Saturday, August 16, 2014

Has the Ukraine gov’t strike at Russian convoys been real or merely a propaganda?

In war, truth is the first casualty—a popular quote misattributed to Greek playwright Aeschylus 

The Ukraine government declared that they hit Russian targets just a few hours back.

Ironically, the Russian government denies this.

From the Wire.com
Ukrainian forces claim to have attacked and destroyed a Russian military convoy that crossed the border into Ukraine during the evening on Friday. President Petro Poroshenko disclosed the event during a phone call with U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron, before announcing the news on his official website.

A statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry also confirmed that the strike had taken place, but they conveyed a more aggrieved tone and denied that anything was destroyed. They also deny that Russian vehicles even crossed the border into Ukraine, and say the incursion was on their side of the border. Ukrainian customs officials have gone across the border to inspect the convoy, but reports say the trucks are mostly empty.
So who’s been lying?

The Zero Hedge has more… (bold and italics original)
While today's trading session was marked by news which at first blush correlated with what may be the 2014 equivalent of the Archduke Ferdinand shooting, in retrospect the newsflow made painfully little sense. Let's recap:
  1. Yesterday afternoon, two UK reporters working for the Guardian and Telegraph, supposedly located by the border in east Ukraine, reported that they were "eyewitnesses" as a convoy of military trucks crossed the Russian border into the breakaway Donetsk republic, aka Ukraine. While there have been photos of the military trucks that have accompanied the Russian humantiarian convoy on Russian territory, there has so far been no proof, aside from said eyewitness reports, confirming Russian military vehicles entered or were in Ukraine.
  2. This morning Ukraine military’s spokesman, Andriy Lysenko, shocked the world when newswires reported that Ukraine forces had attacked an armed convoy from Russia, and "destroyed" a part of it. This was subsequently reiterated by the president of Ukraine himself who said that "the given information was trustworthy and confirmed because the majority of that machines had been eliminated by the Ukrainian artillery at night", and by the secretary-general of NATO, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who said that the alliance had detected an “incursion” of vehicles from Russia last night, adding that “what we have seen last night is the continuation of what we have seen for some time." Alas, as in the case above, just more verbal reports, with zero actual evidence.
  3. Shortly thereafter, Russia responded when the Russian defense ministry said that there was no Russian military column that crossed into Eastern Ukraine, and that the above reports are based on "some fantasies."
This is where the breakdown of logic occurs, because for Russia to make such a formal statement it clearly implies that Russia believes there is no evidence of destruction of a Russian convoy in Ukraine territory, something which obviously would exist if indeed as Ukraine's president had claimed, the "majority of the machines had been eliminated."

If true, it also implies that either Ukraine had fabricated the entire story, and certainly the part about the destruction of the convoy and by extension that Russians had ever entered into East Ukraine. Furthermore, that would also suggest that the reports of the British reporters were also a fabrication.

Unless, of course, there is evidence, in which case the credibility of the both the Guardian and Telegraph reporters can be preserved, Ukraine can not be accused of fabricating a story to suit what some may say its own warmongering ambitions, and the onus is on Russia to explain why it lied about there being no invasion.

More to the point, the onus is on Ukraine to present some evidence, in fact any evidence, of a destroyed Russian military convoy instead of merely building upon a story conceived by the two UK media outlets, because if Ukraine indeed has no evidence, then its story falls apart and what's worse, the credibility and reputation of its government, of NATO and certainly of the UK press would be in tatters.

So what other possibility is there? Well, one that is all too unpalatable for Ukraine, namely that in its excitement to blow something up, it may have well destroyed some of its own military vehicles. A possible lead to such a turn of events comes from this Interfax report citing the leadership of the breakaway Donetsk People's Republic.
The leadership of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic has dismissed the Ukrainian government's statement on destroying a convoy of what appeared to be Russian armored vehicles in eastern Ukraine.
"We haven't received any armored vehicles from Russia. No Russian units, including Russian armored vehicles, have crossed the border. Hence, no Russian armored vehicles could have been destroyed," DPR First Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Purgin told Interfax on Friday evening.
Purgin claimed that, on the contrary, the militias destroyed about 100 Ukrainian armored vehicles.
"A lot of Ukrainian armored vehicles were destroyed today, 7 at one place, 12 at another. And the same all over the DPR territory. A total of about 100 of them," Purgin said.
The implication is clear: while 100 or so Ukraine armored vehicles may or may not have been destroyed, one wonders if indeed the Ukraine army was responsible in "aiding" the separatists with what would appear to be a friendly-fire incident?

But perhaps the most damning evidence comes from none other than the White House itself, which according to CNN just admitted that while it accuses Moscow of "incursions" it can't confirm the convoy was destroyed by Kiev. 

Friday, August 15, 2014

Breaking: Ukraine Government Attacks Russian "Armed" Convoy

In the premise that the US and her allies have their backing them, the Ukraine government draws first blood on the Russian government by striking at the latter’s "armed" humanitarian convoy headed towards Ukraine’s separatist region. This looks like moral hazard applied to the world of politics. Here is what the "humanitarian" convoy looked like, accompanied by military escorts.

From Bloomberg:
Ukraine said its troops attacked and partially destroyed a column of armed vehicles that had crossed the border from Russian territory, while Russia said it was concerned about an attack on another convoy carrying aid.

Ukrainian government troops engaged the vehicles that had arrived overnight through a rebel-held section of the border, Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for the country’s military, told reporters in Kiev today. Ukrainian soldiers continue to come under shelling, including rounds fired from Russia, he said.

The government in Kiev has for months said that separatist rebels in its easternmost regions are receiving support from Russia, which backs them with artillery fire. Russia has repeatedly denied any involvement in the Ukrainian unrest. The Foreign Ministry in Moscow said it was concerned about potential attempts to disrupt the humanitarian convoy and repeated a call for a cease-fire to allow for aid delivery.

The incursion last night isn’t seen by Ukraine as a new development or a possible start of an invasion by Russia, Defense Ministry spokesman Leonid Matyukhin said by phone earlier. The vehicles were painted white to camouflage the operation as a peacekeeping mission, he said.
Or is it that this provocation comes under the prodding of the US government??
One thing may lead to another. We pray that cooler heads prevail.

 

Chinese Government Stirs up an IPO Mania

This looks like another example of how governments use stock markets as communications medium to project economic growth or recovery for political goals. 

The Chinese government, whom has controlled the pricing of mainland Initial Public Offerings (IPO), have fueled a debt finance speculative mania. 

From Bloomberg: (bold mine)
Zhang Xiuli says she knows nothing about the nine Chinese companies that held initial public offerings last month.

Not a problem. Zhang, 37, tried to buy shares in each and every one, confident that she knew what was coming next: an immediate surge in price that has rewarded investors in Chinese IPOs with an average first-day gain of 43 percent this year. Her orders were among 655 billion yuan ($106 billion) of bids for 3.2 billion yuan of new shares, an over-subscription rate 28 times bigger than that of Agricultural Bank of China Ltd.’s listing at the height of the nation’s IPO boom in 2010.

New stocks have regained their reputation as can’t-lose bets in China just four years after that last frenzy ended badly -- a majority of IPOs in the second half of 2010 saddled investors with losses within a year. The soaring demand shows how regulatory efforts to ensure deals aren’t overvalued have led speculators to ramp up bets with borrowed money and hurt plans to let the market, rather than the government, set prices in the biggest emerging economy, said Ding Yuan of the China Europe International Business School.
The above account of the "successful" retail punters partly reminds of me of the Philippine version--'basura queen' of 2007.

