Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Video: Food Stamps Make You Healthy

Here is an advertisement, which really is a government propaganda, promoting the welfare state and dependency on government.


In the US according to Breitbart.com
Almost 48 million people received food stamps in 2011, an increase from the 28.2 million who received the welfare benefit in 2008. The cost to taxpayers has more than doubled during this period, to $78 billion, and will account for 78% of Farm Bill spending over the next ten years.
A parasitical relationship can only last for as long as the host can provide.

As the great Ludwig von Mises warned,
In fact, the Welfare State is merely a method for transforming the market economy step by step into socialism.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

More On BSP's $1-B loan to IMF as Part of the EU Bailout

Recently I commented about the immorality of the Philippine government’s participation in the bailout of the Eurozone through the IMF.

There are two issues more I want to add.

Because international reserves from the local central bank, will be used to finance the loan to the IMF, there is this notion that tax money isn’t involved.

First of all the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is a creation of the Congress via REPUBLIC ACT No. 7653 or the THE NEW CENTRAL BANK ACT

The law says

Section 1. Declaration of Policy. - The State shall maintain a central monetary authority that shall function and operate as an independent and accountable body corporate in the discharge of its mandated responsibilities concerning money, banking and credit. In line with this policy, and considering its unique functions and responsibilities, the central monetary authority established under this Act, while being a government-owned corporation, shall enjoy fiscal and administrative autonomy.

Section 2. Creation of the Bangko Sentral. - There is hereby established an independent central monetary authority, which shall be a body corporate known as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, hereafter referred to as the Bangko Sentral.

The capital of the Bangko Sentral shall be Fifty billion pesos (P50,000,000,000), to be fully subscribed by the Government of the Republic, hereafter referred to as the Government, Ten billion pesos (P10,000,000,000) of which shall be fully paid for by the Government upon the effectivity of this Act and the balance to be paid for within a period of two (2) years from the effectivity of this Act in such manner and form as the Government, through the Secretary of Finance and the Secretary of Budget and Management, may thereafter determine.

Since the BSP is a government-owned corporation, then the Philippine government stands as an explicit guarantor of the BSP.

There has been a precedent to this.

Central Bank of the Philippines, the predecessor of the BSP, suffered massive losses to the tune of an estimated Php 300 billion as consequence of the series of bailouts provided by then President Cory Aquino to her favorites.

The losses were eventually transferred to the central bank board of liquidators.

This from an ADB study,

In 1993, the new Central Bank Act was approved. This law aimed at ensuring the independence of the conduct of monetary policy from political interference. It also provided for the recapitalization of the central bank and the transfer of over P300 billion worth of losses of the old central bank to a board of liquidators. The new central bank is now known as the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

The board of liquidators constitutes an ad hoc government agency (Philippines Executive Order no. 141 Reconstituting the Central Bank Board of Liquidators) headed by the President of the Philippines, and whose other board members include members of the monetary board, Department of Finance, Department of Budget and Management and an executive director nominated by the board.

This means that the losses of the old central bank has been carried over to the Philippine government (at taxpayer’s expense)

The Point is: ALL actions by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, as a government agency, are underwritten by the taxpayers.

And the second point is that no matter the complexity of the structure of political institutions, in essence, government survive from taxes, central banks notwithstanding.

Another idea is that $1 billion represents a small fraction of the BSP’s portfolio.

This has ethical, institutional and behavioral implications.

First the EU crisis exists because there hardly has been any private sector willing to finance insolvent institutions. Only governments, through the use of badges and guns on their citizenry, have been willing to finance them.

This means that the risks to loans for bailouts are REAL.

As Professor Arnold Kling rightly points out,

For private debt issued within a country, creditors have recourse to the court system to try to recover their money. But there is no court with the power to force the government of Spain to pay anything to its creditors. So, even if the German government, in order to "save the European union," agrees as an agent for its citizens to buy existing Spanish debt at par in exchange for new debt worth 70 cents on the euro, how can we be sure that Spain will pay off the new debt?

In short, governments recklessly expose people’s money to greater risks, and worst, they do this even without the public’s consent.

Next is that a billion here, a billion there, pretty soon, you're talking real money, it’s a quote attributed to the late US Congressman and Senator Everett Dirksen. This means governments freely spend or allocate other people’s money without compunction.

Of course there will always be the issue of opportunity costs or money spent on the EU through IMF could be used for other political expenditures.

Finally, bailouts leads to more bailouts as what we are seeing today. Eventually the accumulation of debts from all these, in the HOPE that bailouts will produce the intended effect, will lead to systemic fragility, which risks dragging along the entire world into a black hole.

ADB’s Imprudent Investments in the Philippines

From the ADB

The Asian Development Bank’s (ADB) Board of Directors today approved a $350-million Increasing Competitiveness for Inclusive Growth Program loan to help the Philippines improve its business climate through a mix of policy reforms and programs to promote competitiveness and develop labor skills among out-of-school youth.

