Tuesday, September 04, 2012

US Companies Prepare for Greece Exit

More evidence of the financial market-real world detachment.

Seen from the financial markets, Euro’s problems seem headed for a silver lining. But from the ground, events seems turning for the worst.

US companies are reportedly preparing for a “Greece exit”

From the New York Times,

Even as Greece desperately tries to avoid defaulting on its debt, American companies are preparing for what was once unthinkable: that Greece could soon be forced to leave the euro zone.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch has looked into filling trucks with cash and sending them over the Greek border so clients can continue to pay local employees and suppliers in the event money is unavailable. Ford has configured its computer systems so they will be able to immediately handle a new Greek currency.

No one knows just how broad the shock waves from a Greek exit would be, but big American banks and consulting firms have also been doing a brisk business advising their corporate clients on how to prepare for a splintering of the euro zone.

That is a striking contrast to the assurances from European politicians that the crisis is manageable and that the currency union can be held together. On Thursday, the European Central Bank will consider measures that would ease pressure on Europe’s cash-starved countries.

Public’s opinion has been shifting rapidly. Again from the same article… (bold emphasis mine)

In a survey this summer, the firm found that 80 percent of clients polled expected Greece to leave the euro zone, and a fifth of those expected more countries to follow.

“Fifteen months ago when we started looking at this, we said it was unthinkable,” said Heiner Leisten, a partner with the Boston Consulting Group in Cologne, Germany, who heads up its global insurance practice. “It’s not impossible or unthinkable now.”

Mr. Leisten’s firm, as well as PricewaterhouseCoopers, has already considered the timing of a Greek withdrawal — for example, the news might hit on a Friday night, when global markets are closed.

A bank holiday could quickly follow, with the stock market and most local financial institutions shutting down, while new capital controls make it hard to move money in and out of the country.

“We’ve had conversations with several dozen companies and we’re doing work for a number of these,” said Peter Frank, who advises corporate treasurers as a principal at Pricewaterhouse. “Almost all of that has come in over the transom in the last 90 days.”

From the hindsight everything looks easy to explain, but as I have been saying events can be so fluid, where moves can be swift and dramatic.

I’d say that an exit will mark the climax of the bear market of Greece equity markets.

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The Athens General Exchange index has fallen by nearly 90% since 2007. (chart from Bloomberg)

Greece will likely devalue (inflate) intensively. These should put a floor and perhaps reverse the bear market trend. But rising stocks doesn’t necessarily translate to an economic recovery, instead they can be symptoms of severe inflation or even hyperinflation.

How the Rent Seeking Model Failed Enron

When companies shift focus from servicing the consumers to seeking to profit from regulation, trouble lies ahead. That’s the story of Enron’s debacle according to a former employee.

Enron used to be the seventh largest corporation in the US, but filed for bankruptcy in 2001 (see timeline of Enron scandal here)

Writes Robert L Bradley Jr. at the Library of Economics and Liberty (hat tip Professor David Henderson)

Enron was a political colossus with a unique range of rent-seeking and subsidy-receiving operations. Ken Lay's announced visions for the company—to become the world's first natural-gas major, then the world's leading energy company, and, finally, the world's leading company—relied on more than free-market entrepreneurship. They were premised on employing political means to catch up with, and outdistance, far larger and more-established corporations.

A big-picture Ph.D. economist with Washington, D.C. experience regulating oil, gas, and electricity, Lay found his niche in the private sector managing federally regulated interstate gas-transmission companies, first at Florida Gas Company and then at Transco Energy Company. When Lay became CEO of Houston Natural Gas Corporation, he transformed a largely unregulated intrastate natural-gas company to a federally regulated (interstate) one in 1984-85. Then, during the next 16 years, he steadily moved the renamed Enron into rent-seeking.

The interesting part is how Enron gamed the system (bold added)

Any analysis of Enron's business history will reveal entrepreneurial error and unhealthy government dependence that left major divisions of Enron in the red or just marginally profitable. But rather than make midcourse corrections, Enron manipulated the highly prescriptive—indeed politicized—tax and accounting systems to create the illusion of profitability. Such gaming was another crucial government front for the company.

The corporate tax division acted as a profit center at Enron by meeting earnings targets. Federal investigators identified 881 offshore subsidiaries as part of Enron's tax-sheltering strategy. Enron's general tax counsel remembers reaching his gaming limit: "When the [tax-saving] number got up to $300 million [in 2001] I said... 'We have to come up with a way to get this through [real] earnings—through regular business'."

Gamed financial reporting was a second "profit center," as Enron scoured the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) rulebook to book paper earnings where economic profit (positive cash flow from operations) was absent. "Financial engineering" also hid liabilities and inflated assets, allowing Enron to meet investor expectations and concoct peculiar narratives about its business performance.

A particularly contrived business in this regard was Enron Energy Services (EES), which purportedly split energy savings with customers via long-term outsourcing agreements. EES buttressed Enron's "green" image, but the green was not monetary. Mark-to-market accounting turned into mark-to-model, under which arbitrary assumptions about future energy prices turned losses into profits. The GAAP game was even explained in Enron's employee Risk Management Manual:

Reported earnings follow the rules and principles of accounting. The results do not always create measures consistent with underlying economics. However, corporate management's performance is generally measured by accounting income, not underlying economics. Risk management strategies are therefore directed at accounting rather than economic performance.