Next, IPO pricing regulations by the government
All nine companies that had IPOs last month sold shares at price-to-earnings ratios below the industry average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The regulator requires any firm pricing stock at levels above their peers to postpone the offering by three weeks and issue risk warnings to investors.
The incentive and mechanism that has powered the IPO mania...
The perception that IPOs are riskless has encouraged some investors to use borrowed money, exposing them to deeper losses once prices stop climbing, according to Lin Jin, a senior analyst at Shenyin & Wanguo Securities Co. in Shanghai.

China’s benchmark money-market rate rose the most in three weeks on July 23 as orders for five IPOs spurred an increase in demand for borrowed funds. The central bank said yesterday that the deals helped fuel a record drop in local-currency bank deposits last month as customers shifted funds to their brokerage accounts.

“The main risk is whether borrowing costs can be covered,” Lin said. “As new share sales become the norm, the effect will taper off and returns will decrease.”

Investors’ rush into Chinese IPOs, which have rallied an average 94 percent from their issue price this year, or seven times more than the global average, contrasts with lackluster demand among local investors to participate in the broader stock market. Traders have liquidated about 1.3 million mainland equity accounts since the end of March, leaving the number of funded accounts at a four-year low of 52.55 million.
So forcing companies to issue IPO prices at below market prices has naturally fostered outsized demand. And such demand which has been lapped up by the gullible public has been mainly financed by debt.

The IPO manipulation scheme seems also intended to reverse liquidations by stock market investors during the recent past.

As one would note, people hardly learn from the past or from history.

Yet all these speculative hysteria have emerged amidst an unexpected slump in credit last July.

The latest batch of government data showed a stunning drop in growth in China's financing activity in July—a troubling sign in an economy where debt has become critical to expansion. Total social financing, the broadest measure of lending, expanded by 273 billion yuan ($44 billion) from June, the slowest since the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

The numbers were enough of a shocker—and possibly something of an anomaly—that the central bank felt it necessary to accompany the data release with an unusual written statement explaining that its policy stance hasn't changed. It said July's slump was explained by higher-than-normal lending in June of nearly 2 trillion yuan, among other factors. July has historically been among the slowest months for credit creation. The statement hinted that lending in August has gotten off at a more normal pace.
So this explains the recent 1 trillion yuan ($171 billion) via "Pledged Supplementary Lending" (PSL) as I previously noted.  Chinese authorities must have or has most likely been apprised or informed of this slump, so they launched the Quasi QE. The PSL QE hybrid hopes to provide cushion to this credit drought which authorities recognize risks amplifying the downturn in the property-credit channel.

And it appears that in order to camouflage the extent of credit troubles, and as part of the communications campaign, the Chinese government seems to have resorted to the massaging of the stock markets via IPOs first, in the hope that this will spillover to the rest of the market, in order to project a boom or a recovery to keep the credit flowing.

Yet whether it is about the stock market or property, the promotion of speculative activities has one common denominator: DEBT.

This means that the "kick the can down the road" policy of promoting stock market speculation through debt will exacerbate and compound on excessive leverage conditions in China's highly fragile system, or simply credit risks, which makes her a candidate as trigger to a global black swan event.

As I have been repeately saying here, the thinking of authorities goes like this (and this applies almost everywhere): We recognize of the addiction problem. But the withdrawal syndrome would be cataclysmic. So we will keep the (debt) party going!

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Investing Tips from Jim Rogers and Jim Chanos

Investing tips from investing titans

First the legendary Jim Rogers (from the Financial Post)
“Most successful investors, in fact, do nothing most of the time.”
“If you want to make a lot of money, resist diversification.”
“It is remarkable how many people mistake a bull market for brains.
“On Wall Street there’s no truer adage than …’markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.'”
“No matter what we all know today, it’s not going to be true in 10 or 15 years.”
“If you want to be lucky, do your homework.”
“Swim your own races.”
“If the world economy gets better, commodities are very good place to be in … even if the world economy does not improve, commodities are still a fabulous place to be.”
“The most sensible skill that I can give to somebody born in 2003 is a perfect command of Mandarin.”
“Become a Chinese farmer, that’s what you should do.”
“If you can find ways to invest in Myanmar, you will be very, very rich over the next 20, 30, 40 years.”
“India is not a place for investors, but it’s a fabulous country for tourists”
“I don’t know any way to short either Harvard or Stanford.”
“I was poor once, I didn’t like it, I don’t want to be poor again”

In my opinion when Mr. Roger says "No matter what we all know today, it’s not going to be true in 10 or 15 years". He should apply the same word of caution on his views of China and or to Myanmar or to anywhere else.

Now to the famous short selling artist Jim Chanos (from Business insider) [ht financial post]

On Chinese politics: 
"When the leaders are all billionaires we must say that the Marxist-Leninist ideology has maybe been watered down a bit, sometimes with pigs in it."
Being a one of the strident China bear, Mr Chanos rebuts a Tu-quoque fallacy  
"'Mr. Chanos has never been to mainland China.' Well hell, I didn't work at Enron either."
On Chinese growth 
"It's the accounting tail wagging the economic dog."
On Chinese government statistics: 
"I'm not the only guy crying in the wilderness about the data coming out of China."
On Chiina’s banking system 
"The Chinese banking system is built on quicksand."
On investing research: 
"Primary research is crucial and not as many people do it as you think."
Also, do it on bottom up manner: 
"Nothing beats starting with source documents."
On conflict of interest: 
"The biggest mistake people make is being co-opted by management."
The role of short sellers: 
"The most important function that fundamental short sellers bring to the market is that they are real time financial detectives."
The intertemporal value of long term insights: 
"In investing, you can be really right but temporarily quite wrong."
Valuation matters: 
"Some of the best short ideas can look cheap from a valuation standpoint."
Spotting major errors: 
"We try to focus on businesses where something is going wrong."
Value versus shorts: 
"There’s a big difference between a long-focused value investor and a good short-seller."
On independent thinking: 
"You need to be able to weather being told you’re wrong all the time."
On Dubai’s bubble: 
"Go to Dubai and see what happened. It was…what I call it the 'Edifice complex'."
On monetary policies: 
"If everyone knows you're going to print money ... you know ... welcome to Zimbabwe."
On US and Europe’s economic problems: 
"We keep kicking the can down the road. But maybe now we're at the point where the can is kicking back"
On what I usually write about as the agency problem in the financial world: 
On being a broker: “They’re not interested in truth or what’s best for the client, but in making the sale with the least amount of work.”
On Noise versus signals: 
"Though I listen to the noise to make sure there’s no new information that I need to know, I don’t worry about most of it."
On government interventions: 
"Beware of the law of unintended consequences"
On the role of luck: 
"A lot of what happens in your life is merely serendipitous and really just luck."
A career advise: 
"If you ever have an idea and you think you need to take career risk to accomplish it, do it early in your career."




The Only Thing Constant is Change: Money Edition

Sovereign Man’s Simon Black gives a terse but incisive account of the evolution of money in the perspective of  reserve currency and its lessons.
For hundreds of years the Byzantine Empire coined the most popular reserve currency in the history of the world.

Merchants all over Europe, the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and further, used it in trade for centuries.

It was called the solidus, and was introduced by Constantine I in 312 AD.

The solidus held steady at 4.5 grams of 24-carat gold for nearly seven centuries. Hence its Latin name – ‘solid’. The durability of its purity is nearly unprecedented in the history of money.

Its weight, dimensions and purity remained constant until the 10th century when the government began to debase it.

The debasement was gradual at first, then accelerated rapidly.

In a matter of decades its gold content was reduced to almost zero as the Byzantine Empire was scrambling for cash to finance its numerous wars.

Consequently, Emperor Alexios I Komenos drastically overhauled the Byzantine coinage system in 1092 and introduced a new gold coin, the hyperpyron.

It too was soon subject to gradual debasement. And by the mid 1200s the hyperpyron’s gold content fell drastically again.

As the saying goes, fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

The rest of Europe had seen this movie before. And when they saw the gold content in the hyperpyron fall, they quickly lost confidence.

