Who Said It 13 Years Ago?: “Mr. Greenspan, You Are Way Out Of Touch”

As you might have noticed, Bernie Sanders isn’t exactly enamored with the growing divide between the rich and the poor in America.

In fact, the firebrand senator from Vermont hates inequality worse than just about anything else in the world, and he’s pretty clearly willing to make the federal government even more bankrupt than it already is if it means leveling the playing field for the country’s beleaguered masses who have been forced to watch as trillions in QE have made the likes of Jamie Dimon and Lloyd Blankfein billionaires even as wage growth for everyday Americans remains stuck in neutral.

Make no mistake, a big part of why the haves are increasingly better off than the have-nots in America is Fed policy. By inflating the value of the assets most likely to be concentrated in the hands of the rich, you are deliberately exacerbating income inequality. Or, as Hank Paulson put it: “we made it wider!”

Of course Ben Bernanke will tell you this isn’t the case. It’s the whole “wealth effect” idea, whereby driving up stock prices is supposed to make Joe The Plumber feel better about his 401k, which was wiped out in a flurry of collapsing counterparty chaos in September of 2008. Additionally, banks are supposed to be lending their excess reserves thus stimulating the real economy. Only that’s not what’s happened. Mom and pop up and left the market and never came back after the crash and economic growth is so subdued that the credit impulse simply isn’t there.

Instead, all the Fed did was make the rich richer. Much richer. So rich in fact, that Modiglianis are now going for $170 million even as a record number of Americans are on food stamps.

Now that Bernie Sanders has emerged as a very serious contender for The White House and now that the world has suddenly woken up to the fact that central bankers may have no idea whatsoever about what they’re doing, we thought this an opportune time to bring you the following blast from the past, in which Bernie Sanders lambasts Alan Greenspan (the “maestro” of all that’s wrong with the American economy) in a truly epic diatribe that will have you torn between your hatred for central bankers and your aversion to socialism. Enjoy.

“Mr. Greenspan, I have long been concerned that you are way out of touch”…


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A Contagious Crisis Of Confidence In Corporate Credit

Excerpted from Doug Noland's Credit Bubble Bulletin,

Credit is not innately good or bad. Simplistically, productive Credit is constructive, while non-productive Credit is inevitably problematic. This crucial distinction tends to be masked throughout the boom period. Worse yet, a prolonged boom in “productive” Credit – surely fueled by some type of underlying monetary disorder – can prove particularly hazardous (to finance and the real economy).

Fundamentally, Credit is unstable. It is self-reinforcing and prone to excess. Credit Bubbles foment destabilizing price distortions, economic maladjustment, wealth redistribution and financial and economic vulnerability. Only through “activist” government intervention and manipulation will protracted Bubbles reach the point of precarious systemic fragility. Government/central bank monetary issuance coupled with market manipulations and liquidity backstops negates the self-adjusting processes that would typically work to restrain Credit and other financial excess (and shorten the Credit cycle).

A multi-decade experiment in unfettered “money” and Credit has encompassed the world. Unique in history, the global financial “system” has operated with essentially no limitations to either the quantity or quality of Credit instruments issued. Over decades this has nurtured unprecedented Credit excess and attendant economic imbalances on a global scale. This historic experiment climaxed with a seven-year period of massive ($12 TN) global central bank “money” creation and market liquidity injections. It is central to my thesis that this experiment has failed and the unwind has commenced.

The U.S. repudiation of the gold standard in 1971 was a critical development. The seventies oil shocks, “stagflation” and the Latin American debt debacle were instrumental. Yet I view the Greenspan Fed’s reaction to the 1987 stock market crash as the defining genesis of today’s fateful global Credit Bubble.

The Fed’s explicit assurances of marketplace liquidity came at a critical juncture for the evolution to market-based finance. Declining bond yields by 1987 had helped spur rapid expansion in corporate bonds, GSE securitizations, commercial paper, securities financing (i.e. “repos,” Fed funds, funding corps) and derivative trading (i.e. “portfolio insurance”). Post-crash accommodation ensured that the Federal Reserve looked the other way as Bubbles proliferated in junk bonds, leveraged buyouts and commercial and residential real estate on both coasts.

It’s instructive to note that period’s momentous financial innovation/expansion.  In the 10-year period 1986 to 1995, total Debt Securities (from Fed Z.1 report) surged $7.097 TN, or 159%, to $11.574 TN. For comparison, bank Loans increased 73% ($3.309 TN) to $7.839 TN. Leading the charge in marketable debt issuance, GSE Securities (with their implied government backing) surged 283% ($1.777 TN) to $2.406 TN. Corporate Bonds jumped 254% ($2.213 TN) to $3.085 TN. Outstanding Asset-Backed Securities inflated an incredible 1,692% ($626bn) to $663 billion.

The other side of issuance boom was a revolution in the structure of financial asset management. Mutual Fund assets inflated 653% ($1.607 TN) during the ‘86-‘95 period to $1.853 TN. Money Market Fund assets surged 206% ($499bn) to $741 billion. Security Broker/Dealer assets jumped 288% ($860bn) to $1.159 TN. Wall Street Funding Corps rose 195% ($242bn) to $366 billion, and Fed Funds and Security Repurchase Agreements increased 171% ($802bn) to $1.271 TN. Certainly also worth noting, over this period the global derivatives market expanded from almost nonexistence to about $64 TN.

Market-based Credit is highly unstable. Predictably, the evolution to market finance created persistent instability and, over time, acute fragilities. The early-nineties saw the bursting of Bubbles in junk bonds, M&A and commercial real estate. The neglected S&L crisis festered from a few billion-dollar problem to a $300 billion debacle. By 1991, the U.S. banking system was significantly impaired.

