Currency Wars – Europe Seeks Alternative To ‘Dollar Imperialism’

Currency Wars – Europe Seeks Alternative To ‘Dollar Imperialism’

It was a gamble and it may have just backfired. When U.S. regulators last week sought to limit Banque Nationale de Paris’s ability to clear dollars they opened a pandora’s box of uncertainty. Countries globally depend on the dollar for international payments. Many will have taken note and some will be alarmed by the move and will now naturally mull over alternatives.  


Reserve Currencies In History – Dollar’s Demise Cometh

Today in Brussels the French Finance Minister, Michel Sapin, will start a debate with his EU counterparts on how the European Union can reduce its dependency on the U.S. dollar. Should the discussion find traction it may contribute to the ongoing monumental shift in global monetary economics with the gradual decline of the dollar as the global reserve currency.

Mr Sapin said in an interview with The Financial Times, “We [Europeans] are selling to ourselves in dollars, for instance when we sell planes. Is that necessary? I don’t think so. I think a rebalancing is possible and necessary, not just regarding the euro but also for the big currencies of the emerging countries, which account for more and more of global trade.”

The U.S. dollar has enjoyed reserve currency status for most of the past 70 years. This status confers enormous power to the dollar and allows the U.S. government to fund its trade deficits at very low cost.

Essentially reserve currency status means that most countries around the world and their respective banks will hold dollars (and dollar proxies such as U.S. treasury bonds) as part of their trade requirements.

Globally a massive 87% of all currency transactions have the U.S. dollar on one side, that is to say that most international trading involves buy and selling goods and services through U.S. dollars. Most central banks believe that the U.S. dollar is the only realistic alternative for such trade as the market is very liquid and has always been considered very safe.

Never before, to our knowledge, has the U.S. sought to limit, via limitations on access to the USD clearing systems, a key global institution (BNP) and a national champion of an important strategic ally (France), the right to trade internationally.

This policy shift represents an enormous risk for the U.S. and its trading partners and undermines what has always been implied that; that by clearing through the U.S. dollar a country can access, safely, the world capital markets while remaining sovereign.

It is important to note that that U.S. dollar supremacy began with the Bretton Woods agreement some 70 years ago.

In the aftermath of two devastating World Wars global leaders convened a conference that would set the economic rules for global economic activity. The delegates diagnosed that the causes for both World Wars lay in economic mismanagement by national governments and that a degree of global oversight and the application of a rules based approach was needed. The agreement led to the creation of the IMF and the World Bank with a mandate to intervene, alleviate and where possible prevent economic crises.

Recent unorthodox monetary policies, the issuance of money in the form of quantitative easing has left countries, primarily those in the EU, who have not pursued such measures at a serious disadvantage. As essentially, QE policy countries have effectively devalued their currencies relative to countries who did not participate.

Such poor coordination is in contravention with the principles of Bretton Woods and is keeping with unilateral type policies which preceded the outbreaks of both World Wars.

A key element of the agreement was the stability conferred upon the dollar by virtue of its peg to gold and global currencies peg to the dollar. The U.S. broke the dollar link to gold in 1971 and the USD became a fiat currency, backed only by “trust” in the U.S. government.

 

Today’s meeting speaks to the serious misgivings of parties and a breakdown in trust. There is a legitimate concern that this trust is now being abused for political purposes. This is misguided and not in the U.S. national interest and could backfire spectacularly.

After a period of relative calm, currency wars look set to escalate and will make owning gold important again in the coming months.

Download GoldCore Insight: Currency Wars: Bye, Bye Petrodollar – Buy, Buy Gold




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Turbo Tuesday Pre-Ramp Missing As Earnings Season, Brazil-Germany Set To Kick Off

Poor algos: after they got no love on Monday from the overnight USDJPY selling team which took the all important pair back to the 200 DMA, today, inexplicably (it is a Tuesday after all, and if one can’t frontrun a rigged market surging higher on Turbo Tuesday may as well throw in the towel on free money and learn about fundamental analysis) the same overnight USDJPY selling team has pushed the key carry pair to below the 200 DMA, and has dragged US equity futures lower with it for the second day in a row.

Unfortunately for the momentum ignition HFT crew, today there may be more issues than just igniting momentum at the right time, because as reported overnight by the NYT, Commerzbank has settled at least USD 500mln after breaking US sanctions, meaning the US dragnet of going after money launderers will continue, forcing even more countries (ahem Germany) to make strong anti Petrodollar statements (see France). This comes after BNP recently paid a USD 9bln fine for similar reasons and Morgan Stanley suggesting yesterday that European Banks facing more in legal costs, litigation and settlement costs than their US counterparts. Elsewhere Airline stocks show some notable weakness, after Air France-KLM, formerly the world’s largest airline by revenues, downgraded its forecast, dragging down the sector.

In summary, European shares fall, remaining close to intraday lows, with the travel & leisure and banks sectors underperforming and basic resources, utilities outperforming. U.K. manufacturing index unexpectedly fell, Italian banks’ bad loans rose in May. The Italian and Spanish markets are the worst-performing larger bourses, the Swiss the best. The euro is little changed against the dollar. Japanese 10yr bond yields fall; Portuguese yields increase. Commodities decline, with natural gas, Brent crude underperforming and zinc outperforming. U.S. consumer credit, JOLT job openings due later.

Additionally, geopolitical developments in the middle east continue deteriorating, and now one can add a resumption of the Israel Gaza conflict to the ongoing crusade by ISIS. At this point it is increasingly clear it is only a matter of time before a major land war breaks out between the various feuding factions.

The focus in Asia overnight is on tomorrow’s Indonesian presidential election, with Indonesian equities (Jakarta Comp +0.9%), sovereign bonds and the Rupiah (+0.15%) trading firmer. Indonesian equities are extending yesterday’s 1.1% gain while the Rupiah is consolidating after yesterday’s 1.35% rise against the greenback – so it certainly appears that markets are increasingly positioning for a Jokowi win. The latest election poll from LSI suggests that Jokowi will likely prevail – he has extended his lead with 47.8% support versus his nearest rival and former army general Prabowo at 44.2%. 8% are undecided and there is a 2% margin of error according to the local poll. Other Asian markets are trading with a weaker tone again, paced by a 0.3% fall in the Nikkei. The May current account data for Japan showed an unexpectedly large surplus of JPY523bn (vs JPY417bn expected) with imports falling for the first time in 19 months as consumers cut back following the recent sales tax increase. S&P500 futures (-0.2%) are also struggling overnight.

