After Central Bank Financial Bubbles, Comes Liquidation And Industrial Deflation

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

Nearly two decades of central bank financial repression have created huge distortions and imbalances in the world economy. Now they are coming home to roost as the impossibility of ZIRP forever dawns on even our mad money printers. Having created yet another round of ebullient financial bubbles, they are now getting palpably nervous.

Even the lady with the perpetual tan and unfailing call for “moar” monetary and fiscal stimulus, IMF head Christine Lagarde, said something sensible over the weekend:

“There is too little economic risk-taking, and too much financial risk-taking.”

She got the “too much financial risk-taking” part right, but here’s the thing. The apparatus of state policy—-fiscal borrowing and central bank money printing—-can not cause enterprise to flourish. Free market capitalism is the milieu in which business enterprise, invention, risk-taking and labor productivity thrive best. So, yes, reducing market impairments—such as tax rates on production and capital which are too high or regulations, protectionist laws and subsidies which are too onerous—-is always helpful.

These latter steps are now coming into fashion under the heading “structural reform” and they make sense as far as they go. But central bankers like Draghi and international monetary bureaucrats like Lagarde pushing this agenda fail to recognize that their own policies on the fiscal and monetary side currently dwarf the ill-effects of, for instance, over-zealous EPA regulation in the US or protectionist labor laws in Europe.

In fact, long-standing financial repression and absurdly low interest rates have generated malinvestments and debt burdens that are crushing enterprise and true economic risk-taking throughout the world economy. In the DM (developed market economies), the resulting malady is consumer balance sheets that are bloated with debt; and in the EM (emerging markets) the ill takes the form of vastly bloated industrial capacity and public infrastructure. So if there were ever a case of “physician, heal thyself”, this is it.

Indeed, the current spectacle of Europe’s monetary arsonist, Mario Draghi, telling Italy’s most recently installed double-talking politician, Prime Minister Renzi, to change the nation’s labor laws so that employers can more easily fire redundant workers says it all. Of course this should be done—Italy can’t thrive in a global economy based on 1960s communist union theories that were invalidated the moment that the comrades in Beijing swapped Mao’s little red book for the printing presses of red capitalism. Still, the redundant labor and resulting economic inefficiency in Italy’s few remaining large-scale industrial plants is trivial compared to the burden of nearly $3 trillion of public debt—a figure that amounts to 130% of GDP and continues to mount.

Italy Government Debt to GDP

By his ill-considered and undeliverable pledge to do “whatever it takes”, and the phony peripheral bond rally it elicited, Draghi has destroyed any semblance of political will in Italy to tackle its 130% of GDP public debt. Instead, based on the blatant scheming now underway in Italy’s parliament, it is already evident that the “labor reform” that Renzi is talking up amounts to statutory legerdemain that will make almost no difference in the domestic jobs market for years to come. Yet, it will provide the pretext for a return to out-and-out fiscal profligacy in Italy next year—-as Italy’s politicians are already making evident in an openly public manner.

So what’s going on is Keynesian central bankers are looking for a scapegoat, and have found exactly the right word cloud to define it—-that is, “structural reform”.  And the politicians are grabbing the bait, knowing that infinitely malleable enabling acts can be made to sound constructive upon parliamentary approval, even as they permit real policy change to be buried in regulatory wrangling and judicial review for years to come.

At the same time, the politicians’ pound of flesh in this emerging scam is more pork barrel spending and fiscal stimulus in the guise of “public investment”. But the litmus test on that proposition is quite simple: Are the proposed public “investment” projects being funded with higher user fees and taxes or general government borrowing?

It goes without saying that it is the latter. Yet with DM governments at peak public debt ratios nearly everywhere (i.e. 100% of GDP and higher), borrowing even more money to fund public projects which for the most part are not needed, and will not contribute to improved economic efficiency, is a little more than a recipe for higher taxes and more economic stagnation down the road.

So the new consensus coming out of this weekend’s IMF meeting is just a smokescreen.  What ails the global economy can not be remedied by toothless “structural reforms” or wasteful “public investments”. What is urgently needed, instead, is an end to central bank financial repression and rapid return to normalized interest rates and budget surpluses that can pay down unsustainable public debt burdens that have built up over the past few decades.

