Showing posts with label myths and fallacies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label myths and fallacies. Show all posts

Thursday, January 04, 2018

Auto Industry: Which will Prevail: The DoF on HB 5636 (Tax Reform) or the Law of Demand?


In a section of their website, the Department of Finance published an infographic attempting to debunk supposed “tax myths”
 

A brief purview of the prevailing conditions of the domestic auto industry prior to the enactment of HB 5636:


First fact. Since culminating in July 2016, the growth of unit auto sales has substantially been slowing in conjunction with auto loans. The financing of car sales has mostly been through credit.

Second fact. Based on the Philippine Statistics Authority’s October manufacturing data, auto production grew at double-digit rates in 2016 until the 1H 2017 but suddenly contracted by -.6% and -4.7% in September and October, respectively.

So how will the DOF’s claim measure with the law of demand?

The law of demand as defined by investopedia.com is “a microeconomic law that states, all other factors being equal, as the price of a good or service increases, consumer demand for the good or service will decrease, and vice versa. The law of demand says that the higher the price, the lower the quantity demanded, because consumers’ opportunity cost to acquire that good or service increases, and they must make more tradeoffs to acquire the more expensive product.” (bold added)

So…

Will politics successfully suspend the fundamental laws of economics (law of demand)? Or, will the DOF get shocked by the emergence of unintended consequences to the economy from the practice of the populist notion of “statistics equals economics”?


Friday, October 16, 2015

Headline (and Tweet) of the Day: Weak Philippine peso NOT Equal to Remittances Growth (August Remittances Shrinks!)

For the mainstream: Shiver me Timbers!!!! 



The above headline comes from the Business World

The August numbers signifies a sequel from July's data (as reported by media and as initially blogged here and explained here last September). 

The difference was July was a near zero growth. August was NEGATIVE!

And this seems like a virtual demolition of the mainstream agitprop which sold the weak peso as an elixir to remittances.

The following tweet from Channel News Asia's Haidi Lun



Revenues of both OFWs and BPOs are SOURCED externally. This means OFW remittances depend on the INCOME of foreign employers. BPOs revenues depend on the INCOME of foreign based principals. This likewise means that the economic, social and political CONDITIONS of the nations serving as HOST to foreign employers and foreign principals essentially determine indirectly the REVENUES of OFWs and BPOs. 
Reality eventually prevails. 

Tuesday, September 09, 2014

New ADB Chief: Middle Income Trap is a Sham

Based on empirical studies, the new ADB chief proclaims the Middle Income Trap a “myth”

From Asian Nikkei:
The so-called middle-income trap, in which certain countries appear stuck at a middle level of development, is a sham, the new chief economist of the Asian Development Bank says.   

Although it has no formal definition, the "trap" is characterized by the inability of middle-income countries to advance to high-income status. In contrast, low-income economies are said to be able to easily move up to middle-income status and high-income countries are likely to sustain prosperity

"I have looked at the data -- this is ongoing research still -- but the data suggest to me that this is largely a myth: the notion of the middle-income trap," Shang-Jin Wei said in an interview with the Nikkei late last week…

Wei's assertion came after he looked at the economic growth history of "all countries in the world." He grouped them into five brackets: high-income, middle-income, low-income, poor, and extremely poor. He then looked at how they developed starting from 1960 and then 10, 20 and 50 years after.

In any bracket, Wei said, some countries advanced, some dropped, while some stayed the same, suggesting that there is nothing special with the middle-income level.
This is an example of how macro statistics can be used to mislead people. Countries essentially don’t fall into “traps”, it is the individual who make or unmake their respective wealth.

What truly restrains people from advancing is when productive resources are diverted into non-productive use. That’s basic, and is a matter of the law of opportunity costs or the law of scarcity.

And what induces non-productive use of resources are insatiable government spending, the welfare state, bloated bureaucracy and trade restrictions, anti-competition laws, bubble policies (or policies which induces consumption), inflationism (QEs) and all sorts of market distorting interventionism. Yes, all of them are interconnected…

In short, the more intervention, the lesser the capital accumulation or reduced economic growth. When politicians become greedy enough to divert much wealth into policy driven consumption activities then productivity diminishes. And that's where the so-called statistical 'trap' comes in.
Theory now supported by evidence.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Quote of the Day: Democracy is a Joke

People will tell you that democracy requires a well-informed citizenry. Some will tell you, with a straight face and an earnest tone, that you have a “duty” to keep up with the news so you can participate in public affairs. Some countries – notably Argentina and Australia – even require citizens to vote.

But this presumes people have access to some set of relevant facts… and then make up their minds intelligently, applying the known facts to the public policy alternatives.

It is nonsense for two fundamental reasons.

First, there are no facts in public life, just memes and BS.

Second, even if there were meaningful facts, the individual citizen is hardly equipped to evaluate them. After so many millennia with no public life of any sort, we don’t know how to judge or master it.

Let me give you an example…

Candidate X tells us he is in favor of cutting government spending. Candidate Y tells us he intends to make the government more efficient. Candidate Z tells us we will all be better off, if the government spends more money to stimulate the economy.

And President Obama says he has a plan to improve the nation’s health-care system.

These are all “facts” – reported in the news media and widely debated in opinion columns and talk shows. But is there any way for the poor voter to know what the politicians really believe… or which public policy is likely to produce the best result?

Nope.

We know, after decades of experience, that public policy rarely improves our private lives. The more ambitious it is – as in the Soviet Union or Nazi Germany – the more it subtracts from our own hopes and plans…

Now, a young man can graduate from a leading university with a head full of public facts… and know nothing at all.
This is from Bill Bonner at Bonner & Partners

Monday, February 10, 2014

Hard Lessons from the US Shopping Mall Bust

One of the popular meme has been to project domestic shopping malls as an impregnable investing theme for the Philippines, based on the presumed unlimited spending prowess of the Filipino consumer[1].

As previously discussed and which I won’t elaborate further[2] there that the two common objections against my controversial case on the shopping mall bubble. They can be summed up in terms of sentiment and habit.