Looking at the day ahead, perhaps the two highlights today are the US JOLTs report and the start of the US earnings season. On the JOLTs report, it’s been well publicised that this is a key labour market data point for the Fed so the trends in hiring, layoffs and quit rates will be closely watched. Later in the day, Alcoa unofficially kicks off the US Q2 earnings season for the S&P500 with its Q2 update due after the market close. In Europe, the focus will be on UK industrial production and German trade numbers. A number of central bank speakers are lined up today including the ECB’s Linde who is due to speak shortly after we go to print. The Richmond Fed’s Lacker speaks on the economic outlook at 1pm USET and the Minneapolis Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks on monetary policy shortly after Lacker.

Finally, since today the first world cup final takes precedence over pretty much everything, expect to be able to count the number of ES contracts traded during the day, on one hand.

Market Wrap

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.2% to 1966.8
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.7% to 342.5
  • US 10Yr yield down 2bps to 2.59%
  • German 10Yr yield down 2bps to 1.24%
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.1% to 147.4
  • Gold spot down 0% to $1319.4/oz

EUROPE MARKETS

  • 1 out of 19 Stoxx 600 sectors rise
  • 14.7% of members gain, 82.7% decline
  • Eurostoxx 50 -0.6%, FTSE 100 -0.6%, CAC 40 -0.6%, DAX -0.6%, IBEX -1%, FTSEMIB -1.2%, SMI -0.3%

ASIA MARKETS

  • Asian stocks fall  with the Shanghai Composite outperforming and the Sensex underperforming.
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.1% to 147.4
  • Nikkei 225 down 0.4%, Hang Seng up 0%, Kospi up 0.1%, Shanghai Composite up 0.2%, ASX down 0.1%, Sensex down 2%
  • 2 out of 10 sectors rise with staples, health care outperforming and materials, consumer underperforming

Bulletin headline Summary

  • EU bank headaches arise again as Commerzbank are said to be subject to US fines due to sanctions evasion and Hungary’s banking laws prompt provision-taking
  • Bund futures trade just 10 ticks shy of contract highs as lower equities, poor UK macro data and dovish comments from ECB’s Linde and Noyer prompt upside
  • Attention turns to the beginning of earnings season, with Alcoa due after-market today (exp. EPS USD 0.12) and Fed’s Kocherlakota speaking on monetary policy at 1245CDT/1845BST

FIXED INCOME

Gilt futures lead upside in fixed income markets after UK Industrial Production fell at the fastest rate since August 2013, signalling the UK recovery is far from smooth sailing. This, twinned with dovish comments from ECB’s Linde and Noyer (both talked up the prospect of asset purchases) led Bund futures just 10 ticks shy of Sep-14 contract highs at 147.25.

EQUITIES

Despite gapping slightly higher at the open European equities are on their worst levels of the session, led down by Financials (-0.66%). The notable mover, Commerzbank (-3%), was pressured after a NY Times article overnight reported that the bank has settled at least USD 500mln after breaking US sanctions. This comes after BNP recently paid a USD 9bln fine for similar reasons and Morgan Stanley suggesting yesterday that European Banks facing more in legal costs, litigation and settlement costs than their US counterparts. Elsewhere Airline stocks show some notable weakness, after Air France-KLM, formerly the world’s largest airline by revenues, downgraded its forecast, dragging down the sector.

FX

GBP/USD slumped to the lowest level in a week and sub-1.71 after Industrial and Manufacturing Production fell below expectations, allowing EUR/GBP to top 0.7950 once more as the 1.36 handle in EUR/USD continues to draw attention (large option expiries of just under USD 1bln lie at the handle). NZD rallied to the highest level since Aug’11 after Fitch revised their outlook on the New Zealand ‘AA’ rating to positive from stable. Finally, the ZAR is pulling back some of the currency’s recent weakness as South Africa’s labour ministry has come closer to a resolution with unions to resume output at the country’s metal-working sites.

COMMODITIES

Gold trades range-bound, with little fundamental to offer the yellow metal direction. Copper is outperforming its peers, as supply concerns benefit prices, with Palladium also in positive territory on similar concerns, continuing to strike fresh 13-year highs. The increasingly stable situation in Iraq, coupled with the increasingly stable situation in Eastern Libya, applies downside momentum to the energy complex, with WTI crude futures at USD 103.38, down USD 0.15.

* * *

DB’s Jim Reid rounds up the overnight event summary

It’s fair to say that things are a little on the dull side at the moment as we await tomorrow’s FOMC minutes. Indeed, we’ve now gone 55 trading days since the S&P500 last recorded a gain or loss of more than 1%. The fixed income market has been a tad more interesting given the recent grind upwards in yields at the front end of the UST curve. 2 yr yields are now 18bp higher than the May 20th lows, including a +6bp move since the June 18th FOMC. This has been met with a relatively firmer longer end of the UST curve, where 10yr yields are up only around 8bp since May 20th, and are broadly unchanged since the FOMC. There is plenty of debate about this flattening of the curve – perhaps the front end is acknowledging the better US payrolls and activity data, despite the dovish reassurances from the Fed. A bringing forward of Fed fund rate hike expectations from a number of US banks in recent days has helped to push shorter end rates upwards as well. Meanwhile the longer end is benefiting from positioning which leaves fewer investors willing to short the market and there are lingering concerns about secular stagnation, or as our rates strategist Dominic suggests, structurally low labour productivity.

By the closing bell, the US 2s/30s and 2s/30s curves had flattened by 3-4bp apiece while stocks finished weaker across Europe (Stoxx600 -0.91%) and the US (S&P500 -0.39%). The more growth-sensitive NASDAQ (-0.77%) underperformed in the US as did other cyclicals in general, with many pointing to the increased expectations of rate hikes as the main reason for the underperformance. Bank stocks on both sides of the Atlantic were amongst the laggards yesterday (Eur banks -0.99%, US banks -0.72%) and may have been weighed by a WSJ report over potential Basel Committee changes to the treatment of government bonds as automatically risk-free for bank capital charge purposes (see yesterday’s EMR for more detail).

The focus in Asia overnight is on tomorrow’s Indonesian presidential election, with Indonesian equities (Jakarta Comp +0.9%), sovereign bonds and the Rupiah (+0.15%) trading firmer. Indonesian equities are extending yesterday’s 1.1% gain while the Rupiah is consolidating after yesterday’s 1.35% rise against the greenback – so it certainly appears that markets are increasingly positioning for a Jokowi win. The latest election poll from LSI suggests that Jokowi will likely prevail – he has extended his lead with 47.8% support versus his nearest rival and former army general Prabowo at 44.2%. 8% are undecided and there is a 2% margin of error according to the local poll. Other Asian markets are trading with a weaker tone again, paced by a 0.3% fall in the Nikkei. The May current account data for Japan showed an unexpectedly large surplus of JPY523bn (vs JPY417bn expected) with imports falling for the first time in 19 months as consumers cut back following the recent sales tax increase. S&P500 futures (-0.10%) are also struggling overnight.

