Larry Kotlikoff Asks "Is Hyperinflation Around The Corner?

Authored by Lawrence Kotlikoff, via Yahoo Exchange blog,

In his parting act, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has decided to continue printing some $85 billion per month (6% of GDP per year) and spend those dollars on government bonds and, in the process, keep interest rates low, stimulate investment, and reduce unemployment. Trouble is, interest rates have generally been rising, investment remains very low, and unemployment remains very high. As Lawrence Kotlikoff points out, echoing our perhaps more vociferous discussions, Bernanke’s dangerous policy hasn’t worked and should be ended. Since 2007 the Fed has increased the economy’s basic supply of money (the monetary base) by a factor of four! That’s enough to sustain, over a relatively short period of time, a four-fold increase in prices. Having prices rise that much over even three years would spell hyperinflation.

The Treasury dance

And while Bernanke says this is all to keep down interest rates, there is a darker subtext here. When the Treasury prints bonds and sells them to the public for cash and the Fed prints cash and uses it to buy the newly printed bonds back from the public, the Treasury ends up with the extra cash, the public ends up with the same cash it had initially, and the Fed ends up with the new bonds.

Yes, the Treasury pays interest and principal to the Fed on the bonds, but the Fed hands that interest and principal back to the Treasury as profits earned by a government corporation, namely the Fed. So, the outcome of this shell game is no different from having the Treasury simply print money and spend it as it likes.

The fact that the Fed and Treasury dance this financial pas de deux shows how much they want to keep the public in the dark about what they are doing. And what they are doing, these days, is printing, out of thin air, 29 cents of every $1 being spent by the federal government.

QE an unsustainable practice

I have heard one financial guru after another discuss Quantitative Easing and its impact on interest rates and the stock market, but I’ve heard no one make clear that close to 30 percent of federal spending is now being financed via the printing press.

That’s an unsustainable practice. It will come to an end once Wall Street starts to understand exactly how much money is being printed and that it’s not being printed simply to stimulate the economy, but rather to pay for the spending of a government that is completely broke — with long-term expenditures obligations that exceed its long-term tax revenues by $205 trillion!

This present value fiscal gap is based on the Congressional Budget Office’s just-released long-term Alternative Fiscal Scenario projection. Closing this fiscal gap would require a 57 percent immediate and permanent hike in all federal taxes — starting today!

Prices will rise

When Wall Street wises up to our true fiscal condition (and some, like Bill Gross, already have), it will dump long-term bonds like hot potatoes. This will lead interest rates to jump and make people and banks very reluctant to hold money earning no return. In trying to swap their money for goods and services, the public will drive up prices.

As prices start to rise and fingers start pointing at the Fed for fueling the inflation, QE will be brought to an abrupt halt. At that point, Congress will have to come up with an extra 6 percent of GDP on a permanent basis either via huge tax hikes or huge spending cuts. Another option is simply to borrow the 6 percent. But this would raise the deficit, defined as the increase in Treasury bonds held by the public, from 4 to 10 percent of annual GDP if we take 2013 as the example. A 10 percent of GDP deficit would raise even more eyebrows on Wall Street and put further upward pressure on interest rates.

What are we waiting for?

But why haven’t prices started rising already if there is so much money floating around? This year’s inflation rate is running at just 1.5 percent. There are three answers.

First, three quarters of the newly created money hasn’t made its way into the blood stream of the economy – into M1 – the money supply held by the public. Instead, the Fed is paying the banks interest not to lend out the money, but to hold it within the Fed in what are called excess reserves.

Since 2007, the Monetary Base – the amount of money the Fed’s printed – has risen by $2.7 trillion and excess reserves have risen by $2.1 trillion. Normally excess reserves would be close to zero. Hence, the banks are sitting on $2.1 trillion they can lend to the private sector at a moment’s notice. I.e., we’re looking at a gi-normous reservoir filling up with trillions of dollars whose dam can break at any time. Once interest rates rise, these excess reserves will be lent out.

The fed says they can keep the excess reserves from getting lose by paying higher interest on reserves. But this entails poring yet more money into the reservoir. And if interest rates go sufficiently high, the Fed will call this practice quits.

As excess reserves are released to the economic wild, we’ll see M1, which was $1.4 trillion in 2007, rise from its current value of $2.6 trillion to $5.7 trillion. Since prices, other things being equal, are supposed to be proportional to M1, having M1 rise by 219 percent means that prices will rise by 219 percent.

But, and this is point two, other things aren’t equal. As interest rates and prices take off, money will become a hot potato. I.e., its velocity will rise. Having money move more rapidly through the economy – having faster money – is like having more money. Today, money has the slows; its velocity – the ratio GDP to M1 — is 6.6. Everybody’s happy to hold it because they aren’t losing much or any interest. But back in 2007, M1 was a warm potato with a velocity of 10.4.

If banks fully lend out their reserves and the velocity of money returns to 10.4, we’ll have enough M1, measured in effective units (adjusted for speed of circulation), to support a nominal GDP that’s 3.5 times larger than is now the case. I.e., we’ll have the wherewithal for almost a quadrupling of prices. But were prices to start moving rapidly higher, M1 would switch from being a warm to a hot potato. I.e., velocity would rise above 10.4, leading to yet faster money and higher inflation.

No easy exit

I hope you’re getting the point. Having addicted Congress and the Administration to the printing press, there is no easy exit strategy. Continuing on the current QE path spells even great risk of hyperinflation. But calling it quits requires much higher taxes, much lower spending, or much more net borrowing (with requisite future repayment) from the public. Yet weaning Uncle Sam from the printing press now is critical before his real need for a fix – paying for the Baby Boomers’ retirement benefits – kicks in.

The one caveat to this doom and gloom scenario is point three – increased domestic and global demand for dollars. The Great Recession put the fear of God into savers worldwide. And the fact that U.S. price level has risen since 2007 by only 15 percent whereas M1 has risen by 88 percent reflects a massive expansion of domestic and foreign demand for “safe” dollars. This is evidenced by the velocity of money falling from 10.4 to 6.6. People are now much more
eager to hold and hold onto dollars than they were six years ago.

If this increased demand for dollars persists, let alone grows, inflation may remain low for quite a while. But our ability to get Americans and foreigners to hand over real goods and services in exchange for very few green pieces of paper is hardly guaranteed once everyone starts to understand the incredible rate at which Uncle Sam is printing and spending this paper. Once everyone gets it into their heads that prices are taking off, individual beliefs will become collective reality. This brings me to my bottom line: The more money the Fed prints, the more it risks everyone starting to expect and, consequently produce, hyperinflation.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/cGFUFBNh9ss/story01.htm Tyler Durden

“Euphoria”

Last week, Citi’s Tobias Levkovich raised numerous concerns about the state of exuberance and “disconcerting disconnects” that is our new normal market currently. In the week since, Citi’s proprietary Panic/Euphoria model is sending a clear warning of substantial complacency – its most “euphoric” since 2008. This is worrisome, he notes, since there is an 80% probability of a market decline in the next 12 months based on the current reading.

 

 

The investment community’s mindset is widely monitored and investors anecdotally have become more bullish in conversations and meetings looking to an expected traditional late-year seasonal rally, despite a better than 20% move year-to-date.

Money flows of late have shown that the individual investor is coming back into equities. Mutual fund flows and exchange traded fund flows have turned more clearly positive recently, reflecting a real shift in people’s willingness to take on stock market risk. However, they are doing so after the S&P 500 has tacked on more than 1,000 points since the lows of March 2009. Moreover, the Value Line Arithmetic Index has quadrupled over the same time frame, suggesting that there is a bull chase going on.