By that time, the Byzantine Empire was weak—a shadow of its former power.

Meanwhile, several small kingdoms in Italy were rising in prosperity, especially Florence, Genoa, and Venice.

The Florentines and the Genoese took up the task and minted a new gold coin called the florin, which at 3.5 grams of pure gold was the most wildly circulated trade currency in Europe and around the Mediterranean for a while.

The Venetian ducat gained wide international acceptance in the 1400s. The ducat contained 99.47% of fine gold—the highest metallurgical purity possible at the time.

As the Venetian merchants traveled far and wide the ducat became an internationally accepted trade currency throughout the world.

Even though he didn’t live in Venice, for example, Leonardo da Vinci was paid by the King of France in Venetian ducats—exactly 400 ducats per year, which in today’s dollars equals to roughly $56,000 (and he didn’t pay any tax…)

The ducat was ultimately supplanted by the Spanish dollar (real de a ocho, or Pieces of Eight) with the onset of the Age of Exploration.

Pieces of Eight became so widespread in international trade that they were legal tender in the United States until the mid 19th century.

The clear lesson here is that this stuff changes.

It’s common for the world’s most powerful country to issue a currency that becomes adopted around the world as the standard for international trade.

But whenever that country reaches a point of epic, terminal decline, and especially when it rapidly debases its currency, the rest of the world seeks an alternative.

The US has been enjoying this special privilege for decades now.
With the way the US government has been imposing imperial policies from geopolitics to trade and even to finance, which has recently sown the seeds of global factionalism, the US dollar’s reserve currency status is clearly in jeopardy. Compounding on this has been the Fed's bubble blowing that has been embraced as standard by today’s central banks. Such bubble policies have raised the specter of instability and crisis across the globe.

As the great Ron Paul recently wrote:
US policymakers fail to realize that the United States is not the global hegemon it was after World War II. They fail to understand that their overbearing actions toward other countries, even those considered friends, have severely eroded any good will that might previously have existed. And they fail to appreciate that more than 70 years of devaluing the dollar has put the rest of the world on edge. There is a reason the euro was created, a reason that China is moving to internationalize its currency, and a reason that other countries around the world seek to negotiate monetary and trade compacts. The rest of the world is tired of subsidizing the United States government's enormous debts, and tired of producing and exporting trillions of dollars of goods to the US, only to receive increasingly worthless dollars in return.

The US government has always relied on the cooperation of other countries to maintain the dollar's preeminent position. But international patience is wearing thin, especially as the carrot-and-stick approach of recent decades has become all stick and no carrot. If President Obama and his successors continue with their heavy-handed approach of levying sanctions against every country that does something US policymakers don’t like, it will only lead to more countries shunning the dollar and accelerating the dollar's slide into irrelevance.

Quote of the Day: In the hands of economists, the more precise the number, the bigger the lie.

Numbers are a good thing. Economics is full of numbers. It is perfectly natural to use numbers to count, to weigh, to study and compare. They make it easier and more precise to describe quantities. Instead of saying I drank a bucket of beer you say, I drank two 40s. Then instead of saying ‘I threw up all over the place,’ you say, I threw up on an area 4 feet square.

But in economics we reach the point of diminishing returns with numbers very quickly. They gradually become useless. Later, when they are used to disguise, pervert and manipulate, they become disastrous. Hormegeddon by the numbers. Ask Deep Thought the meaning of life then and the answer is likely to be “Negative Forty-Two.”

Exactly what point does the payoff from numbers in the economics trade become a nuisance? Probably as soon as you see a decimal point or a greek symbol. I’m not above eponymous vanity either. So I give you Bonner’s Law:

In the hands of economists, the more precise the number, the bigger the lie.

For an economist, numbers are a gift from the heavens. They turn them, they twist them, they use them to lever up and screw down. They also use them to scam the public. Numbers help put nonsense on stilts.

Numbers appear precise, scientific, and accurate. By comparison, words are sloppy, vague, subject to misinterpretation. But words are much better suited to the economist’s trade. The original economists understood this. Just look at Wealth of Nations—there are a lot of words in that thing. After all, we understand the world by analogy, not by digits. Besides, the digits used by modern economists are most always fraudulent.

“Math makes a research paper look solid, but the real science lies not in math but in trying one’s utmost to understand the real workings of the world,” says Professor Kimmo Eriksson of Sweden’s Malardalen University.
This is from the Agora’s Publishing chief Bill Bonner at the Casey Research.

Numbers are tools, they can be used for good or for deceit, so be careful with numbers.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Robert Ringer: A Warrior Lives by Acting

Make a difference, act now. Self development Robert Ringer explains
There are two basic kinds of actions. One is proaction, which puts you on the offensive and, all other things being equal, gives you a great deal of control over events. The other is reaction, which puts you on the defensive and relegates you to an inherent position of weakness.

An interesting way of looking at inaction is that it’s really just a negative form of action — a sort of black hole of action that sucks energy away from you much the same as the black holes of the universe pull matter into the deep recesses of their cosmic bowels. This is why inaction often yields consequences by default. If you wait for something, or someone, to act on you, you likely will be unable to control the consequences.

Homeostasis, a trait that all human beings possess to one extent or another, is (in psychological terms) the tendency to live with existing conditions and avoid change. Which is ironic, because resistance to change defies both the laws of nature and the laws of the universe.

The earth, the universe, and life itself are in a perpetual state of change, and so, too, is secular life. Weather changes, laws change, the economy changes, the reins of power change, technology changes, and, perhaps most significant of all, your age changes every second of your life. In addition, with the generation and dying of cells in our bodies, each of us is in a constant state of change physiologically, from birth to death.

Homeostasis is the ultimate defense against taking action, which is why most people stubbornly resist change, particularly major change. Outwardly, of course, we fabricate excuses that attempt to justify why we aren’t able to take action just yet, the most common one being that “the time is not quite right.”

Through the years, my own experience has convinced me that the time is never “right.” There’s always something that’s in the way of taking action. If you’re looking for excuses not to take action, you don’t have to go very far, because life is fraught with so-called problems — and they follow us wherever we go.

The truth is that, with few exceptions, the best day to take action is today. You can make a sales call today. You can start working on that important project today. You can start preparing to move to the city of your choice today. You can begin to pick up the pieces and start a new life today.

Japan’s Q2 GDP Plummets 6.8%!

Last June I wrote about the entangled state of the Japanese political economy due to the “Abenomics engineered economy.” 
It’s a wonder how the Japanese economy can function normally when the government destabilizes money and consequently the pricing system, and equally undermines the economic calculation or the business climate with massive interventions such as 60% increase in sales tax from 5-8% (yes the government plans to double this by the end of the year to 10%), and never ending fiscal stimulus which again will extrapolate to higher taxes.

The mainstream has all been desperately scrambling to look for “green shoots” via statistics. They fail to realize that by obstructing the business and household outlook via manifold and widespread price manipulations, this will only lead to not to real growth but to greater uncertainty which translates to high volatility and bigger risks for a Black Swan event.
All these multi-prong interventions appears to have caught up with the statistical economy as Japan’s GDP plummeted by 6.8% in 2Q 2014!  

From Bloomberg: (bold mine)
Japan’s economy contracted the most since the record earthquake three years ago as consumption and investment plunged after an April sales-tax increase aimed at curbing the world’s biggest debt burden.