Scanning some of the other headlines this morning, there’s an article in the FT suggesting that EU banks are on track to shed as much as €100bn in unwanted loan portfolios this year in response to regulatory pressures. Some €83bn of asset sales have been completed or are in the process halfway through the year, compared with €64bn for all of 2013, according to article, citing PwC. However, the accelerating sales remain a fraction of the total €2.4tn of non-core assets still on European banks’ books (FT). On the topic of banks, Bloomberg reports that the ECB will give banks six months to “fill in any holes” highlighted by the central bank’s Asset Quality Review in October, citing an unnamed Greek official. Away from Europe, Bloomberg is reporting that despite the M&A boom of 2014 and record low debt funding rates, corporates are preferring to use a disproportionately high amount of stock to finance takeovers. All-cash offers made up only about one-third of the takeovers announced in the second quarter, data compiled by Bloomberg show. A year earlier, all-cash bids accounted for two-thirds of deals, and in the five years through 2013 they averaged 50%. European buyers have made the biggest shift away from cash, the data show, with all-cash purchases falling to just 28% of the $88 billion of takeovers announced by public companies during the quarter, compared with 68% from 2008 to 2013 (Bloomberg).

Looking at the day ahead, perhaps the two highlights today are the US JOLTs report and the start of the US earnings season. On the JOLTs report, it’s been well publicised that this is a key labour market data point for the Fed so the trends in hiring, layoffs and quit rates will be closely watched. Later in the day, Alcoa unofficially kicks off the US Q2 earnings season for the S&P500 with its Q2 update due after the market close. In Europe, the focus will be on UK industrial production and German trade numbers. A number of central bank speakers are lined up today including the ECB’s Linde who is due to speak shortly after we go to print. The Richmond Fed’s Lacker speaks on the economic outlook at 1pm USET and the Minneapolis Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks on monetary policy shortly after Lacker.




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Saudi Human Rights Lawyer Jailed 15 Years For ‘Free-Speech’ Under New “Anti-Terror” Laws

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Back in April, I published a post titled, Saudi Arabia Passes New Law that Declares Atheists “Terrorists.” In it, I highlighted an article from the UK Telegraph which noted:

In a string of royal decrees and an overarching new piece of legislation to deal with terrorism generally, the Saudi King Abdullah has clamped down on all forms of political dissent and protests that could “harm public order”.

 

The organization said the new “terrorism” provisions contain language that prosecutors and judges are already using to prosecute and convict independent activists and peaceful dissidents.

Concerns that this law would be used to silence dissent and crackdown on basic human rights were apparently well justified, as the Wall Street Journal reported today that a Saudi court has sentenced human rights lawyer and activist Waleed Abu Alkhair to 15 years in prison for “inciting public opinion,” i.e., effectively utilizing free speech. The WSJ reports that:

A Saudi court on Sunday sentenced prominent human rights lawyer and activist Waleed Abu Alkhair to 15 years in prison followed by an equally long travel ban on charges such as “insulting the general order of the state and its officials” and “inciting public opinion.”

 

Until he was arrested in April while on trial in Riyadh, Mr. Abu Alkhair, founder of the Monitor of Human Rights in Saudi Arabia (MHRSA), has been a vocal critic of the government and called for major reforms in the kingdom including a constitutional monarchy.

 

The organization that he founded released a statement on Sunday night saying the latest sentence against him is “the price that Waleed Abu Alkhair has been expecting as a result of his peaceful demands and defense of human rights.”

 

The activist was convicted on charges of a new controversial antiterrorism law that was passed in February amid criticism by international human rights groups that the new law would be used to silence peaceful dissent.

 

“Saudi authorities have never tolerated criticism of their policies,” Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement in March, “but these recent laws and regulations turn almost any critical expression or independent association into crimes of terrorism.”

I tend to not focus my criticism on other nations due to the severe injustices being committed by my own country, but since Saudi Arabia is such a close U.S. ally, and also what is essentially a despotic Medieval Kingdom with highly suspicious links to the 9/11 attacks, I make a frequent exception in this case. No other nation exemplifies the immortality and hypocrisy of U.S. foreign policy as does our relationship with Saudi Arabia. For more on this topic, I suggest reading my post from last month: America’s Disastrous Foreign Policy – My Thoughts on Iraq.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia isn’t the only country in the region confronting a population entirely fed up with egregious corruption and an autocratic political structure. Kuwait is another geopolitical tinderbox about to explode. Al Jazeera reports that:

Kuwaiti police have fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse hundreds of protesters in the capital demanding the release of Musallam al-Barrak, an opposition leader, and a purge of corrupt judges.

More than 2,000 people marched on Sunday from Kuwait City’s Grand Mosque after evening Ramadan prayers and into the old market, where police broke up the demonstration.

 

A picture was circulated on social media of activist Abdulhadi al-Hajeri in the back of an ambulance in a blood-soaked garment.

 

Hadeel Bugrais, a human rights activist , told the AP news agency that Hajeri was wounded when a tear gas canister hit him in the head.

 

The protesters are demanding the release of Barrak, who was detained in an investigation into allegations he insulted the judiciary.

 

Barrak revealed documents he alleges prove huge sums of illicit financial transfers were made to senior officials, including judges.

 

Barrak, who draws support from some of Kuwait’s powerful tribes, was sentenced to jail for insulting the emir in 2013.

We are currently living in one of the most interesting times in human history as we witness the transformation of society away from centralized, bureaucratic structures, into decentralized, networked organization. It’s imperative that each and every one of us does everything he or she can to make this revolutionary transition as painless as possible.




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Why You Feel Poorer

Via Economic Noise blog,

You feel poorer because you are poorer.

In the last fourteen years, has your income increased over 50%? If you think it has, has it done so after taxes? Even if it has, you likely have not kept up in terms of inflation.

If you are a retiree, living on fixed income, a pension or bonds, you certainly have become poorer. If you had bought the Dow-Jones on 12/31/1999 you would have entered at about 11,500. It closed last week at less than 17,100. That would have been an appreciation of 6,600, better than 50%. But, of course, that was before taxes.

As a retiree, you have seen your purchasing power stolen by Fed policies. Whether you invested in fixed income or equities, you lost ground. Anyone in that position has seen their lives become poorer despite a lifetime of successful work and careful financial planning.