The first has been based on the tenuous notion that “crowd traffic” or the “public park” paradigm alone equals store revenues and thus extrapolates to shopping mall revenues. The crowd traffic equals revenue echoes on the dotcom bubble where “eyeballs” or “page views” had been used as justifications to boost stock market prices. Of course in hindsight we know how these misimpressions ended.

The second has been based on the feeble idea that habits are unchangeable or cultural ethos has made shopping malls immune from the laws of economics. Again there is no such thing as people operating in a stasis, as everyone will change in accordance to the changes in the environment or technology or influences in politics or the markets. In the early 90s mobile phones had been a rarity, today mobile phones have become ubiquitous. Such is an example of change.

The ongoing experience of the US shopping mall bust demolishes these objections.

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In the US, department stores which peaked in the 2000 have long been in a steep decline. Again the decline of department stores coincided with the dotcom bubble bust.

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A recent flurry of job layoffs has been announced in the US shopping mall-big retailing industry

Retail bigwigs such as Sears, JC Penny, Macy’s, Target and Best Buy among many others have announced a wave of store closures and job eliminations. A CNBC article noted of a “tsunami” of forthcoming retail store closures[3].

Moreover, an estimated 15% of shopping malls or retail spaces are expected to be demolished or converted into non retail space within the next 10 years. In addition, one expert believes that half of America’s shopping malls are doomed to fail within 15 to 20 years[4].

Five reasons for the continuing slump in US shopping mall-big retailing arena.

One. As heritage from the 2008 crisis. Notes the Wall Street Journal[5],
Traffic to U.S. retailers was hurt during the financial crisis and recession, when job losses soared and shoppers kept a tight grip on their dollars. But nearly five years into the recovery, it appears many of those shoppers may never be coming back.
Consumers borrowed to spend more than they can afford to pay. Eventually they had pull back as the bills came due. 

Two. Uneven economic recovery. Again from the same article
A Target spokesman said shoppers are making fewer trips as "traffic has been impacted by the uneven economic environment," but are spending more when they do show up.
The FED’s implicit support on Wall Street via the Greenspan-Bernanke-Yellen Put (Zirp and QE) has driven a wedge between main street and Wall Street.

This resonates with the stagflation story for the Philippine consumers.

Three. US $ 1 trillion of legacy debt from the recent crash are coming due over the next three years which some specialty hedge funds have been trying to offer bridge finance[6].

This is the supply side angle of the first factor: Commercial Real Estate or shopping mall or big retail developers built malls or retail outlets MORE than the consumers can afford to spend on, or simply stated, an overexpansion spree financed by debt.

Again bills have been coming due. This is more relevant to the Philippine shopping mall case.

Fourth, change in consumer preference where online sales have become a major alternative channel (again from the WSJ)
Online sales accounted for just 5.9% of overall retail sales in the third quarter, according to the Commerce Department, but they have an outsize impact on how shoppers use stores and what they will pay.
While online sales have been rapidly growing they haven’t entirely been able to replace lost physical retail sales. Nonetheless online sales will cannibalize on costly physical malls or retail space. Online sales I believe will become a dominant force.

Lastly, change in consumer preference in terms of physical stores from CNBC
One big shift in store closings has come from retailers shying away from indoor malls, instead favoring outlet centers, outdoor malls or stand-alone stores. Although new retail construction completions are at an all-time low, according to CB Richard Ellis, the supply of new outlet centers has picked up in recent quarters.
Yes Filipino consumers may not be technically the same as Americans. But the point is economic conditions, technology and shifts in social preferences will impact local habits, activities and buying patterns.

Think of it, if the US, which has a nominal per capita income of $51,704 (IMF 2012) combined with her power to tap the credit from the banks and capital markets that extends her purchasing power, have not able to sustain a debt financed shopping mall boom, how could a lowly economy like the Philippines with a measly $2,611 (IMF 2012) or a mere 5% of US per capita, seemingly parading herself as a pseudo developed economy and whom has frenetically been building malls at a rate that even Americans can’t sustain, be capable of doing so? 

Here is one prediction. Something will have to give.

Finally pls don’t entertain thoughts that today’s giants will remain so or that these so-called blue chips are impervious to any crisis of internal or external in origin. All one has to do is to think about the fate of former titans Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual or General Motors or Enron all of whom ended up as the largest bankruptcy cases in the US[7].

And be reminded, even billions can go to zero in just a year or two as in the case of Brazil’s Eike Batista, who in 2012 was worth $30 billion and today or in less than two years has reportedly a “negative net worth”[8]







[5] Wall Street Journal Stores Confront New World of Reduced Shopper Traffic January 16,2014


[7] Wikipedia.org Largest cases Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code

[8] Wikipedia.org Eike Batista

Saturday, February 08, 2014

The Myth of Low Currency Equals Strong Exports: Brazil Edition

Low currency equals cheap exports. That’s the mainstream’s resonant “incantation” as if such a claim represents an a priori irrefutable truth.

In reality, such a claim has really been a myth though. They signify nothing more than propaganda to promote anti competition regulations via Mercantilism that works to favor of vested interest groups (politicians and their allies).

This has been debunked even as far back in the 18th century by Scottish philosopher Adam Smith in his classic Wealth of Nations

As a recent example I pointed out that since Japan’s adaption of Abenomics, such so-called boost to exports through destroying the yen has failed to come about meeting their objectives. Instead this has generated record trade deficits via exploding import growth. The update of charts of the Japan’s exports, imports and trade balance here. 

What Japan’s yen debasement program has only achieved has been to inflate a stock market bubble which has benefited the financial system at the expense of the consumers.

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We see the same falsehood being exposed in Brazil where the weak real has brought about faltering exports backed by a decline in industrial production.

From Bloomberg’s chart of the day:
The biggest monthly plunge in Brazil’s industrial output since December 2008 shows policy makers’ confidence that a weaker real will stimulate manufacturing is proving misguided.

The CHART OF THE DAY tracks Brazil’s industrial production index, the real on a percentage-change basis and exports on a rolling six-month average. Output fell in December by the most in five years even as the exchange rate weakened 34 percent since the manufacturing index reached a record-high in May 2011. The currency is the biggest decliner against the U.S. dollar in the last three years among 16 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg after the South African rand.

