Showing posts with label US markets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US markets. Show all posts

Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Great Dichotomy: Global Economy at the Precipice; in Panic, Central Banks Flood World with Liquidity, Global Stocks Soar!

The Great Dichotomy: Global Economy at the Precipice; in Panic, Central Banks Flood World with Liquidity, Global Stocks Soar!

We are at a threshold of something unseen in history. Aside from negative policy rates, the record volume of negative-yielding securities, previously inverted yield curves, record repos, central bank balance sheets, and many more, the great dichotomy has been the record-setting global stock markets in the face of a sharply decelerating global economy.

 
If you haven’t been tuned in, inspired by the recent melt-up of US equity markets, the MSCI World Index hit an all-time high last week.

In the US, the participation rate hasn’t been 100% for the major benchmarks. While the NYSE Composite (NYA) is at its record resistance, the Dow Jones Transportation Average (TRAN), the small scale Russell 2000 (RUT) and its counterpart the S&P 600 (SML), and the mid-cap S&P 600 (MID) remains distant from their previous respective apexes.

Meanwhile, developed markets have outperformed as MSCI Asia, emerging markets and the UK have lagged. (Yardeni.com)

What’s striking has been the path deviation between the path between stock prices and the real economy as shown by the Global ISM index.

 
And stocks are soaring despite OECD’s leading indicators and world trade activities have been flashing red!
 
Interestingly, even the S&P 500 seems to have deviated ridiculously from its fundamentals: falling revenue growth and contracting income that has reflected on the general corporate profits after tax (excluding inventory valuation adjustments and Corporate Consumption adjustments). The aberration has spread to even Perma-bull Ed Yardeni’s favorite boom-bust indicator (CRB Raw Industrial prices divided by initial unemployment claims)!

And along with the ongoing strains in the repo market, which has prompted the US Federal Reserve to reactivate its $60 billion (not QE) T-bill purchases, global central banks have embarked on a joint campaign to ease by cutting rates: (from Charlie Bilello) Rate Cuts in 2019... Fed: -75 bps ECB: -10 bps Denmark: -10 bps Australia: -75 bps Brazil: -150 bps Russia: -125 bps India: -135 bps China: -16 bps Korea: -50 bps Mexico: -75 bps Indonesia: -100 bps Philippines: -75 bps Thailand: -50 bps Chile: -100 bps Turkey: -1000 bps

As such, the Fed’s balance sheet has spiked, which helped stoke its money supply growth.
 
Over half of the global central banks have eased. The FED’s $ 286 billion balance sheet expansion (as of November 13) surely fired up the S&P 500.

And the easing measures undertaken by global central banks have had divergent effects; liquidity in developed markets have bounced while emerging markets have yet to respond.

Nonetheless, the global money supply has been ramped along with the MSCI world index, even as the soft indicator, the economic surprise index continues to tumble!

In spite of these collaborative measures by activist central banks to prevent a downturn, the astonishing escalating deviation between financial assets and the real economy should highlight the speculative blowoff phase of the current market cycle.
 
Higher asset prices, it is held, generates liquidity that may push exposing imbalances down the road. However, with global debt rocketing to top $255 trillion, credit markets haven’t been as convinced as the stock markets that flooding the world with liquidity would suffice.

However, US Junk bond’s widening spreads seem to signal growing investor aversion towards risky credit.

Instead, such distinction reveals the extent of the erosion of real savings with the continuing buildup of excess capacity, debt saturation, expanding Ponzi finance or zombie companies, the conspicuous lack of investments, and the excessive fixation on chasing yields as symptoms.

Diminishing returns from the sweet spot from such joint interventions by central banks would arrive earlier than most expect, trade war or not.

Monday, April 04, 2016

Donald Trump Predicts 'Very Massive Recession' in US Economy, Warns that it is a 'Terrible Time' to Invest in Stocks

It's really interesting to watch fireworks or controversial assertions from 'anti-establishment' US presidential aspirant Donald Trump. Well 'anti-establishment' is what he presents or markets himself to the public. Whether this image is real or not is something that will only be known if he manages to implant himself in Washington. (Disclosure I do not endorse any candidate)

But once again, Mr. Trump takes on the side of the grizzly bears.