For those still working, most are losing purchasing power each year. Wages are not keeping up with inflation, even the understated numbers reported by government. In short, the decline of a once-great economic power is well underway. The country is no longer growing enough to raise everyone’s standard of living.

Government has killed the golden goose and in an attempt to hide the obvious is debauching the dollars. Government tries to hide their own failure with phony statistics and a welfare state designed to placate the masses. Bread and circuses are deceptions not progress.

This charade will not work! It is merely a futile attempt to prolong the Ponzi scheme for a little longer. While the process continues, the parasites who plunder the productive ready expand in numbers. The productive either give up or remove their capital from the country. Those who stay build compounds with the walls around them to protect against the   soon-to-become enraged masses. Bread and circuses precede poverty. They don’t continue through it.
 

To understand the loss of purchasing power, look at this series of items:

costoflivingxpenses-7-1-14

H/T Zerohedge

The last two items are what government claims is price inflation over this period. Wikipedia defines them as follows:

The personal consumption expenditure (PCE) measure is the component statistic for consumption in GDP collected by the BEA. It consists of the actual and imputed expenditures of households and includes data pertaining to durable and non-durable goods andservices. It is essentially a measure of goods and services targeted towards individuals and consumed by individuals.[1]

 

The PCE price index (PCEPI), also referred to as the PCE deflatorPCE price deflator, or the Implicit Price Deflator for Personal Consumption Expenditures (IPD for PCE) by the BEA, and as the Chain-type Price Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures (CTPIPCE) by the FOMC, is a United States-wide indicator of the average increase in prices for all domestic personal consumption. It is currently benchmarked to a base of 2009 = 100. Using a variety of data including U.S. Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index prices, it is derived from the largest component of the Gross Domestic Product in the BEA’s National Income and Product Accounts, personal consumption expenditures.

 

The less volatile measure of the PCE price index is the core PCE (CPCE) price index which excludes the more volatile and seasonal food and energy prices.

 

In comparison to the headline United States Consumer Price Index, which uses one set of expenditure weights for several years, this index uses a Fisher Price Index, which uses expenditure data from both the current period and the preceding period. Also, the PCEPI uses a chained index which compares one quarter’s price to the last quarter’s instead of choosing a fixed base. This price index method assumes that the consumer has made allowances for changes in relative prices. That is to say, they have substituted from goods whose prices are rising to goods whose prices are stable or falling.

The last one, the PCE Deflator is used in government’s calculation of real GDP growth. To the extent that this number is understated, reported real GDP is overstated by an approximate amount. That is not an accident.




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Four Charts That Signal EUR Has Further To Drop

EURUSD drop may have further to go given that the relative policy outlook would push Fed/ECB balance sheet ratio lower before long. Citi's Valentin Marinov believes, relative data surprises as well as forward looking cyclical gauges like bank stocks are starting to favor USD over EUR and he points out that leveraged accounts could start adding to shorts again as real money continue to sell EUR.

Via Citi,

The July ECB meeting underscored the prospect for larger ECB balance sheet from here. The upcoming Fed minutes and speeches as well as Yellen’s semi-annual testimony in coming weeks could highlights that the bank is firmly on course to exit QE before long. The diverging policy outlook should be reflected in falling Fed/ECB balance sheet ratio (Figure 1).

 

 

The divergence is further underscored by the growing disparity between positive economic surprises out of the US and disappointments out of the Eurozone (Figure 2).

The data seem to have fuelled concerns about renewed cyclical downturn in the Eurozone while strengthening market belief in the US recovery. Given that bank stocks are a good forward looking gauge of cyclical outlook, the latest development pushed the EZ/US bank stocks ratio lower again (Figure 3).

 

Last but not least, investor positioning seems to suggest that leveraged accounts cut their EUR-shorts and could add again as real money keep selling the euro (Figure 4).

Appendix

We expect the ratio of ECB/Fed balance sheets to move lower before long. Given the historic correlation between EURUSD and the ratio of Fed/ECB balance sheet – this should underscore the downside risks to EURUSD (Figure 1). We simulate that ECB/Fed balance sheet ratio assuming that:

1/ The ECB's balance sheet would expand by ca 250bn as a result of the two T-LTRO tranches in September and December 2014. This follows on our assumption that about 150bn of T-LTRO would be taken up by banks in the periphery and (mostly) used to repay LTRO loans. The T-LTRO take-up is assumed to increases by 100bn in March and June 2015.

 

2/ The ECB balance sheet grows by additional EUR1tn of unsterilized ABS and government bond purchases in June 2015;

 

3/ The Fed's completes taper by October but continues to reinvest proceeds from its portfolio thus keeping the size of its balance sheet.




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“This Is The Worst Of All Possible Worlds,” The Fed “Is Borrowing Returns From The Future”

Felix Zulauf, James Montier and David Iben: Three legendary investors share their views on financial markets. Everything is pricey ("we will continue to swim in a sea of liquidity; but there might be other events and developments that may not be camouflaged by liquidity which could cause a change of investor expectations.") the European periphery is a bubble ("The Euro crisis is not over…the European economies are not going to change for the better for years to come despite all the cheating and breaking of laws"), Value investors need to venture to Russia ("when you look at today’s opportunity set, you’re left with a set of assets where nothing looks attractive from a valuation point of view") or buy gold mining stocks (" The down cycle could be much bigger than anybody believes if the market realizes that all the actions taken in recent years do not work.") Summing it all up, "there is no question that [sovereigns] lack the fundamental economic base to finally service their debts," trade accordingly.

 

Submitted by Gregor Must and Stefan Rehder of Finanz Und Wirtschaft,

Felix, a bit more than a year ago, the mere announcement of tapering by the US Federal Reserve triggered a shock wave through financial markets. You called this the butterfly effect which might feed into a worldwide correction. Now we have had tapering since the beginning of the year, and all major asset classes are gently moving up on very low volatility. Is tapering really a problem?
Felix Zulauf: It was a butterfly effect for the moment because the world feared a liquidity tightening which immediately sent emerging market interest rates higher and their currencies lower while the dollar firmed as capital flowed back to the US. The Fed will be done tapering by September or October, but other central banks will take over. We have seen for many months now that the Chinese are printing more money than the US. On average, they have created Renminbi for the countervalue of 50 bn $ per month over the last six months. This is an enormous amount.  Then the European Central Bank is willing to add 1100 bn € over the next two years which equals an expansion of 50% of its balance sheet. So we will continue to swim in a sea of liquidity. The question is whether there might be other events and developments that may not be camouflaged by liquidity which could cause a change of investor expectations. Liquidity is one thing, but there are fundamentals also.