President Dilma Rousseff said on Feb. 3 that a weaker real would help drive exports this year, an affirmation of Finance Minister Guido Mantega’s comments in September that a currency drop would make Brazilian products more competitive and boost manufacturing. Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Alberto Ramos said the government’s optimism isn’t warranted, as companies are hampered by rising labor costs and lack of incentives to modernize.
Low currency equals cheap exports represents a heuristic “oversimplified” way in looking at trade data. Such have been assumed to generalize that all trade are about “cheapness”. 

The reality is that trade, which is a largely function of the private sector conducting voluntary exchanges goods or services across geographical boundaries, are driven by manifold complex intertwined factors: such as subjective preferences of buyers (which are hardly about “cheapness” as cheapness usually indicates low quality or commoditized goods), availability and access to markets, availability and access to financing to facilitate trade, relative ease or convenience of conducting trade, security of transactions and or the institutional protection of market activities (sanctity of contracts) and more. 

Unfortunately “a lie that has been told to often to become a truth” doesn’t apply to mercantilist propaganda, that’s because economic forces will expose on them.

Monday, February 03, 2014

Emerging Market Turmoil: The Fallacy of Foreign Currency Reserves as Talisman

One fascinating populist meme about how specific emerging markets may survive the recent tantrums has been to cite foreign exchange reserves as talisman or amulet to a crisis. 

As reminder any balance of payment disorders are symptoms and not the source of crisis. The common denominator of every crisis is DEBT.

Central Bank Dilemma: To Use Foreign Currency Reserves or Not?

There have been two contrasting approaches adapted by EM central bankers to the current EM tantrums.

Instead of using forex reserves, Turkey’s government has opted to use the interest rate channel to deal with the current disturbance.

Turkey with a record of forex reserves at $ 149.7 billion, almost 2x the Philippines at $ 84 billion, surprised her financial market by massively raising key interest rates across the board to combat the sinking lira. The one week repo rate was increased by a stunning 550 basis points or from 4.5% to 10%! Read my lips FIVE HUNDRED FIFTY basis points. The lira had a one day celebration. Unfortunately the FED reduced monetary accommodation anew that wiped out the one day gains and even led the lira to set new record lows! The market seems to be saying that the current interest rate levels despite the increases have not been sufficient to compensate for the risks. This means more interest rates hikes or the Turkish government will have to begin using her record forex reserves.

Turkey is in dire straits as I discuss here[1]. Not only have the financial system been burdened by huge pile up of debt, they have about $ 160 billion of short term debt due this year. So a sustained lira depreciation and rising rates in Turkey’s creditor nations will mean a double black eye for deeply indebted transcontinental country.

Worst, foreign banks have $ 350 billion of credit exposure on Turkey’s financial system. How much of Turkey’s economy can absorb such tremendous spike in interest rate or a crashing lira before the economy tailspins? Should there be a credit event in Turkey how much of these $350 billion in debt held by foreign banks will be defaulted upon? What will be the repercussions? Are sinking stocks in Europe and the US signs of these? You think that Turkey’s conditions are merely signs of a “hiccup”?

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The second approach has been to use forex reserves to fight off a crashing currency. This has been the case with Argentina whose currency has been collapsing whether seen from official rates or black market rates (left window).

The Argentinean government has been draining her forex reserves which have been down by a third now to US $29 billion[2]. This has forced the government to devalue to 8 pesos from 6 pesos last week, even when the black market has long been devaluing. Argentina’s government also raised interest rates by six percentage points[3].

The reason for the draining of reserves? Because the socialist government which nationalized many major industries have come short of securing financing. The Argentine government has massively increased spending by running down the reserves (right window). Argentina remains highly indebted and has still unresolved debt restructuring issues which has been a legacy from her default in 2002[4].

Argentina’s economic data can’t be relied on as the government has threatened domestic economic industry of jail time if they published data which goes against the declaration of the government[5]. What has been evident is that the government’s spending spree and the shrinking access to the pool of global credit markets have been instrumental in inciting a currency crash.

You think Argentina’s dilemma poses as a knee jerk reaction?

Foreign Currency Reserves are Manifestations of Bubbles

I find it ludicrous for the mainstream to keep yelling “forex reserves!”, “forex reserves!”, “forex reserves!” as if forex reserves function as some quaint magical amulet against evil spirits.

But this is reality. The source of problems has not been due to a war with some bad spirits but rather excessive debts looking for a release valve in the face of rising interest rates.

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Think of it, the world has $11.434 trillion of foreign currency reserves mostly in US dollars as of the 3rd quarter of 2013, according to the COFER data from the IMF.

If “forex reserves!” equals the magical talisman then we would NOT be experiencing any of these volatilities at all. But this market revulsion has been HAPPENING. It’s been happening IN SPITE of the RECORD international reserve assets. And it has been happening REAL TIME!

The problem is that foreign currency reserves serve as real time manifestations of accrued imbalances rather than the cure to the problem. I can discuss that this as related to the Triffin Dilemma as I did before[6], but this will unduly extend this already prolonged discussion.

The bottom line is that the US dollar standard which financed the world with the FED’s printing machine has fuelled a business cycle in an international scale.

Americans built their comparative advantage via engineering of mostly tradeable debt instruments that has led to a massive growth in her financial industry known as financialization

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The financial industry with less than 10% weighting in the S&P 500 in 1990 became the biggest industry in 2007 as she exported subprime mortgage papers around the world[7].

Meanwhile the world assembled a global network supply chain to supply the US with goods which ultimately transformed into globalization. And US Financialization helped fulfil demand by the world, who accumulated US dollars via trade expressed in record forex reserves, to recycle savings into US dollar assets. Of course the developed world also learned mimic their version of financialization. 

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At the end of the day, the US dollar standard has brought about record debt levels not only for mature market economies (right window) but for the entire world—estimated by the ING in 2012 at $223.3 trillion or 313%(!) of the GDP[8]. EM debt has been estimated at $66.3 trillion or 224% (!) of GDP in 2012.

Accompanying record debt has been record financial assets[9] that have been galloping far away from global economic growth (left window).

Even more, the world’s ramping up of US dollar reserves by the printing local currency by domestic central banks has fuelled bubbles on a national scale.