There was a school of thought that S&L losses were akin to money flushed down the toilet. It had been destroyed and should simply be replaced with new money. “Helicopter money” was not yet reputable – much less fancied. So the Greenspan Fed instead slashed rates, manipulated the yield curve and accommodated the rapid expansion of market-based finance. If not for the ’87 bailout, the early-nineties stealth bailout and cultivation of non-bank Credit would not have been necessary.

Spurring market-based Credit – and the financial markets more generally – proved the most powerful monetary policy mechanism ever. The collapse in the Soviet Union couple with the proliferation of new technologies provided powerful impetus to New Paradigm and New Era thinking.

The unfolding historic inflation of “money” and Credit by the world’s reserve currency did not come without profound consequences. Massive U.S. Current Account Deficits flooded the world with dollar balances. Meanwhile, the flourishing leveraged speculating community broadened their targets from U.S. debt markets to higher yielding securities around the world.

By 1993, market-based finance and leveraged speculation was gaining momentum globally. Apparently there was no turning back. So it’s been serial booms, busts and progressively more audacious policy accommodation ever since. The GSEs bailed out the bond, MBS and derivative markets in 1994, ensuring much more spectacular Bubbles to come. The 1995 Mexican bailout created a backdrop ensuring that fledgling “Asian Tiger” Bubbles inflated precariously. When those Bubbles chaotically imploded in 1997, the perception took hold that the West would never allow Russia to collapse. Such thinking spurred speculative excess in Russian debt and currency derivatives that imploded in September, 1998.

Global Bubble Dynamics had certainly taken deep root by 1998. U.S.-style financial innovation was taking hold throughout Asia and Europe. Financial flows were booming across the markets, and the world’s big financial conglomerates were aggressively adopting securitization, speculation and globalization. Moreover, a booming leveraged speculating community, with trades propagating across the globe, ensured increasingly tight linkages between international markets. When Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) – with egregious leverage along with $2.0 TN of notional derivative exposures around the globe – failed in the fall of 1998, it was a case of top U.S. officials acting as the “committee to save the world.”

The Bubble saved back in 1998/99 has inflated uncontrollably and today has the world at the precipice. Historic debt expansion unfolded virtually everywhere, much of it tradable in the marketplace. The global leveraged speculating community has inflated from about $400 billion to $3.0 TN. Global derivatives have exploded to $700 TN. An ETF complex has risen from nothing to more than $3.0 TN.

The LTCM bailout ensured an almost doubling of Nasdaq in 1999, with that Bubble imploding in 2000. I’m not so sure the euro currency would exist in its current form if not for the efforts of “the committee…”. Leveraged speculation played an instrumental role in the collapse in Italian and Greek bond yields, a miraculous development that proved pivotal for highly indebted Greece and Italy’s inclusion in the euro monetary regime. I also believe that the U.S. Credit Bubble, fueled largely by the GSEs and non-bank Credit creation, played prominently in the huge flows boosting the euro currency. Global demand for euro-based securities created fatefully loose Credit conditions for the likes of Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain.

If not for the “committee to save the world” and the 1998 bailouts, I doubt we would have witnessed the rise of “Helicopter Ben.” The ’87 stock market crash drove fears of another depression. Depression worries returned with the early-nineties banking crisis, and then again in 1998. When U.S. stock and corporate bond Bubbles burst in 2000-2002, Dr. Bernanke, the foremost expert on the Great Depression, was summoned to the Federal Reserve to provide the theoretical framework for a major reflationary effort.

With Wall Street cheering all the way, the Greenspan/Bernanke Fed collapsed rates and targeted (the fledgling Bubble in) mortgage Credit as the primary mechanism for system reflation. Mortgage Credit doubled in almost six years, in the process inflating home prices, corporate profits, securities prices and incomes. Much more so than the “tech” Bubble, the mortgage finance Bubble became deeply systemic. Unprecedented Current Account Deficits, the weak dollar and enormous speculative flows further inundated the world with finance. As the U.S. Credit Bubble became increasingly global, policymakers around the world remained too (pro-global Bubble) accommodative.

The bursting of the mortgage finance Bubble almost incited global financial collapse. It took concerted central bank intervention, $1.0 TN of Bernanke QE, unprecedented bailouts, zero rates and massive fiscal stimulus to hold catastrophe at bay. Massive monetary stimulus pushed fledgling EM and China Bubbles to historic ("blow-off") extremes. The Chinese instituted a $600 billion stimulus package then proceeded to completely lose control of their financial and economic Bubbles. QE, zero rates and dollar devaluation incited a spectacular Global Reflation Trade that has collapsed spectacularly. Ultra-loose finance on a global basis ensured epic over- and malinvestment throughout the energy and commodity sectors. Virtually free-“money” incited massive over-investment in manufacturing capacity, especially throughout China and Asia. In the U.S. and globally, zero rates and liquidity excess fueled crazy tech and biotech Bubbles 2.0.

Along the way the global government finance Bubble became deeply systemic. Zero rates and QE inflated securities markets and asset prices on an unprecedented scale. Leveraged securities speculation engulfed the entire globe. Derivatives trading became globalized like never before. And each instance of market vulnerability was met with an aggressive concerted central bank response. As the global Bubble succumbed to “blow off” excess, central bankers completely lost control of inflationary processes.

The European Bubble was at the precipice in 2012. If not for Bernanke’s QE gambit, I seriously doubt Draghi and Kuroda would have ever succeeded in pushing their massive “money” printing operations through the ECB and BOJ. With the Fed, ECB, BOJ and others moving forward with “whatever it takes” concerted QE, global securities Bubbles morphed into one big play on the global monetary experiment.