Gross domestic product shrank an annualized 6.8 percent in the three months through June, the Cabinet Office said. That was less than the median estimate of 37 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News for a 7 percent drop. Unadjusted for price changes, GDP declined 0.4 percent…
Hopes for a Quick rebound?
While Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is counting on a quick rebound, the economy was struggling in June, with output falling the most since March 2011 as companies tried to pare elevated inventories. The government is ready to take flexible action if needed, Economy Minister Akira Amari said today, as Abe weighs whether Japan can bear another bump in the levy in 2015.
The damage has been widespread from consumption and trade which has spread to corporate profits.
Household consumption plummeted at an annualized pace of 19.2 percent from the previous quarter, while private investment sank 9.7 percent, highlighting the damage to demand by the 3 percentage point increase in the levy…

Imports tumbled an annualized 20.5 percent while exports fell 1.8 percent. That’s sapping the manufacturing sector and shows the yen’s 16 percent drop against the dollar over Abe’s term has yet to drive outbound shipments.

The windfall in corporate profits that the weaker yen delivered to many Japanese manufacturers last year also shows signs of fading.
Will PM Abe still push more tax hikes?
 
The Zero hedge has eye-catching and very telling charts on these.

image

History rhymes. The collapse in GDP has even more than the 1997 counterpart. 

image

The collapse in spending has even been greater than 1997

image

Then Japan’s stocks crumbled. This we have yet to see today. The Nikkei is even marginally up as of this writing.

The reason for this has been most likely “bad news is good news”. The chronically addicted stimulus crowd have been waiting for the government “to take flexible action if needed”

Stocks have been about the economy?

Iraq War: Washington’s Confused Policy

Analyst David Stockman explains of how US foreign imperial policy in Iraq has been one colossal jumbled mess. The US government has not only been bombing their own weapons, they are bombing jihadist troops which they previously trained and armed at the expense of the opposing sect which the US government has previously fought against but ironically are now protecting. 

As a side note, the US bombing of own weapons means more business for the the military industrial complex.

Back to Mr. Stockman 
But then again, ISIS got provisioned by none other than the Iraqi Army. The latter not only dropped its uniforms for civvies during the battle for Mosul, but also left behind armored Humvees, heavy artillery, night vision systems, state of the art firearms and much else of like and similar nature. Nor was this the first time that the Iraqi Army disarmed itself unilaterally. A while back they also surrendered their uniforms and guns when another American President—George W. Bush—-bombed them.

That was called “shock and awe”. Afterwards, the remnants of the Iraqi army must have found it indeed shocking and awesome that Washington immediately pivoted— after hanging the country’s leader—and spent $25 billion re-equipping and training them in brand new uniforms and with far better weapons.

Fast-forward to 2014. The hasty hand-off of these American weapons to ISIS during its June blitzkrieg was easy enough to explain. On their way out of Baghdad, the Washington “nation builders” had equipped and trained a native army so that it could defend a “nation” which did not exist. What passed for “Iraq” was some very long, straight lines drawn on a map exactly 98 years ago by the British and French foreign offices as they carved up their winnings from the Ottoman Empire. What passed for governance within these so-called Sykes-Picot boundaries was a series of kings, generals and dictators—- culminating in Saddam Hussein—-who ruled from the barrel of whatever gun had been supplied by the highest bidder among the Great Powers.

Thus, Brezhnev gave the Iraqi generals weapons in the 1970s. In the 1980s, President Reagan joined in, green lighting exports of the components and precursors for chemical weapons and providing Saddam with the satellite-based intelligence to practice using them on his “enemies” ( i.e. teenage boys in the Iranian Army) before he used them on his own people (i.e. the Kurds and the Shiite).

Not surprisingly, after the US had “liberated” Iraq from 90 years of dictatorship—democracy took hold with lightening speed subsequent to the 2011 departure of American GIs. The “rule of the majority”—that is, the Shiite majority—-soon ripped through most governmental institutions, but especially the military. In short order the “Iraqi” army became a Shiite army. Hence the precipitous surrender and flight from the battles of Mosul and other northern cities. That was Sunni and Kurd territory—–not a place where Shiite soldiers wanted to be shot dead or caught alive.

The more interesting mystery is how the ISIS fighters learned how to use Uncle Sam’s advanced weaponry so quickly. Perhaps the CIA knows. It did train several thousand anti-Assad fighters in its secret camps in Jordan in preparation for Washington’s “regime change” campaign in Syria. Undoubtedly, in the fog of war—-especially the sectarian wars in the Islamic heartland that have been raging for 13 centuries—it is difficult to have friend and foe vetted effectively.
Please read the rest here

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Quote of the Day: Never confuse faith with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality

On September 9th, 1965, US Navy pilot James Stockdale was shot down over North Vietnam and seized by a mob.

He would spend the next seven years in Hoa Lo Prison, the infamous “Hanoi Hilton”.

The physical brutality was unspeakable, and the mental torture never stopped. He would be kept in solitary confinement, in total darkness, for four years.

He would be kept in heavy leg-irons for two years and put on a starvation diet.

When told he would be paraded in front of foreign journalists, he slashed his own scalp with a razor and beat himself in the face with a wooden stool so that he would be unrecognizable and useless to the enemy’s press.

When he discovered that his fellow prisoners were being tortured to death, he slashed his wrists to show his torturers that he would not submit to them.

When his guards finally realized that he would die before cooperating, they relented.
 
The torture of American prisoners ended, and the treatment of all American prisoners of war improved.

Jim Collins, author of the influential study of US businesses, ‘Good to Great’, interviewed Stockdale during his research for the book. How had he found the courage to survive those long, dark years ?

“I never lost faith in the end of the story,” replied Stockdale.

“I never doubted not only that I would get out, but also that I would prevail in the end and turn the experience into the defining moment of my life, which in retrospect, I would not trade.”

Collins was silent for a few minutes. The two men walked along, Stockdale with a heavy limp, swinging a stiff leg that had never properly recovered from repeated torture.

Finally, Collins went on to ask another question. Who didn’t make it out ?

“Oh, that’s easy,” replied Stockdale. “The optimists.”

Collins was confused.

“The optimists. Oh, they were the ones who said, ‘We’re going to be out by Christmas.’

And Christmas would come, and Christmas would go. Then they’d say, ‘We’re going to be out by Easter.’

And Easter would come, and Easter would go. And then Thanksgiving. And then it would be Christmas again. And they died of a broken heart.”

As the two men walked slowly onward, Stockdale turned to Collins.

“This is a very important lesson. You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end – which you can never afford to lose – with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.”
This discipline versus faith narrative, which is very relevant to the current risk environment, is from Tim Price at the Sovereign Man

Monday, August 11, 2014

Phisix: Will the Global Black Swan Be Triggered by Economic Sanctions?

Over time, markets will do extraordinary, even bizarre, things. A single, big mistake could wipe out a long string of successes. We therefore need someone genetically programmed to recognize and avoid serious risks, including those never before encountered. Certain perils that lurk in investment strategies cannot be spotted by use of the models commonly employed today by financial institutions. Warren Buffett- 2006 Letter to Shareholders.

In this issue:

Phisix: Will the Global Black Swan Be Triggered by Economic Sanctions?
-OFWs in Libya Exposes on the Quality of the so-called Economic Boom
-The Toxicity of Overconfidence
-Another BSP Communications ‘Bait and Switch’?
-Credit Expansion as the Source of Inflation
-Stagflation Prediction Partly Met, IMF’s Straddle the Fence and the Peso Disconnect
-The BIR Assails Domestic Financial Community
-Global Black Swan: Nuclear War or Economic Sanctions or Both?

Phisix: Will the Global Black Swan Be Triggered by Economic Sanctions?

OFWs in Libya Exposes on the Quality of the so-called Economic Boom

OFWs caught in the crossfire in war ravaged Libya caught national attention to hug the headlines during the week. Unknown to most, the news carried with it an incisive latent perspective about the state of the Philippine economy. 

The Philippine government ordered a mandatory evacuation of OFWs in Libya. Surprisingly to populist politics, only a few of the OFWs submitted to the government edict.