The model historically has been a very respectable market performance indicator. The last time, Panic/Euphoria was in this area, which occurred in May, the market slid 3%-4% shortly thereafter. It is important to recognize that while euphoria readings have not been registered, there is still about an 80% probability of a market decline in the next 12 months based on the current reading.

 

Source: Citi


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/pGKXdRs6VH0/story01.htm Tyler Durden

"Euphoria"

Last week, Citi’s Tobias Levkovich raised numerous concerns about the state of exuberance and “disconcerting disconnects” that is our new normal market currently. In the week since, Citi’s proprietary Panic/Euphoria model is sending a clear warning of substantial complacency – its most “euphoric” since 2008. This is worrisome, he notes, since there is an 80% probability of a market decline in the next 12 months based on the current reading.

 

 

The investment community’s mindset is widely monitored and investors anecdotally have become more bullish in conversations and meetings looking to an expected traditional late-year seasonal rally, despite a better than 20% move year-to-date.

Money flows of late have shown that the individual investor is coming back into equities. Mutual fund flows and exchange traded fund flows have turned more clearly positive recently, reflecting a real shift in people’s willingness to take on stock market risk. However, they are doing so after the S&P 500 has tacked on more than 1,000 points since the lows of March 2009. Moreover, the Value Line Arithmetic Index has quadrupled over the same time frame, suggesting that there is a bull chase going on.

The model historically has been a very respectable market performance indicator. The last time, Panic/Euphoria was in this area, which occurred in May, the market slid 3%-4% shortly thereafter. It is important to recognize that while euphoria readings have not been registered, there is still about an 80% probability of a market decline in the next 12 months based on the current reading.

 

Source: Citi


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/pGKXdRs6VH0/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Michael Pettis Cautions Abe (And Krugman): “Debt Matters”

"Debt matters… even if it is possible to pretend for many years that it doesn't," is the painful truth that, author of "Avoiding The Fall", Michael Pettis offers for the current state of most western economies. Specifically, Pettis points out that Japan never really wrote down all or even most of its investment misallocation of the 1980s and simply rolled it forward in the form of rising government debt. For a long time it was able to service this growing debt burden by keeping interest rates very low as a response to very slow growth and by effectively capitalizing interest payments, but, as Kyle Bass has previously warned, if Abenomics is 'successful', ironically, it will no longer be able to play this game. Unless Japan moves quickly to pay down debt, perhaps by privatizing government assets, Abenomics, in that case, will be derailed by its own success.

Will Debt Derail Abenomics?
by Michael Pettis of China Financial Markets blog,

It seems to me that one of the automatic, if not always intended, consequences of Abenomics is to force up Japan’s current account surplus, and in fact to force it up substantially. This will have to do at least in part with deciding how to manage the country’s enormous government debt burden, which easily exceeds 200% of the country’s GDP.

If I am right, this should create two concerns.

First, in a world struggling with insufficient demand and excess capacity, and in which the growth strategies of too many countries implicitly involve a significant increase in exports relative to imports, a major increase in Japan’s current account surplus could easily derail growth recovery elsewhere. The US for example has to worry that policies aimed at increasing domestic demand don’t simply result in rising debt as US demand bleeds out through the current account, while both China and Europe need strong external sectors to make their own difficult domestic adjustments less painful.

 

Second, it is not obvious that the world will be able to absorb a significant increase in the Japanese exports, and if Abenomics implicitly forces up the Japanese savings rate relative to investment (which is all that we mean when we say that economic policies force up current account surpluses), these policies can resolve themselves either in the form of high growth and soaring exports, or much lower growth and slowing imports. The former implies that Abenomics will be successful, while the latter that it will fail. It is not obvious, in other words, that Abenomics can succeed in a world of weak demand, and its failure is likely to make Japan’s domestic imbalances worse, not better.

It may seem a little quixotic to worry about a surging Japanese current account surplus just now when in fact Japan’s external balance has declined substantially and is surprising analysts on the downside. According to an article in last week’s Financial Times:

Japan’s current account balance plummeted by nearly two-thirds in August from a year ago, surprising forecasters that had assumed it would grow nearly a fifth. The current account is a broad measure of trade. A fall indicates Japan is receiving less income from overseas investments, despite help from the falling yen.

 

The current account surplus fell nearly 64 per cent in August, versus forecasts expecting an 18 per cent gain. The unadjusted balance in the month was Y161.5bn, against forecasts at Y520bn and down from Y577.3bn in July. Within the data, trade of goods and services was in deficit of more than Y1tn for a second consecutive month, while income fell to Y1.253tn from Y1.794tn a month before.

My concern, however, is unlikely to be played out over the next few quarters but rather over the next few years as Abenomics is implemented, and so Japan’s external position in the immediate future doesn’t matter. What matters, I think, is that in order to generate growth Tokyo is planning to implement polices aimed at raising both inflation and real GDP, and these policies are likely to force up the national savings rate relative to investment.

What is more, to the extent that these policies are successful in generating higher nominal GDP growth, they create a problem for Tokyo in how it decides to set domestic interest rates. Japan has never really resolved the overinvestment orgy of the 1980s. Instead of writing down bad debt it effectively transferred much of it to the government balance sheet, and now this huge debt burden is itself becoming, I think, a constraint on the success of policies designed by Tokyo to spur growth.

Before addressing the debt constraint, let me start by listing the reasons why I think Abenomics is likely to affect the trade surplus. First is the impact of Abenomics on pushing down the value of the yen. As I discuss in the first two chapters of my January book, The Great Rebalancing, currency depreciation does not affect the trade balance directly by changing relative prices. It does so indirectly by changing the relationship between savings and investment (the difference between the two being the current account balance). A depreciating currency reduces the real value of household income by acting effectively as a consumption tax on imported items. This also reduces the real value of household consumption.

The proceeds of this tax are used implicitly to subsidize the tradable goods sector, which effectively increases production in that sector. Of course as production rises relative to consumption, the difference between the two – the national savings rate – must also rise.

This means that as the yen depreciates, the consequence is likely to be an increase in the Japanese savings rate. If there is no commensurate increase in investment (and I assume that with excess capacity Japan does not need to increase investment much in order to produce higher output), Japan’s current account surplus must automatically rise. In the near term the investment rate is likely to rise, largely in response to greater confidence, but over the longer term downward pressure on the consumption share of GDP (which is the likely consequence of downward pressure on the household income share) will also put downward pressure on investment growth.

Savings is the obverse of consumption

But it doesn’t end there. Japan seems to be taking other steps to force up its domestic savings rate. Here is last Tuesday’s Financial Times:

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, pledged to press ahead with the first increase in sales tax for over 15 years despite objections from some of his closest advisers, gambling that measures to address the country’s massive debts would not hinder his attempts to jump-start the economy.

 

Mr Abe said on Tuesday he would couple the consumption tax hike with roughly Y5tn in new public works spending, cash grants and other stimulus in order to blunt any negative impact on the economy.

 

…The plan to increase the tax from 5 to 8 per cent next April had been approved by a previous government with the support of Mr Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party. But it was opposed by economists who had helped the premier draft his Abenomics strategy, as well as by some LDP politicians. The last time Japan increased the levy, in 1997, a deep recession followed that shook the party’s grip on power.

The increase in the consumption tax, part of the proceeds of which will be used to increase infrastructure investment, will accomplish many of the same results as the deprecation of the yen. A consumption tax, like a tariff, is effectively a kind of back-door currency devaluation, with a slightly different mix of losers among the household sector and winners among the producing sector.