A third exercise in government gaming that gave Enron false profitability concerned electricity trading in California in 2000-2001. Through contrived schemes with code names like "Get Shorty" and "Ricochet," Enron exploited loopholes in the state's highly regulated system, which generated hundreds of millions of dollars of paper profits that utilities and their ratepayers could not and would not pay. One manipulation was described in an Enron memo: "The net effect of these transactions is that Enron gets paid for moving energy to relieve congestion without actually moving any energy or relieving any congestion."

The bottom line:

Although an Enron could not have been predicted, it is yet another example of the unintended consequences of interventionism in the field of energy, as well as from the politicized accounting and tax systems that governed all corporations

And then there is the ultimate consequence from the dynamics of intervention. Historically, the failures of the mixed economy have been an excuse to further politicize the economy. Richard Epstein warned: "The greatest tragedy of the Enron debacle is not likely to be the consequences of the bankruptcy, but from the erroneous institutional reforms that will take hold if its causes are not well understood." The Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) and the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (2002), enacted with Enron in mind, proved him right.

Read the rest here

Natural-Shale Gas Revolution Spreads to Israel

The natural-shale gas boom spreads to Israel.

Reports the Financial Times (hat tip Carpe Diem’s Professor Mark Perry)

With reserves of almost 10 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, the Tamar field is a hugely valuable asset for the Israeli economy. Discovered in January 2009, it was the biggest gas find in the world that year, and by far the biggest ever made in Israeli waters. But the record held for barely two years. In December 2010, Tamar was dwarfed by the discovery of the Leviathan gasfield some 20 miles farther east – the largest deepwater gas reservoir found anywhere in the world over the past decade. The two fields, together with a string of smaller discoveries, will cover Israel’s domestic demand for gas for at least the next 25 years, and still leave hundreds of billions of cubic feet for sale abroad. The government take from the gasfields alone is forecast to reach at least $140bn over the next three decades – a staggering sum for a relatively small economy such as Israel’s.

It’s not just in Israel but as I previously pointed out the Natural-Shale gas revolution will become a world wide phenomenon.

And we are seeing some evidence of such progress. Again the FT,

Experts are convinced that Tamar and Leviathan will not be the last big Israeli discoveries. They point to the US Geological Survey, which estimates that the subsea area that runs from Egypt all the way north to Turkey, also known as the Levantine Basin, contains more than 120 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Israeli waters account for some 40 per cent of the total. Should these estimates be confirmed through discoveries in the years ahead, Israel’s natural gas reserves would count among the 25 largest in the world, on a par with the proven reserves of Libya and ahead of those of India and The Netherlands.

Earlier Israel seems to have been devoid of energy resources.

For decades a barren energy island, forced to import every drop of fuel, Israel today stands on the cusp of an economic revolution, fuelled by the vast riches that lie below its waters.

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left chart from Financial Times, right chart from Financial Post

But thanks to human ingenuity, massive advances in technology have transformed what was once resources of little economic value to become abundant highly economically valuable commodities.

Hopefully Israel’s newly discovered energy resources will serve as blessings than a (resource) curse. But this will depend on how the domestic and geopolitical trends in Israel and the Middle East will evolve.

Quote of the Day: Economic Numbers Cannot Stand Without the Logic that Produces Them

Economic models aren’t engineering models. If you ask several aeronautical engineers to project how adding flaps affects an airplane’s takeoff speed, their models will be complex, but they will come up with about the same, and reliable, answers. You don’t need to know why.

But good economic models are quantitative parables, not authoritative black boxes. They only are trustworthy if they illustrate clearly understandable and explicitly stated pathways…

But economic numbers cannot stand without the logic that produces them. Clarity and transparency are far more important to a good quantitative parable than the illusion of authoritative precision.

This is from professor John H. Cochrane of the University of Chicago at the Bloomberg discussing the unrealistic Keynesian based assumptions and projections made by the CBO on the “Fiscal Cliff”.

80% of World Manufacturing Activities Contracting

About 80% of world manufacturing activities have been shrinking. Yet many of the world’s equity markets seem detached to this reality. Negative developments have been offset with positive expectations from promises of central banking rescues.

From Zero Hedge, (bold original)

With the US closed today, the rest of the world is enjoying a moderate rise in risk for the same old irrational reason we have all grown to loathe in the New Normal: expectations of more easing, or "bad news if great news", this time from China, which over the weekend reported the first official sub-50 PMI print declining from the magical 50.1 to 49.2, as now even the official RAND() Chinese data has joined the HSBC PMI indicator in the contraction space for the first time since November. Sadly, following today's manufacturing PMI update, we find that the rest of the world is not doing any better, and in fact of the 22 countries we track, 80% are now in contraction territory. True, Europe did experience a modest bounce from multi-month lows of 44 in July to 45.1 in August (below expectations of 45.3), but this is merely a dead cat bounce, not the first, and certainly not the last, just like the US housing, and now that China is officially in the red, expect the next shoe to drop in Europe. Also expect global GDP to eventually succumb to the manufacturing challenges faced by virtually every country in the world, and to post a negative print in the coming months.

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The above only exhibits of the growing risk of a global recession.

This means central banks will either make good their promises soon or that the diminishing returns of returns from political promises may jolt the markets back to reality.

Be careful out there.