This striking commentary from a Philippine authority on the sentiment of Libyan based OFWs[1]: (bold mine)
Despite the danger, many Filipinos in Libya have ignored the government’s order for mandatory evacuation, DFA spokesman Charles Jose told reporters on Monday.

“The usual reason we hear from them is that they would rather take the chance. They think they have greater chances of surviving the war [there] than of surviving uncertainty [without jobs] here,” Jose said.

Why striking? Because the OFWs are simply saying that they have little or no choice but to keep their livelihood or suffer in hunger if they return home. This reverberates, if not reinforces, with self-rated poverty surveys where the average resident presently has considered themselves as becoming “poorer”. Such sentiment seems to signify grassroots account of real economic conditions. 

Yet look at the difference between what OFWs and self-rated poverty surveys reveal compared to what experts, politicians and media say.

One example is from the IMF’s recent assessment of the Philippines (bold mine)[2]: Strong GDP growth in recent years has translated into improved social conditions. Growth has become less employment intensive, but still reduced the elevated under- and unemployment rates. Poverty incidence, although declining, remains high, and a large share of the population remains vulnerable to falling into poverty as a result of natural disasters and other shocks

As a side note, despite their army of experts, the IMF has a pathetic track record in forecasting, not only have they botched on their predictions on Greece, lately they even gave Bulgarian banking system a clean bill of health two weeks before two massive bank runs[3] that forced the EU to a rescue. I wouldn’t put my money on what the IMF says.

So why has the choice of OFWs been reduced to either “surviving the war” or “surviving uncertainty”, if indeed social conditions have improved from the 7% statistical GDP in 2013?

Have OFWs not heard of the magical “boom” here, which ironically has been well advertised both domestically and internationally? Why the ocean of variance in the sentiment, the claims of the government relative to surveys, as well as, patent disparities in the statistics[4]—between government poverty and self-diagnosed poverty? In short, why the stunning disconnect?

This marks a fundamental example of the evolving divergence between the top-down viewpoint vis-à-vis bottom-up conditions. One previous example I have shown has been how experts and the public defines inflation[5].

Another important dimension from the news is that the lifeblood of the Libyan healthcare system has been on OFWs (mostly from Philippines). So aside from pay and career, OFWs appears to have found some other psychological profits from their work; perhaps through Maslow’s hierarchy—a sense of belonging, self-esteem or even self-actualization. In other words, the human factor has prompted for the OFW’s defiance of the government where their choice can be read as ‘die as heroes or die as starved yet forgotten pawns of politics’[6]. And by disregarding populist politics, the OFWs have asserted their individual sovereignty.

And by failing to account for such human ‘individual’ factor, populist “feel good, noble intention and vote generating” politics thrust to “bring-the-OFWs-home” has utterly failed.

Why is this important? Because, in a nutshell, the Libyan OFW episode brings to light the quality of the so-called economic boom. This accentuates signs of the deepening misperception by the cheery consensus that has backed the prevailing conviction supporting today’s one way trade in the financial markets.

When reality begins to shatter such forceful expectations, then trouble lies ahead especially for those blinded by overconfidence.

The Toxicity of Overconfidence

Overconfidence breeds misconceptions and delusions. As professor of finance and author John Nofsinger writes[7]
People can be overconfident. Psychologists have determined that overconfidence causes people to overestimate their knowledge, underestimate risks, and exaggerate their ability to control events. Does overconfidence occur in investment decision making? Security selection is a difficult task. It is precisely this type of task in which people exhibit the greatest degree of overconfidence.
This means overconfidence can be fatal. 

Could the lamentable fate of former Brazil Billionaire Eike Batista whose fortune $30+ billion in 2012, who then has been the Forbes seventh wealthiest in the world two years ago, to become negative net worth today been mainly through overconfidence[8]? Imagine $30 billion down the drain in just two years? Most have been oriented to think that wealth can only be accumulated, but Mr. Batista’s crash has been nothing more than horrific.

Warren Buffett once said “risks comes from not knowing what you are doing”. I would rather say every crisis reveals that a great scad of smart people have opted to “not know” for many reasons such as dogmatism, dedication to math models, preference for instant gratification, social pressure or groupthink, selective perception due to personal biases, sublime attachment to interest group/s benefiting from current policies and more, but overconfidence could be more of a compelling factor. 

This means that in investing while there are times where one should go with the crowd, there are times required to go against the crowd. From a historical perspective, the crowd is ALWAYS wrong during MAJOR inflection points. The reason inflection point exists is exactly because of the extreme nature of sentiment. Of course, sentiment is never a standalone force. It is a necessary but insufficient factor. The path to overconfidence has always been established by fundamental forces.

For instance when boom times lead to an overconfident crowd, overborrowing in support of excessive speculation or overspending or both, builds up risks on the balance sheets of levered entities. So when economic reality upends the overconfidence that has been founded on popular superstitions, such fragilities simply unravels.

My favorite iconoclast Nassim Nicholas Taleb and partner Mark Spitznagel explains how debt hides fragility[9] (bold mine):
Debt has a nasty property: it is highly treacherous. A loan hides volatility as it does not vary outside of default, while an equity investment has volatility but its risks are visible. Yet both have similar risks. Thus debt is the province of both the overconfident borrower who underestimates large deviations, and of the investor who wants to be deluded by hiding risks. Then there are products such as complex derivatives, which in the name of “modern finance” make the system even more fragile.
So when financial markets exhibit intensifying signs of excessive buildup in sentiment in a single direction buttressed by developments in fundamental factors, then it is time to take a distance from crowd. As legendary investor John Templeton duly advised: Bull-markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.

As a lowly money manager, who survives from the markets also from my direct exposure, which means I have embedded ‘skin in the game’, I write not only to inform but to educate and share the conduct of my investing affairs discreetly through this outlook. 

I also do not write with the intent of entertaining or to bloviate in order get populist plaudits or to confirm on the biases of the speculating crowd or community. I contravene or ethically oppose the Keynesian ‘sound banker’ approach of hiding under the skirt of crowd when the mess surfaces which means that I write with my conscience.
 
I keep to my heart the most precious legacy of investing wisdom from the great value investor Benjamin Graham:
Have the courage of your knowledge and experience. If you have formed a conclusion from the facts and if you know your judgment is sound, act on it - even though others may hesitate or differ. You are neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees with you. You are right because your data and reasoning are right
And unlike most of my contemporaries, I practice what I preach. 

For me, identifying profitable opportunities comes with the imperative of evaluation of the risk environment, this applies to whether one positions for the long term (‘value investors’) or medium term mostly trend-following (growth) investors or even for scalping/momentum traders/punters. Again another gem from Ben Graham[10]: The essence of investment management is the management of risk, not the management of returns

Transitioning market phases implies that there will be time for aggressive or moderate or defensive positioning. Conditions today suggest of the latter. Remember, time is the investor’s real best friend.

Lastly, I neither subscribe nor attempt to share with my clients or audiences snake oil trading (or pseudo hedging) techniques, sought after by people who think with their eyes or who are after instant gratification.

Another BSP Communications ‘Bait and Switch’?

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The unfolding predicament in Libya by OFWs and self-assessed poverty will even become more pronounced.

Last July Statistical consumer inflation swelled to 4.9%. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas once again deviously blames this on weather.

From the BSP[11]: The higher July headline inflation rate was driven mainly by the higher prices of food. Food inflation accelerated as most food items particularly rice, vegetables, meat, fish, milk, fruits, sugar, oils, and corn posted higher prices due to tight domestic supply conditions triggered by recent weather-related production disruptions. Meanwhile, non-food inflation held steady as the increases in electricity rates, tuition fees, jeepney fares, and hospital services were counterbalanced by the slower price increases in domestic petroleum products (i.e., gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and LPG).