Yes, that would cause the boys & girls and robo-traders on Wall Street to throw one hellacious hissy fit. But there’s no getting around it. Current money pumping policies by the major central banks are just inflating financial bubbles to ever more treacherous heights, guaranteeing that the eventual day of reckoning will be all the more traumatic.

And yet the central bankers are reluctant to allow interest rates to escape from the zero bound and begin their flight upward toward “normalization” because they are wedded to the Keynesian fallacy that a weak economy is evidence of insufficient “aggregate demand”. Therefore, monetary “accommodation”—even when it reaches the lunatic extent of recent years— is purportedly needed to goose households and businesses into more spending.

In the DM world, however, the credit transmission channel of monetary policy is broken and done.  Real interest rates for maturities up to five years have been negative in real terms for most of this century. Not surprisingly, main street households have smothered themselves in debt, and have thereby, ironically, reduced the efficacy of Keynesian stimulus policies practically to zero.

The reason is that during the decades after the demise of Bretton Woods in 1971, public and private balance sheets were consistently and drastically levered-up on a one-time basis. The resulting credit-fueled consumption binge in DM economies added to measured GDP, but not to true, sustainable wealth gains. It was a one-time parlor trick that has now left them with contractually fixed public and private debts ranging from 350-500% of GDP—– off-set by stagnant incomes and unsustainable mark-to-market asset values that are vastly inflated by the long years of bubble finance.

So the DM world has now reached the limits of “peak debt”, even with the ZIRP enabled ultra-low “carry” cost on these towering obligations. In this regard, the US and Spanish ratio patterns are typical. But in either case, Keynesian monetary stimulus is simply pushing on a string, as is reflected by slowly falling debt ratios since the 2007-2008 peak.

Stated differently, there has been no escape velocity owing to Keynesian stimulus. Massive central bank liquidity injections have remained in the canyons of Wall Street and other major financial markets where they have enabled endless free money funding of speculation and carry trades, but have contributed virtually nothing to spending by debt-saturated main street households.

Household Leverage Ratio - Click to enlarge.

 

 

At the same time, central bank financial repression has made capital inordinately cheap and has thereby caused fantastic over-investment in the EM world. The current disastrous overcapacity in China’s steel industry is a case in point.  Between the year 2000 and 2010 its steel industry grew from 150 million tons of annual capacity to 750 million tons—a rate of heavy industry growth never before witnessed anywhere.

Yet as shown below, the flood of cheap money from the Peoples’ Printing Press of China in response to the Great Recession only stimulated a further round of even more fantastic steel capacity growth.

The 300 million tons or 40% gain since 2010 is a striking measure of the current global derangement. China’s steel capacity expansion in just the last four years exceeds the combined capacity of the entire steel industry of Europe and North America combined. Yet China’s sustainable domestic need is arguably less than 500 million tons per year—once its spree of constructing empty apartment buildings, unpopulated cities, redundant highways, bridges, airports and high speed railroads and unneeded industrial capacity comes to an end—as it surely must and will. Even the comrades in Beijing are signaling a resignation to that unavoidable outcome.

Already, the inevitable collapse is becoming visible. Prices are plunging, inventories are soaring, and profits in the steel industry have virtually disappeared. As detailed in the attached story from Bloomberg, the inexorable consequence will be a flood of cheap exports on the world market.

stel capacity

 

Indeed, the real problem is that once this immense capacity was brought into being, it was not going to go quietly into the night. China’s true excess capacity now amounts to upwards of 50% of steel production in the rest of the world. Consequently, when China’s domestic consumption is sharply curtailed as the world’s greatest historical building boom winds down, the flow of excess plate and sheet and rebar and structural products into the world steel markets will have a relentless shocking impact. Prices and profits will be crushed everywhere; and protectionist policies not seen since the 1930s are likely to be kindled.

After all, it only need be recalled that 85% of all the growth in global steel production since the year 2000 has been attributable to China. In the rest of the world, steel production during the last 14 years has barely inched forward—growing at just 1.1% per annum owing to a tepid level of end demand. So when the flood of dumped still comes flooding in from China, it is evident that the absorption capacity is next to zero.

And steel is just the most advanced case. A huge wave of industrial deflation is virtually guaranteed in the food chain of materials extraction, production and fabrication.

Today’s Bloomberg story on China’s growing steel industry crisis notes that “China steel now as cheap as cabbage.” Perhaps that is a foretaste of things to come!