What fundamental development could that be?
Zulauf: We think it could be China. In every cycle you have a dominating excess which reinforces the cycle on the upside, but when it turns, it reinforces it on the downside. Last time, it was US and parts of European housing and in the previous cycle technology investments that created excesses and overcapacity. In the current cycle it is emerging markets, and the big gorilla is China.

Can’t Beijing control that?
Zulauf: The dimension of the Chinese cycle was enormous. In 2011 and 2012 alone, China has consumed as much cement as the US had in all of the 20th century. The credit creation in the last five or six years is mounting to the total loan outstanding by the US banking system. The excesses are mind boggling. Now anecdotal evidence tells us that the Chinese investment and construction boom has not broken yet, but it has cooled. But when it cools after a boom like we had, it’s probably the end of the cycle. However, investors still believe that the Chinese authorities can manage it because it is an autocracy. Once this assumption changes, it will have a negative effect on markets, but we do not know when exactly that will be.

After the end of QE1 and 2, equity markets corrected. Could the completion of QE3 be a trigger for the scenario you mentioned?
Zulauf: I doubt that we will see real monetary tightening by central banks. That’s the interesting thing about the current cycle. Investors are prepared for a conventional ending of the cycle with higher growth and capacity utilization resulting in higher inflation, rising interest rates and tightening liquidity that leads to a bear market. But it could be very different this time. If all of a sudden something went wrong in China, we would have another deflationary episode. If China’s currency goes down 20%, this affects pricing in traded goods and, therefore, corporate profits. All of a sudden, investors might look at the valuations of their stocks and realize that the emperor has no clothes.

Spanish, Italian and French bond yields trade on 200-year lows. Is the Euro crisis over?
Zulauf: The Euro crisis is not over. The intensity of the crisis was terminated by Mario Draghi’s famous “whatever it takes” speech in July 2012. The authorities have elevated the existence of the Euro to dominate every other issue. Of course, economics is such that you can’t have all variables fixed. If you can’t deflate to reduce the differences of the economic structures of the different economies and you can’t devalue your currency, the adjustment goes through the real economy. That’s what’s going on. Euro sceptics have taken almost one third of the seats in the recent European parliamentary elections which is a reflection of the unsatisfactory and discontent situation in the majority of the European economies. I do not see that the current set-up for the Euro and for the European economies is going to change for the better in years to come despite all the cheating and breaking of laws and contracts and treaties that is going on.

What does that mean for the EU?
Zulauf: That leads to a change in the political sphere which established parties are ignoring. Instead of taking it up and trying to change the direction of the Euro and EU from a more centrally planned  EU to a EU of subsidiarity, they are just ignoring it. If you’re ignoring the warning signs, it will get worse over time. The changes to the European situation will not come from financial markets. It must come from politics. But the established parties will not change for a long time and therefore the conflict will intensify in the political arena. So my hunch is that the European recovery is not really leading up to expectations and will continue to disappoint citizens and voters. That will be expressed at the next elections. The problems could be dampened along the road if Germany agrees to a mutualization of debt and mutually financed infrastructure programs and so on.

So you distrust the current rally in European equities and bonds?
Zulauf: For the time being, European financial markets have a honeymoon that can continue for a while longer, but this is based on the expectation that the European economy will normalize. But this expectation could eventually be disappointed.

James, we have slow growth, no inflation, low interest rates and easy monetary policy as far as the eye can see. Are we living in the best of all worlds for investors?
James Montier: How I wish that that were true. The problem with the policy of raising asset prices is that you borrow returns from the future. You can think of it as the front loading of return. So what you’re really doing is pushing down future returns. So it doesn’t really help anybody a great deal in the longer term. Of course, in the short term the effect is positive as you get some sort of balance sheet repair through rising asset prices. At least that’s what central banks hope. But when you look at today’s opportunity set, you’re left with a set of assets where nothing looks attractive from a valuation point of view.

Even if interest rates stay low for a long time?
Montier: Even if we factor in low interest rates for the next twenty years, we’re still not seeing great opportunities. We can find stuff that may be fair value in that scenario, but it’s far from obvious. This is a very difficult time – in contrast to 2007, when risk assets were expensive but cash and bonds were priced to deliver reasonable returns, which is not the case today. It’s much harder to find anywhere to hide. So far from being the best of all possible worlds, this is almost the worst of all possible worlds.

Do your clients still believe in the much-cited low return environment? The further markets move up, the more you might have a credibility issue.
Montier: No doubt. We haven’t yet reached the kind of loathing that was displayed towards us in 1999 where we were just told we were complete idiots and several clients banned us from their buildings. I think there is a broader acceptance of the power of valuation, but the longer the rally goes on, the shorter people’s memory gets. Galbraith used to talk about the extreme brevity of financial memory and I fear that’s kind of what we’re experiencing now. People are looking at last year and say look, it can go up 30%, why on earth are you saying future returns are going to be dismal.

But markets have been expensive for quite some time. How opportunistic should a value investor be?
Montier: There are two possible states of the world: either they keep rates low for a very long period of time or they don’t. Anyone who says they know which one is going to happen is either a liar or a fool or possibly a linear combination with unknown weights. The reality is, nobody knows the future, particularly when it comes to policy rates. By second guessing we’re playing some sort of ridiculous beauty contest. Therefore we should try to build portfolios which are robust and can survive different outcomes.

How do these portfolios look like?
Montier: That’s a challenge because the portfolios you want to hold in those two different worlds are almost diametrically opposed. If financial repression continues, you want to own the least bad thing out there, which is equities. In the other world, the only asset which does not hurt you when rates move to normal, is cash. So you end up with this bizarre portfolio where you own some equities where they are cheap. And you want to own some dry powder assets which protect you against inflation, provide liquidity and real return.

Does cash do the job?
Montier: Cash historically has done all three of those things very well, but in a world where rates are kept very low, cash does not do at least two of those things very well. So in addition to cash, you have to include some long-short strategies, TIPS and bonds which offer at least some yield. The really unsatisfying thing is that no matter what is going to happen in the future, you won’t hold the best portfolio. But at least, this portfolio allows you to survive.

Felix, do you come to a different conclusion?
Zulauf: I’m a believer in cycles. This cycle is very unusual in many ways. It is a long cycle because we compress interest rates while high risk aversion has kept certain asset prices low. It is also unusual because we won’t get monetary tightening in a long long time. That gives some investors comfort that there is not much risk in the market. Many of those also subscribe to the view that eventually the bull market will end with the hurrah of the retail public coming in in a big way. I have to put a little bit of cold water on that theory.