From Reuters
Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump predicted that the United States is on course for a "very massive recession," warning that a combination of high unemployment and an overvalued stock market had set the stage for another economic slump.

"I think we’re sitting on an economic bubble. A financial bubble," the billionaire businessman said in an interview with The Washington Post published on Saturday.

Coming off a tough week on the campaign trail in which he made a series of missteps, Trump's latest comments bring him back into the limelight ahead of Tuesday's important primary in Wisconsin where he trails in the polls.

The former reality TV star said that the real U.S. jobless figure is much higher than five percent number released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

"We’re not at 5 percent unemployment," Trump said.

"We’re at a number that’s probably into the twenties if you look at the real number,” he said, adding that the official jobless figure is "statistically devised to make politicians — and in particular presidents — look good."

Trump said “it’s a terrible time right now” to invest in the stock market, offering a more bleak view of the U.S. economy than that held by many mainstream economists.
Is Mr. Trump really a bear? Or is he taking this position as campaign strategy to assail Wall Street?

Thursday, June 17, 2010

What The Distribution Of S&P 500 Sector Weightings Seem To Say

Bespoke has a nice depiction in the distribution of weightings among different sectors constituting the US S&P 500.

Bespoke writes,

``Technology is currently the biggest sector in the index at 18.9%, and it has been the biggest since it overtook the Financial sector early on in the financial crisis. There has been quite a bit of movement in sector weightings in recent years. At the bear market low in March 2009, the Financial sector made up just 8.9% of the index. It has charged back since then and has nearly doubled its weighting to 16.3%. Consumer Discretionary, Industrials, and Technology are the only other sectors that have increased their weightings during the current bull market. Health Care has really dropped off, going from 16.1% at the bear market low to its current level of 11.8%. Energy has also dropped quite a bit from 14.3% to 11%. There are now five sectors with weightings that are between 10.5% and 11.8%. Utilities, Materials, and Telecom continue to have very low weightings, and combined they still make up less than the 7th largest sector. The performance of any of these three sectors has a very minimal impact on the overall direction of the market." (bold emphasis added)

Some observations:

-The steady growth of the technology sector, and its apparent leadership today appears to reflect on the fast evolving US economy into the information age.

-The recent upsurge of the financial exhibits massive inflationism

-who says the US consumer is dead? Consumer discretionary outperformed the others, second only to financials based on the changes on March 2009 and the current

-the growth of in the industrials also suggest that the US economy is seeing some 'progress'

-at the current circumstance, there is a tight competition in 5 sectors: health care, consumer staples, energy, consumer discretionary and industrials, where I think energy has been underappreciated.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

A Very Eventful Week: Philippine Elections And The Euro Bailout

``It's simple: when the utility of what you want (however you measure it) is less than the cost of the debt, don't buy it.” Seth Godin, Consumer debt is not your friend

The past two weeks have been quite eventful both in local and in international terms.

From an international perspective, we’ve been seeing the unfolding of the controversial political developments in Europe, which has apparently sent markets into steep pendulum swings.

From the local perspective, the culmination of the national elections has added to the ongoing optimism in domestic market activities as seen in the Peso and the Phisix.

And this seems to have partially created a divergence which has resulted to an outperformance (see figure 1).


Figure 1: Phisix Outperforms Global Markets

As to whether the Phisix and the Peso can sustain these divergences outside the sphere of global influence remains to be seen.

In the chart, fundamentally the undulations of the Phisix, has coincided with the actions abroad, i.e. the US S&P 500 (SPX), Europe’s (Stox50) and Dow Jones Asia (DJP1), as revealed by coincidental troughs from the Greece tremors last February (vertical line), aside from the sharp selloff during the other week which also signified as a sequel of the previous Greece episode (arrows).

Let me add that Friday’s selloff in the international markets have yet to be factored in the Phisix.