In any event, the stunning collapse of steel prices and the soaring inventories of iron ore in China are a reminder that cheap capital artificially provisioned by central banks can lead to an enormous boom of malinvestment. But ultimately the laws of economics will out and a relentless deflationary correction ensues.

It would appear that the global steel industry, among others, is soon to find out about the crack-up part which inexorably follows the boom.

 

China Iron ore Inventory

 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1u2AENK Tyler Durden

OPEC Members’ Rift Summarized (In 1 Simple Chart)

With oil prices crashing, as various OPEC members (cough Saudi Arabia cough) turn the screws on each other, we thought (after showing the US domestic pain) the following chart from The Economist would provide more context for which nations are feeling the most (and least) pain…

 

 

h/t @TheEconomist via @RANsquawk

So it appears Russia is now in the red.

But, And as Goldman Sachs notes, despite the great efforts of the Sauds and Obamas to bring down the House Of Putin, Russian bond and equity prices, and the fiscal and external balances, are now less vulnerable to oil price shocks:

we conclude that the recent decline in oil prices is unlikely to have been the main factor driving Russian asset prices given that:

 

(i) Russian assets have significantly underperformed those of other commodity-linked economies;

 

(ii) high-frequency correlations between Russian asset prices and the oil price had fallen to close to zero in the recent past;

 

(iii) with the Ruble now being flexible and the correlation between capital outflows and the oil price being highly positive, the oil price should matter less for the real economy than it did in the past.

 

With the exchange rate being flexible, the Russian authorities will be able to use monetary policy in particular but fiscal policy as well to counteract the impact of the terms of trade on growth. This should lower the correlation between bond prices and equity prices in times of sharp moves of oil prices.




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

Tonight on The Independents: South Dakota Independent Senate Candidate Larry Pressler, Dems Fleeing Obama, The Invisible Ebola Czar, Zuckerberg’s Millions, the One-Man Highway, Michael Moynihan, Mollie Hemingway, Michael Weiss, and Aftershow

Meet the independent! |||Tonight’s live episode of The
Independents
(Fox Business Network, 9 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. PT,
with re-airs three hours later) begins with the latest on the Ebola
outbreak, including a timely reminder from
The Federalist
s Mollie Hemingway (who will be on to
discuss) that we
already have an Ebola czar
; it’s just that she’s been even more
forgotten than the millions in taxpayer money thrown at the Center
for Disease Control’s anti-pandemic efforts. Kennedy hits the
streets of New York to find out what the heartland is afeard of
with the virus, and Party Panelists Michael C. Moynihan, (Reason
contributing editor
) and Jimmy Failla (gruff ex-cabbie
with a heart of gold) will react.

The Panel will also consider the strange
Obama-phobic implosion
of Democratic Senate candidate in
Kentucky Alison Lundergan Grimes, and what that might say about the
party’s
uneasy relationship with the president
two weeks before
Election Day; and assess the efficacy of Facebook founder Mark
Zuckerberg’s
$25 million CDC donation to fight Ebola
.

The three-way South Dakota Senate race is as tight as it is
inscrutable, with former GOP Sen.-turned independent candidate
Larry Pressler now saying that he’d be a “friend
of Obama
” if returned to office. He’ll be on to discuss.
Foreign policy analyst Michael
Weiss
will break down the latest battlefield confusion
surrounding ISIS. And I will spin a yarn about the charming Briton
who
built his own damned road
rather than wait for the government
to fix a damaged one adjacent to his property.

Online-only aftershow begins at http://ift.tt/QYHXdy
just after 10. Follow The Independents on Facebook at
http://ift.tt/QYHXdB,
follow on Twitter @ independentsFBN, and
click on this page
for more video of past segments.

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12 Charts That Show The Permanent Damage That Has Been Done To The US Economy

Submitted by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,

Most people that discuss the "economic collapse" focus on what is coming in the future.  And without a doubt, we are on the verge of some incredibly hard times.  But what often gets neglected is the immense permanent damage that has been done to the U.S. economy by the long-term economic collapse that we are already experiencing.  In this article I am going to share with you 12 economic charts that show that we are in much, much worse shape than we were five or ten years ago.  The long-term problems that are eating away at the foundations of our economy like cancer have not been fixed.  In fact, many of them continue to get even worse year after year.  But because unprecedented levels of government debt and reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve have bought us a very short window of relative stability, most Americans don't seem too concerned about our long-term problems. 