By boosting production and reducing consumption, however, it automatically forces up the national savings rate in the same way as does currency depreciation. Even if 100% of the proceeds of the tax were used to fund increased infrastructure investment (and the article suggests that part, but not all, of the consumption taxes will be directed towards higher investment), because at least some of the investment spending will go to workers in the form of wages, who will save part of those wages, the net result will be that total savings will rise faster than total investment. Once again this must force up Japan’s current account surplus even further.

So far this all looks like an attempt by Abe to increase Japanese competitiveness and so increase its total share of global demand, but not by increasing Japanese productivity, which is the high road to growth, but rather by reducing the real Japanese household income share of what is produced. Japan (like Germany and China have done over the past decade) is attempting to increase employment by reducing wages, and this means that its workers will be able to purchase a declining share of what they produce. This effectively means Japan will be growing at the expense of its trading partners. As the Japanese become less able to consume all they produce, the excess must be exported abroad.

If the world were in ruddy good health, we might not worry too much about policies aimed at Japan’s pulling itself out of the mess created in the 1980s, but with the whole world struggling with weak demand and with country after country trying to reduce domestic unemployment by selling more abroad – effectively exporting unemployment (with Germany in particular hoping to resolve the European crisis not by increasing its net domestic demand, as it should, but rather by forcing German surpluses outside Europe) – there is a real question in my mind as to how successful the Japanese program of Abenomics is likely to be if it implicitly requires a burgeoning trade surplus.

Remember that if one country increases its savings rate, unless there is a net increase in global investment there must be a commensurate reduction in the savings rate of the rest of the world so that savings and investment always balance globally. There are broadly speaking two ways this can happen. In the pre-crisis days this reduction in the savings rate of the rest of the world occurred mainly in the form of soaring consumption fueled by credit, and in this way unemployment stayed low. Since the crisis – which because of the negative wealth effect saw credit-fueled consumption drop – foreign savings have been reduced by a rise in foreign unemployment

This means that if Japan forces up its savings rate, and assuming that we are unlikely to return in the next few years to a credit-fueled consumption binge, the only way the world can respond to a structural forcing up of the Japanese savings rate is either by higher unemployment outside Japan or, if Japan’s trade partners take steps to protect themselves from higher Japanese trade surpluses, higher unemployment inside Japan.

The debt-servicing cost of nominal GDP growth

But there is more, perhaps much more. Japan is struggling with an enormous debt burden, and perhaps this explains why Tokyo is so eager to engage in policies that force up the Japanese savings rate. As long as more than 100% of Japanese borrowing is funded by domestic savings (if Japan runs a current account surplus is must be a net exporter, not importer, of capital), it doesn’t have to rely on fickle foreigners, who might not be satisfied with coupons close to zero, to fund its enormous debt burden.

But the debt burden creates its own very dangerous source of trade instability. To understand why, we need to consider what happens to interest rates in Japan if nominal growth rates rise.

In Japan interest rates are currently very low, close to zero. With total government debt amounting to more than twice the country’s GDP – which puts it among the most heavily indebted governments in the world – it is not hard to see how low nominal interest rates benefit Japan. With interest rates close to zero, there is very little cashflow pressure on the government from servicing its debt.

Some people might argue that nominal interest rates do not matter. We should be looking at real interest rates, they would argue, and with Japan’s having experienced deflation for much of the past two decades, real interest rates in Japan are high and the nominal rate is largely irrelevant.

This is true, real interest rates do matter, but it doesn’t mean that nominal interest rates do not. In fact both real and nominal interest rates matter, albeit for different reasons. Real rates matter for all the obvious reasons – they represent the real cost to the borrower in terms of a transfer of resources from the borrower to the lender. But nominal rates also matter because they effectively determine the implicit amortization schedule of principal payments.

When the nominal rate is zero or close to zero in a deflationary environment, in other words, interest is effectively capitalized in real terms. In fact whenever the real rate exceeds the nominal rate, as it has in Japan for much of the past two decades, the cashflow cost of servicing the debt is lower than the real cost, and the difference is effectively converted into real principal and deferred. In real terms, in other words, Japanese debt is growing by the difference between the real rate and the nominal rate, and this effectively represents a reduction in the cashflow cost of servicing its debt.

When nominal interest rates are positive and higher than the real rate, however, there is effectively an acceleration of real principal payments. This means that as long as nominal rates are very low, the real cost of servicing the debt is low and the principal payments are postponed, with some of the interest even being capitalized. As nominal rates rise, however, the real cost of servicing the debt during each payment period consists of interest plus some real principal.

This is just a long, perhaps pedantic, way of pointing out that even if the real interest rate in Japan declines, debt servicing is likely to be much more difficult as the nominal rate rises. Japan might be paying a lower real rate, but it is also implicitly paying down principle, instead of capitalizing it. Tokyo would need a significant increase in revenues, or a significant decrease in expenditures, to cover the cost.

So what would force Japan to raise its nominal interest rate? In principle the nominal interest rate should be more or less in line with the nominal GDP growth rate. If it is higher, growth generated by investing capital is disproportionately retained by net savers (including mainly the household sector). There is, in other words, a hidden transfer of resources from net borrowers to net savers.

If the nominal lending rate is lower than the nominal GDP growth rate, as is the case in China today and Japan during the 1980s, the opposite occurs. There is a hidden transfer from net savers to net borrowers, and because net savers are mainly the household sector, this will put downward pressure on the household share of income even as it gooses investment growth. This hidden transfer has been at the heart of the rapid economic growth that typically occurs in financially repressed economies during the earlier stages, and is also at the heart of the investment misallocation process that typically occurs during the later stages. We have seen this very clearly in China.

Will Tokyo raise interest rates?

Japan is trying to generate both positive inflation and real GDP growth, so that it is trying urgently to raise the growth rate of nominal GDP. What happens if and when it is successful? For example let us assume that Japan’s GDP is able to grow nominally by 4-5% a year – what will happen to the nominal Japanese interest rate?

Tokyo can either raise interest rates in line with nominal GDP growth rates or it can keep them repressed. In the former case, debt-servicing costs would soar, ultimately to 8% of GDP or more. This would create a problem for Tokyo in its ability to service its tremendous debt burden. It would need a primary surplus of around 8% of GDP just to keep debt levels constant, and it is hard to imagine how such a huge surplus would be consistent with nominal GDP growth rates of 4-5%.

If it were to raise income taxes it would create a huge burden for the household sector and almost certainly force up the national savings rate by forcing down the household share of GDP. Remember that during the 1980s Japan, like China today, generated rapid growth in part through financial repression, and one of the consequences of that rapid growth was an extraordinarily high savings rate along with a huge current account surplus, both of which were ultimately unsustainable. Japan has spent much of the past twenty years rebalancing GDP back in favor of the household sector, and to reverse this process may provide relief in the short term, but it is hard to see how I can be helpful in the medium term.

On the other hand if, in order to make its debt burden manageable Tokyo represses interest rates to well below the nominal GDP growth rate, it is effectively transferring a significant share of GDP from the household sector to the government in the form of the hidden financial repression tax. This is what Japan was doing in the 1980s, with all of the now-obvious consequences.

Japan’s enormous debt burden was manageable as long as GDP growth rates were close to zero because this allowed both for the country to rebalance its economy and for Tokyo to make the negligible debt servicing payments even as it was effectively capitalizing part of its debt servicing cost. If Japan starts to grow, however, it can no longer do so. Unless it is willing to privatize assets and pay down the debt, or to impose very heavy taxes of the business sector, one way or the other it will either face serious debt constraints or it will begin to rebalance the economy once again away from consumption.