Why forex reserves are manifestations of imbalances? Austrian economist Antony Mueller explains[10]. (bold mine)
The expansion of debt by the issuer of the international reserve medium augments the stock of international reserves and the increase of the reserves works like a growth of the global money supply. Central bank balance sheets show that the circulating domestic money forms a debit item, while foreign reserves are part of the credit side. All other things being equal, an increase in foreign reserves implies money creation. This way, foreign debt accumulation by the issuer of a global reserve currency impacts monetary demand through two channels: in the debtor country by the domestic spending of foreign savings, and in the creditor country by the accumulation of foreign exchange reserves which augment the money supply
Where the release valves from the stockpile of foreign reserves are to be expected? Again Professor Mueller (bold mine)
The country, which emits the international reserve currency, does not face a foreign exchange constraint; thus there will be no immediate limit for this process to go to its extremes. Additionally, an expansion of this kind must not be accompanied by price inflation right away. The prices for tradable goods may stay low for a considerable period of time and instead of a price inflation the bubble emerges in the asset markets. After all it is the transaction in the capital account of the balance of payments -- the buying and selling of debt instruments -- which lies at the heart of the process and it is here where the music plays in terms of the bubble. Bubbles, however, have the nasty habit of imploding because they are build on some unsustainable element. This factor within an international debt cycle concerns debt service payments, and this has consequences for international trade and economic growth
Has it not been that the outflows from EM local currency debt instruments and from domestic currency a reflection of troubles in the capital account of the balance of payments?

Eventually bubble enthusiasts will come to realize, that screaming “forex reserves!” “forex reserves!” “forex reserves!” will not serve as free passes to bubbles.

Russian Ruble: A Domestic Outflow

As a final thought, I recently pointed at the unique case of the ongoing pressure on Russia’s currency, the ruble. Russia would have been seen by the mainstream as having a strong external finance conditions, since she has $510 billion of forex reserves (6x the Philippine reserves), has significant surpluses in both trade balance and current account balance (though the latter has been dwindling).

Yet Russia suffers from both property bubble fuelled by credit inflation and runaway local government debt. Lately one of the 200 largest bank in terms of assets the ‘My Bank’ suspended withdrawals for a week. Why would My Bank suspend withdrawals unless she has been financing some problem? Perhaps signs of a bank run?

And guess who’s been selling the ruble?

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Well strange as it seems, it has not been foreign outflows as mainstream paints them to be. Russia continues to post foreign capital inflows from 2012 to 2013 (left window). It has been residents whom have been scampering off Russia at a pace that has been picking up pace (right window). There may be various reasons for this such as safehaven, alternative investments or even possibly signs of recognition of a bursting bubble as discussed here[11].

The point worth repeating is that every conditions are unique and that there are no “line in the sand” or specific thresholds before a revulsion on domestic credit occurs.

This brings us to the periphery to core dynamic. For every crisis the first manifestations will be via steepening and spreading of dislocations in the financial markets. Then this transitions into a liquidity squeeze. And finally liquidity squeezes will hit on the real economy possibly either through a credit event first before an economic recession or vice versa.

For those afflicted by the Aldous Huxley syndrome, keep in mind that in the 2007-8 global crisis, the Phisix fell by more than 50% even when the Philippines had floating exchange rate, record forex exchange reserves and low NPLs. The Philippines even narrowly escaped a statistical recession.

Of course one may argue that today’s problem has been different than in 2008. One might assert that today has been an emerging market problem. Part correct. But there are always two sides to a coin. Applied to current events, while one side of the coin is the emerging markets, the other side is the US-developed economies.

But don’t forget: Both of the two sides share the same coin: the DEBT problem coin. Example, just look at how entwined Turkey’s problem has been with foreign banks. The magic number:  $350 billion.




[2] Bloomberg.com The Price of Argentina's Devaluation January 30, 2014






[8] Wall Street Real Time Economics Blog Number of the Week: Total World Debt Load at 313% of GDP May 11, 2013

[9] Institute of International Finance Economic Recovery and Dependence on Asset Values January 8, 2014

[10] Antony P. Mueller Do Current Account Deficits Matter? Mises.org Journals

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Quote of the Day: Trade is Not a Scoreboard

We need to do better a job explaining how trade does not lend itself to sports metaphors. Exports are not our “points.” Imports are not “their” points. The trade account is not a scoreboard. It is not Team America against the world. Trade is about mutually beneficial exchange between individuals in different political jurisdictions, and to the extent that those kinds of transactions are subject to the whims of politicians, more and more resources will be diverted from economic to political ends.
This is from Cato Institute director Daniel Ikenson debunking mercantilist myths

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Lessons from Singapore’s Central Bank: Central Banks are Vulnerable to Bankruptcies

Mainstream media and their favorite experts continue to impress upon the gullible public that foreign currency reserves acts as a shield against the risks of a crisis.

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Well based on this theory, Singapore’s humongous forex reserves (more than twice the Philippines) imply that the current meltdown suffered mostly by emerging markets should have Singapore the least affected. 


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Reality has shown otherwise. 

10 Year Singapore government bond yields continue to unsettle now at 3 year highs

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The Singaporean Dollar has been sold off. The USD-SGD on an uptrend since December 2012.

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The ASEAN meltdown has Singapore’s STI reeling from the ASEAN bear market forces.

While Singapore has technically not yet in a bear market, the break below the June lows and the recent ‘reprieve’ or tepid ‘suckers’ rally reveals of the STI’s vulnerabilities.

In my view, the stress in Singapore’s markets exhibits an ongoing deterioration of trade and financial linkages with ASEAN.

Now Sovereign Man’s prolific Simon Black propounds on how central banks can go bankrupt using the recent Singapore experience. (bold mine)
A few months ago, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the country’s central bank, released its annual report for the fiscal year ending 31 March 2013.

And the results were ‘shocking’, at least for those of us who read central bank annual reports cover to cover like a Harry Potter novel.

The bottom line for MAS showed a mind-boggling S$10.2 BILLION loss (roughly $8 billion USD), about as much as General Motors lost in its worst year.