Why is that?
Zulauf: When you look at equities as a percentage of financial assets in the US, it is exactly at the extreme it was at the end of 1999 and in 2007. So the retail public is there where they always have been at the end of a cycle. They do not have the financial means anymore to create the final bubble move some are expecting. Maybe institutions could, but the retail investor won’t do it. Therefore I think this cycle will probably more likely end with a whimper than with a bang. It might continue for another year or so, maybe with a scary correction sometimes late summer or fall this year, followed by another run to the upside which firms the belief that you always have to be fully invested.

What follows thereafter?
Zulauf: We have thrown so much stimulus into the system, and all we see as an outcome is mediocre fundamental growth with real incomes eroding after fixed costs for average households in industrialized economies. The down cycle could be much bigger than anybody believes if the market realizes that all the actions taken in recent years do not work.

Dave, you like scarce assets. Are they still undervalued?
David Iben: In a world where gold is scarce and fiat currencies are anything but scarce, what do you do when stocks get expensive? Do you really run for the safety of cash when cash is no longer scarce and therefore no longer valuable? That’s a dangerous thing to do as the Fed has quintupled its balance sheet, so what is not scarce is fiat currency. Holding it for the short term maybe makes sense, but for the long term this is almost a guaranteed disaster. Therefore some of your money should be in gold.

How do you value gold?
Iben: I read all the time that if you can’t come up with a present value of discounted future cash flows, it doesn’t have value. Therefore gold or a building which is not rented out have no value. I think people have it backwards as value will create future cash flows. Mona Lisa has no cash flow, but does it have no value? I think it has, as it is scarce and can be turned into cash anytime. So instead of looking at the discounted cash flow of gold, people should ask what is cash worth relative to gold.

Do you have other examples?
Iben: Does a hydroelectric dam have value? I think it has. It is scarce. You can’t dam the same river in the same place. Once you have dammed it, you have a huge competitive advantage as you get clean electricity at almost no cost. Now regulators sometimes let you capture the value and sometimes they don’t, but the value is there. We prefer to buy it when the regulators aren’t letting you capture the value because then you can buy it – as is the case now – for 10 cents on the dollar. If the regulator only gets kind of mean in the future, you can make a lot of money.

What about farmland?
Iben: Farmland is an amazing thing. Over the last fifty years, the world’s population has more than doubled and the money supply has gone up ten times or whatever while the amount of farmland has barely grown and in, the developed world, has even gone down. That is scarce. Uranium (Uranium 28.3 0%) is very scarce. At 300 $, it is not scarce at all, but at 28 $, it is incredibly scarce. Infrastructure is scarce too as there is the tendency to monopolies. Once you’re the market leader, it’s hard for somebody to replicate. You’re also going to find that energy is scarce. They are not making more oil. Natural gas is more debatable, but even there, the success of the US has not been replicated elsewhere. You can find scarce assets that are good assets that meet the needs of the population for food, communication or energy.

So what do you buy today?
Iben: We’re always looking for the thing the market hates. Two of the most disliked things I have ever seen in my life are miners of gold and Russian equities. So contrary to 2007 when everything was expensive, gold and Russian energy stocks look very cheap. Sure, Russia might be less a part of the European economy, but it might be a bigger part of the Asian economy, so when the market wants to sell us a barrel of oil equivalent for 1 $ by owning Gazprom (OGZD 8.81 -1.34%) at 2,5 times earnings, I’m going to do it. Then there is a big dislocation between the amount of currency printed and gold. But you don’t even have to like gold at all to buy gold miners at current valuations. They are pricing in a gold price of 1000 $ or less. So you get a free option on a rising gold price which is the icing on the cake. In general, we prefer companies which have long lived reserves while the market likes reserves that can be turned into cash quickly. We like the optionality of something that’s going to be hard to find and replaced. We’re more owners of assets in this market.

Montier: I agree that there are opportunities in Russia such as Gazprom, Lukoil (LKOD 61.47 0.94%) and Rosneft (ROSN 7.24 2.19%), which are all incredibly cheap. The reason for being cheap is because they are in Russia. That’s fine because they can lose half of their money or have it stolen and are still on a PE of 4. So what? The downside is reasonably muted in those kinds of stocks.
But Russia has been cheap for a long time.

Iben: We buy when the discount to intrinsic value is large enough. Value eventually plays out.

You don’t worry about China?
Iben: I agree China is a bubble. They have been overdoing everything. But when China collapses, is that worse for China or is worse for certain industries? Maybe this is bad for building materials and luxury goods everywhere, but owning China Mobile (CHL 49.2 0.02%) at 8 times earnings is not such a bad thing even if China messes up.

Apart from Russian energy stocks and scarcity assets: What other cheap assets do you find out there?
Montier: The other area where we have found some value is within Europe. We like some of the European value stocks. Over the last few years, each time the Eurozone crisis has erupted, we have been presented opportunities to own some pretty decently priced badly run companies – which is fine, I even buy crap if it’s priced appropriately, and it has been. Right now, that’s diminishing, but as Felix said, the Eurozone crisis is fundamentally not over. It’s a little bit like putting a band aid on a missing limb – it might look ok, but it doesn’t work for the long term as you can’t have monetary union without fiscal union. Until you get those two things together, you’re going to have periodic crisis that will be opportunities to look at Europe again.

Anything else?
Montier: Something which is just showing up on our radar screens is Japanese value. We did own Japan in the wake of the earthquake and sold out after the market decided that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was the answer. Now it has become less obvious that Abe is the answer, and the market has gone down a lot. Then we like selected emerging markets. However, as the credit cycle is extraordinarily extended in places like Brazil, Turkey or China, one wants to be selective about the kinds of stocks you are buying.

Are high quality companies such as Nestlé still attractive after their recent runs?
Montier: As they have become more expensive, we have been exiting them since the end of last year. They are priced to deliver 2.5% real return over the next 7 years. Fundamentally low risk, but investors are paying quite a lot for that area of the market.

Do you see outright bubbles anywhere?
Montier:  From a valuation point of view, there aren’t any hugely obvious bubbles. In some ways, I find the term bubble unhelpful anyway because it’s not obvious that it helps a lot to know something is a bubble. From our perspective, the difference between something that is overvalued and something that is in a bubble is irrelevant. We’re not going to own it anyway. The places where we do see evidence of bubbles though is within the emerging market credit cycles, particularly in China.

What about high yield?
Zulauf: High yield is low yield today. The world is so yield hungry that quality spreads have gone back to the extremes we saw in the previous cycle. You can sit there for a while, but this is certainly not an attractive place.