As this happens Japan’s saving rate will inexorably creep up, and unless investment can grow just as consistently, Japan will require ever larger current account surpluses in order to resolve the excess of its production over its domestic demand. If it has trouble running large current account surpluses, as I expect in a world struggling with too much capacity and too little demand, Abenomics is likely to fail in the medium term.

Perhaps all I am saying with this analysis is that debt matters, even if it is possible to pretend for many years that it doesn’t (and this pretense was made possible by the implicit capitalization of debt-servicing costs). Japan never really wrote down all or even most of its investment misallocation of the 1980s and simply rolled it forward in the form of rising government debt. For a long time it was able to service this growing debt burden by keeping interest rates very low as a response to very slow growth and by effectively capitalizing interest payments, but if Abenomics is “successful”, ironically, it will no longer be able to play this game. Unless Japan moves quickly to pay down debt, perhaps by privatizing government assets, Abenomics, in that case, will be derailed by its own success.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/8VR4hhJ9r2U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Michael Pettis Cautions Abe (And Krugman): "Debt Matters"

"Debt matters… even if it is possible to pretend for many years that it doesn't," is the painful truth that, author of "Avoiding The Fall", Michael Pettis offers for the current state of most western economies. Specifically, Pettis points out that Japan never really wrote down all or even most of its investment misallocation of the 1980s and simply rolled it forward in the form of rising government debt. For a long time it was able to service this growing debt burden by keeping interest rates very low as a response to very slow growth and by effectively capitalizing interest payments, but, as Kyle Bass has previously warned, if Abenomics is 'successful', ironically, it will no longer be able to play this game. Unless Japan moves quickly to pay down debt, perhaps by privatizing government assets, Abenomics, in that case, will be derailed by its own success.

Will Debt Derail Abenomics?
by Michael Pettis of China Financial Markets blog,

It seems to me that one of the automatic, if not always intended, consequences of Abenomics is to force up Japan’s current account surplus, and in fact to force it up substantially. This will have to do at least in part with deciding how to manage the country’s enormous government debt burden, which easily exceeds 200% of the country’s GDP.

If I am right, this should create two concerns.

First, in a world struggling with insufficient demand and excess capacity, and in which the growth strategies of too many countries implicitly involve a significant increase in exports relative to imports, a major increase in Japan’s current account surplus could easily derail growth recovery elsewhere. The US for example has to worry that policies aimed at increasing domestic demand don’t simply result in rising debt as US demand bleeds out through the current account, while both China and Europe need strong external sectors to make their own difficult domestic adjustments less painful.

 

Second, it is not obvious that the world will be able to absorb a significant increase in the Japanese exports, and if Abenomics implicitly forces up the Japanese savings rate relative to investment (which is all that we mean when we say that economic policies force up current account surpluses), these policies can resolve themselves either in the form of high growth and soaring exports, or much lower growth and slowing imports. The former implies that Abenomics will be successful, while the latter that it will fail. It is not obvious, in other words, that Abenomics can succeed in a world of weak demand, and its failure is likely to make Japan’s domestic imbalances worse, not better.

It may seem a little quixotic to worry about a surging Japanese current account surplus just now when in fact Japan’s external balance has declined substantially and is surprising analysts on the downside. According to an article in last week’s Financial Times:

Japan’s current account balance plummeted by nearly two-thirds in August from a year ago, surprising forecasters that had assumed it would grow nearly a fifth. The current account is a broad measure of trade. A fall indicates Japan is receiving less income from overseas investments, despite help from the falling yen.

 

The current account surplus fell nearly 64 per cent in August, versus forecasts expecting an 18 per cent gain. The unadjusted balance in the month was Y161.5bn, against forecasts at Y520bn and down from Y577.3bn in July. Within the data, trade of goods and services was in deficit of more than Y1tn for a second consecutive month, while income fell to Y1.253tn from Y1.794tn a month before.

My concern, however, is unlikely to be played out over the next few quarters but rather over the next few years as Abenomics is implemented, and so Japan’s external position in the immediate future doesn’t matter. What matters, I think, is that in order to generate growth Tokyo is planning to implement polices aimed at raising both inflation and real GDP, and these policies are likely to force up the national savings rate relative to investment.

What is more, to the extent that these policies are successful in generating higher nominal GDP growth, they create a problem for Tokyo in how it decides to set domestic interest rates. Japan has never really resolved the overinvestment orgy of the 1980s. Instead of writing down bad debt it effectively transferred much of it to the government balance sheet, and now this huge debt burden is itself becoming, I think, a constraint on the success of policies designed by Tokyo to spur growth.

Before addressing the debt constraint, let me start by listing the reasons why I think Abenomics is likely to affect the trade surplus. First is the impact of Abenomics on pushing down the value of the yen. As I discuss in the first two chapters of my January book, The Great Rebalancing, currency depreciation does not affect the trade balance directly by changing relative prices. It does so indirectly by changing the relationship between savings and investment (the difference between the two being the current account balance). A depreciating currency reduces the real value of household income by acting effectively as a consumption tax on imported items. This also reduces the real value of household consumption.

The proceeds of this tax are used implicitly to subsidize the tradable goods sector, which effectively increases production in that sector. Of course as production rises relative to consumption, the difference between the two – the national savings rate – must also rise.

This means that as the yen depreciates, the consequence is likely to be an increase in the Japanese savings rate. If there is no commensurate increase in investment (and I assume that with excess capacity Japan does not need to increase investment much in order to produce higher output), Japan’s current account surplus must automatically rise. In the near term the investment rate is likely to rise, largely in response to greater confidence, but over the longer term downward pressure on the consumption share of GDP (which is the likely consequence of downward pressure on the household income share) will also put downward pressure on investment growth.

Savings is the obverse of consumption

But it doesn’t end there. Japan seems to be taking other steps to force up its domestic savings rate. Here is last Tuesday’s Financial Times:

Shinzo Abe, Japan’s prime minister, pledged to press ahead with the first increase in sales tax for over 15 years despite objections from some of his closest advisers, gambling that measures to address the country’s massive debts would not hinder his attempts to jump-start the economy.

 

Mr Abe said on Tuesday he would couple the consumption tax hike with roughly Y5tn in new public works spending, cash grants and other stimulus in order to blunt any negative impact on the economy.

 

…The plan to increase the tax from 5 to 8 per cent next
April had been approved by a previous government with the support of Mr Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party. But it was opposed by economists who had helped the premier draft his Abenomics strategy, as well as by some LDP politicians. The last time Japan increased the levy, in 1997, a deep recession followed that shook the party’s grip on power.

The increase in the consumption tax, part of the proceeds of which will be used to increase infrastructure investment, will accomplish many of the same results as the deprecation of the yen. A consumption tax, like a tariff, is effectively a kind of back-door currency devaluation, with a slightly different mix of losers among the household sector and winners among the producing sector.

By boosting production and reducing consumption, however, it automatically forces up the national savings rate in the same way as does currency depreciation. Even if 100% of the proceeds of the tax were used to fund increased infrastructure investment (and the article suggests that part, but not all, of the consumption taxes will be directed towards higher investment), because at least some of the investment spending will go to workers in the form of wages, who will save part of those wages, the net result will be that total savings will rise faster than total investment. Once again this must force up Japan’s current account surplus even further.