The point is, it would seem fallacious to assert that the local markets have been operating independent of global influence until last week.

Where the Phisix has broken out of the consolidation to a 25 month high last week, we can only discern that such buoyancy had been a consequence from the recent local elections.

All told, we have been validated anew that election jitters or risks had only been an exaggeration[1] apparently a figment of imagination of media and the politically obsessed groups.

Further, news reports where the nation was supposedly stunned[2] by the speed of election count only reveals of the backward orientation held by the public with regards to the current state of technological capability. Yet in today’s technology enhanced real time world, these returns, while fast, have not been impressive, or fast enough.

Nevertheless, the question in our mind is whether the Phisix will manage to sustainably diverge from the global markets, or if the current pressures seen in the global markets imply for a reversal, which may eventually affect the performance the Phisix.



[1] Why The Presidential Elections Will Have Little Impact On Philippine MarketsPhilippine Markets And Elections: What People Do Against What People Say and

[2] Inquirer.net, Fast count stuns nation


Sunday, July 19, 2009

Example Of Chart Pattern Failure

As we always say chart patterns can’t be relied upon for that pivotal decision, most especially the short term ones.


The May-July S&P 500 Head and Shoulders pattern (blue curves) which had been used by the bears to call for a market crash appears to have been invalidated.

However, there is another longer term reverse Head and Shoulders (red curves) from which a break off the 950 neckline level would suggest of a vital upward thrust. Technically a break from the 950 should lead towards the 1,234 target. I doubt this to occur unless governments inflate extensively anew (second round stimulus?).

I have no opinion on where the US markets will be headed over the short or medium term. Although given the inflationary tendencies of the US government, it may seem that the recent lows could have likely served as the bottom or the floor, unless proven otherwise. But we're not saying its gonna be a bull market too.

Remember, inflation as a component of US equity returns, [see last week’s Worth Doing: Inflation Analytics Over Traditional Fundamentalism!] are likely to grow at a much faster clip than dividends or real capital returns.

And the US government has been practically inflating to support asset (stock and real estate) prices.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Worth Doing: Inflation Analytics Over Traditional Fundamentalism!

``Economics is not about goods and services; it is about the actions of living men. Its goal is not to dwell upon imaginary constructions such as equilibrium. These constructions are only tools of reasoning. The sole task of economics is analysis of the actions of men, is the analysis of processes.”- Ludwig von Mises Logical Catallactics Versus Mathematical Catallactics, Chapter 16 of Human Action

Marketing guru Seth Godin has this fantastic advice on quality,

``When we talk about quality, it's easy to get confused.

``That's because there are two kinds of quality being discussed. The most common way it's talked about in business is "meeting specifications." An item has quality if it's built the way it was designed to be built.

``There's another sort of quality, though. This is the quality of, "is it worth doing?". The quality of specialness and humanity, of passion and remarkability.

``Hence the conflict. The first sort of quality is easy to mandate, reasonably easy to scale and it fits into a spreadsheet very nicely. I wonder if we're getting past that.

In essence, everything we do accounts for a tradeoff. When we make choices it’s always a measure of acting on values.

For instance, the “quality” of providing investment advisory is likewise a tradeoff. It’s a compromise between the interests of investors relative to the writer and or the publisher. It’s a choice on the analytical processes utilized to prove or disprove a subject. It’s a preference over the time horizon on the account of the investment theme/s covered. And it’s also a partiality on the recommendations derived from such investigations.

So “meeting specifications” which is the conventional sell side paradigm has mainly the following characteristics, it is:

-short term oriented (emphasis on momentum or technical approaches),

-frames studies based on “spreadsheet variety” (reduces financial analysis to historical performance than to address forward dynamics),

-serves to entertain more than to advance strategic thinking,

- promotes heuristics or cognitive biases

-upholds the reductionist perspective or the oversimplified depiction of how capital markets work and

-benefits the publisher more than the client (Agency Problem)

Yet many don’t realize this simply because this has been deeply ingrained into our mental faculties by self serving institutions that dominate the industry.