“There has been marked improvement in the Philippines’ global competitiveness, but regulation, lack of domestic competition in key sectors, underinvestment in infrastructure and a mismatch of skills in the labor market are keeping the country from realizing its full potential,” said Kunio Senga, Director General of Southeast Asia Department.

To help young people better integrate into the labor market and develop workplace skills, ADB is working closely with the Department of Labor and Employment to design a youth job search program, called MyFirstJob, which will be piloted in 2013. The initial pilot will provide up to 1,600 youth with career counseling services, grants for vocational training, and internships with employers.

MyFirstJob is one of several initiatives that will be used to make the labor market more inclusive. Others include the tourism industry-led skills development program and a new tourism quality assurance and accreditation system that will improve skills and competitiveness in the tourism industry.

(bold highlights mine)

Well ADB seems to be throwing away taxpayers money on some wishful thinking measures that, in reality, treats the symptoms than the disease. These will represent taxpayers (ADB’s contributors) money down the drain, as well as more burden to Philippine taxpayers because of the spendthrift loan program.

First of all, the ADB admits that the problem has been one of "regulation and lack of domestic competition in key sectors". So the answer here is to substantially reduce regulatory and legal impediments as well as taxes and all of other barriers and costs to businesses. But ADB has been silent on the details of their proposed reforms.

Second, ADB sees another problem of “a mismatch of skills” in the domestic labor market.

Plagued by a poor investing climate, this only means that domestic markets has been heavily distorted by political interventions.

This is why many Filipinos would rather seek employment overseas and why commerce have largely been done underground or through the informal or shadow economy.

So how on earth does ADB know of a “skills mismatch”? By mere comparison with other economies?

In a free market environment or in market economies, economic systems emerge out of specialization (law of comparative advantage), so what may be advantageous for country X may not be advantageous for country Y. But specialization through the markets has not been sufficiently addressed, again out of political obstacles.

In essence, matching of skills and jobs is hardly the cause the problem but rather a symptom. Yet without a salutary marketplace, there hardly seems a way establish the domestic comparative advantage from which local labor market should cater to. ADB then seems to be presuming the possession of the right knowledge which it doesn't have.

ADB should instead address reforms based on the liberalization not only of labor markets but of the entire economy.

So what good does the MyFirstJob project do?

With the lack of investments, job searches won’t have any material impact. The answer, instead, is to CREATE JOBS through a business friendly environment. Job searches will become a natural dynamic once the business environment expands. Also, job searches can be accomplished by many private sector internet based platforms.

To add, tourism industry-led skills development program can also be handled by the private sector. Tourist enterprises would want to have employees with the right skills to meet the demand of their consumers for them to profit from.

So the demand of the industry will be reflected on supply as local citizens will conform with changes in the industry and of the economy. If the tourism industry continues to boom, so will the number of people who would want to join the sector by acquiring the skills required. And this will be most likely provided by schools or by enterprises themselves through in housing training or education outsourcing. This does NOT need the government.

However “new tourism quality assurance and accreditation system” only means more bureaucracy, red tape and regulations which ADB sees as a problem. So the ADB the loan proposes to do more of the same thing and expecting different results. Hasn't this been called insanity?

At the end of the day, the money that ADB lends money to the Philippine government accounts for as nothing more than political symbolism, wasted taxpayer resources (which means more tax burden for us) and a wonderful ($350 million) business opportunities for domestic cronies and for the pockets of political officials.

A side comment: Could this be the money used to recently pump up the local stock market?

Agricultural Protectionism is an Environmental Hazard

Protectionism isn’t just economically destructive, it is also an environmental hazard. Agricultural protectionism is usually couched in terms of ‘self sufficiency’ or in the US the “Locavore’s dilemma”.

An excerpt from a Book Review at the Wall Street Journal explains why: (hat tip Cato’s David Boaz) [bold emphasis mine]

Pierre Desrochers and Hiroko Shimizu seem to have had the most fun among this group of authors. "The Locavore's Dilemma" argues that the benefits of eating local have been vastly overstated by food activists and its serious detriments swept under the rug. The tone is distinctly upbeat, no doubt because being a gleeful debunker is fun but also because the two authors are resolutely cheerful about the world's food situation.

Mr. Desrochers and Ms. Shimizu, a married couple who are both professional economists, present a counterintuitive but well-supported case that local self-sufficiency is the worst thing you can do for the environment, since it requires many crops to be grown in the wrong places, with damaging ecological consequences. American farmers, they observe, used to grow wheat locally in the Shenandoah Valley, tilling steep and rocky slopes—and unleashing a torrent of soil erosion. With the shift of grain farming to the far more productive and erosion-resistant soils of the Midwest, "more grain is now being produced on fewer acres and, overall, more habitat is available for wildlife." Their study of the history of American agriculture is one of the strongest points of this book.

Famines were common in the past precisely because food security rested on the vagaries of local conditions rather than the resiliency of trade, they observe: "Subsistence farmers periodically starve while commercial agricultural producers who rely on monocultures for their livelihood don't."