But is it a bubble?
Zulauf: When you say bubble, it implies that it is going to burst soon. I’m not sure that’s what’s going to happen. We see a lot of bubbles, but they keep inflating. For instance, peripheral European government debt is a bubble. There is no question that they lack the fundamental economic base to finally service those debts. Spanish debt to GDP is at 95%, Italian debt is at 140% and the economy might eventually not service it. You can’t tighten the tax screw further because it means that the economy goes downhill again. Those are bubbles in the making. People keep buying Greek debt despite what happened before. Some of the emerging market currencies that are sought by yield hungry investors such as the Turkish Lira or Turkish bonds are bubble-like investments. They could inflate a bit further, but once they burst, it is going to be very painful.

To finish up, what are your three favourite investment ideas – long or short?

Montier: European value stocks, some parts of the yield curve and cash.

Zulauf: Cash to buy cheaper later, gold to sell later higher and some high-quality long duration bonds as a trade to sell later.

Iben: Long gold, long uranium and short consumer stocks.




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As GM Objects To Recalling Another 1.8 Million Trucks, One (Ex) Customer Says “Enough”

After recalling over 28.5 million cars this year already, one would have thought GM has ‘kitchen-sink’ed it – but no. As NY Times reports, even after receiving over 1000 complaints via NHTSA since 2010, GM has yet to recall almost 1.8 million full-size pickups and sport utility vehicles from the 1999 to 2003 model years for corrosion-related brake failures. The company claims rusted brake lines were an industrywide problem (as assertion that is not supported by complaints filed with Carcomplaints.com).

So the question is – after all these recalls, who (apart from vacant dealer lots and the government) is buying GMs; because it’s not this previous owner:

“I will not be purchasing any further GM vehicles since GM does not stand behind vehicles when a serious malfunction occurs… My children and I could have been fatally injured due to the disintegration of the brake line.”

So far over 28.5 million vehicles recalled in 2014…

 

But, as The NY Times reports, there is more they are not telling us…

the automaker has yet to recall almost 1.8 million full-size pickups and sport utility vehicles from the 1999 to 2003 model years for corrosion-related brake failures.

 

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has been investigating the issue since 2010, and the agency has now received about 1,000 complaints from owners, some of whom report narrowly avoiding crashes.

 

“Hit brakes and a line blew. Almost hit car in front of me,” the owner of a 2003 Chevrolet Silverado wrote in a complaint filed in June.

 

“Like all G.M. trucks in snow country my brake lines rusted through along with my rear backing plates. I don’t know how many people have to be killed from blown brake lines for them to do anything. I guess a lot since they held off 10 years on their current problem.”

 

G.M. has resisted recalling the pickups and S.U.V.s., telling federal regulators that rusted brake lines are a routine maintenance issue. In addition, the automaker says, the vehicles have dual brake lines, so “the affected vehicle would be capable of stopping.”

But GM’s defense is simple – “It’s not just us” –

In a statement this year about the issue, the company said that rusted brake lines were an industrywide problem.

“Brake line wear on vehicles is a maintenance issue that affects the auto industry, not just General Motors,” the company said. “The trucks in question are long out of factory warranty, and owners’ manuals urge customers to have their brake lines inspected the same way brake pads need replacement for wear.”

General Motors’ assertion that rusting brake lines are an industry issue is not supported by complaints filed with Carcomplaints.com, Mike Wickenden, its owner, wrote in an email. He said the website had received 56 complaints about the 1999-2003 Silverado, compared with five for the Dodge Ram, two for the Ford F-Series and none for the Toyota Tundra.

It appears the owners have had enough…

Some owners of much newer G.M. models have also filed complaints, although in far smaller numbers, including one owner of a 2012 GMC Sierra. “At 81,000 miles the rear steel brake line from the frame to the rear end rusted out and burst,” the owner complained to regulators early in 2012.

Many owners are also unhappy that G.M. will not help with repair bills, which can exceed $2,000. They included a Silverado owner in Maryland, whose letter to the automaker was included in the agency’s investigatory files.

“I declined to take your offer for a voucher toward a new vehicle because I will not be purchasing any further General Motors vehicles since G.M. does not stand behind vehicles when a serious malfunction occurs,” the owner wrote the automaker in July 2012. “My children and I could have been fatally injured due to the disintegration of the brake line.”

*  *  *

This recall would take GM over the Maginot Line of 30 million vehicles recalled – good for overtime we assume? not so good for margins…

 

So as we asked rhetorically before – aside from the government (whose orders surged in June), vacant dealer lots (as channel stuffing 2.0 begins all over again), or the subprimest of the subprime quality borrowers (as incentives surge and GM is more than willing to chase the rabbit of credit risk in the medium term in exchange for short-term gain) – who is buying GMs?




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Egypt Raises Fuel Prices 78% Overnight

Egypt's surging budget deficit has hit its limit and the Oil Ministry has decided to cut its $20bn plus fuel subsidies. The result – mainstream fuel prices by up to 78% from midnight on Friday. As Reuters reports, previous governments have failed to curb energy product subsidies, fearing backlash from a public used to cheap fuel. We will wait and see the response but as one analyst noted "It should be noted that the effect of a rise in fuel prices will not affect the poor directly, since they do not own cars…" which makes perfect sense as long as the poor do not use or purchase any item that has fuel in its supply chain – brilliant! The government hopes the fuel subsidy cut will raise 40 billion pounds.

 

 

As Reuters reports, Egypt was set to raise mainstream fuel prices by up to 78 percent from midnight on Friday, an Oil Ministry source told Reuters, in a long-awaited step to cut energy subsidies to ease the burden on its swelling budget deficit.

Food and energy subsidies traditionally eat up a quarter of state spending. The government is cutting subsidies in hopes of reviving an economy battered by more than three years of political turmoil…

 

State finances have been decimated by more than three years of political turmoil, but the government is trying to improve them without provoking a backlash from Egyptians, who have helped topple two presidents since 2011 but have yet to see an improvement in living standards.

 

Egypt's Finance Minister Hany Kadry Dimian announced deep cuts in energy subsidies in the 2014/15 budget that would save the government 40 billion pounds.

 

The revised budget seeks to reduce the deficit to 10 percent of gross domestic product in the next fiscal year, from an expected shortfall of 12 percent in the 2013/14 fiscal year.

Successive governments have failed to curb energy product subsidies, fearing backlash from a public used to cheap fuel.

"The increase will start being implemented by midnight," the source said.

