft earlier this month, and
has
ticketed five Uber
drivers since then. Protests against Uber
have
swept
 European countries in recent weeks. Despite
this widespread opposition, some notable public officials have
voiced their support for Uber and think that the innovative
business will eventually win the battle against taxis.

Kasim Reed, the mayor of Atlanta, recently
told Conor Friedersdorf
of The Atlantic that though
Uber might be in for a “15 round right” with the taxi industry, he
thinks the company will eventually win. He also suggested that this
doesn’t necessarily mean traditional taxis will be completely
phased out by the modernized ridesharing services, but they may
just be forced to innovate to continue to compete. He
said: 

“But in the interim, they’re going to flat out fight it out, and
mayors are going to be in the middle of it, because the taxicab
industry is so old and staid and never had real competition, and
now it’s being forced to innovate.”

The mayor of New Orleans, Mitch Landrieu, also thinks Uber will
eventually win out in the battle against the antiquated taxi
business: 

“I think at the end of the day Uber is going to win. I think
that their technology model is superior. I think their political
skills need some work, if I might.”

The Washington Post reported
that Chicago’s department of Business Affairs and Consumer
Protection receives 12,000 complaints about taxis every year, which
comes out to 33 a day. Uber has a built-in system to overcome these
shortcomings and ensure accountability of its drivers—both the
driver and the passenger are given a rating of 1 through 5 after
every ride. If an Uber driver or a passenger gets out of line on
too many occasions and gets low ratings, they are booted from the
service. 

New York, like many other states, has had a long battle with
Uber and the sharing economy. Despite this, the former commissioner
of the New York City Department of Transportation, Janette
Sadik-Khan, also told Friedersdorf that she was partial to
innovative peer-to-peer services:

“I do think that the shared economy is here to stay. That train
has left the station. It is happening.”

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Italian government explains how we can all become $250,000 richer

shutterstock 120389911 Italian government explains how we can all become $250,000 richer

June 30, 2014
Rome, Italy

As of today, I am $250,000 richer than I was last week. And thanks to the magic of economics, I didn’t even have to do anything.

You see, following the lead of the Italian and British governments, I’ve taken the liberty of ‘rebasing’ my net worth.

In their case they decided to include proceeds from hookers, coke addicts, and meth heads in their GDP calcuations, thereby increasing the sizes of their economies overnight.

So the other day in Singapore as I was filling out an application for a new account at a private bank, there was a box where they wanted me to write in my net worth.

I decided that I would include the “street value” of some of my vital organs; after all, a kidney in a wealthy country like Singapore can fetch over $250,000.

(There was actually a case back in 2008 of a retail tycoon in Singapore who was arrested for trying to buy a kidney for roughly USD $250,000…)

The banker didn’t find my logic particularly convincing, something about ‘not being able to get that past compliance…’ Yet amazingly the market has given these bankrupt European countries a pass on their equally ridiculous idea.

It’s a testament to how absurd things have become. And the fun’s only just begun.

In the last month, I’ve put boots on the ground in four continents. Just about everywhere I’ve gone (with the exception of Myanmar), it’s pretty clear that things are slowing.

In South America, several major economies are slowing down. Chile is seeing much slower growth and much higher inflation.

Brazil is slowing down as well, and the central bank there just quietly released a substantially lower growth estimate that no one seems to have noticed amid the World Cup festivities.

Asia, which is supposed to be maintaining growth for the rest of the world, is slowing. China’s President has told his nation, and the entire world, to prepare for a new normal of slower growth.

Thailand, Southeast Asia’s most important economy, is slowing down. And inflation is rising. Even in Singapore growth is slowing.

Here is Europe, no amount of hookers and coke can put a brave face on 50%+ youth unemployment.

And of course, in North America, the US economy ground to a halt, contracting at a 2.9% annualized rate. This amid the highest rate of inflation in 18-months.

(By extension, growth rates in Canada and Mexico are slowing as well.)

Hmmmm… Slowing growth. Rising inflation. Central bankers have really backed themselves into a corner on this one.

They’ve spent years creating an ocean of credit, creating credit-junkie addicts out of everyone from governments to banks.