The Philippine consumer price inflation chart (right window) doesn’t match with the BSP’s statement. Philippine CPI began its ascent in September 2013 two months prior to Typhoon (Haiyan) Yolanda which devastated mostly Region 8 in November 8, 2013. Philippine CPI has now reached 2011 highs. Besides the only direct connection between Typhoon Yolanda and the economy has been the coconut industry[12].

In addition, if tight supply has been the problem, then the solution would be to allow imports to offset any supply imbalance. Yet given that statistical price inflation continues to move upwards during the last 10 months, which has intensified since the advent of 2014, it is quite obvious that either the government didn’t permit imports to cover the deficits which has mostly been in food but has become widespread even from statistics derived from a heavily regulated environment or that supply shocks have only been aggravating circumstances or symptoms from an undisclosed disease.

Next why did the BSP raise interest rates last week which they immediately implemented[13], if such has only been a supply side problem? What has raising interest rates got to do with bringing in supplies into the market? Or will increasing interest rates induce more imports? How? And why the BSP’s seemingly desperate attempts to curtail inflation via 5 successive policies—2 reserve requirements, SDA rates, bank stress test and lately official rates—in 5 months? The BSP leadership leaves the public groping in the dark 

So whether it is about facts or about policy actions, the BSP’s communications appear to become more abstruse, increasingly inconsistent and non-transparent. This is hardly positive, as this should raise suspicions.

As reminder, in order to promote domestic demand, the BSP in 2009 made a grand pirouette in line with most of central banks around the world to shield their respective economies from a contagion from a financial meltdown via zero bound rates. Does the BSP think that frontloading expenditures through the creation of money from thin air via bank credit expansion or in the words of the BSP chief “counter-cyclical support to aggregate demand in the form of expansionary fiscal and monetary policies”[14] will not impact prices? Is the BSP blind to demand and supply curves? Does the BSP believe in free lunches?

As one can see Philippine statistical price inflation reared its ugly head when the BSP unleashed the inflation Godzilla via a 30++% month money supply growth rates in July 2013 (left window). Because monetary inflation has lagging effects, the CPI response came later. I would further deduce that the 30+% money growth has been a manifestation of the accumulation of inflation pressures from the earlier phase of credit expansion combined with the SDA policy of 2013. In short, the SDA policy of 2013 became the outlet valve for the simmering inflation pressures that has amassed overtime.

Let me add to the BSP chief’s words then “Maintaining an expansionary monetary policy stance to the extent that the inflation outlook allows, could support market confidence and assure households and businesses that risks to macro-stability are being addressed decisively”. Well can blowing bubbles be seen and interpreted as “risks to macro-stability are being addressed decisively”? Or is macro-stability risk being ignored decisively due to unstated or undeclared political objectives?

Credit Expansion as the Source of Inflation

Central bank induced credit expansion means injecting fresh spending power into the economic stream. If the supply side fails to anticipate the surge in spending stream, then a supply shock will happen. This is what we are seeing today and this is what the BSP has been publicly attributing as factors responsible for inflation.

Yet additional demand unmet by supply growth will mean imbalances expressed through higher prices. So the government will need to address the growth in demand with more imports. But additional imports will extrapolate to strains on the trade balance which will impact the currency, through a weaker peso.

So the problem generated by credit expansion can only multiply. And the solution will be to reverse it.

But credit expansion also means that producers reallocating resources to capital intensive (high order) industries.

Since the Philippines has been seen as a consumption story, the direction of investments gravitated on these areas, particularly to the property sector mostly catering to the highly touted consumer, the shopping malls, residential condos or housing projects, hotel and restaurants, casinos.

Moreover since massive flows of funds and resources had been diverted to these popular bubble areas, which implies of overconsumption of resources, at the expense of the other industries, like agriculture, the dearth of investments and consumption of resources in the latter has contributed to supply side constrains which have now been expressed as consumer price inflation.

As for the former which has imbibed on most of the resources, the eventual outcome will be an oversupply. Signs of oversupply may have already emerged. As noted last week, the latest report from Global Property Guide indicated that Manila has ‘ghost cities’ or really more of ghost condos rather than the hyperbole of ‘cities’. Such are examples of how distortions of the pricing mechanism by inflationism engender malinvestments.

Yet most of these have been financed by debt. And debt from the supply side has growth disturbingly faster than real demand or even statistical economic growth. So massive misallocation of resources combined with rapid growth in debt relative to demand or economic growth makes the entire aggregate demand growth template unsustainable. This has been the cornerstone of the Philippine economic boom; a boom that has been revealing signs of reversal.

Rising price inflation means that resources or savings have been insufficient to finance projects established as profitable only at low price inflation levels and at low interest rates. For instance, for the supply side, rising price inflation will translate to project cost overruns and increasing overheads in the face of reduced demand from both consumers and producers.

In addition, for entities with access to credit in the formal banking sector, whom has sharply increased the level of debt absorption over the years, implies greater balance sheet risks when interest rates move higher.

The current increase in official rates still means negative real rates environment. When real rates move to positive, real debt levels will also increase, thereby increasing the burden of debt servicing.

For an economy whose statistical growth has become debt dependent, reduced debt levels will first temper down profitability and growth, and eventually expose on the degree of resource misallocations through the markets.

As you can see, aggregate demand quasi-boom policies bring about price disruptions, economic discoordination and malinvestments.

Stagflation Prediction Partly Met, IMF’s Straddle the Fence and the Peso Disconnect

Well the BSP’s current inflation predicament I have predicted years ago.

While I was still in the bullish camp as the effects of negative real rates remain benign I wrote[15]: Also, given the combination of the currentopwhich remains far above the interest rate, coupled with the negative real interest rate outlook, suggests that the Philippines continues to operate on a loose monetary inflation stoking environment.

By late 2012 I became concerned over the far aggressive rate of credit expansion, I wrote[16]:
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
Oops.

By imposing 5 policies in 5 months, the BSP seem to have already shown incipient signs of desperation if not panic, even when statistical price inflation has been supposedly at the upper range of their target at 4.9% last July. Why? Because real inflation figures have been alot higher than statistical numbers say? Because some influential pressure groups, perhaps outside the Bank of International Settlement’s warnings[17], may have been cognizant of dangers or if not imperiled by effects of the BSP’s policies?

Yet the BSP’s reaction comes along with, as noted earlier[18] “the more than doubling of the growth rates of the real estate consumer NPLs in the 1Q 2014 vis-à-vis the average of the last three quarters of 2013 can be juxtaposed to the breathtaking 8.95% 1Q 2014 spike in the prices of 3 bedroom condominium units in Makati the cresting of money supply growth rates also in Q1 2014, the intensifying official inflation rates and the below consensus expectations of 5.7% 1Q 2014 GDP growth rates.”

Has anyone from the mainstream seen this outbreak of inflation? Most experts or talking heads see inflation like a pet in a cage.

Oh by the way, remember the sanguine quote above by the IMF on the Philippines in their press release? Well the IMF actually has straddled the fence to ensure that they can’t be lambasted for being blind.

First the IMF notes of the external risk[19]: This favorable outlook could be buffeted by external and domestic events. Abrupt exit from exceptionally loose monetary policies abroad, a sharp slowdown in China or other emerging markets, or a major geopolitical incident could impact global or regional trade and capital flows and adversely affect the Philippine economy.

Now the punchline (bold mine): On the domestic front, rapid credit growth or a disproportionate flow of resources to the property sector could boost short-term growth but heighten volatility thereafter, impacting over­leveraged households and corporates.

I don’t know how the IMF defines “rapid credit growth or a disproportionate flow of resources” but for me, such seeming fence sitter’s word of caution has been descriptive of what has already been transpiring, specifically “boost short-term growth but heighten volatility thereafter”. Let me break it down: 2013’s 7% growth represents “boost short-term growth” while rising property NPLs, record growth in condo prices, ghost condos, price inflation and blatant overvaluations of asset prices levels can be read as “heighten volatility thereafter”, although ‘thereafter’ is today!