And instead of merely meeting the specifications which is the norm, here we offer the alternative-the “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Why?

-Because we realize that successful investing comes with the application of the series of "right" actions based on the “right” wisdom and rigorous discipline.

And with “right” wisdom comes the broader understanding of the seen and unseen effects of government policies that IMPACT asset markets or the economy more than just the simplistic observation that markets operate like an ordinary machine with quantified variables.

-Because government policies shape bubble cycles which underpins the performance of asset prices.

Think of it, if markets operate unambiguously on the platform of “valuations” or the assumption of the prevalence of rational based markets, then bubble cycles won’t exist.

Hence, the failure to understand policy directions or policy implications would be the Achilles Heels of any market participant aspiring success in this endeavor.

For instance, with nearly 90% of oil reserves or supplies under government or state owned institutions, any analysis of oil pricing dynamics predicated on sheer demand and supply without the inclusion of policy and political trends would be a serious folly or a severe misdiagnosis.

Of course, money printing by global central banks adds to the demand side of the oil equation. Moreover, price control policies can be an interim variable. The recent attempt to curb speculative trading in oil can be construed as a significant factor for the recent oil collapse in oil prices.

-And also because I try to keep in mind and heart Frederic Bastiat’s operating principle, ``Between a good and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference - the one takes account of the visible effect; the other takes account both of the effects which are seen, and also of those which it is necessary to foresee. Now this difference is enormous, for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favourable, the ultimate consequences are fatal, and the converse. Hence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come, while the true economist pursues a great good to come, - at the risk of a small present evil.”

In short, the seen and unseen effects of policy actions and political trends are the operating dynamics from which underlines our “is it worth doing?” perspective.

Financial Markets As Fingerprints

We have repeatedly argued against the mainstream and conventional view that micro fundamentals drives the markets [see Are Stock Market Prices Driven By Earnings or Inflation?].

Stock markets, for us, have been driven by principally monetary inflation, and secondarily from sentiment induced by such inflation dynamics. All the rest of the attendant stories (mergers, buyouts, fundamentals such as financial ratio, etc…) function merely as rationalizations that feeds on the public’s predominant dependence on heuristics as basis of decisions in a loose money landscape.

In an environment where liquidity is constrained, no stories or financial strength have escaped the wrath of the downside reratings pressure.

The disconnect between market price actions over the performance of corporate financials or the domestic economy have been conspicuous enough during the last bull (2003-2007) and bear cycles (2007-2008) to prove our assertion.

Moreover, up to this point our skeptics haven’t produced any strong evidence to refute our arguments. Instead we had been given a runaround, alluding to some regional securities as possible proof of exemptions.

Here we discovered that inflation and inflation driven sentiment seem to apply significantly even in the more sophisticated markets of Asia as well.

So, instead of weakening our arguments, the wider perspective has even reinforced it.

Moreover, financial markets shouldn’t be seen as operating in uniform conditions. Such reductionist view risks glossing over the genuine internal mechanisms driving the markets. The underlying structure of every national financial markets appear like fingerprints-they are unique.

For instance, they have different degrees of depth relative to the national economy as seen in Figure 1.


Figure 1: McKinsey Quarterly Mapping Global Capital Markets Fifth Annual

The McKinsey Quarterly map reveals of the extent of distinction of financial market depth across the world. Yet growth dynamics are underpinned by idiosyncratic national traits.

So it would be an “apples to oranges” fallacy to take the Philippines as an example to compare with the US markets or other markets in trying to ascertain the degree of “fundamentals” affecting price actions versus the inflation perspective.

Finding scant evidence that the Philippine market is driven by fundamentals, we’ll move to ascertain the impact of inflation to US markets-the bedrock of the capital markets.

The US has deeper and more sophisticated markets, where [as we pointed out in PSE: The Handicaps Of A One Directional Reward Based Platform] investors can be exposed to profit from opportunities in all market directions- up, down and consolidation, given the wide array of instruments to choose from, such as the Exchange Traded Funds, Options, Derivatives and other forms of securitization vehicles.