They seem to have faith that our "leaders" will be able to find a way to muddle through whatever challenges are ahead.  Hopefully this article will be a wake up call.  The last major wave of the economic collapse did a colossal amount of damage to our economic foundations, and now the next major wave of the economic collapse is rapidly approaching.

#1 Employment

The mainstream media is constantly telling us about the "employment recovery" that is happening in the United States, but the truth is that it is just an illusion.  As the chart below demonstrates, just prior to the last recession about 63 percent of all working age Americans had a job.  During the last wave of the economic collapse, that number dropped to below 59 percent and stayed there for a very long time.  In the past few months we have finally seen the employment-population ratio tick back up to 59 percent, but we are still far, far below where we used to be.  To call the tiny little bump at the end of this chart a "recovery" is really an insult to our intelligence…

Employment Population Ratio 2014

 

#2 The Labor Force Participation Rate

The percentage of Americans that are either employed or currently looking for a job started to fall during the last recession and it has not stopped falling since then.  The labor force participation rate has now fallen to a 36 year low, and this is a sign of a very, very sick economy…

Labor Force Participation Rate 2014

 

#3 The Inactivity Rate For Men In Their Prime Years

Some blame the decline in the labor force participation rate on the aging of our population.  But it isn't just elderly people that are dropping out of the labor force.  In fact, the inactivity rate for men in their prime working years (25 to 54) continues to rise and is now at the highest level that has ever been recorded…

Inactivity Rate Men 2014

 

#4 Manufacturing Employees

Once upon a time in America, anyone that was reliable and willing to work hard could easily find a manufacturing job somewhere.  But we have stood by and allowed millions upon millions of good paying manufacturing jobs to be shipped out of the country, and now many of our formerly great manufacturing cities have been transformed into ghost towns.  Over the past few years, there has been a slight "recovery", but we are still well below where we were at just previous to the last recession…

Manufacturing Employees 2014

 

#5 Our Current Account Balance

As a nation, we buy far more from the rest of the world than they buy from us.  In other words, we perpetually consume far more wealth than we produce.  This is a recipe for national economic suicide.  Our current account balance soared to obscene levels just prior to the last recession, and now we have almost gotten back to those levels…

Current Account Balance 2014

 

#6 Existing Home Sales

Our economy has never fully recovered from the housing crash of 2007-2008.  As you can see from the chart below, the number of existing home sales is still far below the level that we hit back in 2006.  At this point we are just getting back to the level we were at in 2000, but our population today is far larger than it was back then…

Existing Home Sales 2014

 

#7 New Home Sales

Things are even more dramatic when you look at new home sales.  This is an industry that have been absolutely emasculated.  The number of new home sales in the United States is just a little more than half of what it was back in 2000, and it isn't even worth comparing to what we experienced during the peak of 2006.

New Home Sales 2014

 

#8 The Monetary Base

In a desperate attempt to get the economy going again, the Federal Reserve has been wildly printing money.  It has been so reckless that it is hard to put it into words.  When I look at this chart, the phrase "Weimar Republic" comes to mind…

Monetary Base 2014

 

#9 Food Inflation

Thankfully, much of the money that the Federal Reserve has been injecting into the system has not made it into the real economy.  But enough of it has gotten into the system to force food prices significantly higher.  For example, my wife went to the store today and paid just a shade under 10 bucks for just four pieces of chicken.  And as you can see from the chart below, food prices have been steadily going up in America for a very long time…

Food Inflation 2014

 

#10 The Velocity Of Money

One of the reasons why we have not seen even more inflation is because the velocity of money is extraordinarily low.  In general, when an economy is healthy money tends to flow through the system rapidly.  People are buying and selling and money changes hands frequently.  But when an economy is sick, money tends to stagnate.  And that is exactly what is happening in the United States right now.  In fact, at this point the velocity of the M2 money stock has dropped to the lowest level ever recorded…

Velocity Of Money 2014

 

#11 The National Debt

As our economic fundamentals have deteriorated, our politicians have attempted to prop up our standard of living by borrowing from the future.  The U.S. national debt is on pace to approximately double during the Obama years, and it increased by more than a trillion dollars in fiscal year 2014 alone.  Despite assurances that "the deficit is under control", the federal government borrows about a trillion dollars a year to fund new spending in addition to borrowing about 7 trillion dollars to pay off old debt that is coming due.  What we are doing to future generations of Americans is absolutely criminal, and it is just a matter of time before this Ponzi scheme totally collapses…

National Debt 2014

 

#12 Total Debt

Of course it is not just the federal government that is gorging on debt.  When you add up all forms of debt in our society (government, business, consumer, etc.) it comes to a grand total of more than 57 trillion dollars.  This total has more than doubled since the year 2000…

Total Debt 2014

If you know anyone that believes that we are in good economic shape, just show them these charts.