So far this all looks like an attempt by Abe to increase Japanese competitiveness and so increase its total share of global demand, but not by increasing Japanese productivity, which is the high road to growth, but rather by reducing the real Japanese household income share of what is produced. Japan (like Germany and China have done over the past decade) is attempting to increase employment by reducing wages, and this means that its workers will be able to purchase a declining share of what they produce. This effectively means Japan will be growing at the expense of its trading partners. As the Japanese become less able to consume all they produce, the excess must be exported abroad.

If the world were in ruddy good health, we might not worry too much about policies aimed at Japan’s pulling itself out of the mess created in the 1980s, but with the whole world struggling with weak demand and with country after country trying to reduce domestic unemployment by selling more abroad – effectively exporting unemployment (with Germany in particular hoping to resolve the European crisis not by increasing its net domestic demand, as it should, but rather by forcing German surpluses outside Europe) – there is a real question in my mind as to how successful the Japanese program of Abenomics is likely to be if it implicitly requires a burgeoning trade surplus.

Remember that if one country increases its savings rate, unless there is a net increase in global investment there must be a commensurate reduction in the savings rate of the rest of the world so that savings and investment always balance globally. There are broadly speaking two ways this can happen. In the pre-crisis days this reduction in the savings rate of the rest of the world occurred mainly in the form of soaring consumption fueled by credit, and in this way unemployment stayed low. Since the crisis – which because of the negative wealth effect saw credit-fueled consumption drop – foreign savings have been reduced by a rise in foreign unemployment

This means that if Japan forces up its savings rate, and assuming that we are unlikely to return in the next few years to a credit-fueled consumption binge, the only way the world can respond to a structural forcing up of the Japanese savings rate is either by higher unemployment outside Japan or, if Japan’s trade partners take steps to protect themselves from higher Japanese trade surpluses, higher unemployment inside Japan.

The debt-servicing cost of nominal GDP growth

But there is more, perhaps much more. Japan is struggling with an enormous debt burden, and perhaps this explains why Tokyo is so eager to engage in policies that force up the Japanese savings rate. As long as more than 100% of Japanese borrowing is funded by domestic savings (if Japan runs a current account surplus is must be a net exporter, not importer, of capital), it doesn’t have to rely on fickle foreigners, who might not be satisfied with coupons close to zero, to fund its enormous debt burden.

But the debt burden creates its own very dangerous source of trade instability. To understand why, we need to consider what happens to interest rates in Japan if nominal growth rates rise.

In Japan interest rates are currently very low, close to zero. With total government debt amounting to more than twice the country’s GDP – which puts it among the most heavily indebted governments in the world – it is not hard to see how low nominal interest rates benefit Japan. With interest rates close to zero, there is very little cashflow pressure on the government from servicing its debt.

Some people might argue that nominal interest rates do not matter. We should be looking at real interest rates, they would argue, and with Japan’s having experienced deflation for much of the past two decades, real interest rates in Japan are high and the nominal rate is largely irrelevant.

This is true, real interest rates do matter, but it doesn’t mean that nominal interest rates do not. In fact both real and nominal interest rates matter, albeit for different reasons. Real rates matter for all the obvious reasons – they represent the real cost to the borrower in terms of a transfer of resources from the borrower to the lender. But nominal rates also matter because they effectively determine the implicit amortization schedule of principal payments.

When the nominal rate is zero or close to zero in a deflationary environment, in other words, interest is effectively capitalized in real terms. In fact whenever the real rate exceeds the nominal rate, as it has in Japan for much of the past two decades, the cashflow cost of servicing the debt is lower than the real cost, and the difference is effectively converted into real principal and deferred. In real terms, in other words, Japanese debt is growing by the difference between the real rate and the nominal rate, and this effectively represents a reduction in the cashflow cost of servicing its debt.

When nominal interest rates are positive and higher than the real rate, however, there is effectively an acceleration of real principal payments. This means that as long as nominal rates are very low, the real cost of servicing the debt is low and the principal payments are postponed, with some of the interest even being capitalized. As nominal rates rise, however, the real cost of servicing the debt during each payment period consists of interest plus some real principal.

This is just a long, perhaps pedantic, way of pointing out that even if the real interest rate in Japan declines, debt servicing is likely to be much more difficult as the nominal rate rises. Japan might be paying a lower real rate, but it is also implicitly paying down principle, instead of capitalizing it. Tokyo would need a significant increase in revenues, or a significant decrease in expenditures, to cover the cost.

So what would force Japan to raise its nominal interest rate? In principle the nominal interest rate should be more or less in line with the nominal GDP growth rate. If it is higher, growth generated by investing capital is disproportionately retained by net savers (including mainly the household sector). There is, in other words, a hidden transfer of resources from net borrowers to net savers.

If the nominal lending rate is lower than the nom
inal GDP growth rate, as is the case in China today and Japan during the 1980s, the opposite occurs. There is a hidden transfer from net savers to net borrowers, and because net savers are mainly the household sector, this will put downward pressure on the household share of income even as it gooses investment growth. This hidden transfer has been at the heart of the rapid economic growth that typically occurs in financially repressed economies during the earlier stages, and is also at the heart of the investment misallocation process that typically occurs during the later stages. We have seen this very clearly in China.

Will Tokyo raise interest rates?

Japan is trying to generate both positive inflation and real GDP growth, so that it is trying urgently to raise the growth rate of nominal GDP. What happens if and when it is successful? For example let us assume that Japan’s GDP is able to grow nominally by 4-5% a year – what will happen to the nominal Japanese interest rate?

Tokyo can either raise interest rates in line with nominal GDP growth rates or it can keep them repressed. In the former case, debt-servicing costs would soar, ultimately to 8% of GDP or more. This would create a problem for Tokyo in its ability to service its tremendous debt burden. It would need a primary surplus of around 8% of GDP just to keep debt levels constant, and it is hard to imagine how such a huge surplus would be consistent with nominal GDP growth rates of 4-5%.

If it were to raise income taxes it would create a huge burden for the household sector and almost certainly force up the national savings rate by forcing down the household share of GDP. Remember that during the 1980s Japan, like China today, generated rapid growth in part through financial repression, and one of the consequences of that rapid growth was an extraordinarily high savings rate along with a huge current account surplus, both of which were ultimately unsustainable. Japan has spent much of the past twenty years rebalancing GDP back in favor of the household sector, and to reverse this process may provide relief in the short term, but it is hard to see how I can be helpful in the medium term.

On the other hand if, in order to make its debt burden manageable Tokyo represses interest rates to well below the nominal GDP growth rate, it is effectively transferring a significant share of GDP from the household sector to the government in the form of the hidden financial repression tax. This is what Japan was doing in the 1980s, with all of the now-obvious consequences.

Japan’s enormous debt burden was manageable as long as GDP growth rates were close to zero because this allowed both for the country to rebalance its economy and for Tokyo to make the negligible debt servicing payments even as it was effectively capitalizing part of its debt servicing cost. If Japan starts to grow, however, it can no longer do so. Unless it is willing to privatize assets and pay down the debt, or to impose very heavy taxes of the business sector, one way or the other it will either face serious debt constraints or it will begin to rebalance the economy once again away from consumption.

As this happens Japan’s saving rate will inexorably creep up, and unless investment can grow just as consistently, Japan will require ever larger current account surpluses in order to resolve the excess of its production over its domestic demand. If it has trouble running large current account surpluses, as I expect in a world struggling with too much capacity and too little demand, Abenomics is likely to fail in the medium term.