This leads to more pricing efficiency in relative and absolute terms.

This also implies that deeper and more efficient markets tend to be more complicated. Nonetheless this doesn't discount policy induced liquidity as a significant variable affecting asset pricing.

In lesser efficient markets as the Philippines or in many emerging markets, the lesser the sophistication and the insufficient depth accentuates the liquidity issue.

The fact that the broad based global meltdown in 2008 converged with almost all asset markets except the US dollar, had been a reflection of liquidity constraints as a pivotal factor among other variables.

S&P 500 Total Nominal Return Highlights Rapid Inflation Growth!

Since we don’t indulge in Ipse Dixitism, the proof in the pudding, for us, is always in the eating.


Figure 2: Investment Postcards: Components of Equity Returns

This excellent chart from Prieur Du Plessis’ Investment Postcards (see figure 2) showcases the categorized return of equity capital since 1871. That’s 138 years of history!

Says Mr. Plessis, ``Let’s go back to the total nominal return of 8.7% per annum and analyze its components. We already know that 2.2% per annum came from inflation. Real capital growth (i.e. price movements net of inflation) added another 1.8% per annum. Where did the rest of the return come from? Wait for it, dividends - yes, boring dividends, slavishly reinvested year after year, contributed 4.7% per annum. This represents more than half the total return over time!”

While it is true that dividends accounted for as the biggest growth factor in equity returns in the S&P 500 benchmark yet, where inflation so far has constituted about 25.3% (2.2%/8.7%) of total returns, what has been neglected is that rate of growth of inflation has far outpaced the growth clip of both capital and dividend growth.

Notice that inflation had been a factor only since the US Federal Reserve was born in 1913. Prior to 1913, equity returns had been purely dividends and capital growth.

And further notice that the share of inflation relative to total returns has rapidly accelerated since President Nixon ended the Bretton Woods standard by closing the gold window in August 1971 otherwise known as the Nixon Shock.

To add, the share of inflation has virtually eclipsed the growth in real capital!!!

In other words, investing paradigms predicated on the pre-inflation to moderate inflation era will unlikely work in an environment where inflation grows faster than dividends or capital.

Hence it is a folly to latch on to the beliefs of “fundamental driven” prices without the inclusion of policy induced inflation in the context of asset pricing.

This is a solid case where past performances don’t guarantee future outcomes!

To further add, if inflation has a growing material impact to the pricing of US equity securities, then the degree of correlation with the rest of the global markets must be significantly greater under the premise of market pricing efficiency.

Policy Induced Volatilities Against Mainstream Fundamentalism

Here is more feasting on the pudding (this should make me obese).


Figure 3: Hussman Funds Secular Bear Markets And The Volatility Of Inflation

Another outstanding chart, see figure 3, this time from William Hester of Hussman Funds.

Mr. Hester uses the volatility of inflation as a proxy for economic volatility.

In the chart, low inflation volatility extrapolates to higher price P/E multiples and vice versa.

Here it is clearly evident that when volatility is low, bubble valuations emerge (left window), whereas the regression to the mean from excessive valuations occurs when volatility of inflation or economic volatility is high (right window).

Mr. Hester adds, ``It's not only the level of volatility and uncertainty in the economy that matters to investors, but also the trend and the persistence in this uncertainty. Shrinking amounts of volatility in the economy creates an environment where investors are willing to pay higher and higher multiples for stocks, while growing uncertainty brings lower and lower multiples.” (bold highlight mine)

So, it isn’t just economic volatility (as signified by inflation) but uncertainty as a major contributory factor to the gyrations of price earning multiples.

And where does “uncertainty” emanate from?

It is rooted mostly from government intervention or political policies instituted by governments, such as protectionism, subsidies, higher taxes et. al.. or any policies that fosters “regime uncertainty” or ``pervasive uncertainty about the property-rights regime -- about what private owners can reliably expect the government to do in its actions that affect private owners' ability to control the use of their property, to reap the income it yields, and to transfer it to others on voluntarily acceptable terms” as defined by Professor Robert Higgs.