Monday, September 03, 2012

Quote of the Day: Voting and Complaining

I have solved this political dilemma in a very direct way: I don't vote. On Election Day, I stay home. I firmly believe that if you vote, you have no right to complain. Now, some people like to twist that around. They say, 'If you don't vote, you have no right to complain,' but where's the logic in that? If you vote, and you elect dishonest, incompetent politicians, and they get into office and screw everything up, you are responsible for what they have done. You voted them in. You caused the problem. You have no right to complain. I, on the other hand, who did not vote — who did not even leave the house on Election Day — am in no way responsible for what these politicians have done and have every right to complain about the mess that you created.

This is from comedian George Carlin (source The LRC Blog)

Asian Stocks: Bad News is Good News Redux

Here we are again, Asian stocks supposedly have risen due to bad news being interpreted as good news. (Below is a run down on Asian stocks as of this writing from Bloomberg)

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First the bad news…

Fresh report says China’s manufacturing has contracted

This from Bloomberg,

In China, the Purchasing Managers Index fell to 49.2 in August from 50.1 in July, the National Bureau of Statistics and China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said Sept. 1. It’s the first time in nine months that the measure has fallen below the 50 level that signals contraction.

A separate report released today by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics showed China’s manufacturing contracted last month at the fastest pace since March 2009.

China should “decisively” expand the strength of its policy fine-tuning based on economic developments and market changes, according to a front-page commentary published in China’s People’s Daily newspaper.

Next, more negative data from other Asian economies…

In Japan, a report showed companies’ capital spending gained less than expected. In South Korea, inflation slowed to the weakest pace in 12 years last month. Australia’s retail sales fell in July by the most in almost two years. In New Zealand, a gauge of the country’s terms of trade dropped for a fourth consecutive quarter.

Now the supposed good news… (bold added)

Asian stocks rose, reversing earlier losses, as economic reports from China, Japan, South Korea and New Zealand fueled speculation that central banks will boost stimulus measures

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.5 percent to 118.32 as of 1:44 p.m. in Tokyo after earlier falling as much as 0.5 percent. U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said on Aug. 31 that further monetary easing is an option.

Bernanke “is defending the case that quantitative easing and unconventional policy have been effective, and that could be a controversial statement,” said Tim Leung, a portfolio manager who helps manage about $1.5 billion at IG Investment Ltd. in Hong Kong, referring to the Fed’s large-scale asset purchases. “If in the future the economy is not performing as good as they expect, they still have room” for more stimulus.

I’d say that for China, the today’s reaction seems more of a dead cat’s bounce than from “bad news is good news” phenomenon

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China’s Shanghai index has been under pressure for the past few weeks, so today’s bounce should come as a natural response. But this may have been misinterpreted by media

But I don’t think this applies with the rest.

What really has been happening is that the seduction of marketplace from promises of central bank steroids has been intensifying. As I noted last night,

Eventually stock markets will either reflect on economic reality or that central bankers will have to relent to the market’s expectations. Otherwise fat tail risks may also become a harsh reality.

Yes central banks will either have to deliver on their promises soon enough, or that financial markets will react violently if expectations have not been met or if economic data continues to exhibit pronounced deterioration.

A quote from the same Bloomberg articles gives a clue on the diminishing returns from central bank promises.

“It’s going to be difficult for the market to keep rallying on the promise of QE and other measures without some improvement in the data,” said Donald Williams, chief investment officer at Sydney-based Platypus Asset Management Ltd. that manages about $1 billion.

Inflationism distorts the pricing system which eventually spawns bubble cycles. The above accounts accounts for anecdotal evidences.

Hyperinflations and the Mickey Mouse Peso

In a transcript from a lecture, the illustrious Austrian economist Percy L. Greaves Jr. explains the stages of inflation.

Sales to these buyers cannot be continued forever. As the quantity of money is increased and prices rise, injections of larger and larger quantities of money are required to produce the same effects. If the quantity of money increases in ever larger quantities, prices will rise faster and faster as the value of each monetary unit falls. Sooner or later, the increases must be stopped. If they are not stopped before the value of the monetary unit falls to zero, people will eventually run away from the money and spend it on anything they can get, because, in their minds, anything will soon be worth more than a constantly depreciating money.

When governments increase the quantity of money, the effects tend to follow a certain pattern. Of course, the inflation can be stopped at any point. The first stage of inflation is when housewives say: "Prices are going up. I think I had better put off buying whatever I can. I need a new vacuum cleaner, but with prices going up, I'll wait until they come down." During this stage, prices do not rise as fast as the quantity of money is being increased. This period in the great German inflation lasted nine years, from the outbreak of war in 1914 until the summer of 1923.

During the second period of inflation, housewives say: "I shall need a vacuum cleaner next year. Prices are going up. I had better get it now before prices go any higher." During this stage, prices rise at a faster rate than the quantity of money is being increased. In Germany this period lasted a couple of months.

If the inflation is not stopped, the third stage follows. In this third stage, housewives say: "I don't like flowers. They bother me. They are a nuisance. But I would rather have even this pot of flowers than hold on to this money a moment longer." People then exchange their money for anything they can get. This period may last from 24 hours to 48 hours.

56 countries including the Philippines experienced the nasty consequences of inflation run amuck, caused by government’s sustained tampering of money

Below is the table which lists the accounts of world hyperinflations.

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Unknown to most, the Philippines had a short episode of hyperinflation during World War II.

