The "Sick Man Of Europe" Is Back – German Economy Barely Grows In 2013

Everyone knows that without the German export-driven growth dynamo, the European economy would quickly wither and disappear into nothingness. Which is why today’s report that the German economy grew by just 0.4% last year, its worst performance since the global financial crisis in 2009, with strong domestic demand only partially offsetting the continued negative impact of the euro crisis, should be reason for significant concern to all especially since all the artificial, goalseeked GDP readings from the periphery are just that, and are completely meaningless in the grand scheme of things – should Germany’s growth falter, as it clearly has been over the past two years, may as well put the lights out.

For the past three years we have been hearing how Germany is about to turn the corner and its GDP will surge… any minute now. Instead what happened was that growth slowed to 0.7% in 2012 and the economy barely skirted a recession at the start of 2013. Luckily, soon thereafter Europe revised its GDP definition and all was well, if only for the time being. Still, excluding 2009, when the economy shrank by 5.1 percent, its biggest contraction of the post-war era, 2013 proved Germany’s weakest since 2003 when it was dubbed the “Sick Man of Europe”.

Reuters reminds us that the events of 2003 prompted then-chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to unveil far-reaching reforms of the welfare state, which are now being diluted by the new right-left coalition of Angela Merkel’s conservatives and the Social Democrats (SPD).  Investments took 0.1 percent off GDP last year as companies held off on investing due to uncertainty over the euro zone crisis. Foreign trade, which had underpinned growth for the previous three years, subtracted 0.3 percent. The fact import growth outpaced that of exports could tame criticism of Germany’s traditional reliance on exports and suggests it is contributing to recovery among its euro zone trading partners by buying up their products.

Prespun excuses aside, when it comes to Germany, it is all about exports. Recall that net trade accounts for nearly 40% of German GDP – the highest of any developed world economy!

And while the Euro means Germany is competitive within the Eurozone (since the dreaded DEM is no longer around), it still has to export outside the monetary union. Which is what seems to not be happening.

Reuters puts this print in the context of analyst expections: “The preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) estimate from the Federal Statistics Office, released on Wednesday, fell just short of the consensus forecast for a 0.5 percent expansion in a Reuters poll of 18 economists.” It adds the following color:

Germany faced international criticism earlier in 2013 for not doing enough to reduce its high trade surpluses. The U.S. administration reprimanded Germany in October in its semi-annual report to Congress for its economic imbalances.

 

Private and public consumption rose 0.9 and 1.1 percent respectively in 2013, helping domestic demand contribute 0.7 percent to GDP despite the drag from investments.

 

The private household savings rate dropped to its lowest level since 2001 as low interest rates and a robust labor market encouraged traditionally thrifty Germans to spend.

 

The public sector budget swung to a slight deficit of 0.1 percent after posting a surplus of 0.1 percent in 2012.

 

The BGA trade association has said it expects exports, the cornerstone of the Germany economy for decades, to grow by up to 3 percent in 2014.

Good luck: maybe this time will be different and “experts” will finally predict the future. Then again, as we – with the help of the IMF – have been showing, global trade is crashing thanks to global QE where one no longer needs to trade: instead one can simply print whatever “money” one needs…

The happy ending there is absolutely assured.


    



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The “Sick Man Of Europe” Is Back – German Economy Barely Grows In 2013

Everyone knows that without the German export-driven growth dynamo, the European economy would quickly wither and disappear into nothingness. Which is why today’s report that the German economy grew by just 0.4% last year, its worst performance since the global financial crisis in 2009, with strong domestic demand only partially offsetting the continued negative impact of the euro crisis, should be reason for significant concern to all especially since all the artificial, goalseeked GDP readings from the periphery are just that, and are completely meaningless in the grand scheme of things – should Germany’s growth falter, as it clearly has been over the past two years, may as well put the lights out.

For the past three years we have been hearing how Germany is about to turn the corner and its GDP will surge… any minute now. Instead what happened was that growth slowed to 0.7% in 2012 and the economy barely skirted a recession at the start of 2013. Luckily, soon thereafter Europe revised its GDP definition and all was well, if only for the time being. Still, excluding 2009, when the economy shrank by 5.1 percent, its biggest contraction of the post-war era, 2013 proved Germany’s weakest since 2003 when it was dubbed the “Sick Man of Europe”.

Reuters reminds us that the events of 2003 prompted then-chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to unveil far-reaching reforms of the welfare state, which are now being diluted by the new right-left coalition of Angela Merkel’s conservatives and the Social Democrats (SPD).  Investments took 0.1 percent off GDP last year as companies held off on investing due to uncertainty over the euro zone crisis. Foreign trade, which had underpinned growth for the previous three years, subtracted 0.3 percent. The fact import growth outpaced that of exports could tame criticism of Germany’s traditional reliance on exports and suggests it is contributing to recovery among its euro zone trading partners by buying up their products.