The numbers do not lie.  Our economy is sick and it is getting sicker by the day.

And of course the next major financial crisis could strike at any time.  U.S. stocks just experienced their worst week in three years, and if cases of Ebola start popping up around the country the fear that would cause could collapse our economy all by itself.

The debt-fueled prosperity that we are enjoying today is not real.  We are living on the fumes of our past, and every single day our long-term problems get even worse.

Anyone with half a brain should be able to see what is coming.

Sadly, most Americans will continue to deny the truth until it is far too late.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1sIXE9o Tyler Durden

French Nobel-Prize Winning Economist Slams “Big State” Socialism: “Not Enough Money To Pay For It”

One would think: i) French + ii) economist + iii) Nobel prize winner = the French version of Paul Krugman, which immediately means someone who exists in a permament state of eternal hubris and confused shock at the endless stupidity of all those others who (have a functioning frontal cortex and thus) fail to recognize his brilliance (hence, are capable of rational thought), whose only explanation for the failure of all his promoted policies is that not enough, never enough of them was attempted, and that, like a good socialist, the only thing better than a massive government apparatus is an infinite government apparatus, coupled with 10 Princeton economists sitting in a circle, chanting and micromanaging the world, the economy and the capital markets.

One would be wrong. Because hours after winning the economics Nobel Prize, speaking on France 24, French economist Jean Tirole advocated Scandinavian-style labour market policies and government reform as a way of preserving France’s social model. Wait, he said he believes in… less government? Sacre bleu, A French economist advocating less socialism? Was that Krugman’s head just exploding?

From France 24:

“We haven’t succeeded in France to undertake the labour market reforms that are similar to those in Germany, Scandinavia and so on,” he said in telephone interview from the French city of Toulouse, where he teaches.

 

France is plagued by record unemployment and Tirole described the French job market as “catastrophic” earlier on Monday, arguing that the excessive protection for employees had frozen the country’s job market.

 

We haven’t succeeded also in downsizing the state, which is an issue because we have a social model that I approve of – I’m very much in favour of this social model – but it won’t be sustainable if the state is too big,” he added.

If Krugman had a second head, this is where it, too, would explode. And while Krugman is stuck with his usual rhetorical, unreadable, intellectual masturbation, the Frenchman unleashes even more shocking common sense:

Tirole remarked that northern European countries, as well as Canada and Australia, had proven you could keep a welfare social model with smaller government. In contrast, he said France’s “big state” threatened its social policies because there will not be “enough money to pay for it in the long run”.

Now if only US socialists would learn from their French peers, then this truly would be a memorable week.




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

Cliff Asness Warns On QE-Blowback “Nothing Is Over Yet”, Slams “Mostly Dishonest” Krugman

Excerpted from Cliff Asness Op-Ed, originally posted at RealClearPolitics,

Quantitative easing (QE) and other inventive forms of loose monetary policy have simply been less than hoped or feared. Some may declare Fed policy a great success as we’re not in a depression, but they can’t show any counter-factual, and given that this money has largely sat dormant, albeit presumably lowering risk premia (raising asset prices), it’s likely we’d have a similar record-weak recovery with or without it. How this is a victory for one side of the debate or another is beyond me, but obviously clear to Paul and his back-up singers. Of course, it’s also clear to Paul that the 2009 stimulus package saved us from this same second Great Depression (but more stimulus would of course have been much better). Yep, and if we traded good cash for just one more “clunker” we’d be growing at 5% per annum by now with a normal labor participation rate.