Cato’s Steve H. Hanke and Nicholas Krus in their paper World Hyperinflations narrates,

Another largely unreported hyperinflation episode imageoccurred in the Philippines, during World War II. In 1942, during its occupation of what was then the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Japan replaced the Philippine peso with Japanese war notes. These notes were dubbed “Mickey Mouse money”, and their over-issuance eventually resulted in a hyperinflation that peaked in January 1944. It should be noted that the U.S. Army, under orders from General Douglas MacArthur, did add a relatively small amount of fuel to the Philippine hyperinflation fire by surreptitiously distributing counterfeit Japanese war notes to Philippine guerilla troops (Hartendorp 1958). (Mickey Mouse Peso image from Wikipedia.org)

History gives us lessons of what may happen if governments continue to abuse money.

As the great Ludwig von Mises wrote,

History looks backward into the past, but the lesson it teaches concerns things to come. It does not teach indolent quietism; it rouses man to emulate the deeds of earlier generations.

Unfortunately, in the world of politics, such lessons never sink in, and this is why history rhymes.

Sunday, September 02, 2012

Phisix: Why The Correction Cycle Is Not Over Yet

A delirious stock-exchange speculation such as the one that went crash in 1929 is a pyramid of that character. Its stones are avarice, mass-delusion and mania; its tokens are bits of printed paper representing fragments and fictions of title to things both real and unreal, including title to profits that have not yet been earned and never will be. All imponderable. An ephemeral, whirling, upside-down pyramid, doomed in its own velocity. Yet it devours credit in an uncontrollable manner, more and more to the very end; credit feeds its velocity- Garet Garett

Portfolio Pumping at the Philippine Stock Exchange

Friday’s session, which marked the last trading day for the month of August, manifested another probable sign of the politicization of Philippine equity market.

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95% of Friday’s trading activities saw the sluggish Phisix in the red, albeit modestly. That was until the last few minutes where a spike occurred, as shown by the intraday chart from Bloomberg. Such fantastic comeback accounted for a hefty 1.4% move from bottom to the session’s close.

On social media, market participants occasionally yammer or bellyache about supposed price manipulations on certain issues, but Friday’s action makes them pale by comparison.

Because the event happened on the month end, I earlier noted[1] that the typical rationalization will be that of ‘window dressing’. And perhaps too some may say that last minute flow of new information might have prompted some fund managers with sizeable portfolios to urgently position based on an anticipated boom.

But I see none of the above. From the flow of circumstantial empirical evidences, the last minute juggernaut seems to have been well crafted, through coordinated executions.

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For starters, it usually takes a handful of heavyweight blue chip issues to move the Phisix. Of course being that they are blue chips this entails huge amount of money as these issues are the most liquid or frequently the most heavily traded

However, a push based on select heavyweights, while providing a lift to the Phisix, would not be reflected on all sectors.

This is why Friday’s action has been remarkable. As illustrated by the intraday charts from citiseconline.com, the resurgent Phisix was not limited to Phisix component leaders but to the major market caps of ALL the sectors.

Coordinated and synchronized buying has been adeptly executed which targeted heavyweights of every sector.

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The systematic buying activities, thus, projected a broad based advance. (table from the Philippine Stock Exchange)

Among the sectoral benchmarks, the service sector, led by PLDT, promptly stood out. PLDT remains as the largest free float market cap constituting 14.62% of the Phisix basket as of Friday’s close. PLDT closed 2.16% on Friday (see red arrow below).

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Ironically, there were some major issues that closed in the red such as Ayala Corp and Metrobank.

But again, the well contrived buying operation ensured that their losses had been neutralized by gains on some other heavyweights. For instance, in the holding sector, Ayala Corp’s losses had been offset by the gains of larger market cap Aboitiz Equity Ventures [PSE: AEV] and SM Investments [PSE: SM]. Also in the banking sector, Metrobank’s losses were countered by material gains of Bank of the Philippine Islands [PSE: BPI] and BDO Union Bank [PSE: BDO]

In short, the strategy’s centrepiece was that PLDT ensured the gains of the benchmark, while other blue chips were meant to “paint the town red”.

Peso volume net of special block sales, for the day, accrued to a substantial 6.9 billion pesos (US 165 million).

Since foreign money posted substantial net outflows (Php 1.8 billion; USD 43 m) during the session, this means that the local institution/s, channelled through a variety of leading brokers, were responsible for the synchronized buying spree.

It would seem senseless, if not irrational, for money managers with substantial portfolios to undertake what seems as dicey actions, considering the current risk environment and given the recent correction phase the Phisix has been undergoing.

This also means that the parties involved may not be after pursuing Alpha (investment) returns[2] but intended to garnish the Phisix for whatever non-financial reasons.

Importantly, in the absence of economic incentives, the likelihood is that the hefty risk money used could have been third party money.

If such actions have been limited to a single issue, then this would be known as “marking the close” which under Philippine laws are considered illegal[3]

In the US “marking the close” is defined[4] as “the practice of buying a security at the very end of the trading day at a significantly higher price than the current price of the security”.

Even if these acts has been engineered for so-called “window dressing”, they are reckoned as unethical, if not illegal, through Portfolio Pumping[5]

The illegal act of bidding up the value of a fund's holdings right before the end of a quarter, when the fund's performance is measured. This is done by placing a large number of orders on existing holdings, which drives up the value of the fund.

Nonetheless because “marking the close” is technically hard to prove, the elaborate broad index “management” scheme may have also been designed to elude legal technicalities.

Such “marking the close” manipulation was part of the insider trading charge[6] levelled against crony Dante Tan on the BW Resources scam but whose twin cases were eventually dropped by the Supreme Court[7].