Prespun excuses aside, when it comes to Germany, it is all about exports. Recall that net trade accounts for nearly 40% of German GDP – the highest of any developed world economy!

And while the Euro means Germany is competitive within the Eurozone (since the dreaded DEM is no longer around), it still has to export outside the monetary union. Which is what seems to not be happening.

Reuters puts this print in the context of analyst expections: “The preliminary gross domestic product (GDP) estimate from the Federal Statistics Office, released on Wednesday, fell just short of the consensus forecast for a 0.5 percent expansion in a Reuters poll of 18 economists.” It adds the following color:

Germany faced international criticism earlier in 2013 for not doing enough to reduce its high trade surpluses. The U.S. administration reprimanded Germany in October in its semi-annual report to Congress for its economic imbalances.

 

Private and public consumption rose 0.9 and 1.1 percent respectively in 2013, helping domestic demand contribute 0.7 percent to GDP despite the drag from investments.

 

The private household savings rate dropped to its lowest level since 2001 as low interest rates and a robust labor market encouraged traditionally thrifty Germans to spend.

 

The public sector budget swung to a slight deficit of 0.1 percent after posting a surplus of 0.1 percent in 2012.

 

The BGA trade association has said it expects exports, the cornerstone of the Germany economy for decades, to grow by up to 3 percent in 2014.

Good luck: maybe this time will be different and “experts” will finally predict the future. Then again, as we – with the help of the IMF – have been showing, global trade is crashing thanks to global QE where one no longer needs to trade: instead one can simply print whatever “money” one needs…

The happy ending there is absolutely assured.


    



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Import Prices Drop; 6th Straight Month Of Dis-Inflation

While modestly better than expected, Import Prices fell 1.5% year-over-year, down from a 1.3% year-over-year drop for December. This is the sixth month in a row of year-over-year drops in import prices and perhaps even more notably, the last 20 months have seen only 2 months of year-over-year price gains as the Japanese deflation ogre spreads around the world.

 

 

Chart: Bloomberg


    



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Investor "Uncertainty" Spikes To 11-Year High

The percentage of investors who describe themselves as “neutral” is at its highest in over 11 years as a modest 5% retracement in stocks has bulls running for the hills and individual investors extremely uncertain once again. As Bloomberg notes, “everyone is sitting in the middle of the canoe waiting for something to happen.” Will it be Birinyi’s 1,900 surge, Tom Lee’s 2,100 spike, or DeMark’s 1929 crash analog?

 

 

For the four weeks ended last week, survey respondents expecting little change in stock prices amounted to 59 percent of those calling for gains or losses. The figure, based on the market outlook for the next six months, was the highest since March 2003.

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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Investor “Uncertainty” Spikes To 11-Year High

The percentage of investors who describe themselves as “neutral” is at its highest in over 11 years as a modest 5% retracement in stocks has bulls running for the hills and individual investors extremely uncertain once again. As Bloomberg notes, “everyone is sitting in the middle of the canoe waiting for something to happen.” Will it be Birinyi’s 1,900 surge, Tom Lee’s 2,100 spike, or DeMark’s 1929 crash analog?

 

 

For the four weeks ended last week, survey respondents expecting little change in stock prices amounted to 59 percent of those calling for gains or losses. The figure, based on the market outlook for the next six months, was the highest since March 2003.

 

Charts: Bloomberg


    



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A.M. Links: Hillary Clinton's Advice to Women in Politics, Federal Judge Strikes Down Virginia's Gay Marriage Ban, Ron Wyden Hints at Support for Rand Paul's NSA Lawsuit

  • Hillary Clinton told college students that the
    most important tip she could offer women in public life was to

    grow thicker skin
    . What difference does it make?
  • A federal judge
    struck down
    Virginia’s ban on same-sex marriage as
    unconstitutional, because it denies gay couples a fundamental
    freedom to marry. 
  • Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)
    hinted
    in interview set to air today that he supports for Sen.
    Rand Paul’s (R-Ky.) lawsuit against President Obama and the
    National Security Agency. Now that’s bipartisanship.

  • One in five people
    who signed up for health insurance under
    Obamacare failed to pay their premiums on time and therefore did
    not receive coverage in January. You can take a horse to
    water…
  • The majority of Americans favor
    normalizing
    U.S. relations with Cuba, according to new polling
    data. What America needs now is a cigar.
  • Two publications have
    sued Colorado
    in federal court over the state’s restrictions on
    advertising recreational marijuana.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook.
  You
can also get the top stories mailed to
you—
sign
up here.
 