But these bankrupt countries are all so dependent upon cheap credit that if the central banks stop printing, the economies will all take a nose dive.

Even worse, shut off from the central bank teet, governments will lose their #1 buyer of debt and be in serious danger of default.

On the other hand, the inflationary effects of their print-at-all-costs monetary policy are starting to be felt all over the world. So if central banks keep printing, they will do even more damage to their currencies and anyone who uses them.

So at the end of the day, central banks have to pick between screwing the governments and banks which appoint them vs. screwing the people who are told to blame the weather.

Gee I wonder which one they’ll choose…

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A time of universal deceit

shutterstock 453810881 A time of universal deceit

June 30, 2014
London, England

[Editor’s Note: This column was written by Tim Price, frequent Sovereign Man contributor and Director of Investment at PFP Wealth Management in the UK]

“We are currently on a journey to the outer reaches of the monetary universe,” write Ronni Stoeferle and Mark Valek in their latest, magisterial ‘In Gold we Trust’. Their outstanding work is doubly valuable because, as George Orwell once wrote,

“In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.”

The reality bears restating: as the good folk of Incrementum rightly point out,

“..the monetary experiments currently underway will have numerous unintended consequences, the extent of which is difficult to gauge today. Gold, as the antagonist of unbacked paper currencies, remains an excellent hedge against rising price inflation and worst case scenarios.”

For several years we have advocated gold as a (necessarily only partial) solution to an unprecedented, global experiment with money that can only end badly for money.

The problem with money is that comparatively few people understand it, including, somewhat ironically, many who work in financial services.

Rather than debate the merits of gold (we think we have done these to death, and we acknowledge the patience of those clients who have stayed the course with us) we merely allude to the perennial difficulty of investing, namely the psychology of the investor.

In addition to being the godfather of value investing, Ben Graham was arguably one of the first behavioural economists. He wisely suggested that investors should

“Have the courage of your knowledge and experience. If you have formed a conclusion from the facts and if you know your judgment is sound, act on it – even though others may hesitate or differ. You are neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees with you. You are right because your data and reasoning are right.”

Graham also observed,

“In the world of securities, courage becomes the supreme virtue after adequate knowledge and a tested judgment are at hand.”
Judgment has clearly been tested for anyone who has elected to hold gold during its recent savage sell-off.

The beauty of gold, much as with a classic Ben Graham value stock, is that as it gets cheaper, it gets even more attractive. This should be self-evident, in that an ounce of gold remains an ounce of gold irrespective of its price.

This puts gold (and value stocks) markedly at odds with momentum investing (which currently holds sway over most markets), where once a price uptrend in a given security breaks to the downside, it’s time to head for the hills.

There are only three ways of trying to handle a mountain of unsustainable debt. The options are:

1) Maintain economic growth at a sufficient rate to service the debt. We believe this is grossly unlikely.

2) Repudiate the debt. Since we also operate within a debt-based monetary system (in which money is lent into being by banks), default broadly equates to Armageddon.

3) Inflate the debt away.

At the risk of pointing out the obvious, which path do we consider the most likely? Which path does it suit grotesquely over-indebted governments and their client central banks to pursue?

But it does not suit central banks to be caught with their fingers in the inflationary cookie jar, so they now have to pretend that deflation is Public Enemy Number One.

Well, deflation is certainly a problem if you have to service unserviceable debts. So it should come as no surprise if this predicament is ultimately resolved through an uncontrollable and perhaps inevitable inflationary or stagflationary mess.

So we have the courage of our knowledge and experience. (In fact, of other people’s experience, too.

As the title of Robert Schuettinger and Eamonn Butler’s book puts it, we have ‘Forty Centuries of Wage and Price Controls’ and their inevitable failure to draw upon. We know how this game ends, we just don’t know precisely when.)

We have formed a conclusion based on facts and we know our judgment is sound. For the last two years, the crowd has disagreed with us on gold.

We think we are right because we think our data and reasoning are right. Not that we don’t see value in other things, too: bonds of unimpeachable quality offering a positive real return; uncorrelated assets; value and ‘deep value’ stocks. And we ask a final question: if not gold, then what?

Are we deceiving ourselves – or are our central bankers in the process of deceiving everyone?

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