Perhaps all I am saying with this analysis is that debt matters, even if it is possible to pretend for many years that it doesn’t (and this pretense was made possible by the implicit capitalization of debt-servicing costs). Japan never really wrote down all or even most of its investment misallocation of the 1980s and simply rolled it forward in the form of rising government debt. For a long time it was able to service this growing debt burden by keeping interest rates very low as a response to very slow growth and by effectively capitalizing interest payments, but if Abenomics is “successful”, ironically, it will no longer be able to play this game. Unless Japan moves quickly to pay down debt, perhaps by privatizing government assets, Abenomics, in that case, will be derailed by its own success.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/8VR4hhJ9r2U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Bad Breath of the Eurozone “Recovery”

Wolf Richter   www.testosteronepit.com   www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter

There has been a symphony of calls for American investors to take their money, after the outsized gains in our gravity-defying stock market, and plow it into European stocks. Net inflows into European equity funds have been strong since April and have recently set all-time records. In October, allocation to Eurozone equities hit the highest level in over six years.

Excitement was palpable when Eurozone PMIs stopped dropping in most countries, and started rising in some, and things appeared to be getting less worse, giving rise to euphoria that a recovery was on the way, that profits would flow in profusion, and that equities would soar.

Equities did soar. But reality has bad breath. Total Q3 estimated earnings by the 286 companies in the STOXX 600 that have quarterly estimates, according to Thomson Reuters IBES, dropped €17.3 billion from a year ago, or -14.5%. That’s right, earnings are plunging. And they're plunging the most in Italy (nearly -50%), Austria (-22%), France, Germany, and Spain (around -20%), followed by Britain…. It’s tough out there.

And the recovery-fueled revenues? Estimated Q3 revenues dropped by €39 billion, or -2.4%. The revenue quagmire covered all sectors except consumer cyclicals and non-cyclicals. Hardest hit: basic materials down 5%, telecom down 6.2%, financials down 6.4%, and tech down 6.5%.

Estimated earnings for the full year dropped by €20.5 billion, or -3.1%. That includes the still optimistic estimates for Q4. Of course, estimates for 2014 are sky-high because reality is still too far away, and hype organs can’t smell its bad breath yet.

Yet there are whiffs of it. When Euro Disney reported earnings yesterday for the year ending September 30, it disclosed that the number of visitors to Disneyland Paris dropped by 1.1 million, or 7%, to 14.9 million. Two-thirds of the decline was due to French visitors (who make up about half of total visitors). The remaining third of the decline was due to Italian and Spanish visitors. They no longer have the moolah to do fun things!

It wasn’t “disenchantment,” explained Euro Disney CEO Philippe Gas, but an “economic problem.” Other companies in the industry suffered similar declines. Compagnie des Alpes, which operates the Parc Astérix and the Futuroscope, saw traffic fall by 7.5%. For the Paris region, tourist count for 2013 is expected to be down 2%, largely due to fewer Spanish and Italian visitors.

To make up for lower traffic, Disneyland Paris cut promotions and raised prices. And so, overall revenues were down only 1.1% to €1.31 billion. And it doesn’t expect a rebound. It’s trying to fill the hole left behind by French, Italian, and Spanish visitors the best it can with visitors from other countries, such as Russia and Brazil. There is only so much blood you can still wring out of Eurozone dwellers.

In France, the troubles continue. There has been an avalanche of announced of 736 mass layoffs so far this year, though layoffs are difficult to impossible, very expensive, and often associated with political battles, labor unrest, plant occupations, vandalism, and taking local bosses hostage.

The list includes Alcatel-Lucent [Hype Collapses: Alcatel-Lucent “Could disappear,” Says CEO], Alstom, La Redoubte (whose labor unrest with strong support from political heavy weights is making the evening news), pork giant Gad, automaker PSA…. And this, even while the economy, as measured in GDP, is hopefully going to grow, at the brisk rate of, well, 0.9% in 2014 and 1.2% in 2015.

So, job creation in 2014? Nope. Companies are overstaffed by 250,000 people, according to recent estimates – due to the difficulties of laying them off. This has been confirmed by polls of CEOs who consistently say that they could raise output without having to hire. They have large productive reserves on their payrolls that now sit more or less idle. So growth, if any, in France's anemic private sector won't create new jobs. Instead, companies will try to shed workers.

For 2013, total job destruction will likely reach 91,000. Fewer jobs for more people: the working age population is growing by about 115,000 this year – France being one of the few European countries with that toxic combination of job destruction and a rapidly growing working age population. So unemployment will get worse, estimated to hit 10.9% next year. There simply is no letup in sight.

Not surprisingly, the French are having a field day, now that the EU Commission has joined the US Treasury in slamming Germany for its export-focused policies that are bleeding France, the rest of Europe, the US, and the rest of the world to death, somehow.

But even in Germany, exports are down 0.9% for the year through September, and imports are down even more, 1.9%. Germany, the locomotive of the Eurozone? Its economy has been crummy. Production, including construction and energy, dropped in September after rising in August in its typical zigzag manner, but still has not reached the level of 2007 – as the dreary graph shows (Destatis):

Same with the industrial orders. They’re still running way below their peak of 2007 (Destatis).

Retail sales look even drearier. In September, they dropped 0.4% from August, seasonally adjusted, but edged up year over year a measly 0.2% adjusted for inflation. On an annual basis, retail sales since 1994 have been on a bumpy downward slope. When sales for 2013 are available, chances are, this won’t look much better:

The economies of Italy and Spain have been wracked by long recessions, dreadful unemployment fiascos, decomposing assets in the banking sector…. Yet, Eurozone stock markets have been oblivious to reality’s ba
d breath.

The German DAX jumps from new high to new high. It’s up about 150% from its March 2009 low and 17% for the year so far. It didn’t even stop to take a breath when the economy shrank in Q4 last year. The French CAC 40, up 14% so far this year, knows no crisis. The Italian FTSE MIB, oh my! It soared 29% so far this year (though it’s still down 62% from its peak in 2000). The Spanish IBEX 35? What a dizzying ride! Up 29% just four months (though it’s still down 52% from its 2007 real-estate bubble peak)!

Another sign that the sea of trillions that central banks have been printing, particularly in the US, floats even the leakiest boats. The bad breath of reality? Ignored. For the time being.

The euro, its dexterous management, the “whatever-it-takes” guarantees by ECB President Draghi, the trillions being shifted around to prop up banks and governments – all these efforts to keep the Eurozone duct-taped together have hit countries differently. Including France and Germany, that are now shooting at each other, but hitting the ECB. Read…. France Clamors for Currency War, Bundesbank Warns Of Housing Bubble

And here I am on RT with Max Keiser. High-octane, pungent, and funny! Risk of whiplash…. Wolf Richter On The Keiser Report: Debtonomics And The NSA


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/dvU1Pgda3Ws/story01.htm testosteronepit

Big Institutions Bet “All In” On Small Caps

Last week, over a year after we first forecast a major short squeeze-driven outperformance of the most shorted small- and micro-cap stocks, none other than Goldman jumped on the “buy the most shorted names” bandwagon, which promptly led us to wonder if the rally in both the most shorted names, and also in the small cap Russell 2000 index, is finally coming to an end.

The reality, as the chart below shows, is that despite 2013’s rate-driven headfake, where Russell 2000 stocks have outperformed the S&P in close approximation with the 10 Year yield, whose surge was incorrectly translated as an indication of economic strengthening when it was merely reacting to fears about the Fed’s gradual tapering, that the Russell is still solidly outperforming the S&P year to date.