It’s now been more than three years of absolute monetary disorder. The commodities Bubble went bust, which, in the age of over-liquefied and speculative global markets, worked to spur only greater “blow off” excess throughout global securities markets. The EM Bubble burst, which provoked only greater stimulus measures in China. Chinese reflationary policies incited precarious “blow off” stock and bond market excesses. The timid Fed’s failure to begin rate normalization spurred speculative Bubble excess throughout equities, fixed-income and derivative markets.

On an unprecedented global scope, extreme monetary measures fueled financial excess at the expense of real economies. Monetary disorder and Bubble Dynamics ensured highly destabilizing wealth redistribution – within and between nations. Extreme central bank policies spurred leveraged speculation around the globe. Extraordinary devaluation measures from the ECB and BOJ ensured the euro and yen were used aggressively for leveraged “carry trade” speculations. “Carry trade” and currency derivative-related leverage became powerful sources of liquidity driving securities market “blow off” excess – again on a globalized basis. With the global Bubble faltering, risk is now too high to maintain highly leveraged bets.

In the face of faltering energy and commodities, weakening CPI trends, a highly vulnerable global economic backdrop and mounting social and geopolitical tension, highly unstable global securities markets lurched higher. It all became one gargantuan bet on the global central bank experiment with boundless monetary stimulus. Global securities markets diverged from fundamental economic prospects like never before.

In the end, the runaway global Bubble was built chiefly upon confidence in central banking and policymaking more generally. Markets then rather abruptly lost confidence in the ability of Chinese officials to manage their faltering Bubbles. With the historic Chinese Credit and economic Bubbles at risk of imploding – and energy and commodities collapsing – faith in the capacity of global central bankers to keep the game going began to wane. The sophisticated leveraged players commenced risk reduction – and suddenly there were few buyers. Instead of more QE, central bankers have responded to “risk off” with negative interest rates. Negative rates don’t alleviate market illiquidity and they won’t bolster faltering global Bubbles. They do intensify the unfolding crisis of confidence.

Between the faltering Chinese Bubble and the unwind of securities market speculative leverage globally, global Credit and economic backdrops have turned ominous. The downside of a historic global Credit cycle has commenced. De-risking/de-leveraging ensure a process of much tighter Credit conditions. This is problematic for leveraged speculators, companies, countries and regions – certainly including banks and securities firms around the world.

Negative rates, collapsing energy companies and weak global prospects hurt bank sentiment. Yet bank stocks are collapsing globally because of the faltering global Credit Bubble. Between waning confidence in central banking and the global banking system, one is left to question the functioning of global derivatives markets. And if counter-party risk becomes an issue in the global risk “insurance” marketplace, global securities markets quickly face a potentially catastrophic backdrop.

A tremendous number of bets were placed based on a world of ongoing liquidity abundance, risk embracement and growth. In a “risk on” world of cheap finance, the latest Greek bailout strategy appeared manageable. In today’s “risk off” faltering global Bubble reality, Greece is a disaster. Greek sovereign yields were up 370 bps in six weeks. A bursting global Bubble will shake confidence in the European periphery – and likely European integration more generally. Periphery spreads widened meaningfully again this week.

Here at home, contagion effects have made it to the investment-grade corporate debt market. In “risk on,” loose “money” as far as the eye can see, writing insurance on corporate Credit (CDS) became a quite popular endeavor. But with the market now questioning the global economy, central bank efficacy, and the soundness of the banking system and Wall Street firms, it makes more sense to unwind previous speculations and buy insurance. This equates to a major unwind of leverage throughout the corporate debt marketplace, in addition to huge amounts of additional selling to hedge new CDS trades. Suddenly, liquidity abundance is transformed into problematic marketplace illiquidity. Again, a major tightening in Credit conditions bodes ill for leveraged entities. It also bodes ill for the general economy – the Credit Cycle's self-reinforcing downside.

Booming international corporate debt markets have been instrumental in fueling the global securities market boom – and the Global Credit Bubble more generally. And I would add that perceived low-risk corporate Credit has been at the (Crowded) epicenter of the central bank-induced “Moneyness of Risk Assets” phenomenon. If I’m right on the unfolding global backdrop, prospects for corporate Credit as a liquid store of value are dismal. A Crisis of Confidence in Corporate Credit would severely impact an already fragile global financial and economic backdrop.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1WlVAyG Tyler Durden

In Milestone, Iran Ships First Oil To Europe Since Sanctions Lifted

In case you haven’t noticed, Iran is on a roll.

Much to the chagrin of Israel and any number of GOP lawmakers in the US, the nuclear accord is a done deal and creates a $100 billion windfall for Tehran.

And that’s just the beginning of the story.

Starting in Q1, Iran will ramp crude production by 500,000 b/d and by 1,000,000 b/d by year end. The sharp increase in production is expected to help Iran quintuple its oil revenue by the end of 2016 compared to what the country was pulling in while languishing under international sanctions.

Assuming $29/ barrel crude, Iran would bring in some $2.35 billion a month assuming production of 2.7 million b/d, which is below the 2.86 million b/d that Tehran actually pumped in January.

Of course we shouldn’t put it in dollar terms. After all, Iran prefers euros. But not for “political reasons” – it’s business not personal (see here).

 

Iran’s return to the world stage and effort to shed the pariah state label comes just as the country is poised to score a dramatic win in Syria, where the IRGC and Hezbollah are battling to preserve the Shiite crescent by restoring the Alawite government’s hold on the country. Thanks to Russian air support, that effort is now going swimmingly, and it has Riyadh, Ankara, Doha, and the entire Sunni world in a state of frightened disbelief.