This is the antithesis of what one would expect from Asia’s dominant financial center. And it begs the question– how can a central bank, which has the power to conjure money out of thin air, even suffer a loss, let alone such a heavy one?

Simple. MAS was desperately trying to hold back the Singapore dollar’s rise against the US dollar.

Because Singapore is a trade-based economy and the US dollar is so central in international trade as the world’s reserve currency, MAS has been trying to keep the Singapore dollar somewhat restrained vs. the US dollar.

Essentially MAS was buying US dollars and then intentionally selling them at a lower price in order to create artificial demand for US dollars.

This was a completely failed strategy.

Singapore’s ultra-healthy economy attracts investment from around the world, and the natural tendency is for the Singapore dollar to rise.

This rise has been even more pronounced given Ben Bernanke’s journey into monetary madness over the last several years.

Since 2008, the Singapore dollar steadily appreciated by more than 20% from peak to trough as investors sought a more stable currency alternative. After all, Singapore is a very strong, growing economy with zero net debt.

Because of these factors, MAS lost a prodigious sum trying to prevent its currency’s natural rise; the S$10.2 billion they lost constitutes roughly 3% of GDP.

In fact, Singapore’s economy only grew by S$11.5 billion from 2012-2013… so MAS managed to blow through 87% of the country’s economic growth last year fighting Ben Bernanke. Crazy.

This is something that is clearly not sustainable. And while that term is a bit overused today, such losses cannot continue indefinitely.

A central bank CAN go bankrupt, often creating a major currency crisis. And this is what suggests to me, above all else, that the fiat system is on the way out.

Fiat currency has been the greatest monetary experiment in the history of the world. Four men control over 70% of the world’s money supply, giving them control over the price of… everything.

And this system is so absurd that, healthy nations like Singapore are forced to lose billions in order to keep playing the game.

That’s exactly what it is– a game. Like most nations, Singapore has been playing this game for decades while the US changes the rules whenever it sees fit.

And it’s becoming obvious that the cost of playing is now far exceeding the benefit it receives. The hard numbers are very clear on this point.

This spells one inexorable conclusion: game over.
Another interrelated consequence of this US dollar recycling (vendor finance scheme) by Singapore’s central bank has been to blow homegrown bubbles 


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Growth in the loans to the private sector has virtually been skyrocketing

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Singapore’s surging housing index has passed the 1997 Asian crisis highs!

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And domestic credit to the private sector at 112% of GDP is about the highs of the 1980s and similarly approaches the Asian crisis highs of 1997.

I don’t have data on the claims to the banking system on ASEAN by Singapore and vice versa, but I suspect that there may be significant private sector exposures on the ASEAN investment corridor, as well as ASEAN investments in Singapore

Should the ASEAN meltdown continue or deepen then the risks of a regional crisis grows. 

We should thus be vigilant on the conditions ASEAN markets

And despite the denials of media and their clueless highly paid mainstream experts, we should expect the unexpected 

Mounting losses compounded by economic slowdown or recession will place central banks on the spotlight.

Caveat emptor

Monday, June 24, 2013

Phisix in the Shadows of a Bursting Global Bond Market Bubble

The capital markets are desperate for continued hallucination. Central banks supply hallucinations. They create money, and the investing world pretends that this is capital. It isn’t capital. It is no more capital than heroin is a nutrient. Heroin is a tool for keeping people from coming to grips with reality. So is central bank monetary inflation. –Gary North

Mainstream Talking Points: The Irrelevance of Easy Money

Thursday’s Inquirer article opened with how the domestic financial markets had been shaken from a supposed turnaround in US monetary policies: “US Federal Reserve signaled that the regime of easy money—which has inflated asset valuations in emerging markets—would end by next year”[1].

Ironically the entire article went on to refute, or more appropriately, defend the status quo by sidestepping the issue of how “easy money” led to “inflated asset valuations”. The stereotyped politically tinged article cites the opinions of “economic managers” whose arguments banked on supposed “fundamentals”.

Such assurances comically emanate from talking heads who never saw this financial market rout coming in the first place.

The populist dogma feted by mainstream media to the public has been to project a “new order” for the Philippine markets and the economy whose direction has been etched on the stone as “up up and away!”.

Yet for the mainstream “experts” and the populist talking heads, recent events has been deemed as an anomaly, a temporal quirk, unreal or a just a metaphorical nightmare—which will go away soon.

Since such events don’t fit into their understanding of the world, which for them reality or “fundamentals” constitute as statistical aggregates, the natural reaction has been to deny them.

The bubble mentality has been so pronounced to the point that some experts even justify high valuations[2] of Philippines assets relative to other Asian peers due to “strong growth trajectory” and “long term growth prospects”. This time is different.

Such denials basically ignore the fact that market actions account for as “fundamentals”, they have been portentous of a dramatic change of economic-financial and even political environment.

Would sellers stampede out of or crash the markets without any motivations guiding their actions? Such would represent naïve presumptiveness.

Perhaps humongous political rallies in Brazil[3], Indonesia[4], and Turkey[5] could be writings on the wall.

If the transition from easy money to tight money will be sustained, then all of the inflated statistics from which current “fundamentals” (yes history) have been founded on, hence the “inflated asset valuations”, will dramatically get reconfigured.

Moreover, the obsession over accounting identities as impeccable measures of economic growth will be blown to smithereens or exposed for as duplicitous aggregates tainted by patent imperfections.

Heuristics camouflaged by economic terminologies and statistics hardly constitutes as economic analysis.

Popular delusions of “this time is different” brought about by credit expansion will face harsh reality soon.

Signs of Bursting Bond Bubble?

The mainstream cannot seem to fathom that monetary policies are hardly neutral and has relative impacts on each sectors of the economy.

They hardly understand or appreciate the causal relationship between monetary conditions with respect to asset markets, statistical economy and the real economy.

My guidepost from the start of the year[6]:
Let me repeat: the direction of the Phisix and the Peso will ultimately be determined by the direction of domestic interest rates which will likewise reflect on global trends.
And interest rates have indeed shaped the market’s direction.

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CLIMBING yields of the US 10 year treasury, which serves as important benchmarks for many credit markets, has accelerated or has intensified from its interim nadir last May.