Doug Casey: The Human Species will Evolve to Other Species

The visionary Doug Casey believes that people will continue to evolve in line not only with the changes in the environment, but also along with the changes in technology or through adaption to technology

Once humans get established in space, evolution will take over – and take off. Before then, however, and likely even before we leave the planet, I'll bet there's going to be a lot of intentional, as opposed to natural, genetic alteration. It will start with efforts to eliminate undesirable genes that predispose one to heart disease, cancer, or genetic disorders. But while we're at it, why not also select for blue eyes, taller, more muscular frame, greater intelligence, and anything else people might want their children to have? Some people won't want to go that route, preferring to leave things to nature, but their children will be at a disadvantage to those whose parents have selected superior genes. That could lead to speciation along several lines.

Read the rest here.

I encountered this article earlier.

But having been immersed in too many readings, it took Bob Wenzel’s post to remind me to share with you this, what I think is a, significant outlook.

If I am not mistaken, Mr. Casey may have been reading futurist Ray Kurzweil’s Singularity is Near.

UN Hits on President Obama’s Drone Warfare

The UN sees Obama’s drone warfare as violating international human rights.

From Personal Liberty Digest,

A U.N. investigator wants some answers regarding President Barack Obama’s penchant for carrying out targeted drone attacks overseas that routinely result in civilian casualties.

The United States uses military drones to carry out attacks in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen and Somalia. In a 28-page report addressed to the U.N. Human Rights Council, Christof Heyns, special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, said that Washington must clarify the legal basis for the policy of killing suspected al-Qaida and Taliban leaders and associates rather than trying to capture them.

“The government should clarify the procedures in place to ensure that any targeted killing complies with international humanitarian law and human rights and indicate the measures or strategies applied to prevent casualties, as well as the measures in place to provide prompt, thorough, effective and independent public investigation of alleged violations,” the report says.

President Obama’s imperial role as one man judge, jury and executioner through the drone warfare has in fact been implemented in the Philippines.

In my view, the territorial disputes, which I think China has been complicit, has only opened the doors for deeper intervention by the US in local politics.

And more incidences of drone warfare or overt interventions (in the name of war on terror) will likely lead to more anti-American protests.

As Ron Paul recently warned,

The use of drones overseas may have become so convenient, operated as they are from a great distance, that far more “collateral damage” has become acceptable. Collateral damage is a polite way of saying “killing innocent civilians.”…

This dramatic increase in the use of drones and the lowered threshold for their use to kill foreigners has tremendous implications for our national security. At home, some claim the use of drones reduces risk to American service members. But this can be true only in the most shortsighted sense. Internationally the expanded use of drones is wildly unpopular and in fact creates more enemies than it eliminates.

President Obama perhaps believes that he is the world’s savior.

Singaporization’ of Georgia: The Economic Freedom Model

A fundamental pillar for the deepening of the global wealth convergence trend is that developing or emerging markets are likely to loosen up on their economies from politics as opposed to the financially desperate developed nations.

Sovereign Man’s Simon Black seems bullish with Georgia, (bold emphasis mine)

One of the biggest reasons for this is that there is hardly any natural wealth in the country. Like Hong Kong or Singapore, Georgia has figured out that it can’t get rich by becoming a resource powerhouse.

Consequently, the last several years has seen what they call the ’de-Sovietization and Singaporization’ of Georgia.

Georgia has shot up in the ranks of international business… from slumming with the likes of Pakistan just a few years ago, to besting places like Estonia and Switzerland.

They’re doing it by tearing down worthless, extractive economic institutions and making things easy for business and investors.

At a 15% flat rate, for example, corporate taxes are essentially as low as Singapore or Hong Kong. Capital gains, in many cases, is zero.

Regulation has been reduced dramatically– registering a property or starting a business, for example, are easier in Georgia than just about anywhere in the world.

And with both a US and UK comprehensive tax treaty (sorry Canada, Australia, and New Zealand), Georgia could make an excellent place to establish a tax efficient international business structure.

Ultimately, its ease of doing business is going to be one of the major growth catalysts for this economy– just like Panama, Dubai, or Estonia before.

Georgia is surrounded by places that are marred in obscene regulatory minefields, Byzantine tax codes, and corrupt officials. In the future, this will make Georgia the natural choice to do business in the region.

What’s the point: Prosperity does not emanate from sheer resources. To the contrary, resources may lead to a resource curse—where economic growth has been impeded by the abundance of resources due to lack of competitiveness. This has mostly been due to cronyism, economic fascism and or state capitalism.

This applies to the Philippines whom has been blessed by resources but has failed to take off economically. Yet instead of focusing on what is needed, politics keeps diverting people's attention to the superficial.

For instance, having Scarborough or Spratly’s has NOT and will not lead to prosperity. This only shows how such political controversies are really a waste of time and energy.