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A.M. Links: Hillary Clinton’s Advice to Women in Politics, Federal Judge Strikes Down Virginia’s Gay Marriage Ban, Ron Wyden Hints at Support for Rand Paul’s NSA Lawsuit

  • Hillary Clinton told college students that the
    most important tip she could offer women in public life was to

    grow thicker skin
    . What difference does it make?
  • A federal judge
    struck down
    Virginia’s ban on same-sex marriage as
    unconstitutional, because it denies gay couples a fundamental
    freedom to marry. 
  • Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)
    hinted
    in interview set to air today that he supports for Sen.
    Rand Paul’s (R-Ky.) lawsuit against President Obama and the
    National Security Agency. Now that’s bipartisanship.

  • One in five people
    who signed up for health insurance under
    Obamacare failed to pay their premiums on time and therefore did
    not receive coverage in January. You can take a horse to
    water…
  • The majority of Americans favor
    normalizing
    U.S. relations with Cuba, according to new polling
    data. What America needs now is a cigar.
  • Two publications have
    sued Colorado
    in federal court over the state’s restrictions on
    advertising recreational marijuana.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook.
  You
can also get the top stories mailed to
you—
sign
up here.
 

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Kurt Loder Reviews The Pretty One

The
Pretty One
 is a first feature by
writer-director Jenée LaMarque. The movie is a lot of fun in
parts, but it’s subverted by lazy plotting and narrative tones that
clash like soup-pot cymbals. Fortunately, says Kurt Loder, it also
has Zoe Kazan, playing both Laurel and Audrey. And as anyone who
saw her at full glow in Ruby Sparks might guess,
Kazan is enough to make the movie worth seeing.

View this article.

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Gold Technicals Support Positive Fundamentals – 9 Key Charts

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,308.50, EUR 955.60 and GBP 783.21 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,290.25, EUR 943.65 and GBP 774.93 per ounce.   

Gold climbed $10.80 or 0.84% yesterday to $1,301.70/oz. Silver rose $0.31 or 1.54% at $20.51/oz.

This morning bullion for immediate delivery rose another 1.1% to $1,317.70 an ounce, the highest price since November 8, and traded as high as  $1,319.51/oz in London. It is the seventh straight day of gains – the longest stretch of gains since July 2011.


Gold in U.S. Dollars – (Bloomberg)

Gold is up 3.3% this week and headed for the biggest weekly advance since October as U.S. economic data was again worse than expected. This increased safe haven demand and the biggest exchange-traded product saw holdings rise to a two-month high.


Gold Prices/Fixes/Rates/Vols, February, 2014 – (Bloomberg)

Call options on gold, giving the buyer the right to buy June 2015 futures at $2,200 an ounce, surged 24% to a five-week high as prices climbed to a three-month high.


Gold in US Dollars, 2009 – February 2014 – (Bloomberg)

Gold has traded above the 100 day moving average since February 10, and is heading for a close above the 200 day moving average for the first time since February 2013.

A weekly close above the 200 day moving average and the psychological level of $1,300/oz will be very positive for gold and could lead to gold challenging the next level of resistance at $1,357/oz and $1,434/oz.

Gold is up 5.3% so far in February and 9.3% so far this year as concerns about emerging market markets, currencies, and the U.S. economy boosted safe haven demand.  Recent employment and sales data was poor. U.S. jobless claims reached 339,000 in the week ended February 8 and retail sales in the U.S. declined in January by the most in 10 months.


GOFO or Gold Forward Offered Rate (1989 – February 2014)

The fundamental outlook for gold remains encouraging as there continues to be robust physical demand for gold despite frequent sharp and sudden sell-offs in the paper futures market. Indeed, there are continuing stresses in the physical bullion market as seen in the Gold Forward Offered Rate (GOFO) rates. These are rates at which contributors, LBMA banks primarily, are prepared to lend gold on a swap against U.S. dollars.

 
Bloomberg Industries (January 2009 – February 2014)

Robust physical demand is also confirmed by the government mints and their coin and bar sales – many of whom had record sales in 2013. The U.S. Mint saw gold coin sales surge 63% to 91,500 ounces in January from 56,000 ounces in December. This was the highest monthly total since April, as sales continued to rebound from their August and September lows.

Chinese demand was quite weak in the last day or two but as ever with Chinese demand it is important to focus on the long term- the monthly and annual data, and fade out the daily noise.

After a massive, record year for Chinese gold demand in 2013, Chinese demand for gold in January was again staggering. SGE data shows that withdrawals from the Shanghai Gold Exchange vaults in January 2014 accounted for 247 tons. This is an increase of 43% compared to January 2013. It’s also more than monthly global mining production and an all-time record.