Once the yields broke beyond the March highs of 2.05%, global markets began to seize up as shown by the recent decline of the S&P, and the nosedive in the Phsix (PCOMP) and ex-US global equity benchmark (MSCI World).

Last Friday, UST’s 10 year yields spiked to August 2011 levels[7].

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The upheaval in US bond markets[8] has been broad based.

The biggest impact can mostly be seen in UST 5-10 year notes and the 30 year bonds as well as the Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPs) [lower pane].

Rising yields of TIPs suggest that the market’s expectation of inflation risks have, so far, been subdued.

Add to this recent surge of credit default swap premiums[9] both in the sovereign and corporate sector which underlies growing concerns over creditworthiness, it would seem a mistake to construe rising yields as a function of “economic growth”.

Instead the unraveling events seem as growing indications of concerns over credit quality conditions.

Bluntly put, we could be witnessing incipient signs of the bursting of global financial asset bubbles, spearheaded by the bond markets.

Fed Communique: To Taper or To Ease?

I would like to reemphasize too that the Ben Bernanke’s “Taper talk” really has substantially been a tactical communications signaling maneuver to maintain or preserve the central bank’s “credibility” by realigning policy stance with actions in the bond markets.

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The incumbent FED’s easing policies which has been designed to “maintain downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative”[10] has been confronted by the opposite or the unintended effects: rising long term interest rates.

10 year yields have been rising since July 2012. The FED implemented the QEternity 3.0 in September of 2012 which put downward pressure on rates for a mere THREE (3) month period. Yields then reversed course and crept higher until Japan’s PM Shinzo Abe’s nomination of Haruhiko Kuroda as Bank of Japan’s Chief. The appointment of Mr. Kuroda, who was widely expected to conduct aggressive monetary actions, practically served as the “sell on news” part of the “buy the rumor, sell the news” on Mr. Kuroda’s assumption to office. The announcement of Kuroda’s “arrow” of Abenomics plus the ECB’s interest rate cut last May has basically been negated by the ascendant yields.
In short, yields have been rising even before the Taper Talk.

This shows that it would not be accurate to say that Taper Talk caused higher yields. Instead, the Taper Talk essentially functioned as the “trigger” or the “outlet valve” for what has been a simmering pressure buildup for higher yields. The Taper Talk has really been an aggravating factor.

A further reality is that the “Taper Talk” mantra represents as selective focusing of the markets. The markets fixated on one aspect of the FOMC announcement while disregarding the rest.

The Fed’s official communique mentioned “taper” as an option “The Committee is prepared to increase or reduce the pace of its purchases” that is subject to arbitrary parameters set by them “will continue to take appropriate account of the likely efficacy and costs of such purchases as well as the extent of progress toward its economic objectives”.

Taper has not been a foreordained path. To the contrary the increase in the pace of purchases has also been considered or discussed.

This has been reinforced by Mr. Bernanke’s press conference speech[11]:

The Taper Option: (bold mine)
If the incoming data are broadly consistent with this forecast, the Committee currently anticipates that it would be appropriate to moderate the monthly pace of purchases later this year; and if the subsequent data remain broadly aligned with our current expectations for the economy, we would continue to reduce the pace of purchases in measured steps through the first half of next year, ending purchases around midyear. In this scenario, when asset purchases ultimately come to an end, the unemployment rate would likely be in the vicinity of 7 percent, with solid economic growth supporting further job gains, a substantial improvement from the 8.1 percent unemployment rate that prevailed when the Committee announced this program
The Easing Option:
I would like to emphasize once more the point that our policy is in no way predetermined and will depend on the incoming data and the evolution of the outlook, as well as on the cumulative progress toward our objectives. If conditions improve faster than expected, the pace of asset purchases could be reduced somewhat more quickly. If the outlook becomes less favorable, on the other hand, or if financial conditions are judged to be inconsistent with further progress in the labor markets, reductions in the pace of purchases could be delayed; indeed, should it be needed, the Committee would be prepared to employ all of its tools, including an increase in the pace of purchases for a time, to promote a return to maximum employment in a context of price stability
To repeat: The “taper” is an option, and not a definitive action, that the FED may or may not resort to. As much as taper is an option, so has “easing”. 

Bond vigilantes itching for a grand entrance found the Taper speech as opportunity to flaunt their newfound power.

Asked about the “very sharp rise in real interest rates” over the last few weeks, the clueless Bernanke responds
Well, we were a little puzzled by that. It was bigger than it could be explained I think by changes the ultimate stock of asset purchases within reasonable ranges. So I think we have to conclude that there are other factors at work as well including again, some optimism about the economy, maybe some uncertainty arising. So, I'm agreeing with you that seems larger than it can be explained by a changing view of monetary policy. It's difficult to judge whether the markets are in sync or not
Rising yields over the past 11 months depicts of the diminishing marginal returns of such policies. This means that accumulation of current imbalances has essentially offset the wealth generating capacity of the economy or has severely damaged the process of real wealth generation that has led to a shrinkage in real savings.

As Austrian economist Dr. Frank Shostak explains[12]:
Contrary to popular thinking, an increase in the monetary flow is in fact detrimental to economic growth since it sets in motion an exchange of something for nothing — it leads to the diversion of real wealth from wealth generators to wealth consumers. This in the process reduces the amount of wealth at the disposal of wealth generators thereby diminishing their ability to enhance and maintain the infrastructure. This in turn undermines the ability to grow the economy.
Rising yields will either force the FED to align their policies with the bond markets or attempt to douse such conflagration with bigger inflationist policies.

Poker Bluff Redux

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The US government and the banking system have become increasingly dependent on Fed’s actions.

The balance sheet of the US Federal Reserve[13] has been stuffed with US Treasuries and mortgage backed securities (MBS)

The Fed possesses about 30.32% of all outstanding ten year an equivalent according to the Zero Hedge[14]. At the rate of purchases, the FED’s share of outstanding ten year will balloon to 90% in 2017, where the Zero hedge notes that “By the end of 2018 there would be no privately held US treasury paper”. And if fiscal deficits do shrink, a complete nationalization of bond markets will be sooner rather than in 2017-2018.