In a field without a broad set of counter-factuals we all stick too much to our priors and ideologies, and perhaps I’m doing that now. But at least I see it, and that’s always step one. Paul [Krugman] is stuck on step zero (if he ever gets up to “making amends” I will be around but given his history he might never get to me). But, if you’d like to advance past step zero, Paul, we’re still waiting on why Keynesianism failed to fix the Great Depression (no doubt not quite enough stimulus; just one more Hoover Dam would have done it, or, as they called it back then, “Dams for Clunkers”), strongly predicted a deep post-WWII depression, didn’t predict stagflation, and generally was on a the downward spiral to the intellectual dustbin until the great recession resuscitated it, not as a workable intellectual doctrine, but as an excuse for politicians to spend on their constituents and causes.

Also remember, much like when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor, nothing is over yet. The Fed has not undone its extraordinary loose monetary policy and is just now stopping its direct QE purchases. When monetary policy is back to historic norms, and economic growth is once again strong, a normal number of people are seeking and getting jobs, and inflation has not reared its head, I think we can close the books on this one, still recognizing that forecasting a risk and having it fail to come to bear is not a cardinal sin. But which one of those things has happened yet? Paul, and others, should by now know the folly of declaring victory too early.

So, to those who’ve been waiting for one of us to say it, you can have half the mea culpa you clearly want, but mostly Paul is wrong, and twisting the facts, and doing so as rudely and crassly as possible, yet again. The rest of the JV team of Keynesians who have also jumped on board are doing the same thing, just with more class and less entertainment value than the master.

Now for a real prediction: Paul will continue to be mostly wrong, mostly dishonest about it, incredibly rude, and in a crass class by himself (admittedly I attempt these heights sometimes but sadly fall far short). That is a prediction I’m willing to make over any horizon, offering considerable odds, and with no sneaky forecasts of merely “heightened risks.” Any takers?




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

Federal Reserve Bank Admits AGAIN That It Is Not a Federal Agency

As we’ve reported for over 4 years, the Federal Reserve banks are private, not government agencies.

Indeed, the government admitted 86 years ago that the Fed banks are private. And the Fed has repeatedly reaffirmed this fact.

As Matt Stoller points out, they have just done so again … in the AIG trial. Specifically, government lawyers said:

Now, some of the documents … were not actually produced by the United States, they were produced by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is a third party.

http://ift.tt/1xQchXu




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1u2dN54 George Washington

FBN Warns Not All Pullbacks Are Created Equal

Via FBN Securities' Jeremy Klein,

In a secular rally, pullbacks will inevitably arise.  Market participants, though, should not view all drops in the same light.  In addition to the differences in the depth of the collapse, the magnitude of the changes of critical investor sentiment statistics may differ greatly.  Hence, identifying a potential trough with the use of a nondiscretionary quantitative trigger may not prove reliable.  Nevertheless, recognizing the amount of aggression contained within each selloff can be invaluable in forecasting a fortuitous buying opportunity.

I identified fourteen material declines for equities since July 2007.  Traders did not have the ability to short a common stock prior to this date.  I leveraged the following technical indicators for the study:  average session range, range as a percentage of index level, average monthly NYSE closing TICK, average monthly NYSE intraday TICK, the number of TICK readings below -1,000, average miles driven, miles driven as a percentage of index level, ratio of miles driven to range, open interest in the futures over the past week, volumes in the E-Minis, notional value transacted in the E-Minis, and relative performance between the Russell 2000 and S&P 500.

Unsurprisingly, the drops associated with the financial crisis and the sovereign credit downgrade of U.S. debt ranked as the most violent over the period investigated.  I actually assess the slide that climaxed in August 2011 as more extreme than the beating share prices received in the wake of Lehman’s bankruptcy albeit this distinction is nothing more than splitting hairs.  While painful at the time, pullbacks such as the one that resulted from the fiscal cliff negotiations or the “taper tantrum” were mild in comparison.

Assessing the current retracement is a difficult prospect as we may have yet to reach its terminus.  Based on the initial sentiment statistics, the decline has more similarity to the aforementioned historic collapses.  Specifically, this most recent selloff scored highly in nearly all categories including the mileage driven, session ranges, the TICK averages, notional volumes, and the scale of underperformance exhibited by smaller capitalization names.

However, I do not anticipate that we have stumbled upon a full blown bear market but suspect that a bottom still sits in front of us.  The lack of any upward inertia in the open interest figures supplies me confidence in such an assertion.  At a minimum, institutions create 165K contracts over the previous five days when suffering from rapidly falling share prices.  Moreover, this metric usually climbs above 250K on these occasions and peaked at roughly 950K for the August 2011 correction.  Using the preliminary data from yesterday, the corresponding number computes to only 99K.