Bottom line is that whatever gains accrued from Friday’s ploy to artificially boost stock prices should be taken as temporary and with a grain of salt. Eventually markets will prevail.

Global Equities on a Correction Mode

Most of the weekly 1.03% gain by the Philippine benchmark, the Phisix, can be traced to Friday’s extraordinary recovery of .91%.

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For the week, among major international bellwethers, only the Phisix posted positive results.

The rest of the world seems to be in a correction mode.

However, the emerging market majors, particularly the BRICs, endured the heaviest losses.

What seems even more worrisome is that backed by a string of negative developments, such as Saturday’s post-trading announcement where Chinese manufacturing activities shrank or contracted (and not reduced growth) for the first time in nine months[8], China’s Shanghai index continues to fathom new depths. This may point to greater possibility of a hard landing for China.

Ignoring developments in China would be a reckless proposition. Aside from being the second largest economy in the world, China assumes very important roles in many aspects of global trade. This only means that a sharp unexpected downturn in China may amplify the risks of contagion.

It would also seem foolhardy to become overly optimistic on the sustained narrative by mainstream media that Chinese authorities would eventually come to the rescue. Chinese markets have so far dispelled the torrent of propaganda.

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Well, the global equity market downturn seems to have affected even the streaking hot Thailand equity bellwether, the SET. Thailand’s SET sizzled even as the other ASEAN peers fumbled over the past few weeks.

Thailand SET (green) now joins the Phisix (PCOMP, red orange), Indonesia’s JCI (orange) and Malaysia (FBMKLCI, red) in rolling over to what seems as a downside bias.

If the SET should continue to correct, then this goes to prove that the forces of “reversion to the mean” are at work. This should also debunks the anachronistic idea of decoupling.

Risks to Ben Bernanke’s Political Career Points to Fed Action Soon

On the other hand, the cumulative weekly losses by US markets has been apparently been mitigated by a strong Friday close.

Again, the one day rally came amidst promises made by the US Federal Reserve’s Ben Bernanke for more policy stimulus in his Jackson Hole speech.

The Bloomberg gives us a good account on the Pavlovian behavior adapted by the markets[9],

U.S. stocks rallied with commodities and Treasuries as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said he wouldn’t rule out more stimulus to lower a jobless rate he described as a “grave concern…

Bernanke’s 24-page speech at the Kansas City Fed’s symposium made the case for further monetary easing and concluded that the central bank’s non-traditional policy tools such as bond purchases have been effective in boosting growth and improving financial conditions. He said that declines in the unemployment rate would continue only if growth picks up above its longer term trend.

Mr. Bernanke’s speech seems to impart subtle political implications.

Mitt Romney, Republican presidential candidate, lately announced that should he win the presidency this November, according to a Bloomberg article[10], “he wouldn’t reappoint Bernanke, raising questions about the succession more than a year before Bernanke’s term expires in January 2014.”

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And as noted last week[11], the performance of the US stock market has had a strong correlationship with the outcome of the presidential elections. Strong stocks mostly led to the re-election of the incumbent (chart from yahoo[12]). This again may be due to public’s interpretation of rising markets as signs of economic “progress” even if in reality such artificially tweaked gains were mainly due to bank credit expansions.

This from USA News[13],

InvestTech Research, an investment firm out of Montana, says the stock market is the most reliable indicator of who will win the presidency and has been for more than 100 years.

"The election is a reaction to the stock market. If you see strength in the market, consumer sentiment and confidence among the voters is higher. If you see volatility, you are going to see investors take that out on the incumbent," says Eric Vermulm, an InvestTech Research senior portfolio manager.

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Gains of the US stock markets have essentially been built around the slew of policy steroids or from repeated interventions by US Federal Reserve. This essentially postulates to the deepening politicization of US financial (equity) markets.

And as I pointed out in the recent past[14] the New York Federal Reserve even blustered about successfully boosting the US stock markets. Thus, the fate of equity markets seems largely beholden to the Fed’s sustained infusion of steroids.

In the knowledge that the Fed can tweak policies to favor the stock markets, and in the prospects that Mr. Bernanke will be out of work from a Romney presidency, then the most likely guiding incentive for Mr. Bernanke will be to work to retain his tenure by promoting the re-election of President Obama through “stock market friendly” policies in September or October.

Besides Mr. Bernanke seems to have a strong backing from FOMC members, according to the Carl Tannenbaum of Northern Trust[15], “more than half of the current FOMC members would be amenable to additional easing”

I previously said that the Mr. Bernanke may likely wait for the ECB to move first[16]. Now I am more inclined to the scenario or the probability that Fed action this September or in October may become a reality.

Two major variables yet could prevent Mr. Bernanke from doing so; one is a sustained surge in food prices, and the other, would be a more vocal opposition by the public on expanded Fed policies.

All Eyes On Central Bankers

Global equity markets have generally been on a correction mode, a dynamic which is likely to continue, until perhaps central banks lay down their cards.

Only the US markets seem to contradict this. Yet the strength of the US markets has been mainly erected from expectations of further policy easing by the US Federal Reserve.

On the other hand, the ECB may finalize the rescue mechanism within the first half of the month. This in spite of incipient signs of stagflation[17]; elevated inflation, high unemployment and contracting economic growth.

Mounting expectations and deepening dependence from central banking opiate, which has been clashing with the unfolding economic reality, will prompt for more price volatility on both directions. The Bank of America posits that QE 3.0 has been substantially priced in[18].