The same almost holds true for mortgages. As Euro Pacific Capital’s Peter Schiff recently pointed out[15], (bold mine)
While it's true that the Fed only owns 14% of all outstanding MBS (the "small fraction" he referred to in the press conference), it is by far the largest purchaser of newly issued mortgage debt. What would happen to the market if the Fed were no longer buying? There are no longer enough private buyers to soak up the issuance. Those who do remain would certainly expect higher yields if the option of selling to the Fed was no longer on the table. Put bluntly, the Fed is the market right now and has been for years.
Given the entrenched dependency relationship by the mortgage markets and by the US government on the US Federal Reserve, the Fed’s QE program can be interpreted as a quasi-fiscal policy whose major beneficiaries have been the political class and the banking class. Thus, there will be little incentives for FED officials to downsize the FED’s actions, unless forced upon by the markets. Since politicians are key beneficiaries from such programs, Fed officials will be subject to political pressures.

This is why I think the “taper talk” represents just one of the FED’s serial poker bluffs.

Besides, any withdrawal or a scaling back of QE will only stir up disorder, not only in the bond markets, but across the financial asset spectrum from which the current market bedlam serves as a useful template.

And in contrast to the popular idea that the FED will taper, again I think that surging interest rates and the attendant intensifying financial market turmoil eventually will impact on the FED’s dual mandate of “maximum employment and price stability”.

While the objective of “price stability”[16] has been focused on price inflation, the ongoing riots in the bond markets are equally signs of spreading instability that will interfere “with the efficient operation of the economy and can reduce economic growth”.

The FED obviously has been looking at the wrong places.

Such reemergent instabilities will compel the FED to expand their balance sheets. And I expect other central bankers to follow suit.

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It is important to note too that with the stimulative effects of about $10 trillion[17] of global central bank asset expansion obviously fading, central bankers whom has recently been hailed as “superheroes”[18] for what has been perceived by media as having attained the elixir of policymaking will likely renew their attempt to reflate the markets and economies.

Aside from the political agenda, the previous round of so-called “successes” will provide the motivation for FED and other central bankers to adapt the same “path dependent[19]” recourse.

As I have been repeatedly saying, central bankers will likely push inflationism to the limits: QE 1.0, QE 2.0, QEternity, Abenomics and etc…

And with the diminishing access to what government labels as “risk free” bonds or “safe assets”, which will affect bank capital adequacy regulations and bank risk profiles, central bankers are likely to expand purchases to include other financial assets, perhaps equities, corporate bonds and others.

But there will likely be more pain ahead before the next round of central bank actions.

“Deflation” has been conventionally used as the convenient bogeyman from which central banks justify their actions. The ongoing meltdown in US Treasuries, credit markets, emerging market assets, US muni bonds, MBS, commodities and increased selling pressure on developed market stocks signifies as the convenient backdrop for the next round of rescue measures.

But if the wealth generators in the real economy has been severely damaged, and if the unfolding rout in financial asset markets will be deep enough to traumatize participants, the next wave of reflationary policies will likely spur a spike in price inflation, rather than a resumption of the speculative excess or the risk ON environment.

We may be in the next phase of the inflation cycle.

As the great dean of Austrian school of economics, Murray N. Rothbard explained[20] (bold mine)
The ultimate result of a policy of persistent inflation is runaway inflation and the total collapse of the currency. As Mises analyzed the course of runaway inflation (both before and after the first example of such a collapse in an industrialized country, in post-World War I Germany), such inflation generally proceeds as follows: At first the government's increase of the money supply and the subsequent rise in prices are regarded by the public as temporary. Since, as was true in Germany during World War I, the onset of inflation is often occasioned by the extraordinary expenses of a war, the public assumes that after the war conditions including prices will return to the preinflation norm. Hence the public's demand for cash balances rises as it awaits the anticipated lowering of prices. As a result, prices rise less than proportionately and often substantially less than the money supply, and the monetary authorities become bolder. As in the case of the Assignats during the French Revolution, here is a magical panacea for the difficulties of government: pump more money into the economy, and prices will rise only a little! Encouraged by the seeming success, the authorities apply more of what has worked so well, and the monetary inflation proceeds apace. In time, however, the public's expectations and views of the economic present and future undergo a vitally important change. They begin to see that there will be no return to the prewar norm, that the new norm is a continuing price inflation — that prices will continue to go up rather than down. Phase two of the inflationary process ensues, with a continuing fall in the demand for cash balances based on this analysis: "I'd better spend my money on X, Y, and Z now, because I know full well that next year prices will be higher." Prices begin to rise more than the increase in the supply of money. The critical turning point has arrived.
This implies that next set of central bank actions will likely undergird a transitional period from bursting bubbles to stagflation. Once stagflation becomes the order of the day the next risks will be one of runaway inflation.

Ultimately it will be the feedback loop between the actions of policymakers and markets responses to them that will shape the direction of markets.

So far, as noted above, rising interest rates appear as signs of bursting bubbles across the globe.

And global bond markets serve as our guideposts as I previously wrote[21]
What I am saying is that unless the upheavals in global bond markets stabilize, there is a huge risk of market shock that may push risk assets into bear markets.
Has the Bond Vigilantes landed on ASEAN Bond Markets?

As of the previous week, the upheaval in emerging market bonds has barely landed on the ASEAN shores, except Indonesia.

But two weeks back I warned, “the vastly narrowed Philippine-US spread may or could be an accident waiting to happen via reversion to the mean”[22]

And from last week[23]
Remember, the yield of the 10 year Philippine bonds seem to suggest that her credit risk profile has been nearly at par with Malaysia and has (astoundingly) surpassed Thailand, which for me, signifies as a bubble.

And as I have earlier pointed out, the interest rate spread between the US and Philippines has substantially narrowed. This reduces the arbitrage opportunities and thus providing incentives for foreign money to depart from local shores to look for opportunities elsewhere or perhaps take on a “home bias” position.