In actuality, Mr. Hester’s technical observations of the proximate correlations of inflation and price/earnings multiples is a reflection or a symptom of the operational phases of the business cycles.

As depicted by Hans F. Sennholz in the The Great Depression, ``Like the business cycles that had plagued the American economy in 1819–1820, 1839–1843, 1857–1860, 1873–1878, 1893–1897, and 1920–1921. In each case, government had generated a boom through easy money and credit, which was soon followed by the inevitable bust. The spectacular crash of 1929 followed five years of reckless credit expansion by the Federal Reserve System under the Coolidge administration.” (bold highlights mine)

So it would be plain shortsightedness for any serious market participants to blindly read historical “fundamental” performances and project these into future prices while discounting political or policy dimensions into asset pricing.

As we noted in last week’s Inflation Is The Global Political Choice, the financial and economic milieu has been hastily evolving post crash and is likely being dynamically reconfigured from where asset pricing will likewise reflect on such unfolding dynamics, ``the unfolding accounts of deglobalization amidst a reconfiguration of global trade, labor and capital flow dynamics, which used to be engineered around the US consumer, will likely be reinforced by an increasing trend of reregulations which may lead to creeping protectionism and reduced competition and where higher taxes may reduce productivity and effectively raise national cost structures, as discussed in Will Deglobalization Lead To Decoupling?

Hence, any purported objectives to attain ALPHA without the context of the measurable impact from policy or political dimensions over the long term are inconsistent with the intended goals.

Instead, these signify as lamentable and plaintive quest for short term HOLY Grail pursuits which is not attributable to investing but to speculative punts.

Hence, traditional “fundamentalism” serves as nothing more than the search for rationalizations or excuses that would conform to cognitive biased based risk taking decisions.

It’s not objectivity, but heuristics (mental shortcuts or cognitive biases) which demands for traditional fundamentalism metrics since evolving market and economic realities and expectations don’t match.

Under A New Normal, Old Habits Die Hard

London School of Economics Professor Willem Buiter [in Can the US economy afford a Keynesian stimulus?] makes the same policy based analysis when he predicts that the US will prospectively underperform the global markets due to the political direction,

``There is no chance that a nation as reputationally scarred and maimed as the US is today could extract any true “alpha” from foreign investors for the next 25 years or so. So the US will have to start to pay a normal market price for the net resources it borrows from abroad. It will therefore have to start to generate primary surpluses, on average, for the indefinite future. A nation with credibility as regards its commitment to meeting its obligations could afford to delay the onset of the period of pain. It could borrow more from abroad today, because foreign creditors and investors are confident that, in due course, the country would be willing and able to generate the (correspondingly larger) future primary external surpluses required to service its external obligations. I don’t believe the US has either the external credibility or the goodwill capital any longer to ask, Oliver Twist-like, for a little more leeway, a little more latitude. I believe that markets - both the private players and the large public players managing the foreign exchange reserves of the PRC, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, the Gulf states, Japan and other nations - will make this clear. There will, before long (my best guess is between two and five years from now) be a global dumping of US dollar assets, including US government assets. Old habits die hard.” (bold highlights mine)

Indeed, old habits, mainstream but antiquated beliefs are even more difficult to eliminate.


Figure 4: John Maudlin/Safehaven.com: Buddy, Can You Spare $5 Trillion?

In an environment where the dearth of capital will be overwhelmed by the expansive liabilities of global governments deficit spending policies [see figure 4], the underlying policy trends will determine, to a large extent, the dimensions of asset pricing dynamics.

And as we noted last week, deficits won’t be the key issue but the financing. Here a myriad of variables will likely come into play, ``the crux of the matter is that the financing aspect of the deficits is more important than the deficit itself. And here savings rate, foreign exchange reserves, economic growth, tax revenues, financial intermediation, regulatory framework, economic freedom, cost of doing business, inflation rates, demographic trends and portfolio flows will all come into play. So any experts making projections based on the issue of deficits alone, without the context of scale and source of financing, is likely misreading the entire picture.”