Eventually stock markets will either reflect on economic reality or that central bankers will have to relent to the market’s expectations. Otherwise fat tail risks may also become a harsh reality.

Market direction now depends on the details of central bank actions.

Mounting Stagflation Risks

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Rising commodity prices appear to be factoring in the imminence of such actions. Gold’s recent recovery leads other commodities, Energy ($GKX-S&P GSCI Energy Index) and Industrial metals ($GYX-S&P GSCI Industrial metals) except Agriculture ($GKX-S&P GSCI Agricultural Index) which seems to have presaged the commodity rally.

For emerging markets, sustained high levels of food prices, which incidentally have now become a global phenomenon according to the World Bank, raises the risks of stagflation[19] which will force their respective central banks to tighten.

An environment plagued by stagflation will not be friendly to the stock market in general.

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Perhaps China’s procrastination to pursue further aggressive stimulus has been due to the supposed huge disconnect between statistical CPI index and on the ground real food prices[20].

Surging food prices have been prompting many Asians to stockpile.

According to Wall Street Journal[21],

Reduced availability and higher prices are spurring importers to buy more, not less, as a hedge against even higher prices in the future. China, which accounts for more than 60% of the world's soybean imports, is also buying cargoes several months before shipment. Demand there is driven mainly by double-digit annual growth in dairy-product consumption, 5% to 6% growth in poultry consumption and 3% growth in pork consumpion, said Christopher Langholz, the business unit leader at Cargill Investments (China) Ltd.'s animal protein division in Shanghai.

Yet the prospects of Fed and the ECB simultaneously easing in the coming days, weeks or months will likely intensify not only on stagflation risks but the risk of a global food crisis as well.

Incipient stagflation, aside from micro bubble busts, may have been a principal reason why major emerging markets continue to underperform.

Correction Mode: PSE Capital Flows and the Peso US Dollar Trend

For the Philippine equity markets, the ongoing episode of correction has also been evident in the foreign fund flows.

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Net foreign flows have begun to turn negative over the past weeks.

And negative foreign fund flows may have been influencing on the decline of the Peso.

According to an IMF paper[22], foreign capital flows dynamic via stock market transactions influence exchange rates more than the bond markets.

when it comes to external capital flows, it is foreign investors’ private information related to the stock market and not the bond market which drives the exchange rate.

This may hold some relevance to the relationship between the Phisix and the Philippine Peso

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The correction phase of the Phisix (red candle), partly influenced by increasing net foreign sales, has likewise been manifested through the weakening of the Peso vis-à-vis the US dollar (black candle). The Phisix and the Peso exhibits strong correlations which may partly validate the theory that flows in and out of the stock market influence more the direction of the exchange rates.

So far, the Phisix correction cycle seems largely intact and could intensify

Domestic market technical picture and internal market dynamics, two items I discussed last week, along with capital flows and the trend of the Peso have converged to suggest that the correction phase of the Phisix has unlikely been over.

Add to these the external based dynamics which are likely to be transmitted to the local financial markets and to the real economy.

Don’t get lulled into the mainstream idea that the domestic central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), will be able to successfully achieve so-called “inflation targeting” or contain price inflation through macro ‘policy toolkits[23]’ and that the statistical economic growth will remain robust as mainstream economists predict.

Had these policy toolkits “worked” then the world would not be experiencing what has been a lingering and worsening crisis since 2008. Technical gobbledygook has only been meant to project an aura of pretentious superiority in knowledge to justify the existence of unsound political institutions, even if they really don’t work.

Once price inflation accelerates through food and energy channels, which is likely to be accentuated by current easy money policies, and where stagflation becomes a clear and present threat, statistical economic growth, like a bubble, will simply pop. Then, the BSP will be in a state of panic. The public will discover that the emperor has no clothes.


[1] See Phisix: Another Fantastic Last Minute Upward Push August 31, 2012

[2] Wikipedia.org Alpha (investment)

[3] Security and Exchange Commission, CHAPTER VII Prohibitions on Fraud, Manipulation and Insider Trading Securities Regulation Code

[4] USLegal.com Marking the Close Law & Legal Definition

[5] Investopedia.com Definition of 'Portfolio Pumping'

[6] Philstar.com SEC favors random closing time for PSE December 3, 2002

[7] Manila Bulletin SC oks dismissal of Dante Tan charges in BW Resources case August 1, 2010

[8] Bloomberg.com China Manufacturing Unexpectedly Contracts As Orders Drop, September 1, 2012

[9] Bloomberg.com Stocks Rise With Commodities, Treasuries On Stimulus Bets, September 1, 2012

[10] Bloomberg.com Bernanke Makes Case For Further Stimulus To Help Jobless September 1, 2012

[11] See Phisix: The Correction Cycle is in Motion August 27, 2012

[12] Yahoo.com Obama’s Re-Election Odds Are Better Than You Think Says Hirsch, August 15, 2012

[13] USA News Stock Market Picks 90 Percent of Presidential Elections February 24, 2012

[14] See Bernanke Doctrine: New York Fed Boasts of Pushing Up the US Stock Markets, July 14, 2012

[15] Carl R. Tannenbaum The Message from Jackson Hole, Northern Trust Augst 31, 2012

[16] See Phisix: Managing Through Volatile Times August 6, 2012

[17] See Eurozone’s Nascent Signs of Stagflation September 1, 2012

[18] Zero Hedge, Chart Of The Day: With All Of QE3 Priced In, The Only Way Is Down Should Bernanke Disappoint, August 31, 2012