The EM and ASEAN bond markets are highly vulnerable to market shocks as recent events have shown.
Just looking at the IMF calculated Nominal GDP per capita[24], notably there has been a gulf in data between the Philippines US$ 2,617 on one hand, and Indonesia $3,910, Thailand $5,678 and Malaysia $10,304 on the other hand. Ironically, current bond yields which reflects on credit risks, suggests that the Philippines shares the same profile with her much ‘wealthier’ peers.

Even if the popular assumption that the Philippines will outperform her contemporaries in terms of growth over the coming years holds true (which isn’t), seen from the perspective in nominal per capita GDP, such whale of the difference indicates that Philippine bond yields seem as having been blatantly mispriced.

This may have been mainly due to recent credit rating upgrades (which will be put to test), and the rest from the credit bloated statistical growth based on easy money policy regime which is about to change.

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Regardless of what BSP officials will say on sustaining low interest environment, if the selloff in global bonds persists, this will show up in Philippine bond yields.

10 year bond Philippine bonds yields[25] moved significantly higher during the Thursday and Friday’s stock market rout. 

Last week’s bond market actions seem as the second attempt to break beyond the 4% level. I believe that once a breakout has been attained, the upward movements will intensify.

Our neighbors have already began to show signs of distress in their bond markets…

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Thailand and Malaysia seems to have joined Indonesia in a trajectory of ascendant yields

I don’t share the view that will entirely be a story of current accounts and external debt as some experts suggest.

Malaysia still has current account surplus but a rapidly shrinking one. Also Malaysia’s external debt has been trending lower since 2008. Yet yields of Malaysia’s 10 year bonds[26] have broken away from the highs of 2013.

Thailand recently posted a current account deficit. Thailand’s current account has been seesawing between surpluses and deficits. Thailand’s external debt has leapt by 60% since 2010. But like the Philippines, yields of Thailand’s 10 year bonds[27] appear to be making a second attempt to breach the 4% level.
Indonesia’s current account has been in a deficit since 2012, external debt has also jumped by about 40% since 2010.

So based on relative external conditions Indonesia has borne the initial brunt of a bond market[28] selloff. But the pressures on the ASEAN bond market appear to be spreading. Indonesia recently raised interest rates, but likewise announced her version of QE.

At the end of the day, sustained tightening of money conditions will not only expose on external fragilities but likewise internal imbalances or domestic bubbles. The recognition of the unsustainability of domestic assets bubbles may further incentivize liquidations already triggered by continuing collapse of the global bond markets. 

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So far actions in the bond markets has had variable effects on equities. The above shows of the variable stock market losses since the close of the week in May 31st.

This may be due to many factors such as capital regulations, degree of foreign ownership and etc…

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Finally while ASEAN financial assets reveals of mixed degrees of selling pressure, what has converged so far has been a sharp selloff in domestic currencies.

Yet part of the currency selloffs has been cushioned by central bank actions. For instance last week, the BSP was reported to have stepped in via open market operations to “stem the decline and smooth out the volatility”[29]

It would be interesting to see how all these selling will affect the region’s vaunted Gross International Reserves.

Will there be enough reserves to shield a sustained stream of outflows? Or will domestic central banks sharply raise rates?

Global Bond Markets Determines the Fate Of Asset Markets

Bottom line: Markets will remain highly volatile, however as previously noted, volatility will go on both direction but with a downside bias, unless again, global bond markets are pacified.

Unsettled global bond markets will continue to hound financial markets.

Emerging market outflows reached $19 billion during the past three weeks the most since 2011. This may be part of the “reversal of the $3.9 trillion of cash that flowed into emerging markets the past four years” according to a report from Bloomberg[30].

Such claim will ultimately depend on the conditions of the bond markets.

Crashing markets means that losses will continue to mount and begin to affect balance sheets of major institutions around the world.

For instance, China’s PBoC reversed course from attempting to ferret out shadow banks and reportedly infused money to a financial institution[31] as rumors floated that one of the largest commercial bank in China, the Bank of China defaulted. The latter denied such allegations[32].

Eventually smoke will likely become fire.

On the other hand, a flurry of selling has prompted one of the market’s largest exchange-traded fund sponsors of municipal bond ETFs in the US to suspend share redemptions[33].

These are initial symptoms. 

Eventually too the suppression of losses will become public which increases the likelihood of contagions.

And as stated before, the reverse reflexive feedback loop from liquidations and realized losses will affect expectations and subsequently prospective actions and vice versa.

And given the multiple hotspots brought about by the unravelling global bond markets, it would not be prudent for anyone to expect an immediate resolution on these.

Even if the US Federal Reserve decides to intervene, it would take coordinated or collaborative actions by major central banks to possibly soothe the bond markets.

But again such band-aid treatment will likely have a short term effects considering that real savings may have been substantially drained and that real wealth generators of the economy have been damaged by such policies.

Highly indebted governments will also be put on spotlight. This puts to the fore the increased risks of a debt crisis from a major economy that may ripple across the world and worsen current conditions.

But media will be stuffed with rabid denials.

If you happen to read or hear of talking heads who claim that the current selloff represents a bottom, check out first if they saw this market carnage coming. Also find out if they have “skin in the game”, before believing them.

As my favorite iconoclast Nassim Taleb recently wrote[34]
predictions in socioeconomic domains do not work, but predictors are rarely harmed by their forecasts. Yet we know that people take more risks after they see a numerical prediction. The solution is to ask – and only take into account – what the predictor has done, or will do in the future.
It’s your money that is at risk, not theirs.

So do yourself a favor of doing independent research.

Trade with utmost caution.




[3] Wall Street Journal Brazil Protests Surge Despite Concession June 21, 2013



[6] See What to Expect in 2013 January 7, 2013




[10] Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Press Release June 19, 2013


[12] Frank Shostak Drowning in a Liquidity Trap? May 24, 2013

[13] Federal Bank of Cleveland Credit Easing Policy Tools



[16] Federal Reserve bank of Richmond Price Stability & Monetary Policy



[19] Wikipedia.org Path dependence

[20] Murray N. Rothbard The Austrian Theory of Money January 3, 2012









[29] Inquirer.net Markets still shaken as peso rebounds June 21 2013





[34] Nassim Nicolas Taleb More Skin in the Game in 2013 December 31, 2013 Project Syndicate