In fact, to many buying the Russell 2000 is merely the highly levered bet with which the bulk of institutions (recall that almost all hedge funds, and a majority of mutual funds, are underperforming the S&P for a 5th consecutive year) seek to make up for losses in their portfolios. Which is why as the next chart below shows, in a furious scramble to catch up by year end, the institutional Russell net futures (i.e. levered) positioning just hit a record high: the biggest investors are now all-in the smallest names.

And once again, as so often happens, flows are confused for fundamentals. Because even Goldman edmits that the entire outperformance of the small cap sector is purely due to multiple expansion, not from actual fundamental improvement.

So is the massively overbought small cap sector due for a correction?

With these manipulated, centrally-planned markets, nobody has any idea. However, for those who have once again bet all in, which just happens to be most plain vanilla dumb money, it may be time to reevaluate. Below is Goldman’s David Kostin with his take on what has emerged as the most overbought small cap sector in history:

From Goldman

Investors have cast their ballots, and so far in 2013 the vote goes to small cap US equities. 2013 has been an excellent year for US equities in
general, and an even better one for small caps in particular. The Russell 2000 has returned 28% YTD, outperforming the S&P 500 by 370 bp. Its 36% return over the last 12 months ranks a standard deviation above historical averages both in absolute terms and relative to large caps.

Small caps have outperformed large caps in almost every sector. Most notably, Russell 2000 Consumer Staples have returned nearly 40% YTD and outperformed their large cap counterparts by 15 pp. Info Tech is another notable difference, with investors citing the lack of growth among S&P 500 Tech as the reason for the small cap sector’s 33% return and 14 pp outperformance relative to the lagging large cap sector.

The two major drivers of Russell 2000 returns are US economic growth and valuation. We highlighted in April that the prospect for accelerating US GDP combined with undemanding valuation set the stage for strong returns. From May through September, the Russell 2000 returned 14%, outperforming the S&P 500 by 800 bp. After lagging by 300 bp in the last month, however, investors wonder whether the small cap rally is over.

The opposing forces of improving US GDP growth and above-average valuation suggest that the Russell 2000 will post a decent but less impressive return of 6% in the next 12 months. This compares to a historical average of 11% and implies that small caps will trade in line with large caps. We forecast the S&P 500 will reach 1850 in 12 months (also +6%).

One core pillar of small cap performance, growth, remains supportive. We expect US GDP will accelerate above-trend to a 3% pace in 2014 from under 2% this year, and remain at that rate at least through 2016. Strong expectations for earnings growth reflect the economic picture. We forecast 2014 EPS growth of 23% for the Russell 2000 compared with 8% for the S&P 500. Consensus expects earnings growth of 33% and 11%, respectively.

The other major driver, valuation, is the strongest obstacle to small caps, and the most common concern raised by investors. The Russell 2000 P/E multiple has risen 25% YTD, explaining more than 80% of the index return. It now stands above 10-year averages both in absolute terms and relative to the S&P 500. Price/book, our preferred metric for small caps, has similarly risen from a standard deviation below to nearly a  standard dev. above average levels during the last two years.

Rising interest rates should be a tailwind for Russell 2000 returns. From a fundamental perspective, small cap borrow costs, and therefore  margins and earnings, have a low sensitivity to changes in Treasury yields. Russell 2000 performance relative to the S&P 500 tracked the general path  of yields this year, with small caps garnering most of their excess returns as 10-year yields rose from 1.7% in May to nearly 3% in September. Our rate strategists forecast the 10-year will rise to 2.75% by YE 2013 and 3.25% by YE 2014.

Several other macro factors that supported small cap outperformance of large caps this year may become headwinds in 2014. The Russell 2000 has historically outperformed the S&P 500 during periods of accelerating EPS growth, expanding P/E multiples, and a strengthening dollar. We expect S&P 500 EPS growth to decelerate to 8% in 2014 from 11% this year, and that P/E multiple expansion has largely run its course. The current S&P 500 forward multiple of 15x is in line with our year-end 2014 forecast level. Our FX strategists expect USD to weaken against EUR and GBP but strengthen relative to JPY during the next 12 months.

The Russell 2000’s leverage to domestic growth boosted the index this year but may be a detriment as growth in foreign markets improves. Roughly 80% of Russell 2000 sales are derived domestically compared with 66% for the S&P 500. This benefitted the small cap index earlier this year as investors worried about growth in Europe and Asia. Both data and sentiment have improved, however; Eurozone and China PMIs are back above 50, and regional equity markets have responded.

Positioning also poses a risk to small cap performance. Small cap mutual fund and ETF flows have totaled $22bn (5% of AUM) YTD, putting 2013 on pace to be the strongest year on record. Institutions are currently $6bn net long Russell 2000 futures, the largest position since the data start in 2006. Leveraged funds have a modest $2bn net short, a decline from their $2bn net long earlier this year but enough to rank in the 85th percentile historically.

Micro data are also mixed. 81% of Russell 2000 companies have reported 3Q results. 41% of firms beat on earnings by at least a standard deviation of consensus estimates, 25% missed, and the average surprise was 3%. These metrics are all in line with the 10-year historical average. In 3Q the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index averaged its highest level since 2007, but remains well-below average levels prior to the crisis. According to the survey, revenue growth concerns are fading, and respondents continue to point to government requirements as their most important problem.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/usHoLJZIyWo/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Big Institutions Bet "All In" On Small Caps

Last week, over a year after we first forecast a major short squeeze-driven outperformance of the most shorted small- and micro-cap stocks, none other than Goldman jumped on the “buy the most shorted names” bandwagon, which promptly led us to wonder if the rally in both the most shorted names, and also in the small cap Russell 2000 index, is finally coming to an end.

The reality, as the chart below shows, is that despite 2013’s rate-driven headfake, where Russell 2000 stocks have outperformed the S&P in close approximation with the 10 Year yield, whose surge was incorrectly translated as an indication of economic strengthening when it was merely reacting to fears about the Fed’s gradual tapering, that the Russell is still solidly outperforming the S&P year to date.

In fact, to many buying the Russell 2000 is merely the highly levered bet with which the bulk of institutions (recall that almost all hedge funds, and a majority of mutual funds, are underperforming the S&P for a 5th consecutive year) seek to make up for losses in their portfolios. Which is why as the next chart below shows, in a furious scramble to catch up by year end, the institutional Russell net futures (i.e. levered) positioning just hit a record high: the biggest investors are now all-in the smallest names.

And once again, as so often happens, flows are confused for fundamentals. Because even Goldman edmits that the entire outperformance of the small cap sector is purely due to multiple expansion, not from actual fundamental improvement.

So is the massively overbought small cap sector due for a correction?

With these manipulated, centrally-planned markets, nobody has any idea. However, for those who have once again bet all in, which just happens to be most plain vanilla dumb money, it may be time to reevaluate. Below is Goldman’s David Kostin with his take on what has emerged as the most overbought small cap sector in history:

From Goldman

Investors have cast their ballots, and so far in 2013 the vote goes to small cap US equities. 2013 has been an excellent year for US equities in
general, and an even better one for small caps in particular. The Russell 2000 has returned 28% YTD, outperforming the S&P 500 by 370 bp. Its 36% return over the last 12 months ranks a standard deviation above historical averages both in absolute terms and relative to large caps.

Small caps have outperformed large caps in almost every sector. Most notably, Russell 2000 Consumer Staples have returned nearly 40% YTD and outperformed their large cap counterparts by 15 pp. Info Tech is another notable difference, with investors citing the lack of growth among S&P 500 Tech as the reason for the small cap sector’s 33% return and 14 pp outperformance relative to the lagging large cap sector.