Tehran is also ramping up its already impressive ballistic missile program. In October, and then again in November, Iran tested the Emad, a next generation surface-to-surface weapon with the range to hit arch rival Israel.

On Sunday, Iran marked yet another milestone. The country loaded its first cargo of oil to Europe since sanctions were lifted.

“A tanker for France’s Total SA was being loaded at Kharg Port while vessels chartered for Chinese and Spanish companies were due to arrive later Sunday,” Bloomberg reported earlier today, citing an Iranian oil ministry official. “A tanker hired by a Russian company hadn’t arrived, and was still expected, the official said.” Here’s more:

The Suezmax vessel Distya Akula, chartered by Lukoil PJSC’s trading unit Litasco, departed Iran’s loading terminal at Kharg Island in the Persian Gulf and was located Saturday in the Gulf of Oman off the east coast of the United Arab Emirates, according to ship tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. Suezmaxes can hold 1 million barrels of oil. The draft of the Distya Akula vessel in the water indicated it is full, according to the data.

 

 

Supply deals were signed with Total and Hellenic Petroleum SA of Greece.

 

Total, Spanish refiner Compania Espanola de Petroleos and Russia’s Lukoil PJSC all booked cargoes of Iranian crude to sail from Kharg Island to European ports, according to shipping reports compiled by Bloomberg earlier this month. The vessels included one very large crude carrier, a tanker capable of carrying 2 million barrels of crude, and two smaller Suezmax-sized vessels with capacity of about 1 million barrels each.

Aside from what this represents symbolically for Tehran, this means that Iranian supply is now officially set to flood an already oversupplied market. That is, after nine months of speculation, Iran is now back to market and that means still more supply at a time when the world’s storage capacity is very nearly exhausted. 

But oil bulls need not despair. Because the first time a Turkish mortar kills a Hezbollah fighter in Aleppo, the world will careen into a global armed conflict and if that doesn’t send oil back to $100, nothing will. 


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1KPY1J9 Tyler Durden

Peter Pan Is Dead – Japanese Economy Stalls For 6th Time In 6 Years

We just cannot wait for the next time either Abe or Kuroda utter the following string of words "[stimulus – insert any combination of equity buying, bond buying, money printing, and NIRP] is having the desired effect." For the sixth time in the last 6 years, GDP growth has once again turned negative and while the BoJ balance sheet continues to balloon, so the nation's economy (as measure by GDP) is now shrinking as Peter Pan policy is officially dead.

With 3 of the top 4 forecasters already suggesting Japanese GDP growth would be worse than the median estimate of -0.2% growth, fairy-tales were all they had left… Nearly a year ago, Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda described the unlikely inspiration behind Japan’s unprecedented monetary stimulus: Peter Pan.

I trust that many of you are familiar with the story of Peter Pan, in which it says, ‘the moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease forever to be able to do it’.

 

Yes, what we need is a positive attitude and conviction. Indeed, each time central banks have been confronted with a wide range of problems, they have overcome the problems by conceiving new solutions.

And now, Pan is dead… this is the 6th negative GDP growth period since 2010… printing a 0.4% QoQ drop against the -0.2% growth expectation…

This is the biggest SAAR GDP drop (down 1.4%) since Q2 2014 – right before Kuroda unleashed QQE2 once The Fed had left the money-printing business.

And in case anyone wanted it made any clearer just what an utter farce Abenomics has been…

 

But it gets much worse…

Private Consumption tumbled more than expected…

  • *JAPAN 4Q PRIVATE CONSUMPTION FELL 0.8% Q/Q

The biggest drop since Q2 2014.

Of course – if you are an "enabler" or "central planner" this is great news – just a little more NIRP and just a little more QQE and everything will be fine… what a joke!

 

*  *  *

And in just a few hours we get to see China's made-up trade data.

Charts: Bloomberg


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1mBvIme Tyler Durden

The Age Of Stagnation (Or Something Much Worse)

Excerpted from Satyajit Das' new book "The Age Of Stagnation",

If you look for truth, you may find comfort in the end; if you look for comfort you will not get either comfort or truth, only . . . wishful thinking to begin, and in the end, despair. C.S. Lewis

The world is entering a period of stagnation, the new mediocre. The end of growth and fragile, volatile economic conditions are now the sometimes silent background to all social and political debates. For individuals, this is about the destruction of human hopes and dreams.

One Offs

For most of human history, as Thomas Hobbes recognised, life has been ‘solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short’. The fortunate coincidence of factors that drove the unprecedented improvement in living standards following the Industrial Revolution, and especially in the period after World War II, may have been unique, an historical aberration. Now, different influences threaten to halt further increases, and even reverse the gains.

Since the early 1980s, economic activity and growth have been increasingly driven by financialisation – the replacement of industrial activity with financial trading and increased levels of borrowing to finance consumption and investment. By 2007, US$5 of new debt was necessary to create an additional US$1 of American economic activity, a fivefold increase from the 1950s. Debt levels had risen beyond the repayment capacity of borrowers, triggering the 2008 crisis and the Great Recession that followed. But the world shows little sign of shaking off its addiction to borrowing. Ever-increasing amounts of debt now act as a brake on growth.

Growth in international trade and capital flows is slowing. Emerging markets that have benefited from and, in recent times, supported growth are slowing.

Rising inequality and economic exclusion also impacts negatively upon activity.