[19] See Stagflation Risk: Food Price Inflation is Worldwide August 31, 2012

[20] Zero Hedge, Big Outflow Trouble In Not So Little China? August 25, 2012

[21] Wall Street Journal Soybean Worries Spur Asian Buying August 29, 2012

[22] Jacob Gyntelberg, Mico Loretan, and Tientip Subhanij Private Information, Capital Flows, and Exchange Rates IMF Working Paper September 2012

[23] Businessonline.com BSP ready to tweak policy August 30, 2012

Saturday, September 01, 2012

Eurozone’s Nascent Signs of Stagflation

Stagflation according to Wikipedia.org is a situation in which the inflation rate is high, the economic growth rate slows down, and unemployment remains steadily high

This Bloomberg article entitled Euro-Area Unemployment At Record, Inflation Quickens: Economy suggests that the Eurozone is now suffering from stagflation.

Euro-area unemployment rose to a record and inflation quickened more than economists forecast as rising energy costs threaten to deepen the economic slump.

The jobless rate in the economy of the 17 nations using the euro was 11.3 percent in July, the same as in June after that month’s figure was revised higher, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today. That’s the highest since the data series started in 1995. Inflation accelerated to 2.6 percent in August from 2.4 percent in the prior month, an initial estimate showed in a separate report. That’s faster than the 2.5 percent median forecast of 31 economists in a Bloomberg survey.

A 12.4 percent surge in crude-oil prices over the past two months is leaving consumers and companies with less money to spend just as governments seek ways to contain the debt crisis. European economic confidence dropped more than economists forecast to a three-year low in August and German unemployment increased for a fifth month, adding to signs the euro-area economy continued to shrink in the third quarter.

“The whole euro zone is undergoing negative growth developments,” Don Smith, a London-based economist at ICAP Plc, told Ken Prewitt on Bloomberg Radio yesterday. “The sense is that increasingly the euro-zone crisis is bearing down on countries in northern Europe and Germany in particular and this is really forcing officials’ hands toward coming up with a firm solution.”

Europe’s nascent stagflation in pictures,

image

All three elements of stagflation, namely, elevated CPI or price inflation, contracting economic growth and high unemployment rates appear to be intact. (chart from trading economics)

And the so-called “firm solution” for policymakers translates to even more inflationism by the European Central Bank (ECB).

From the same article…

The ECB, which in July cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low of 0.75 percent, is working out details of a plan to purchase government bonds of distressed nations along with Europe’s rescue fund. So far, neither Italy nor Spain has asked for help from the bailout facility, the European Stability Mechanism.

The central bank, led by Mario Draghi, will hold its next meeting on Sept. 6 in Frankfurt.

“There may be a little bit of disappointment,” Piero Ghezzi, head of global economics at Barclays Plc, told Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move” on Aug. 29. “A solution in Europe could be coming from the ECB if they were willing to do unlimited and unconditional purchases.”

Policymakers are fighting the last war. Incipient signs of stagflation will likely turn into intractable inflation or a deepening phase of stagflation once the next round of “unlimited and unconditional purchases” becomes a reality.

The ECB’s actions will then be likely complimented by the US Federal Reserve this September, and perhaps by other central banks such as BoJ, SNB and the BoE or even possibly China's PBoC soon.

These concerted inflationism by global central bankers could bring about the "worst of both worlds" for the global economy.

China-EU Deal: China may Buy EU Bonds, Bilateral Trade to be Settled in Yuan or Euro

China’s government promises to support the Eurozone by proposing to buy EU government bonds in return for expanded economic relations.

From Reuters,

China is prepared to buy more EU government bonds amid a worsening European debt crisis that is dragging on the world economy, Premier Wen Jiabao said, in the strongest sign of support for its biggest trading partner in months.

The debt crisis, which has dented demand for Chinese exports and dragged China into its worst downturn in three years, was the primary focus of talks between Wen and German Chancellor Angela Merkel who arrived in Beijing on Thursday.

The pair also concluded a flurry of business agreements, including a deal by China to buy 50 Airbus worth $3.5 billion, and multi-million-dollar investment deals involving Volkswagen AG and Chinese telecoms equipment maker ZTE.

But China’s pledge to backstop the Eurozone has been conditional.

More from the same article.

Wen said Beijing is willing to continue supporting the debt-stricken euro zone, and will step up talks with the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund -- also known as the troika -- to help struggling EU nations.

"China is willing, on condition of fully evaluating the risks, to continue to invest in the euro zone sovereign debt market, and strengthen communication and discussion with the European Union, the European Central Bank the IMF and other key countries to support the indebted euro zone countries in overcoming hardships," he said after meeting Merkel.

Wen, who did not elaborate, said he remained worried about the crisis in the euro zone.

"Recently, the European debt crisis has continued to worsen giving rise to serious concerns in the international community. Frankly speaking, I am also worried," Wen told a news conference.

"The main worries are two-fold: first is whether Greece will leave the euro zone. The second is whether Italy and Spain will take comprehensive rescue measures. Resolving these two problems rests with whether Greece Spain, Italy and other countries have the determination for reform."

China’s government made the same promise before but domestic politics proved to be an obstacle

China Central Bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said Beijing would continue buying European government debt in February, but various Chinese agencies, including the sovereign wealth fund, countered the remarks by saying such investments were not wise due to risks.