The two major drivers of Russell 2000 returns are US economic growth and valuation. We highlighted in April that the prospect for accelerating US GDP combined with undemanding valuation set the stage for strong returns. From May through September, the Russell 2000 returned 14%, outperforming the S&P 500 by 800 bp. After lagging by 300 bp in the last month, however, investors wonder whether the small cap rally is over.

The opposing forces of improving US GDP growth and above-average valuation suggest that the Russell 2000 will post a decent but less impressive return of 6% in the next 12 months. This compares to a historical average of 11% and implies that small caps will trade in line with large caps. We forecast the S&P 500 will reach 1850 in 12 months (also +6%).

One core pillar of small cap performance, growth, remains supportive. We expect US GDP will accelerate above-trend to a 3% pace in 2014 from under 2% this year, and remain at that rate at least through 2016. Strong expectations for earnings growth reflect the economic picture. We forecast 2014 EPS growth of 23% for the Russell 2000 compared with 8% for the S&P 500. Consensus expects earnings growth of 33% and 11%, respectively.

The other major driver, valuation, is the strongest obstacle to small caps, and the most common concern raised by investors. The Russell 2000 P/E multiple has risen 25% YTD, explaining more than 80% of the index return. It now stands above 10-year averages both in absolute terms and relative to the S&P 500. Price/book, our preferred metric for small caps, has similarly risen from a standard deviation below to nearly a  standard dev. above average levels during the last two years.

Rising interest rates should be a tailwind for Russell 2000 returns. From a fundamental perspective, small cap borrow costs, and therefore  margins and earnings, have a low sensitivity to changes in Treasury yields. Russell 2000 performance relative to the S&P 500 tracked the general path  of yields this year, with small caps garnering most of their excess returns as 10-year yields rose from 1.7% in May to nearly 3% in September. Our rate strategists forecast the 10-year will rise to 2.75% by YE 2013 and 3.25% by YE 2014.

Several other macro factors that supported small cap outperformance of large caps this year may become headwinds in 2014. The Russell 2000 has historically outperformed the S&P 500 during periods of accelerating EPS growth, expanding P/E multiples, and a strengthening dollar. We expect S&P 500 EPS growth to decelerate to 8% in 2014 from 11% this year, and that P/E multiple expansion has largely run its course. The current S&P 500 forward multiple of 15x is in line with our year-end 2014 forecast level. Our FX strategists expect USD to weaken against EUR and GBP but strengthen relative to JPY during the next 12 months.

The Russell 2000’s leverage to domestic growth boosted the index this year but may be a detriment as growth in foreign markets improves. Roughly 80% of Russell 2000 sales are derived domestically compared with 66% for the S&P 500. This benefitted the small cap index earlier this year as investors worried about growth in Europe and Asia. Both data and sentiment have improved, however; Eurozone and China PMIs are back above 50, and regional equity markets have responded.

Positioning also poses a risk to small cap performance. Small cap mutual fund and ETF flows have totaled $22bn (5% of AUM) YTD, putting 2013 on pace to be the strongest year on record. Institutions are currently $6bn net long Russell 2000 futures, the largest position since the data start in 2006. Leveraged funds have a modest $2bn net short, a decline from their $2bn net long earlier this year but enough to rank in the 85th percentile historically.

Micro data are also mixed. 81% of Russell 2000 companies have reported 3Q results. 41% of firms beat on earnings by at least a standard deviation of
consensus estimates, 25% missed, and the average surprise was 3%. These metrics are all in line with the 10-year historical average. In 3Q the NFIB Small Business Optimism Index averaged its highest level since 2007, but remains well-below average levels prior to the crisis. According to the survey, revenue growth concerns are fading, and respondents continue to point to government requirements as their most important problem.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/usHoLJZIyWo/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Tori Richards on Obamacare Enabling Deadbeats

CashTucked inside nearly 11,000 pages of the
Affordable Care Act is a little-known provision that doles out
three months of free health care to individuals who choose to
default on their premiums. People who receive the federal subsidy
to be part of Obamacare will be allowed to incur a three-month
“grace period” if they can’t pay their premiums and then simply
cancel their policies, stiffing the doctors and hospitals. Their
only repercussion, writes Watchdog.org’s Tori Richards, is that
they have to wait until the following year’s open enrollment if
they want coverage on the exchange.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/09/tori-richards-on-obamacare-enabling-dead
via IFTTT

Supertyphoon Haiyan Leaves Over 1,200 Dead: The “Massive Destruction” In Photos And Videos

As reported yesterday, Typhoon Haiyan – potentially the strongest storm to ever make landfall, and stronger than Katrina and Sandy combined – has come and left the Philippines (currently heading for Vietnam), and now the time has come to evaluate the damage and count the dead. Sadly, as Reuters reports, the devastation is absolutely massive and especially in the hardest hit city of Tacloban in the central Leyte province, may match the aftermath of the Fukushima tsunami: "This is destruction on a massive scale. There are cars thrown like tumbleweed and the streets are strewn with debris." Airport manager Efren Nagrama, 47, said water levels rose up to four metres (13 ft) in the airport. "It was like a tsunami. We escaped through the windows and I held on to a pole for about an hour as rain, seawater and wind swept through the airport. Some of my staff survived by clinging to trees. I prayed hard all throughout until the water subsided."

And it's not over yet: the following clip from The Weather Channel summarizes the current position and heading of the Typhoon:

But while the worst may be yet to come, for the Philippines it is bad enough as Reuters explains:

A day after Typhoon Haiyan churned through the Philippine archipelago in a straight line from east to west, rescue teams struggled to reach far-flung regions, hampered by washed out roads, many choked with debris and fallen trees.

The death toll is expected to rise sharply from the fast-moving storm, whose circumference eclipsed the whole country and which late on Saturday was heading for Vietnam.

Among the hardest hit was coastal Tacloban in central Leyte province, where preliminary estimates suggest more than 1,000 people were killed, said Gwendolyn Pang, secretary general of the Philippine Red Cross, as water surges rushed through the city.

"An estimated more than 1,000 bodies were seen floating in Tacloban as reported by our Red Cross teams," she told Reuters. "In Samar, about 200 deaths. Validation is ongoing."

She expected a more exact number to emerge after a more precise counting of bodies on the ground in those regions.

Witnesses said bodies covered in plastic were lying on the streets. Television footage shows cars piled atop each other.

The Philippines has yet to restore communications with officials in Tacloban, a city of about 220,000. A government official estimated at least 100 were killed and more than 100 wounded, but conceded the toll would likely rise sharply.

The airport was nearly destroyed as raging seawaters swept through the city, shattering the glass of the airport tower, levelling the terminal and overturning nearby vehicles.

"Almost all houses were destroyed, many are totally damaged. Only a few are left standing," said Major Rey Balido, a spokesman for the national disaster agency.

Local television network ABS-CBN showed images of looting in one of the city's biggest malls, with residents carting away everything from appliances to suitcases and grocery items.

Airport manager Efren Nagrama, 47, said water levels rose up to four metres (13 ft) in the airport.

"It was like a tsunami. We escaped through the windows and I held on to a pole for about an hour as rain, seawater and wind swept through the airport. Some of my staff survived by clinging to trees. I prayed hard all throughout until the water subsided."

Across the country, about a million people took shelter in 37 provinces after President Benigno Aquino appealed to those in the typhoon's path to leave vulnerable areas.

"For casualties, we think it will be substantially more," Aquino told reporters.

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Photos of the damage via the Weather Channel:

 

Finally, here is video evidence of what the stronger typhoon in history looks like on the ground:


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/wpO8fb7we5U/story01.htm Tyler Durden