Financial problems are compounded by lower population growth and ageing populations; slower increases in productivity and innovation; looming shortages of critical resources, such as water, food and energy; and manmade climate change and extreme weather conditions.

The world requires an additional 64 billion cubic metres of water a year, equivalent to the annual water flow through Germany’s Rhine River. Agronomists estimate that production will need to increase by 60–100 percent by 2050 to feed the population of the world. While the world’s supply of energy will not be exhausted any time soon, the human race is on track to exhaust the energy content of hundreds of millions years’ worth of sunlight stored in the form of coal, oil and natural gas in a few hundred years. 10 tons of pre-historic buried plant and organic matter converted by pressure and heat over millennia was needed to create a single gallon (4.5 litres) of gasoline.

Europe is currently struggling to deal with a few million refugees fleeing conflicts in the Middle East. How will the world deal with hundreds of millions of people at risk of displacement as a resulting of rising sea levels?

Extend and Pretend

The official response to the 2008 crisis was a policy of ‘extend and pretend’, whereby authorities chose to ignore the underlying problem, cover it up, or devise deferral strategies to ‘kick the can down the road’. The assumption was that government spending, lower interest rates, and the supply of liquidity or cash to money markets would create growth. It would also increase inflation to help reduce the level of debt, by decreasing its value.

It was the grifter’s long con, a confidence trick with a potentially large payoff but difficult to pull off. Houses prices and stock markets have risen, but growth, employment, income and investment have barely recovered to pre-crisis levels in most advanced economies. Inflation for the most part remains stubbornly low.

In countries that have ‘recovered’, financial markets are, in many cases, at or above pre-crisis prices. But conditions in the real economy have not returned to normal. Must-have latest electronic gadgets cannot obscure the fact that living standards for most people are stagnant. Job insecurity has risen. Wages are static, where they are not falling. Accepted perquisites of life in developed countries, such as education, houses, health services, aged care, savings and retirement, are increasingly unattainable.

In more severely affected countries, conditions are worse. Despite talk of a return to growth, the Greek economy has shrunk by a quarter. Spending by Greeks has fallen by 40 percent, reflecting reduced wages and pensions. Reported unemployment is 26 percent of the labour force. Youth unemployment is over 50 percent. One commentator observed that the government could save money on education, as it was unnecessary to prepare people for jobs that did not exist.

Future generations may have fewer opportunities and lower living standards than their parents. A 2013 Pew Research Centre survey conducted in thirty-nine countries asked whether people believed that their children would enjoy better living standards: 33 percent of Americans believed so, as did 28 percent of Germans, 17 percent of British and 14 percent of Italians. Just 9 percent of French people thought their children would be better off than previous generations.

The Deadly Cure

Authorities have been increasingly forced to resort to untested policies including QE forever and negative interest rates. It was an attempt to buy time, to let economies achieve a self-sustaining recovery, as they had done before. Unfortunately the policies have not succeeded. The expensively purchased time has been wasted. The necessary changes have not been made.

There are toxic side effects. Global debt has increased, not decreased, in response to low rates and government spending. Banks, considered dangerously large after the events of 2008, have increased in size and market power since then. In the US the six largest banks now control nearly 70 percent of all the assets in the US financial system, having increased their share by around 40 percent.

Individual countries have sought to export their troubles, abandoning international cooperation for beggar-thy-neighbour strategies. Destructive retaliation, in the form of tit-for-tat interest rate cuts, currency wars, and restrictions on trade, limits the ability of any nation to gain a decisive advantage.

The policies have also set the stage for a new financial crisis. Easy money has artificially boosted prices of financial assets beyond their real value. A significant amount of this capital has flowed into and destabilised emerging markets. Addicted to government and central bank support, the world economy may not be able to survive without low rates and excessive liquidity.

Authorities increasingly find themselves trapped, with little room for manoeuvre and unable to discontinue support for the economy. Central bankers know, even if they are unwilling to publicly acknowledge it, that their tools are inadequate or exhausted, now possessing the potency of shamanic rain dances. More than two decades of trying similar measures in Japan highlight their ineffectiveness in avoiding stagnation.

Heart of the Matter

Conscious that the social compact requires growth and prosperity, politicians, irrespective of ideology, are unwilling to openly discuss the real issues. They claim crisis fatigue, arguing that the problems are too far into the future to require immediate action. Fearing electoral oblivion, they have succumbed to populist demands for faux certainty and placebo policies. But in so doing they are merely piling up the problems.

Policymakers interrogate their models and torture data, failing to grasp that ‘many of the things you can count don’t count [while] many of the things you can’t count really count’. The possibility of a historical shift does not inform current thinking.

It is not in the interest of bankers and financial advisers to tell their clients about the real outlook. Bad news is bad for business. The media and commentariat, for the most part, accentuate the positive. Facts, they argue, are too depressing. The priority is to maintain the appearance of normality, to engender confidence.

Ordinary people refuse to acknowledge that maybe you cannot have it all. But there is increasingly a visceral unease about the present and a fear of the future. Everyone senses that the ultimate cost of the inevitable adjustments will be large. It is not simply the threat of economic hardship; it is fear of a loss of dignity and pride. It is a pervasive sense of powerlessness.

For the moment, the world hopes for the best of times but is afraid of the worst. People everywhere resemble Dory, the Royal Blue Tang fish in the animated film Finding Nemo. Suffering from short-term memory loss, she just tells herself to keep on swimming. Her direction is entirely random and without purpose.

Reckoning Postponed

The world has postponed, indefinitely, dealing decisively with the challenges, choosing instead to risk stagnation or collapse. But reality cannot be deferred forever. Kicking the can down the road only shifts the responsibility for dealing with it onto others, especially future generations.