Bloomberg Industries (2011 – December 2013)

Gold is hemorrhaging out of the western banking system and flowing east to China and also to the increasingly important Asian precious metals hub in Singapore.Storage in Singapore is extremely attractive to the very risk averse, gold owning public. In just three weeks, we already have more bullion stored in Singapore than in Zurich and Hong Kong combined. Our research regarding storing gold in Singapore is the most widely downloaded and read research we have ever produced.


COMEX Gold and Silver Inventories (1999 – Feb 2014)

The flow of gold from west to east can also be seen in the COMEX gold inventory data which remains near multi year lows.

We are confident this trend will continue in the coming weeks, given the fragility of the western economies and banking systems. Indeed, it may lead to a COMEX default and a scramble to acquire physical gold amid surging prices.

Increasingly, gold investors are seeking the safest way to own gold and are avoiding paper gold and gold stored with banks in favour of fully segregated and fully allocated physical coins and bars, in their name, in safer jurisdictions.


Bloomberg Industries

Continuing rumblings of bail-ins and the risk of punitive taxes, levies and even confiscation of assets is contributing to the flow of gold from west to east. As is the ultra loose monetary policies of western central banks who continue to punish savers.

This week brought confirmation, if it were needed that loose monetary policies are set to continue. Doves Carney at the Bank of England and Draghi at the ECB have been joined by Yellen taking over at the Fed.

In her testimony to Congress, Yellen confirmed that she is set to be remain dovish and will continue with QE in the billions per month and maintain interest rates near zero. Yellen said the markets should expect the central bank to continue to follow the ultra low-interest-rate path laid out by her predecessor. She failed to outline the exit strategy of how and when the U.S. might be able to wean itself off the drug that is cheap money and debt monetisation.

It is important to note that while the U.S. money supply did not increase much in the final year of Bernanke’s stewardship of the Fed, it has accelerated as he leaves and Yellen takes over. Money supply in the form of M2 has surged in January and February and has doubled in pace so far this year.


Global Money Supply (M2) of U.S., EU, UK, Japan and China (1999- Feb 2014)

Despite the recent taper and a recent slight improvement in the U.S. annual trade and budget deficits, the U.S. financial position remains appalling as seen in the national debt. Then, there is also the small matter of the unfunded liabilities in the U.S. of between $100 trillion and $200 trillion.

Conclusion
The technicals of gold are increasingly aligned with the bullish fundamentals. Gold’s momentum and it’s holding above the 100 day moving average and now moving above the 200 day moving average are bullish indicators. As is the recent close above resistance at $1,294/oz. 

This is aligned with the still positive fundamental backdrop of significant macroeconomic, systemic, geo-political and monetary risk which is leading to significant demand for physical bullion globally.

Gold is good value at these levels. However, those considering accumulating gold should not assume that the correction is over as it may not be. There is still the potential of falls to test support at $1,180/oz and more range bound trading.

However, if the very positive demand and supply fundamentals are allowed to assert themselves then we should see gold enter a new bull market. Buyers are advised to dollar cost average into position to protect from further corrections and pullbacks and to always own physical bullion and have full title to it.

Find out why Singapore is now one of the safest places in the world to store gold in our latest gold guide – Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Singapore


    



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Gold Soars After 200 DMA Breach, As ETFs Finally Resume Buying

Recall what we said first thing this week when we remarked the latest surge in Chinese physical gold buying: “As we have said before: keep an eye on the “gold holdings” of the GLD and other US paper gold ETFs, whose drop in holdings for now has offset Chinese accumulation on the margin. Once GLD gold holdings solidly resume their climb higher, that will be the key upward gold price inflection point.” Perhaps it is a testament to the power of paper of physical gold (if only for now), that while yes, we were correct, and gold is now indeed soaring, having finally broken above its 200 DMA as we reported yesterday, all it took was the predicted rebound in gold ETP holdings which have finally ended their liquidation cycle.

 

As Bloomberg reports “Assets in the SPDR Gold Trust expanded 1.2 percent to 806.35 metric tons, the highest since Dec. 20. The biggest ETP backed by gold, which shrank 41 percent last year, is up 1.2 percent this week, headed for a third weekly advance.

Sure enough, gold is now surging, and is back to levels last seen in November of 2013.

Of course, should the paper accumulation accelerate from here, with physical inventory vastly depleted thanks to relentless Chinese buying, the reflexive cycle may result in a dramatically rapid move higher from current levels as gold finally returns on its path ever higher.

 

As Silver also breaks above the crucial $21 level…


    



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