More, such disputes serves only to stir up nationalism and increase the risks of military conflagration at the expense of everyone.

In reality, territorial disputes over supposed resources (which is more a propaganda than reality) represents a façade meant to protect the interests of domestic cronies than of the average Filipinos. (Guess who will get the service contracts for resource extractions once the dispute is settled?)

Add to that the interests of foreign military industrial industries.

What truly is required are reforms ala Georgia: Economic freedom or the Singaporization’ of the Philippines.

Quote of the Day: The Spurious Idea of Measuring Value

The basis of modern economics is the cognition that it is precisely the disparity in the value attached to the objects exchanged that results in their being exchanged. People buy and sell only because they appraise the things given up less than those received. Thus the notion of a measurement of value is vain. An act of exchange is neither preceded nor accompanied by any process which could be called a measuring of value. An individual may attach the same value to two things; but then no exchange can result.

This is from the great Ludwig von Mises from his magnum opus Human Action Chapter XI Section 2 p.204. (hat tip Mises Blog)

This is in accord to yesterday’s quote of the day where Professor Deirdre McCloskey bashed the notion of using mathematical formalism to measure “happiness”.

EU Summit Faces Political Deadlock, Cyprus Seeks Bailout

Political impasse at the EU, amidst a global economic slowdown, continues to hound the markets…

From Bloomberg,

Chancellor Angela Merkel hardened her resistance to euro- area debt sharing, setting Germany on a collision course with its allies at a summit starting on June 28.

In signs the debt crisis is worsening, Cyprus said it will seek a financial lifeline from the euro area’s firewall funds, and Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras consented to the resignation of his finance minister, Vassilios Rapanos.

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded 28 Spanish banks, citing the country’s sovereign debt and rising losses on real- estate loans. The lenders’ long-term debt and deposit ratings were cut by one to four notches, Moody’s said yesterday in a statement. The New York-based rating company also downgraded 16 Spanish banks on May 17.

Italy and Spain will sell debt today amid concern Europe’s fiscal crisis is infecting bigger economies.

The EU crisis adds a new victim: Cyprus. This only translates to the worsening of the crisis in the face of internecine political squabbling.

Political stalemate has also been a scourge to China and the US.

I have been saying that political pledges will eventually yield to the law of diminishing returns and that financial markets will eventually DEMAND real action.

It appears that financial markets are beginning to see through the façade of political fables or seems to have initiated the discounting of these phony promises.

Be careful out there.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Quote of the Day: The Folly of Measuring Happiness

What the economists could measure pretty easily, though, was the money you have for buying sandwiches or paying the rent. Income is not your happiness and doubling it will not make you twice as happy—but it does measure your capability for action.

That’s from a lengthy critique, by Professor and author Deirdre McCloskey, on experts who fallaciously attempt to “engineer a happy society”

Former Climate Change Alarmist James Lovelock Blasts the Green “Religion”

James Lovelock, a famed godfather of global warming and a former “alarmist” whom has recanted his position turns the table to lambast the Green “religion”

The Toronto Sun does a synopsis of a Lovelock interview…

(1) A long-time supporter of nuclear power as a way to lower greenhouse gas emissions, which has made him unpopular with environmentalists, Lovelock has now come out in favour of natural gas fracking (which environmentalists also oppose), as a low-polluting alternative to coal.

As Lovelock observes, “Gas is almost a give-away in the U.S. at the moment. They’ve gone for fracking in a big way. This is what makes me very cross with the greens for trying to knock it … Let’s be pragmatic and sensible and get Britain to switch everything to methane. We should be going mad on it.” (Kandeh Yumkella, co-head of a major United Nations program on sustainable energy, made similar arguments last week at a UN environmental conference in Rio de Janeiro, advocating the development of conventional and unconventional natural gas resources as a way to reduce deforestation and save millions of lives in the Third World.)

(2) Lovelock blasted greens for treating global warming like a religion.

“It just so happens that the green religion is now taking over from the Christian religion,” Lovelock observed. “I don’t think people have noticed that, but it’s got all the sort of terms that religions use … The greens use guilt. That just shows how religious greens are. You can’t win people round by saying they are guilty for putting (carbon dioxide) in the air.”

(3) Lovelock mocks the idea modern economies can be powered by wind turbines.

As he puts it, “so-called ‘sustainable development’ … is meaningless drivel … We rushed into renewable energy without any thought. The schemes are largely hopelessly inefficient and unpleasant. I personally can’t stand windmills at any price.”

(4) Finally, about claims “the science is settled” on global warming: “One thing that being a scientist has taught me is that you can never be certain about anything. You never know the truth. You can only approach it and hope to get a bit nearer to it each time. You iterate towards the truth. You don’t know it.”

It's nice to hear people humbly admit the fact that we can't know everything, especially not from the false assumptions of math 'models'.

Yet the politics of climate change is like inflationism, they are surreptitiously designed to promote the stakeholdings of special interest groups, through fascist or socialist policies in the guise, and mantra, of saving “earth”.