A slow, controlled correction of the financial, economic, resource and environmental excesses now would be serious but manageable. If changes are not made, then the forced correction will be dramatic and violent, with unknown consequences.

During the last half-century each successive economic crisis has increased in severity, requiring progressively larger measures to ameliorate its effects. Over time, the policies have distorted the economy. The effectiveness of instruments has diminished. With public finances weakened and interest rates at historic lows, there is now little room for manoeuvre. Geo-political risks have risen. Trust and faith in institutions and policy makers has weakened.

Economic problems are feeding social and political discontent, opening the way for extremism. In the Great Depression the fear and disaffection of ordinary people who had lost their jobs and savings gave rise to fascism. Writing of the period, historian A.J.P. Taylor noted: ‘[the] middle class, everywhere the pillar of stability and respectability . . . was now utterly destroyed . . . they became resentful . . . violent and irresponsible . . . ready to follow the first demagogic saviour . . .’

The new crisis that is now approaching or may already be with us will be like a virulent infection attacking a body whose immune system is already compromised.

As Robert Louis Stevenson knew, sooner or later we all have to sit down to a banquet of consequences.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/20xJ2FF Tyler Durden

What The Big Short Can Teach You About Investing

By Chris at http://ift.tt/12YmHT5

My kids have the mental age of ten and eleven year olds, because, well, they are ten and eleven years old!

So, they fight pretty much constantly. For example: when my son wants past his sister in the hallway and she’s “in the way,” he hasn’t yet formulated the reasoning to wait for her to move, and instead shoves past, sending her into the wall. She, not having developed a cogent argument why this shouldn’t take place, whacks him.

Hard at work here are primal responses. Engaging the most developed part of our brain, the neocortex, which reasons and solves problems, isn’t happening in that example.

Primal instinctive responses are the most common responses since they require almost no thought process. For instance:

  • Man sees lion running at him. Man runs away.
  • Man sees neighbor with new Porsche. Man wants it.
  • Man sees pretty girl in bar. Man wants to get frisky.
  • Man sees stock market going up. Man feels good, buys more.
  • Man sees stock market going down. Man feels pain. Man sells.

The reason that asymmetry exists in the world is, I believe, in no small part due to the fact that the overwhelming majority of people operate purely at an instinctive, primal level.

This asymmetry is representative in the distribution of wealth globally. The 80/20 law otherwise known as the Pareto Principle (or Pareto’s Law) remains pretty darn constant across time, and geographies. It exhibits itself in both nature as well as human endeavors.

The easiest and fastest fortunes made in the world have been closely tied to this phenomenon.

Case Study

A few weeks ago I did what I only ever do on airplanes – I watched a movie;

The Big Short. It is based on the book by Michael Lewis, which in turn is based on the story of the guys that identified anomalies in the credit default swap market and bet against the CDO bubble.

The story provides yet another (brilliant) example of the Pareto Principle.

Consider the reasoned, thoughtful, and decidedly non-primitive (despite his musical tastes) Dr. Michael Burry. Dr. Burry, unlike the overwhelming majority of his fellow primates realised that 1 and 1 could not equal 4 squared, even if it did have a ratings agency “bow and ribbon” on it.

The overwhelming majority of the investing populace, on the other hand, hadn’t thought much about it at all. As with most things that are entirely unreasonable but ultimately accepted, the US housing boom began with sound fundamentals. Securitizing assets and selling them is what Wall Street does. In this instance Wall Street did just that. They packaged up mortgages into bundles and flogged them to pension funds, mutual funds and various other (mindless) investors. Don’t get me wrong.

Securitizing mortgages isn’t a bad thing per se. Liquidity is increased, and capital can flow more easily between buyers and sellers.

The problem arose with what to do with the mortgages that were subprime or crap. No worries; the CDO squared solved this problem. Just take all the garbage that nobody wants, repackage it into new CDOs which, once blessed by rating agencies, looked just like the original “prime” CDOs, and voila. The institutions, engaging their primal brain, bought them without bothering to look inside.

In the end both the debt and the equity landed up being worthless. Garbage is garbage no matter how you dress it up.

Now, none of the above should be news to you at this point, as it’s been the focus of public debate for the last 8 years.

Dr. Burry (and the guys that followed him into the trade) made out like a bandit not because he shorted garbage, but because he shorted garbage which was mis-priced.

Just as my kids will thump each other instead of thinking through a reasoned response, the majority of the market will react to situations with a primal brain, failing to think things through. The adult mind using only primal instincts is no different from my kids doing same; actually, it’s likely worse.

Furthermore, when asymmetry presents itself as it did to Dr. Burry, it’s human nature to seek solace in the opinions of others who may share the view. You’ll almost assuredly fail to find it. Being social creatures, it’s only human to look for kindred spirits. Being alone is not a natural tendency. Hermits are not the norm.

There are a couple of notable takeaways from the film…

Firstly, Dr. Burry and a number of other players identified not only the fraud, but the mis-pricing of risk, which presented such asymmetry. This is of course how 489.3% returns (the return generated by Dr. Burry’s firm Scion Capital between November 2000 and June 2008) are achieved.

The other takeaway is that the bankers involved should all have landed up in jumpsuits, allowed out of their cells only for a moments man-love in the showers. They of course didn’t, and instead paid themselves billions in bonuses, but that’s another story.

This is how the world works. And so it’s better to look where the 20% of the market has the highest probability of paying you 80% of the returns. Hint: it’s found where asymmetry lies.