 

 

Khaled Hanafi, Egypt's supplies minister, confirmed the cuts on private television channel Sada al-Balad, saying the state will cancel 90 octane gasoline and the price for 92 octane gasoline would be 2.60 pounds while the price for 95 octane gasoline would rise to 6.25 pounds. He also confirmed that diesel prices would rise to 1.80 pounds. Newly elected president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has already raised electricity prices in efforts to reform energy subsidies, one of a range of politically sensitive subsidies that also cover transport, food and agriculture.

But don't worry… it won't be inflationary or impact the poor!!

"An increase in fuel prices has been expected and while it is likely that there will be some inflationary repercussions, a rise in prices to a market price is necessary," said Angus Blair chairman of business and economic forecasting think-tank Signet.

 

"It should be noted that the effect of a rise in fuel prices will not affect the poor directly, since they do not own cars," he added.

And it's not just fuel…

Electricity prices began to rise this month under a plan to eliminate power subsidies within five years, the electricity minister said on Thursday.

 

Electricity prices are set to double over five years, but the introduction of a more graduated pricing structure aims to reduce the burden on the poor in a country where one person in four lives on less than $2 a day.

*  *  *
Let's just hope the poor (and disenfranchised) do not use fuel or electricity (and are not listening to The Islamic State).




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Krugman’s Bathtub Economics

Submitted by David Stockman of Contra Corner blog,

You often find people talking about our economic difficulties as if they were complicated and mysterious, with no obvious solution. As the economist Dean Baker recently pointed out, nothing could be further from the truth. The basic story of what went wrong is, in fact, almost absurdly simple: We had an immense housing bubble, and, when the bubble burst, it left a huge hole in spending. Everything else is footnotes.

And the appropriate policy response was simple, too: Fill that hole in demand.

True enough, the housing and credit bubbles did burst. But that’s exactly where the rubber meets the road in the debate between Keynesians and Austrians. The latter see bubbles as an artificial expansion of economic activity owing to cheap credit and the malinvestments which flow from it.

When bubbles inevitably burst, therefore, the artificial bloat in investment, output, jobs and incomes is eliminated—or in the old fashioned phrase, liquidated.  Moreover, liquidation is the equivalent of purging a cancer; it removes a malignant growth, but does not reduce the true wealth of society or the sustainable living standard of the people.

The reason for this proposition is Say’s Law. That is, sustainable demand must originate in production; valid “spending” must be derived from the income earned in the process of supplying real goods and services. That includes spending that is financed by savers out of their own current incomes, and spending by transfer payment recipients that is financed by taxes on producers.

In that context, “money” is just an intermediary: it facilitates efficient exchanges between producers, but does not give rise to incremental “demand” that is independent of goods and services already delivered. Accordingly, when a credit bubble bursts there is no loss of honest, production-based aggregate demand. What disappears is artificial monetary demand that was originally enabled by the central bank and the financial system, not the productive main street economy.

Self-evidently, therefore, there was no “hole’” to fill after the housing and credit bubbles imploded in 2008. So Krugman’s injunction to “fill that hole” implies the opposite of Say’s Law. Namely, it embraces the Keynesian notion of what might be termed the “conservation of demand”. Accordingly, spending originating in fiat credit must always and everywhere be preserved by the fiscal and monetary arms of the state via new injections of artificial, non-production based “demand”.

It does not take too much imagination, however, to see where that leads—straight to helicopter money. During the seven years ending on the eve of the financial crisis in Q3 2008, total credit market debt soared from $28 trillion to $53 trillion—-or at a sizzling 9.2% annual rate.

By contrast, nominal GDP during the same period expanded at just 4.8% annually or at half the rate of credit growth. Accordingly, just during this short 7-year interval, the nation’s aggregate leverage ratio expanded from 2.7X GDP to 3.5X. In short, the booming “demand” of the Greenspan/Bernanke housing bubble was being borrowed from the future, not financed out of current production.

The unsustainability of nominal GDP growth financed by an ever increasing ratchet of the leverage ratio is evident from simple arithmetic. Just assume that the massive credit expansion of 2001-2008 was a good thing and that the trend needed to be preserved another 7-years, according to the Keynesian injunction on the conservation of demand. Moreover, even though credit expansion was rapidly loosing its efficacy during the last bubble as more debt bought less new GDP each year, assume that nominal GDP also managed to grow at 4.8% a year— compared to the actual rate of only 2.4% annually that has been recorded since 2008.

Under those assumptions, a “cut and paste” of the 2001-2008 trend would result by 2015 in $100 trillion of credit market debt on $20.6 trillion of GDP. The national leverage ratio would then also ratchet to  a mind-numbing 4.8X GDP.

Needless to say, the credit-fueled trend of 2001-2008 could not be sustained without eventual economic and financial collapse. Stated differently, the rate of demand growth from the Greenspan/Bernanke bubble finance policies could not be conserved, and should not have been implemented in the first place.

Ironically, the housing bubble that Professor Krugman wants to preserve was actually his idea in the first place. During 2002 he famously instructed the Fed to replace the dotcom bubble with a housing bubble. Now he proposes that the “hole” left by the housing collapse should have been filled by an aggressive expansion of public investment, which is to say, a public works bubble.

In particular, the aftermath of the bursting bubble was (and still is) a very good time to invest in infrastructure. In prosperous times, public spending on roads, bridges and so on competes with the private sector for resources. Since 2008, however, our economy has been awash in unemployed workers (especially construction workers) and capital with no place to go (which is why government borrowing costs are at historic lows). Putting those idle resources to work building useful stuff should have been a no-brainer.

But what actually happened was exactly the opposite: an unprecedented plunge in infrastructure spending. Adjusted for inflation and population growth, public expenditures on construction have fallen more than 20 percent since early 2008. In policy terms, this represents an almost surreally awful wrong turn; we’ve managed to weaken the economy in the short run even as we undermine its prospects for the long run. Well played!

Here is the part that Professor Krugman didn’t mention. We already had a public works bubble last time around! Public construction spending grew at a 10% annual rate in the period up to the 2008 crash.  The decline he laments since then is modest, and still reflects a 2% real growth rate since the 1990s. Filling the “hole” with a continuation of the pre-2008 public works bubble, therefore, would result in the same kind of malinvestments and waste that was generated by the housing bubble he recommended last time around.

Here is the same data in constant dollars. Given the pork barrel nature of public works spending, it is completely unlikely that the public works bubble recommended by Professor Krugman would actually add to national wealth and living standard.  But it would fill up the Keynesian bathtub, and that is, apparently, exactly what Krugman seeks to accomplish.

Real Public Construction Spending- Click to enlarge

 




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