The point is the IMF, like many other global political or mainstream institutions or establishments, CANNOT deny the existence of bubbles anymore. So their recourse has been to either downplay on the risks or put an escape clause to exonerate them when risks transforms into reality which is the IMF position.

As for inflation outlook, unlike the IMF which sees inflation from a neo-Keynesian output gap version of the Phillips curve, with hardly inflation in the context of Milton Friedman’s “always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon”, for me for as long as bank credit expansion is sustained from which these will circulate in the economy as artificial demand and which will revealed in money supply growth, then price inflation will continue to rise even beyond the BSP’s moving goalpost.

However, as in the case today, money supply growth appears to be plateauing, this comes as the rate of growth in bank credit expansion seems to have also decelerated. This may be because much of the credit expansion could be used to pay off existing debt instead of capital expansion programs. And this is even before the increase in official rates at the end of July. If such trend is sustained then inflationary pressures down the road will ease but statistical economy growth will also vastly underperform. And slower growth amidst high debt levels will give rise to credit burdens of leveraged institutions and or individuals, or in the words of the IMF, “impacting over­leveraged households and corporates”.

The Peso vis-à-vis the US dollar fell by .82% this week. However the Peso remains up for the year, which curiously comes in the face of rising price inflation. This is another sign of a fantastic detachment between financial markets and the real economy.

The government may for the meantime succeed at the massaging of prices at the financial markets, resort to statistical masquerade or publicity gimmicks. But eventually economic forces will ventilate on the accreted imbalances from all these manipulation of the markets and the economy. It’s just a matter of a not so distant time.

Yet the BSP’s recent actions have begun to reflect on all these.

With 2Q GDP growth due to be announced possibly in the last week of August, it is a wonder how the BSP will respond to data.

The BIR Assails Domestic Financial Community

Last week, the domestic financial community, which reportedly includes 9 of the most influential business groups, as well as, the banking and capital market, supposedly protested a new tax ruling which requires “the submission of an alphabetical list (alphalist) of payees of income payments subject to withholding taxes”[20]. The community said that the new rule may result to capital flight. The new ruling would affect dividends which, if not compliant with BIR directives, will be taxed at 30% instead of 10%.

I am with the financial community on this. Such senseless arbitrary new ruling will not only cause capital flight but put a barrier on business creation and investments, thereby adversely influencing economic growth and increasing poverty levels. If such program gets implemented and would result to economic deprivation will these bureaucrats be held responsible and prosecuted for policy failures? The answer is NO, so they go about tossing more and more fatal totalitarian decrees at the expense of everyone.

Yet as one could observe, the BIR has been relentlessly tightening the dragnet on the economy with aim of shanghaiing more resources from the productive sector.

Bizarrely, the financial community hardly appears to have seen this coming. The public lynching of doctors, the assault on the informal economy and many more has long served as the proverbial writings on the wall. Yet facetiously too, the financial industry remains sanguine over the financial markets and the economy. And as even more sign of oxymoron, at the day this article was published the Phisix zoomed by over 100 points or by about 1.5% mostly on local buying!

Think of it, threats of capital flight in the face of rampaging stocks would seem like a bait-and-switch, how do you think this will be effective in persuading the BIR commissioner??? Here is a guess; a full-fledged bear market will force the BIR chief to stand down. Yet this bear market will come with or without a change in the BIR ruling.

And secondarily, this eccentric pushing up of stocks in the face of government assault on the industry is one splendid example of blindness from overconfidence. How do you square the growing risk from a capital flight due to a repressive tax edict with frenetic bidding up of stocks? More confiscation by the government of investor’s resources equals more earnings growth? How fabulous!

And alongside this news, the BIR commissioner reportedly wants to remove or exempt the tax agency from standardization of salary levels[21]. The BIR chief wants to change the organization’s structure from rule based to arbitrary based. Doing so, allows even more internal politicization of the tax agency and the appointments of favored officers.

It’s sad to see how productive capital has already been wasted from current feel good programs, but it is even direr to see the suffocation of the domestic economy just to appease the whims of these self-righteous political agents.

It’s no crisis time, yet the government has been drooling for more funds and attempting to extract these by harassing more and more of the private sector.

What happens when the economic version of Typhoon Yolanda makes a landfall?

India’s Central Bank’s Rajan Warns of 1930s Collapse, US Treasury’s TBAC Warns of De-Risking

I have been saying that current environment has been prompting officials and the establishment to admit to the existence of bubbles. Except for the Bank of International Settlements, much of the warnings have functioned as an escape hatch perhaps intended to relieve authorities of the responsibility in the prospects of a financial-economic meltdown.

Well last week when I referred to China, I said ‘epic bubble will lead to epic collapse’.

Here is one central banker, India’s Central Bank Governor Raghuram Rajan, a Chicago School alumnus and formerly the chief economist of the IMF, who recently elevated the prospects of the risks of an ‘epic collapse’ by referring to the GREAT DEPRESSION.

Governor Rajan decries the beggar-thy-neighbor policies being implemented by global monetary authorities which translates to a lack of coordination, that for him, elevates the risks a 1930 scenario

From the Wall Street Journal Real Times Economics Blog (bold mine)[22]: We are taking a greater chance of having another crash at a time when the world is less capable of bearing the cost,” said Mr. Rajan in an interview with the Central Banking Journal. A sudden shift in asset prices could happen in a variety of ways, Mr. Rajan said. The most obvious route would be as a result of investors chasing higher yields at a time when they believe central bank policies will protect them against a fall in prices. They put the trades on even though they know what will happen as everyone attempt to exit positions at the same time – there will be major market volatility,” said Mr. Rajan. A clear symptom of the major imbalances crippling the world’s financial market is the over valuation of the euro, Mr. Rajan said.

Just a reminder; these quotes should not be interpreted as an ‘appeal to authority’, the economic theory of business cycles have been enough to prove the case of bubbles.

However, my citations of public authorities have been meant to point out how bubbles have not only been in the radar screens of authorities, but seem to have reached a state of clear and present danger for some like the BIS or RBI’s Governor Rajan. The difference is that public authorities appear to be directionless on how to approach or deal with them. So outside the BIS or RBI’s Rajan, the rest treat them as an escape hatchet. Again my analogy for this is “Yes I recognize the problem of addiction but a withdrawal syndrome would even be more cataclysmic”.

Yet the buck doesn’t stop here.

A member of the US treasury Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC) composed of US banks and investors in a recent presentation warned of the risks of a massive de-risking due to Fed policies that has generated severe complacency in the marketplace, forced pension to extract yields to fulfill of return requirements and yield chasing based on orthodox risk models.

From the Financial Times[23] (bold mine): “Against [an] environment of low vol[atility] and low returns, the only way to achieve the same return targets is to take on more risk,” TBAC said in its presentation. Assets invested into hedge funds, which typically undertake riskier strategies, have ballooned to $2.8tn in the second quarter of this year, up from about $1.75tn just before the financial crisis, TBAC said. Meanwhile conservative investors such as pension funds are still trying to reach an average return target of a little less than 8 per cent, at a time when yields on benchmark US Treasuries are at 2.45 per cent. Because banks and investors incorporate volatility into their internal risk management models, there is a chance that suppressed markets are creating a feedback loop that amplifies further risk-taking, TBAC noted. The “value-at-risk” models used by most large Wall Street banks and investors typically incorporate volatility data to try to calculate how much a trading portfolio might be expected to lose in a given day with a given probability. With volatility drifting lower and lower in recent years, these models are spitting out extremely small chances of investors sustaining large losses, allowing Wall Street to assume additional risk without violating its own internal risk management standards. “VaR-based analysis leads to self-reinforcing loops as low volatility causes models to recommend scaling up risk,” TBAC said in its presentation. “An unexpected increase in volatility might come from broad-based selling of assets wanting to de-risk in front of a turn of policy.”