In no particular order of preference, right now we are researching and interested in:

  • Sovereign debt: What feels like a lifetime of central bank intervention has created a debt burden of proportions never experienced before. As we near the end of the debt supercycle this remains one of the most compelling areas for us.
  • Currencies: Short yen and remnimbi. Long US dollar as the USD carry trade unwinds.
  • Decimated resource markets: In particular uranium, precious metals, copper and zinc.
  • Artificial intelligence: Automation of knowledge work.
  • Synthetic biology: Gene sequencing is really coming into its own.
  • Blockchain: I’ve previously spoken about this here, here and also in our Bitcoin and blockchain report.
  • Robotics: Exoskeletons, remote physical manipulations, manufacturing, healthcare and surgery, and of course basic chores and activities such as food preparation.
  • 3D printing: I’ll need an entire report (or 5) to cover this one. It’s coming and fast.
  • Iran: Yes, Iran.

You’ll notice that exactly NONE of these fit into “standard portfolio construction.” You’ll probably also notice that there is ZERO interest in mutual funds, indexing, or any of the nonsense preached to us in four-walled institutions comically referred to as “higher education.” The 80% can gladly have all that.

If you, like us, are focused on harnessing the power of the 20%, then make sure not to miss out on our future articles on the topic.

– Chris

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Citi: “There Was Something About The Entire Recovery Narrative That Is Downright Wrong”

Yesterday, we laid out what according to Citi’s Matt King, one of the most insightful and respected credit analysts in the world, is most surprising about the ongoing market selloff: the odd interplay between some asset classes which are declining in an orderly, almost boring fashion, and other assets which have crossed into and beyond a state of existential panic.

The reason for this ongoing paradox is still unclear but as Citi’s King, BofA’s Martin and Hartnett, and DB’s Konstam and Reid have all hinted on numerous occasions, the fundamental driver of everything that is wrong with the market are the actions of the policy makers themselves, who in their feverish attempt to preserve the market in the post-Lehman devastation, have made the market into a “market”, one where nothing makes sense any more. In other words, in order to save the market, central bankers broke it.

Which brings us to the conclusion from Matt King’s most recent note, one which picks up on his observations of the all too clear dislocations and paradoxes in the market, those “things which, according to all the policymakers’ models of the world, are “not supposed to be happening”.

And yet they are, and as King adds, it is increasingly clear that the world is not fixed – far from it.”

The rest of King’s conclusion is a must read for everyone, especially those who think that anything in the past 7 years has been fixed, or even partially resolved.

This, then, is the real implication of widespread market dislocations. It suggests that there was something about the entire narrative peddled after the crisis which was at best incomplete, and at worst downright wrong. As an FT article put it, either for the emerging markets, or indeed for what is rapidly becoming a much more broad-based sell-off, “There is no obvious high conspiracy between banks, the rating agencies and the government”. Nor is there simply a risk we might need to respond to “future adverse shocks”, as Yellen’s testimony to Congress yesterday maintains.

 

If the pre-crisis problem was not CDOs in and of themselves, or excessive bank lending and leverage, it must have been something else. The most obvious candidate is overly easy monetary policy stimulating unsustainable credit expansion and ultimately asset price bubbles. Banks were certainly an instrument through which this policy was enacted, but financial leverage itself – especially that behind relatively low-risk arbitrages within financial markets – was a very limited part of it. Had leverage not been available, easy money would have taken effect some other way, either by spreading to other banking systems which were less constrained, or through stimulating an expansion of credit via bond markets instead. The years since the crisis have of course seen both.

Which brings us to King at his most apocryphal.

Far from making the world safer, then, there is a risk that the post-crisis policy mix has simply suppressed problems, making markets stickier, and may even have added to them, by driving the global credit cycle far ahead of the current interest rate cycle. Recent market dislocations are a sign that that stickiness may be reaching breaking point. In the past, aggressive easing of monetary policy provided  the solution to almost all recent crises – both those which did not lead to recessions, such as 1998 and 2011, and those which did, such as the tech bubble of 2000 and the real estate bubble of 2007-8. At this point we may start to question whether it can provide a similar solution this time round, not just because of the zero lower bound, but because the entire premise on which it has been based – inducing credit expansion and risk-taking in some other part of the global economy – seems to be reaching its limits.

 

In the property market, agents like to say that location is everything. When it comes to fixing current problems we are tempted to resort to the apocryphal story of the response given to tourists in Ireland when asking the way to Dublin: “If I were you, I wouldn’t start from here.”

Alas, 7 years into the fake “recovery” the option of “starting from some other place” is long gone.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ohdacO Tyler Durden

The Negative Mortgage Rate Program

Submitted by Ramsey Su via Acting-Man.com,

Something Needs to be Done – A Glimpse of the Future

In the summer of 2016, US and global economic growth rates are nowhere close to estimates.  In fact, a global recession, or worse, is imminent.  At home, student loan defaults are now close to 100%.  The unemployment rate is climbing, as minimum wage workers finally realize that the financial pain of working or not working is identical.  In Euro-land, as the weather warms up, the never-ending flotillas from Northern Africa resume swamping the Southern shores.

 

NIRP

A black hole opens up in the world of centrally planned money

 

By now, the Treasury has long given up on the idea of privatizing the agencies.  Freddie and Fannie will soon be part of HUD, surviving for the sole purpose of providing affordable housing for all – whatever that is supposed to mean.  Policymakers have determined that the real estate market is stalling.  Desperate times require desperate measures.  Something needs to be done.

After an intense pow-wow between the administration, Congressional leaders and the Federal Reserve, the Negative Mortgage Rate Program (NMRP) is born. The program is simple.  Homeowners will be paid to borrow.  The Federal Reserve declares that the NMRP is a brilliant extension of NIRP (negative interest rate policy), because it will benefit everyone, not just the 1%ers.