Yet, like us, PIMCO’s Bill Gross in his June Outlook sees a “New Normal” environment where investing strategies will have to be reshaped.

``It is probable that trillion-dollar deficits are here to stay because any recovery is likely to reflect “new normal” GDP growth rates of 1%-2% not 3%+ as we used to have. Staying rich in this future world will require strategies that reflect this altered vision of global economic growth and delevered financial markets. Bond investors should therefore confine maturities to the front end of yield curves where continuing low yields and downside price protection is more probable. Holders of dollars should diversify their own baskets before central banks and sovereign wealth funds ultimately do the same. All investors should expect considerably lower rates of return than what they grew accustomed to only a few years ago. Staying rich in the “new normal” may not require investors to resemble Balzac as much as Will Rogers, who opined in the early 30s that he wasn’t as much concerned about the return on his money as the return of his money.” (bold highlights mine)

So yes, ALPHA can only be achieved with respect to the understanding of the scope and scale of policy and political trends and its implication to the sundry financial assets and to the global and local economy as well as to industries. For instance, industries that have endured or will see expanded presence of the visible hand of governments will have systemic distortions that may nurture bubble like features of expanded volatility or could see underperformance over the long run.

And any models or assumptions built around traditional metrics are likely to be rendered less effective than one which incorporates political and policy based analysis.

In short, like it or not, in the environment of the New Normal, government inflation dynamics will function as the zeitgeist which determines financial asset pricing trends.

This brings us back to the issue of quality. For us, in almost every sense, it appears that the "is it worth doing?" perspective is the more profitable approach than simply abiding by the conventional “meeting specifications”.

Nonetheless for those who can’t rid themselves of such archaic habits, we suggest for them to enroll in local stock market forums where traditional fundamental information from diverse sellside sources or even rumor based information can possibly be obtained for free! Forums are recommended sources of information for short term players seeking market adrenalin and excitement.


Sunday, February 01, 2009

Learning from Past Crisis; History As Basis For the Future

``When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion - when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing – when you see money flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors – when you see that men get richer by graft and pull than by work, and your laws don't protect you against them, but protect them against you – when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice – you may know that your society is doomed.” Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

Most of us would like to know when this crisis might come to a close. Most of us would also like to know when life might ‘normalize’.

Of course, life, as we know it, won’t likely be the same or “normalize” as it had been during the past decade.

We are likely to live in a world which will be governed by more regulations, higher interest rates, lower leverage, higher taxes, possibly diminished ‘globalization’ in terms of trade, and capital flows and reduced political freedom especially seen through the lens of the once liberal Anglo-Saxon world, as discussed earlier in 2009: Asian Markets Could OUTPERFORM.

Yet even as they undergo rehabilitation, we can’t discount the reemergence of bubbles through other asset classes and the reorientation of the conduct of the world’s political economy. Remember, bubble cycles are the inherent character of our paper money system.

Historical Roadmap

Moreover, while history may not exactly repeat, the lessons of the past may provide us with some essential clues or may function as some sort of a roadmap to help guide us in navigating our way through the present financial crisis.

As we have discussed in Will Previous Crisis Serve As Deserving Guidepost For Today’s Crisis?, Harvard Professor and former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart recently updated a study of the previous world crises, see figure 1.


Figure 1 Rogoff-Reinhart: Learning From The World’s Past Real Estate-Banking Crises

In the Rogoff-Reinhart paper, the ‘Aftermath of the Crisis’, we are treated to 18 major post war banking-real estate crises of advanced economies including some of the recent emerging markets crises and its consequent impact to domestic real estate and the equity market in terms of pricing based losses and the periods of agonizing adjustments (peak-to-trough).

We can observe that the typical or average housing cycle (right window) losses of real housing prices have been 35.5% and has lasted an average of 6 years. As you may notice, the Philippines, in the wake of the Asian Crisis in 1997, suffered the second biggest loss of 50% after Hong Kong, and where our painstaking market cleansing cycle culminated after 6 long years. It is also important to note that the longest real estate bear market cycle was recorded in Japan and which registered over 15 years of losses.