Lies that have been said so often and believed by many is still a lie.

As the father of modern psychology William James warned,

There's nothing so absurd that if you repeat it often enough, people will believe it

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Phisix: Will the Risk ON Environment be Sustainable?

High Volatility Continues

The Philippines Phisix had an ENORMOUS ‘RISK ON’ week with a raucous shindig over the outcome of the Greece elections.

The Phisix jumped by an eye popping 3.84% for the week to take the top spot in the region. This week’s gain practically obliterated the previous two weeks of losses.

ASEAN markets somewhat shared the carousal.

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Unknown to most the Phisix-ASEAN blast came amidst highly volatile global market actions.

While most of the world shared the early excitement brought about by the pro-Euro Greece victory, gains eventually succumb to heavy losses. It’s only in Japan and in the major ASEAN markets where gains were maintained until the week’s close.

Even in the US, market breadth has been decisively either ON or OFF or a phenomenon driven by a rising or sinking tide.

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Bespoke Invest writes[1],

We consider all or nothing days in the market to be days where the net daily A/D reading in the S&P 500 exceeds plus or minus 400. After a slow start to the year, the pace of all-or-nothing days has really picked up as nine of the year's sixteen occurrences have all come since the beginning of May. At the current rate, the S&P 500 is on pace to see 34 all-or-nothing days this year.

This demonstrates of the continued high volatility that has dominated the financial markets.

Another “Political” Intervention to Bolster the Phisix?

I suspect that interventions from non-market forces may be responsible anew for the resiliency of the Phisix.

The Phisix was bizarrely unruffled by the rout of the US markets last Thursday and even closed slightly positive on Friday.

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Friday’s session opened with the Phisix sharply down driven by the developments in the US. But in no time, aggressive buyers constantly bid up the heavy market cap stocks, particularly by PLDT [PSE: TEL] and Bank of the Philippine Islands [PSE: BPI] significantly higher, thus driving the major domestic composite higher.

The 75 point pendulum swing from the troughs to the highs translated to another amazing 1.5% intraday move (intraday chart from technistock.com).

Such peculiar aggressive buying behaviors occurred when the region’s bourses suffered from losses.

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Friday’s closing scorecard for Asia from Bloomberg.

Why would any rational market agent aggressively buy up such index issues in the knowledge that they can take advantage of, and save a lot through bargain hunting or buying defensively, considering the prevailing dour market sentiment?

Are these forces really sooo exceedingly bullish such that they expect Philippine equities to immediately zoom even amidst all the surrounding risks? Are these forces price insensitive? Or are they assuming the role of market makers or of stock market operators?

Remember these entities are dealing with tens, if not hundreds of millions of pesos worth of equity positions. So they are unlikely to be gullible retail investors.

While it may be true that both issues posted heavy foreign buying on that day, statistics may not tell the true story. Foreign buying can come from offshore entities owned by local non-market entities or from foreign institutions allied to the local political class.

Besides, their actions appear to be inconsistent with actions of portfolio managers around the world as emerging market funds have registered net outflows.

From Reuters[2], (June 21st)

Funds that focus on emerging markets also saw outflows last month, eVestment found. For the ninth consecutive month investor withdrawals outpaced allocations to those managers, with $1.1 billion in redemeptions in May.

Even if foreign investors have distinct treatment on various emerging markets, I find these seemingly deliberate market defying actions as very suspicious.

As a side note, the Phisix has posted two consecutive weeks of net foreign buying.

Also Friday’s action seems to parallel the dynamics executed over the same environment three weeks back[3]. Yet such an attempt had been shot down by a single day loss[4].

Three weeks into a recovery, these operators have hardly been significantly up today.

The point is ‘interventions’ will eventually be smoothed out or neutralized by the underlying forces which drives the financial markets.

Will the Current Phisix Divergence Last?

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This week’s dramatic upside showing by the Phisix nonetheless highlights another anomalous divergence within the region; particularly the winners Philippines (PCOMP orange)—Malaysia (FBMKLCI red) and the laggards as Thailand (SET yellow)—Indonesia (JCI green).

In the past, ASEAN price trends have largely moved in consonance, inflection points have almost been synchronized (blue vertical lines)

So either divergence become a lasting (decoupling) feature, or that eventually a recoupling will happen—where the laggards catches up or the winners will fall in line with the laggards.

My bet is on the latter—recoupling. There have hardly been any durable signs of divergences. And a decoupling within the region must also mean a decoupling with the world. That would be unlikely.

As previously discussed[5] the Philippines IS sensitive to developments abroad particularly through the merchandise trade channel (which accounts for about 50% of GDP) and through the OFW-remittance channel (which is about nearly 12% of GDP)

I believe that the possibility of a decoupling may happen in the event of a currency crisis. However current setting which has been about unwieldy debt and boom bust cycles doesn’t seem conducive for such scenario. Of course I could be wrong.