Again these are mainstream articles excerpting speeches or presentations of authorities from political institutions or the establishment. It’s pretty clear that we are seeing a convergence of worries.

Denial of bubbles wouldn’t remove its risks.

As English writer Aldous Leonard Huxley once penned, “Facts do not cease to exist because it is ignored.” I call such bubble denials as the Aldous Huxley syndrome.

Global Black Swan: Nuclear War or Economic Sanctions or Both?

Unless one has been hiding under the stone, it’s been quite clear that there has been a flare up in the accounts of wars around the globe.

Aside from the civil war in Libya, which has jeopardize domestic OFWs, and also the ongoing civil war in Syria, other wars include the US financed invasion by the Israel government of the Palestine held Gaza[24], the Northern Iraq offensive by the Jihadist Sunni led ISIS, supposedly financed by American ally Saudi Arabia and Qatar where the US has paradoxically joined foe Iran in defending the besieged Iraq government via air strikes which began last Friday[25]. The renewed skirmishes between two former Soviet Union Republics, Armenia and Azerbaijan over a contested mountainous territory[26] where the latter’s president threatened a full scale war with the former over Twitter[27] and a conflict which Russian President Vladmir Putin as of this writing has been trying to broker a peace deal[28].

While there may other ongoing wars, none has captured the world’s attention than the civil war in Ukraine which threatens to escalate into a war between US-NATO and Russia.

Economic sanctions are equivalent to protectionism that risks retaliation and further escalation. I recently wrote[29],
One thing may lead to another. If the brinkmanship escalation worsens, then sanctions are likely to expand to eventually cover trade and finance and more. This paves way for more heated confrontation which may open the door to a military conflict in today’s nuclear age. We just pray that cooler heads will prevail.
In other words, economic sanctions are equivalent to economic warfare. The great Proto-Austrian economist, the French classical liberal Claude Frederic Bastiat once said that “if goods don’t cross borders, armies will”

Historian Eric Margolis echoes Bastiat and provides a precedent[30]:
Economic embargos such as those launched by the US against Russia may seem relatively harmless. They are not. Trade sanctions are a form of strategic warfare that is sometimes followed by bullets and shells.

Think, for good example, of the 1940 US embargo against Japan that led Tokyo’s fateful decision to go to war rather than face slow,economic strangulation. How many Americans know that President Roosevelt closed the Panama Canal to Japanese shipping to enforce demands that Tokyo get out of Manchuria and China?
We are seeing some signs of these.

Recently, the US has imposed sanctions “directly targeting Russia’s banking, defence and energy sectors”[31], Russia has responded by “imposing a "full embargo" on food imports from the EU, US and some other Western countries”, which includes “fruit, vegetables, meat, fish, milk and dairy imports”[32] aside from “banning Ukrainian airlines from transit across its territory”. Russia also considers expanding retaliatory sanctions to include a ban on transit flights for EU and US airlines from Siberian airspace.

Professor Michael Rozeff gives 17 reasons why the US sanctions against Russia are crazy

Yet instead of sanctions leading to de-escalation, US sanctions on Russia appears to provoke more reciprocal adversarial response. Russia has recently re-amassed troops over the Ukraine border[33], and importantly, listen up, the US government has admitted that the Russian air force flew 16 forays over or near US air space at Alaska and at Northern Canada over the last 10 days[34]!

Historian Margolis says that because of the limited number of troops on both sides to conduct a full scale conventional war, such limitations are temptations to use tactical nuclear weapons. 

It’s really silly for both governments to put the risks of a global Armageddon on the table just to please the egos of these politicians.

Even if we are to discount the occurrence of a nuclear war, these economic sanctions could lead to a 1930s equivalent of Smoot Hawley act or essentially de-globalization via protectionism.

But instead of a Smoot Hawley in response to a stock market-banking sector collapse, in today’s environment the causation may work in the opposite.

Economic sanctions can be the trigger for a global economic and financial black swan.

Economic sanctions can be interpreted as equivalent to monetary tightening. Investopedia.com’s defines credit crunch[35] as “an economic condition in which investment capital is difficult to obtain. Banks and investors become wary of lending funds to corporations, which drives up the price of debt products for borrowers.”

This means that despite zero bound rates or further QE by central banks, by imposing restrictions on capital flows and credit, banks and investors will become wary of lending funds to financial and nonfinancial corporations affected by the sanctions. And one can’t just look at the numbers because the financial system has been vastly interconnected if not tightly interdependent. 

As I earlier noted, one thing can lead to another. Economic sanctions can spread to include allies (say China). Or the impact of sanctions can be transmitted via network effects.

Also sanctions are self-destructive. Take a look at Russia’s food counter sanctions against West.

One should first ask why does a country import? A country imports because the products may not be produced in the domestic economy, or they may be inefficiently or inadequately produced (or produced more expensively based on the law of comparative advantage) or offer more choice to the consumers (via product variation or quality, again law of comparative advantage).

To clarify: importations are conducted usually by enterprises than by the government. So I used ‘country’ to simplify the explanation

So by cutting off or prohibiting supply means to punish domestic consumers more than the overseas suppliers. Domestic consumers will have reduced supply at higher prices, if not at reduced quality. Meanwhile overseas suppliers suffer from a loss of business. The losses will be transmitted to suppliers to labor or even to taxes.

This applies whether to food or other items. The end result is that both parties lose, which further means that all these sanctions are like shooting oneself on the foot.

So in the case of Russia’s food sanctions, expect the average Russians to suffer from higher food prices, if not food shortages. You can see Russia’s food import numbers here.

Also, take for example US-Russian trade which has recently collapsed. Media says sanctions have worked. Media doesn’t see the losses incurred by US producers as well as the potential impact of those losses to the economy. This applies as well to Russia.

Media has been fascinated by the numbers. What media doesn’t see is that of the human factor matters more than the numbers. If both sides will escalate further, then more and more parts of the global economy will be affected. We will end up with epic collapse given the epic bubble. But instead of finance, we may have a collapse triggered by a geopolitical fiasco.

Another problem with media is that sanctions applied by the US before may not have fomented war because these have been imposed against much smaller countries, say Iran, Cuba and North Korea.

It would be a mistake to make the same comparison against Russia. They seem to forget that Russia, while smaller, has economic clout over the Eurozone due to energy supplies. Importantly Russia has roughly the same number of nuclear weapons as the US.

Politically, economic depression from sanctions will be used by politicians to fuel nationalistic fervor that will incite popular clamor for war. These impassioned responses may provoke a real war.

At the end of the day all these sanctions will go back to Bastiat “if goods don’t cross borders, armies will”.

Unfortunately instead of armies, what may cross today’s borders may be nuclear bombs.

Have a nice day.




[2] IMF.org IMF Executive Board Concludes 2014 Article IV Consultation with the Philippines Press Release No. 14/388 August 8, 2014







[9] Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Mark Spitznagel Time to tackle the real evil: too much debt Financial Times July 13, 2008


[11] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas July Inflation Rises to 4.9 Percent August 5, 2014


[13] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas BSP Peso Rediscount Rate Effective 4 August 2014 August 15, 2014






[19]IMF loc cit

[20] Inquirer.net BIR rule seen to trigger capital flight August 4, 2014

[21] Inquirer.net BIR seeks perks to attract better workers August 4, 2014

[22] Wall Street Journal Real Times Economics Blog RBI’s Rajan Sees Risk of Financial Markets Crash August 6, 2014

[23] Financial Times US banks warn on ‘excessive’ risk-taking August 6, 2014







[30] Eric Margolis What if There’s a Real War in Ukraine? August 9, 2014 Lewrockwell.com





[35] Investopedia.com Credit Crunch