Consequently, portfolio managers have stubbornly refused to throw in the towel. 

I maintain that most firms desperately cling to the hope that the broader indices will enjoy a breathtaking rally as the calendar moves toward Christmas.  Reducing one’s exposure would constitute a forfeiture of the year such that investors who have struggled in 2014 are loath to lower their risk.  Thus, capitulation gets delayed which allows me to reiterate my bearish outlook even as the S&P 500 dipped to within 25 bps of my official target on Monday.

The macro data remains quiet until tomorrow to accentuate the impact of earnings which starts to build momentum this morning.  The usual swath of money center banks will provide their results over the coming days while INTC will hog the headlines tonight.  Although I do not expect a poor reporting season, the Fed has gifted corporate executives an excuse for any shortfall with its concerns over the strengthening dollar.  Any help from these announcements will therefore be modest at best.

 
S&P 500 Cash Key Technical Levels

Support:  1874.00/70.00, 1868.00/65.00, 1862.25/60.00, 1850.50, 1846.00/44.00, 1816.25 , 1800.00

Resistance: 1887.25, 1892.25, 1905.00, 1909.00, 1912.00, 1929.00, 936.00/37.00, 1938.50/1942.00, 1959.25




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

The Fed Has to Sell Treasury Holdings Back to Marketplace

By EconMatters

 

Not Holding Assets to Maturity

 

The conventional wisdom by Wall Street was that the Fed would just hold onto these Treasuries until they expired off their $4.5 Trillion balance sheet largely made up of US Treasuries and Mortgage backed securities, but during the last Fed Meeting Janet Yellen talked a lot about exiting these securities off the Fed`s balance sheet, and how they are thinking and planning about this process of selling these assets back onto the market. 

 

$4.5 Trillion is a lot of Assets Needing to find a Permanent Home

 

 

This sort of news went under the radar with everyone focused on  the exact date of the first rate hike , but it looks like the Fed is coming to terms with the fact that they have to sell many of these assets, especially all the treasuries, as it does no good to just let them expire on the Fed`s balance sheet, because in a sense the government at a time when their liabilities will be far more taxing in the form of the ramp up of the entitlement`s curve starting around 2018, will have to not only issue bonds and treasuries to cover these expenditures, but will then have to issue more treasuries to fund the fact that the expenditures for the treasuries issued during the Fed`s asset purchasing program (essentially government IOU`S for iou`s of T-bills and Bonds) never got funded. 

 

These expenditures need to be funded by an external holder other than the US Government for these Treasuries, and while Bond Yields are so low relative to historical standards it makes sense for the Fed to sell these bonds back to the market regardless if yields spike a little, versus creating additional Treasury allocations say in 2018 to cover these expenditures that never really got funded by external debt holders when interest rates are going to be much higher maybe by factors of 3 to 5 times higher in yields and financing costs.

 

 

The Government Cannot ‘Un-Spend’ the Money

 

There is no way the bond market will handle both an entitlements funding increase in Treasury allocation and funding the IOU`S of the Treasuries that never got funded during the QE era of the Federal Reserve, it isn`t like the government didn`t spend this money already, and not go full boar Bond Vigilante like we saw in Europe in 2012.

 

The Fed Hurts themselves for being Overly Transparent & Risks Front Running Actions

 

Of course the smart thing would have been to subtly without signaling the market put some of these Treasuries back on the market when yields were so low with everyone wanting to chase yield with lots of ZIRP floating around the financial system. But that would be ‘dishonest’ and a little odd considering they are still buying treasuries (15 Billion this month), but it sure would have been the best way to exit some of these holdings, call it an administration or procedural allocation, of course the market would catch on real quick (if they were dumb enough to reveal this in a shrinking balance sheet) a little deception would be helpful here as well.

 

Reverse QE: Just How Big & When Will it Begin?

 

But it does appear that the Federal Reserve is going to sell these bonds back to the market over the next several years, so besides raising the Fed Funds Rate, investors should probably be paying attention to just how much per year the Fed is going to sell back to the market now that they are no longer buying any more bonds as QE officially winds down this month. Based upon Janet Yellen`s own words on the topic and the ramifications of just holding these assets to maturity, many on Wall Street got this one wrong. The fact that the Fed isn`t just going to hold these assets to maturity, they are actually going to sell these assets back to the market, and hope the environment both in the bond market and the overall economy are robust enough to take this process without too much of a hiccup. 