Even in terms of conventional methodology, sustained divergences may seem implausible.

If economic growth should prove to be an indicator of future profits or earnings, then current manufacturing surveys of major economies does not seem to be supportive of further earnings or profit growth.

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Europe’s largest economies Germany and France seem headed towards or if not have already been in a recession. The US manufacturing index has likewise slumped, while China’s manufacturing index has steadily been on a decline as shown by the charts from Danske Bank[6].

Of course this ultimately depends on the persistence of such trends.

The same applies to earnings growth.

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The consensus view of earnings of global publicly listed companies according to the UBS appears to be rolling over[7].

So if stocks continue to rise even as economic growth begins to stagnate, which subsequently suggests of increasing risks of a downturn in profits, then deductive logic tells us that rising stocks won’t be sustainable.

Sustained rise in stocks means that valuations will eventually become ‘pricey’ and thus subject markets to the risks of the regression to the mean[8]—or outlier events that statistically reverts towards the mean.

In short, markets will decline either orderly or in disorderly fashion depending if markets will adjust today or sometime in the future to reflect on the evolving realities.

So there hardly have been fundamentals (even in the conventional perspective) in support of a sustained upswing EXCEPT for interventions by central banks that supports the financial markets.

And here lies the essence of today’s volatile markets.

Diminishing Returns and the Withdrawal Syndrome

As I pointed out last week, expectations of central bank rescues have functioned as the focal point of the market’s directions.

I wrote[9],

Global financial markets have relied heavily on the “buy the rumor” from central banking rescues.

These are likely to have two short to medium term outcomes.

One, if central bankers FAIL to deliver in accordance to market’s expectations, then we will likely see another huge bout of downside volatility in global equity markets…

On the other hand, if markets may be temporarily satisfied with REAL actions of central banks (e.g. $1 trillion bailout) then we should see a minor or a slight “sell on news”. But this should be seen as opportunities to RE-ENTER the markets incrementally.

Like the bailout of Spain, the Greece elections have had a short term effect on most of the world markets.

[As a side note, to call the Philippine (Phisix) and Malaysia’s (KLSE) one week deviation as sustainable trends would be based on HOPE.]

The attention of global financial markets eventually shifted to the US Federal Reserve to deliver the promise of stimulus.

The Ben Bernanke led Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) DID deliver, but did so reluctantly.

The FOMC extended Operation Twist until the yearend by only about three-fifths ($267 billion) of the original size ($400 billion)[10]. But along with it comes more assurance of “additional asset purchases would be among the things that we would certainly consider”

Unknown to most is that the current bailouts have been subjected to the laws of diminishing returns.

For instance, the positive impact to the marketplace from bailouts in Eurozone has been shortening or experiencing diminishing returns as measured and documented by a recent study[11].

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The same diminishing returns can be seen from US Federal Reserve actions (QE 1, QE 2, and Operation Twist or Maturity Extension Program MEP) as shown by the yields from different debt instruments[12].

The point is that central bankers will need to step up or INTENSIFY the scale of balance sheets expansions. Otherwise similar or lesser degree of actions would mean vastly reduced positive impact to the marketplace which alternatively accentuates the risks from downside volatilities.

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So the Fed’s announcement belatedly incited a huge slump on the S&P 500, Thursday.

Again, the slump can be construed as ventilation of the frustrated expectations or as consequence to “sell on news” or as manifestations of diminishing returns or a combo of the three.

Yet it would be misguided to view the FED’s actions as simply providing what the market wanted as proposed by the populist analyst John Mauldin[13],

So why did the Fed continue Operation Twist? Because the market (that amorphous, omnivorous blob) expected something from the Fed. This summer's version of Twist and Whisper was about the least they could do.

The FED has been CONDITIONING the markets of the coming FED actions that has artificially propped up the markets[14].

So the market expectations simply adjusted to pledges made by officials. Besides market participants have been brainwashed like Pavlov’s dogs with the Bernanke “inflation” Put.

And that’s why bad news became good news—or markets rose amidst a spate of bad news—for the simple reason that major central bank authorities continually whetted on the appetite of the marketplace with guarantees of support.

The genuine reason for the extension of Operation Twist is that the FED continues to finance the US treasury or bails out the US government.

While Operation Twist has been designed to nudge market’s appetite to take on more risk “by taking long-term bonds off the market”, notes the Wall Street Journal[15], what has been happening, instead, is that the US Treasury has been taking advantage of low interest rates to ramp up on the issuance of long term securities.

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This means that the Fed has actually been accommodating the shift in the debt maturity profile by the US Treasury, whose moves may have been possibly intended to reduce rollover risks[16] or the risk from refinancing debt that could be triggered by an upward move of interest rates.

A surge in interest rate would balloon interest payments and deficits and most likely trigger a debt crisis ala the Eurozone (see chart above[17]). A US debt crisis would likely elicit a currency crisis if the FED insists on resorting to the printing press to solve her problem of debt.