The article does not elaborate whether China’s central bank pursued to fulfill on the pledge, or deferred until a comprehensive package has been contrived at.

My guess is that the kernel of the current deal of support by China to the EU, may have been set on the condition that bilateral trade will be settled mostly with the use of the yuan and or the Euro.

Both countries also agreed to settle more bilateral trade in the euro and yuan, as Beijing welcomed investments in China's interbank bond market by German banks, and the issuance of yuan-denominated financial products in Germany.

In short, the EU-China accord will work on bypassing the US dollar.

Given the marked slowdown or increasing signs of hard landing in China, it is not clear if China's government will undertake to buy significant amounts of EU bonds.

Nonetheless my guess is that the pact lays the foundation for the expanded use of China’s currency, the yuan, as international medium of exchange and as potential reserve currency, the reduced role of the US dollar, and the evolving balance of geopolitical power.

US Foreign Policy Backlash: Egypt’s President Morsi Defies the US

The US seems to be losing allies with her militant foreign policies. The well attended Non Aligned Movement held in Tehran Iran included US protégé Egypt’s President Mohammed Morsi, who apparently flouted pressures from the Washington.

Writes Eric Margolis at the lewrockwell.com,

To Washington’s further annoyance, Egypt’s new president, Mohammed Morsi, shrugged off threats of a cut in US aid and flew to Tehran. Under the 30-year Mubarak dictatorship, Egypt had been a bulwark against Iran. But no more. The increasingly assertive, independent Morsi made clear that Egypt would follow its own foreign policy interests rather than those of the US and Israel, as in the past.

Morsi has surprised just about everyone. When he stumbled into power earlier this year he was regarded as a plodding nobody, selected by the all-powerful military to do its bidding and not make trouble. The Muslim Brotherhood leader, a former space engineer, threw off his cloak of humility and quickly proceeded to muzzle Egypt’s bullying US-backed military, the key to US domination of Egypt for the past 40 years.

How Morsi pulled this off without facing a military coup remains a mystery. But he certainly had the backing of most Egyptians. It took Turkey’s Islamist Lite government a decade to push the swaggering generals back to their barracks and bring real democracy.

The Egyptian leader stunned everyone by openly blasting the Syrian regime of Bashar Assad, calling for its replacement by an elected, democratic government. Egyptian intervention in the bloody Syrian conflict may help pave a way to a peaceful settlement. It could also rekindle ancient Egyptian-Syrian rivalry for leadership of the Arab world.

In spite of issuing dulcet banalities about Egypt’s turn to democracy, Washington is extremely unhappy with Egypt’s newly elected government. Egypt will no longer be a discreet defender and ally of Israel, as under Mubarak, but a rival power that genuinely demands a Palestinian state and sees no reason to confront Iran or other US foes.

The US is responding to Egypt’s newfound independence by muttering about cuts to its annual $1.3 billion donations to Egypt’s military and millions more in secret payments. However, the Saudis and Gulf Arabs are lending cash-strapped Cairo $3 billion and the US-run IMF another $4.8 billion in loans. Interestingly, President Morsi just visited China where he received pledges of aid.

In past years, most non-aligned conferences, whose objective was to find a middle way between the West and Soviet Empire, produced only hot air, often quite anti-American. As America’s world power declines after the loss of two wars and deep recession, the NAM meeting in Tehran maybe a step, albeit small, towards moving away from today’s unipolar world towards a more balanced, equitable international system.

Egypt’s supposed disobedience and the success of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) has very important implications

One, the US seems to be losing geopolitical capital.

The motivation by incumbent political class to stir up conflicts around the world has been getting the opposite response than intended by Washington.

Part of the militant imperial policies has been meant to divert public’s attention from the steepening deterioration of the domestic fiscal and economic conditions. Part of these has been designed to justify and protect the businesses interests of the military industrial complex and of the imperial or geopolitical ambitions of neoconservatives.

Yet the apparent success of the NAM also exhibits of the implied impact of globalization, where trade rather than war have become the key domestic agenda for many, if not most, of developing countries. (For instance Russia became the 156th member of World Trade Organization last August 22)

Second, the erosion of the imperial status, through the prospective realignment of geopolitical power or “towards a more balanced, equitable international system”, extrapolates to the decline of the US dollar standard.

Current policies of inflationism embraced by the US along with her Western peers, which radically conflicts with globalization, will compel more developing countries to cooperate as regional or as specific nation trading blocs than depend on the US. Thus realignments will not just be within the context of geopolitics, but also in the currency spectrum.

The increasingly desperate political-economic power cabals working behind the scene may force the issue by pushing the Washington to go to war with either Syria or Iran. But such wars will not do away with the deepening trend towards economic, financial, political and moral bankruptcy the US has been challenged with. Instead wars will continue to nibble away at the social fabric and the political economic foundations of the US.

As a side note, interestingly China pushes forward with the Non Aligned Movement plank

At the Xinhua, Ma Zhaoxu, Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs was quoted, (bold emphasis mine)

Non- aligned movement is an important platform for developing countries to move forward together. China supports the non-aligned movement for its positive role played in international affairs. China and other developing countries share similar histories, and face the common task of keeping world peace and boosting development. China will work together with the members of non-aligned movement to push the international order in a more fair and rational direction. China's attendance at the NAM summit also delivers an important message that China will always deepen traditional friendships and expand mutually beneficial cooperation, as well as maintain common interests with other developing countries.

More signs of China’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde relationship with ASEAN.