 

fannie-mae-cartoon

A good reason to break into song…

 

Here is how it works:

No downpayment needed.  100% financing.

 

No payments needed.  This is the reverse of the negative amortization loans during the subprime era.  In other words, it is a negative negative amortization, or neg-neg-am loan.  The loan balance will decrease instead of increase.

 

No need for mortgage insurance since, with no payments, there can be no defaults.

 

No qualifying needed, hence removing the entire cumbersome loan application process.

Say you borrow $100,000 at -1% interest.  Here is the math:

Your interest cost will be -$1,000 per year.  In other words, your loan balance will be $99,000, if you make no payments at all.

Using a commonly accepted 30 year term, the loan balance at the end of 30 years would be around $50,000, all without the borrower having to pay a dime in mortgage expense.

 

In fact, instead of charging around 4% for a mortgage, reverse that to -4% interest.  In 30 years, the mortgage will be totally extinguished.

Freddie and Fannie will originate these loans, package them as neg-neg-am-MBS and sell them all to the Federal Reserve.  Housing recovers overnight and the Feds declare “mission accomplished.”

 

location

What can possibly go wrong? It’s free money!

 

Get Out the Straight Jackets

Before you call me nuts, this is actually already reality.  The governments of Germany, Switzerland, Japan and others are charging savers for the privilege of lending them money.  Why stop there?  Let the people enjoy negative interest rates when they buy a house, or a car, or borrow for a college education.  In fact, why bother with taxes.  Just let the government borrow to operate.  The more it borrows, the more it makes.

 

Germany, 2 year yield

Germany’s 2-year note yield has been negative since the summer of 2014 – currently it is at a new low of minus 50 basis points – click to enlarge.

 

Watching Ms. Yellen answer questions during the “Humphrey-Hawkins” testimony the last two days was painful.  It is time to put the central bankers of the world in straight jackets and throw them into the cuckoo’s nest where they belong.

 

Draghi Holder

Get Out the Straight Jackets – This heavy duty model might even hold Draghi!


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A Bubble Induced Economy & The Wage Gap

Submitted by Leonard Brecken via OilPrice.com,

During the 1990s, developing nations including Mexico and many in Asia became very competitive manufacturing bases due to lower wage structures. This, I believe, was the root cause of the use of failed fiscal and monetary policy to “close the gap” with the competitiveness of low-cost wage structures around the world, which has played out for three decades. The result has been three bubbles and a worsening systemic problem of wage and taxation disparity between the U.S. and developing nations.

In addition, an immigration explosion has occurred in part tied to big business’ desire to use foreign-born lower wage earners to fill the so called “wage gap”. Then policy followed to accommodate this desire. U.S. corporations in the 1990s accelerated outsourcing manufacturing to nations such as China and Mexico to temporarily solve the wage dilemma.

The chart below shows that wages, adjusted for inflation, have been steadily declining for decades. This illustrates the systemic problem we have as a nation. Wages have increased and decreased along with the vagaries of economic cycles, but they have steadily made lower highs and lower lows. Instead of responding with traditional methods of lower taxation to compete in the global marketplace, the government has chosen to keep taxation high relative to other countries, even while other countries lowered taxation. That made the wage disparity problem, and U.S. economic competitiveness, worse.

Source: Zerohedge

The labor participation rate turned down almost exactly when wages peaked in the late 1980s. This reinforces the fact that the labor problem was growing at the same time that immigration accelerated. Yes, baby boomers have impacted the rate as they aged and left labor force, but it’s no coincidence that the rate peaked coincidentally with wages. Many left the workforce simply as result of not being able to find a high-wage job, concluding that it is not worth it.

Source: Zerohedge

With a shortage of high-wage jobs, many are substituting lower-paying jobs, as well as the chart below clearly depicts:

Moreover, to artificially boost GDP, the U.S. turned to debt (public and private) and easy monetary policy (which enabled more debt), but as the chart above shows it failed to address Americas wage competitiveness. 

Source: Federal Reserve

(Click to enlarge)

Even after decades of low interest rates that has encouraged mountains of debt, the end result will likely be a deep recession unless structural changes in taxation and regulation occur. The use of both debt and artificially low interest rates only temporarily fills the gap.

Furthermore, both have consequences eventually when the debt comes due, as growth can no longer support it. Asset bubbles are the other consequence, or in economic terms, “mis-allocation of capital.”

However, lowering taxes permanently could help alter the long-term structural problems. As U.S. government debt eclipses $19 trillion, it is clear that its use of debt to artificially prop up the U.S. economy has not solved anything.

Source: Gov’t Data

Debt is a temporary stop gap measure for politicians to kick the problem to a new generation. As the chart on wages show, all the new debt has done very little to rescue three decades of falling wages.

We are bumping up against the limits of both fiscal and monetary policy. And financial markets are just now realizing this. Easy money is only enabling the debt binge as the problem has only grown since the last crisis of 2008-2009, as yet another crisis may be beginning.

Lastly, many investors are finding market volatility extreme driving many from participating. If one was to measure investor participation rates like labor you would find a steadily declining one as algorithm driven trading grows. This is not a healthy trend either. Would you go to a casino & lay bets knowing the house has unlimited chips to out bet you? That is exactly what’s going on with stock market, systemic to easy money fed policy. Price swings as a result of algorithm trading in order to "stop" investors are not tied to fundamentals but unlimited capital & headlines. The investment field is changing forever like the economy and it isn’t good for the all but the very large investor.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1TjWCx3 Tyler Durden