But of course, the Fed’s accommodation has also been about the growing debt of the US which now stands at $15.809 trillion according to USdebtclock.org

US politicians have become so addicted to debt based spending such that House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., writes the Washington Examiner[18], thinks that President Obama should unilaterally eliminate the debt ceiling. Politicians really believe that they are above the laws of economics.

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And perhaps the Fed’s parsimonious actions may have been due to the reduced number of short term instruments available for the twist (US Treasury securities held by the FED for 1-5 years maturity has been collapsing).

Or perhaps, Mr. Bernanke would like to avoid a political backlash similar to that of the last quarter of 2011, which may have prompted him to jilt the markets expecting for QE 3.0[19].

Bottom line, the current uncertainty dynamic comes with the growing gap between actualized policies and market expectations mainly premised on the pledges of backstops from central bank authorities.

The failure to meet such expectations is likely to provoke turbulent episodes symptomatic of a withdrawal syndrome.

Uncertainty leads to volatility.

As the past 3 weeks has shown, the Phisix has not been immune to volatility in both directions.

China’s Languid Economic Conditions Aggravates Political Uncertainty

Developments in China has been adding to the landscape of uncertainty.

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Reports of a worsening decline in the manufacturing index[20] have not only led to a technical breakdown of China’s Shanghai markets but also to a breakdown of commodity prices.

The SSEC will soon test the immediate support level (green horizontal line)

China’s economy seems to be in a slomo burn rate.

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And the epicienter of China’s weakness (bursting bubble?) emanates from the property sector (see chart above[21]) which continues to reel from a slomo decline, and which has spread to the manufacturing sector.

An even grimmer news is that reports say that China has been artificially been propping up economic statistics for political reasons[22], particularly for the coming national elections, as local officials pad up statistical output in order to get promotions. The implication is that China’s economic performance has been weaker than what has been published

So far, the Chinese national government has repeatedly shown reluctance to aggressively intervene. Most of interventions has been marginal, done on a stealth State level[23], on the monetary aspects (lowering of interest rates)[24] and on the cosmetic inflation of economic statistics.

So the deterioration in China’s economy has been aggravated by political deadlock.

Low Oil Prices Jeopardizes the Oil Welfare State and Enhances Risks of War

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The ongoing economic slowdown in multiple fronts (most especially in China) has hurt commodity prices and has led the US Oil (WTIC) benchmark to break below the $80 level.

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And with oil prices slightly below the $80 threshold, this should begin to affect the fiscal balances of many welfare states of oil producing economies, whose critical welfare threshold is at the $80 level and above (see chart[25]).

As I previously wrote[26],

The welfare states of many of the major producers, particularly OPEC economies or even non-OPEC such as Russia greatly depends lofty oil prices, perhaps about $85 and above. Even President Obama’s green energy projects have been anchored on high oil prices.

This means that if oil prices breaks below their welfare threshold for a prolonged period, then this would incite popular uprising and the eventual collapse of the current political order.

And this is why oil producing governments have been limiting private sector’s access to oil reserves. Yet the capacity by these governments to bring oil to the surface has been constrained by government budget, which has been mostly spent on welfare (yes to buy off their political privileges from their constituents), and the lack of technology.

The implication of the above is that these governments will probably try to restrict production, seek the war option (e.g. urge the US to militarily take on Iran), inflate their economies to pay for their welfare system or influence major central banks and politicians of major economies to resort to more inflationism.

And it is why the brinkmanship politics in the Middle East has scaled up the drumbeats of war not just on Iran, but also on Syria.

Foreign policy interventions have been about promoting the interests of the welfare states allied to the West and the interests of the neoconservative political class who represents the interests of the military industrial complex.

As Ron Paul rightly points out[27],

And once again, we are about to engage in military action against Syria and at the same time irresponsibly reactivating the Cold War with Russia. We're now engaged in a game of "chicken" with Russia which presents a much greater threat to our security than does Syria…

Controlling Iranian oil, just as we have done in Saudi Arabia and are attempting to do in Iraq, is the real goal of the neo-conservatives who have been in charge of our foreign policy for the past couple of decades.

So politicians are looking for political scapegoats from which to divert people’s attentions, as well as, to create justifications for more inflationism.

Bottom line: Either from demand-supply perspective or from monetary inflation, falling commodity prices can hardly be seen as positive for stock markets for the moment.

Falling commodity prices are manifestations of an ongoing liquidation process from malinvestments and from the political uncertainty over ambiguous policies.

We would need to wait for declared actions from political authorities. Otherwise, should markets awaken to the reality of false promises, downside volatility will likely be amplified.