 

Mainstream Business Media Completely Missed The Importance of this Issue

 

I was surprised that the media didn`t pick up on this fact, just how much time Janet Yellen spent addressing exiting these assets off the Fed`s balance sheet during her last press conference. They are actually formulating an exit plan for these assets to slowly liquidate these holdings off their balance sheet in the coming years. The real question and problem is that QE went on in several forms for essentially 7 years, and by my conservative calculations some of these Treasuries will start expiring for the longer duration items in just 4 years.

 

 

Let the Front Running Begin in 2015

 

Thus 2018 being the target date just divide the number of years 4 by the number of Fed assets that they want to slowly transfer off the balance sheet, and this is the number that the Federal Reserve will be doing Reverse QE per year, and I guess per month probably starting sometime in 2015. But when you run the numbers it sure isn`t going to be $15 per month of asset sales as that only gets the Fed to $180 Billion on an annual basis, and that pace isn`t going to solve their balance sheet dilemma/problem! And based upon the dismal turnout for the last 10-Year Treasury Auction, and the fact that we have our first two Treasury Auctions of the year with no Fed Buying for the month in November and December, maybe overzealous bond investors might want to rethink that Yield Chasing Strategy for 2015. 

 

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If The Oil Plunge Continues, “Now May Be A Time To Panic” For US Shale Companies

Over the past 5 years, the shale industry, fabricated or real reserves notwithstanding, has been a significant boon to the US economy for four main reasons: it has been the target of billions in fixed investment and CapEx spending, it has resulted in tens of thousands of high-paying jobs, its output has been a major tailwind for the US trade deficit, and has generally been a significant contributor to GDP (not to mention various Buffett-controlled or otherwise railway corporations). And perhaps, most importantly, it has become a huge buffer to the price of global oil, as the cost curve of US shale is horizontal, with a massive 10,000 kbls/day available within pennies of $85/bl.

Goldman’s explanation:

We believe that the vast reserves that have been opened for development through shale oil in the US have flattened the cost curve meaningfully, at around a US$85/bl Brent oil price. We estimate shale reserves from the top three fields in the US onshore (the Permian, Bakken and Eagle Ford) at around 91bn boe, which to put it in context, is equivalent to roughly one third of Saudi Arabia’s current stated reserves (ZH: this number may be vastly overstated). Most of this resource has become available in the past five years, with few barriers to exploiting the reserves. Production in the US as a result is growing strongly, by more than 1mbpd currently, and we expect this pace of growth to continue over the coming three years as capital continues to be drawn in to these developments. The consequence is that costs of production and E&P capex/bl should stabilise as the marginal cost of production remains stable. We believe that shale oil has become effectively the marginal source of supply, providing the bulk of non- OPEC production growth. This is also the key driver of our oil price view: we continue to expect Brent oil to stay at c.US$100/bl for the coming few years.

For once, Goldman is spot on (even if their Brent price target may be a bit off): with shale oil profitable only above its virtually horizontal cost curve, it means that a whopping 11,000 kbls/day are available as long as Brent is above $85, a clear “red line” for all OPEC producers.

The red line is conveniently shown on the chart below:

However, should the price drop below $85, and very bad things start to happen, not the least of which is what we warned about in May that “Shale Boom Goes Bust As Costs Soar.” That was when Brent was $110. It is now at $85 and sliding lower.

As a further reminder, we noted two days ago that shale is now in a bear market:

 

But that is nothing compared to the no bid market the (very, very levered) shale companies will find themselves in if and when, for whatever reason, Brent drops below $85 to a price where only Qatar is profitable on the global Brent cost curve.

So while we understand if Saudi Arabia is employing a dumping strategy to punish the Kremlin as per the “deal” with Obama’s White House, very soon there will be a very vocal, very insolvent and very domestic shale community demanding answers from the Obama administration, as once again the “costs” meant to punish Russia end up crippling the only truly viable industry under the current presidency.

As a reminder, the last time Obama threatened Russia with “costs”, he sent Europe into a triple-dip recession.

It would truly be the crowning achievement of Obama’s career if, amazingly, he manages to bankrupt the US shale “miracle” next.




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