Next, equity losses averaged 55.9% which lasted for about 3.4 years.

In addition, a defining characteristic of such crises is that the real public debt exploded as governments suffer from falling tax revenues and increased spending to fight off recession. On the average, real public debts ballooned by 86%.

Applying Past Lessons Today

So where are we today?


Figure 2: US Housing Prices (researchrecap) Japan Housing Prices (J. Quinn: Financial Sense)

If we are to base our analysis on the epicenter of today’s crisis which is the US, then housing prices based on the Case-Shiller index has lost 30% (see figure 2, left window), and is almost near the average loss of 35% during similar crises. Peaking in 2005, the housing bear market is now on its 4th year which is also approaching the average of 6 years.

In terms of the bear market cycle in equities, the major US bellwether as signified by the S&P 500 has lost over 50% and is now 16 months old or 1.3 years. Compared to the average of 3.4 years, the equity bear market cycle suggests of a transition for about two years more.

So simplistically speaking 2011 should be a turning point for the US real estate and US equities…if we are to base it on the average.

But as our earlier caveat, all crises aren’t the same.

Further, the average alludes to the typical. Since today’s landscape is global in scope compared against a regional or national phenomenon in the past, it is likely that the disposition of today’s crisis will be distinct.

Besides, the collective global government response has been unprecedented in scale. Importantly, today’s crisis jolts the foundations of the world’s monetary architecture. Hence, today’s crisis may not be the archetype.

What seems to be relevant is that the US government has been implementing almost similar policy responses as with Japan in the 1990s following its bubble bust.

The Keynesian approach of Zero Interest Rate, government infrastructure spending, tax cuts and rebates and monetary manipulations via the purchase of commercial paper, shares of public companies and provision of bailout funds for bailouts only resulted to a prolonged era of distress from which Japan’s real estate fell by over 15 years (see right window) and whose stock market went nowhere from 1990s until today.

Just recently, Japan’s key benchmark, the Nikkei 225 crashed below its support level shaped during the trough of 2003 to register a NEW low. The Nikkei which presently drifts near the 2003 lows reflects a loss of over 80% from the peak in 1990, nearly 20 years ago!

Of course some may argue that the rapid fire response by the US government may do the magic trick. Well, for us, the fundamental defiance of nature’s economic laws will either bring short term panacea with long lasting torment similar to Japan or precipitate another set of collapse.

Conclusion

Nonetheless, in our opinion, the US won’t probably see a bullmarket for years to come, even if the economy manages to emerge out of the recession. The indemnity from the recent crisis will be scathingly enormous and will contribute heftily to the suboptimal growth outlook. Besides, the intensity of government interventions seems likely to create substantial inefficiencies in the economy that should weigh on its productivity. Moreover, the US will have to deal with its ballooning unfunded entitlement liabilities.

Remember, it took almost 25 years for the Dow Jones Industrial to breach its 1929 peak. In the same vein, US benchmarks haven’t successfully broken through the dot.com pinnacle set in 2000, which makes today’s bear market nearly 10 years old! Hence it is likely that the US could be rangebound or muddle through over the next few years or even in the next decade.

Of course, we’d argue otherwise that if the Obama-Bernanke tandem prints an ocean of money similar to Dr. Gideon Gono’s policy approach in Zimbabwe. While this may boost share prices, not out of earnings, but because people may shun the destruction of its currency and seek sanctuary in hard assets or in stocks as ‘stores of values’, the net effect is that any nominal gains will be offset by currency losses.

Thus, the lesson we can get from the Rogoff-Reinhart study may possibly apply NOT to the US or the credit bubble infected economies. But as possible beacon to the performances of economies or markets untainted by the credit bubble structure but had been affected by the contagion from the implosion of the proximate epicenters of the bubbles.

While 2008 had been a year of convergence as we discussed in Will “Divergences” Be A Theme for 2009?, we’d probably see the resurrection of an unpopular discarded theory.