[1] Bespoke Investment Group Another All or Nothing Day!, June 21, 2012

[2] Reuters.com Investors fled Europe-linked hedge funds in May-report, June 21, 2012

[3] See Phisix: Very Impressive Day or Month End Close for May 2012, May 31, 2012

[4] See Phisix: Last Week’s Big Surge Wiped Out in a Single Day! June 4, 2012

[5] See Will the Phisix Divergence Last? June 4, 2012

[6] Danske Research Time for another important EU summit, June 22, 2012

[7] Zero Hedge Three Charts Your Stockbroker Won't Want You To See, June 18, 2012

[8] Chegg.com Definition of Regression to the Mean Regression to the mean, or regression threat, refers to the statistical phenomenon of outlier data moving toward the mean in subsequent non-randomly selected tests. Statisticians need to take regression to the mean into account when designing experiments.

[9] See Dealing with Today’s Uncertainty: Patience is the Better Part of Valor June 17, 2012

[10] See US Federal Reserve Extends Operation Twist, Commodities Drop June 21, 2012

[11] See The Diminishing Returns from Euro Bailouts Becoming Evident June 20, 2012

[12] Zero Hedge The Diminishing Returns Of Central Planning, And Why More Printing Would Have No Impact June 15, 2012

[13] Mauldin John, Daddy's Home Goldseek.com June 24, 2012

[14] See Bad News Is Good News: Global Markets Rise on MORE Stimulus Expectations June 20, 2012

[15] Wall Street Journal Economics Blog Bernanke Acknowledges Treasury Strategy at Odds With Fed Policy, June 22, 2012

[16] Investopedia.com Rollover Risk

[17] Zero Hedge Presenting Dave Rosenberg's Complete Chartporn, June 1, 2012

[18] Washington Examiner Pelosi: Obama should unilaterally eliminate the debt ceiling, June 22, 2012

[19] See Bernanke Jilts Markets on Steroids, Suffers Violent Withdrawal Symptoms, September 22, 2012

[20] See China’s Manufacturing Troubles Hasn’t Gone Away June 21, 2012

[21] Businessinsider.com SocGen: China's Housing Market Correction Is 'Sending Shock Waves Through Its Economy', June 18, 2012

[22] See China’s Economy has been Artificially Embellished for Politics June 24, 2012

[23] See China’s New Loans Unexpectedly Surged in May June 12, 2012

[24] See HOT: China Cuts Lending Rates and Deposit Rates June 7, 2012

[25] King Byron What’s the Deal With Oil Prices? June 13, 2012 Daily Reckoning.

[26] See Phisix: The Correction Phase Cometh, May 14, 2012

[27] Paul Ron When Will We Attack Syria?, June 20, 2012, lewrockwell.com

China’s Economy has been Artificially Embellished for Politics

China’s economy may be weaker than publicized as local officials manipulate data for the coming elections

Reports the New York Times

As the Chinese economy continues to sputter, prominent corporate executives in China and Western economists say there is evidence that local and provincial officials are falsifying economic statistics to disguise the true depth of the troubles.

Record-setting mountains of excess coal have accumulated at the country’s biggest storage areas because power plants are burning less coal in the face of tumbling electricity demand. But local and provincial government officials have forced plant managers not to report to Beijing the full extent of the slowdown, power sector executives said.

Electricity production and consumption have been considered a telltale sign of a wide variety of economic activity. They are widely viewed by foreign investors and even some Chinese officials as the gold standard for measuring what is really happening in the country’s economy, because the gathering and reporting of data in China is not considered as reliable as it is in many countries.

Indeed, officials in some cities and provinces are also overstating economic output, corporate revenue, corporate profits and tax receipts, the corporate executives and economists said. The officials do so by urging businesses to keep separate sets of books, showing improving business results and tax payments that do not exist.

The executives and economists roughly estimated that the effect of the inaccurate statistics was to falsely inflate a variety of economic indicators by 1 or 2 percentage points. That may be enough to make very bad economic news look merely bad. The executives and economists requested anonymity for fear of jeopardizing their relationship with the Chinese authorities, on whom they depend for data and business deals.

The following chart Zero Hedge shows of electricity production trends during the first quarter.

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It would appear that the decline may have been deeper than what is shown, if indeed the observations by executives in the report are valid.

As always, politics has always been THE reason for the statistical chicanery. Again the New York Times,

Questions about the quality and accuracy of Chinese economic data are longstanding, but the concerns now being raised are unusual. This year is the first time since 1989 that a sharp economic slowdown has coincided with the once-a-decade changeover in the country’s top leadership.

Officials at all levels of government are under pressure to report good economic results to Beijing as they wait for promotions, demotions and transfers to cascade down from Beijing. So narrower and seemingly more obscure measures of economic activity are being falsified, according to the executives and economists.

“The government officials don’t want to see the negative,” so they tell power managers to report usage declines as zero change, said a chief executive in the power sector.

Many Chinese politicians think that they can sucker the public by inflating statistical data, but all these masquerade are really being manifested in the financial markets; particularly in the commodity sphere, in China’s equity benchmark and even the yuan, which has been on a downdraft.

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Bottom line is that more artificialities (statistical inflation, aside from real inflation) equates to more uncertainties which implies of more market volatilities.