``A novel, a story, a myth, a tale, all have the same function: they spare us from the complexity of the world and shield us from its randomness. Myths impart order to the disorder of human perception and the perceived “chaos of human experience.””- Nassim Nicolas Taleb- Black Swan, The Impact of the Highly Improbable
Let us take for example some ingredients of the present crisis, such as Collateralized Debt Obligations or CDO or a type of asset backed security and structured credit product which pools several collateral including mortgage securities.
Figure 2: SIFMA: Global CDO Issuance Market Data
Since the
The predominance of US CDO issuance is a testament to the degree of leverage faced by the
Figure 3: IMF: GFSR Global Hedge Funds by Geographic Source of Funds
In figure 3 courtesy of IMF, while the growth of the hedge funds industry have been worldwide leading to a reduction of the share of US based institutions, what we want to point out is that if there will be any destruction of credit, the bulk or meat of the damage would likely still be in the US, where 62% of hedge funds are located.
Of course, hedge funds and CDOs don’t make up the entire investing sphere, but what we would like to point out is that deflationist school of thought overestimates the universality of the global credit structure. Such view is ultimately too US centric.
The problem of “foreign currency reserve rich” Asian countries has been as BUYERS of these tainted instruments which could result to some balance sheet losses but should not affect its economic functions in the entirety.
FinanceAsia interviewed ANZ's Melbourne-based chief economist, Mr. Saul Eslake, from which we quote,
``Asian investors and financial institutions will have some of this toxic debt on their books. And will have to confess to how much they have lost. But I doubt there are many institutions in
``But as far as the Asian economies are concerned they should be resilient. If there is a recession in the
``As far as Asian equity markets are concerned: if the central banks succeed in restarting the credit mechanimsm, part of the means by which they will do that is by cutting interest rates. Lower interest rates, combined with what is fairly good growth, should be good for Asian equity markets, particularly since –
Figure4 BIS: Median debt equity ratios
Quoting the BIS on their latest quarterly outlook (highlight mine), ``The situation improved significantly after the crisis. Beginning in 1998, leverage began to fall significantly for
Second, is that depression advocates argues in the context oblivious of the existence of today’s Fiat currency Standard.
What we mean is that the US Dollar being the world’s de facto currency standard would require the US Government to fight tooth and nail for the sustenance of present system, which underpins its quintessential pride and dignity.
It could, under present circumstances coordinate with global central banks to institute measures to mitigate the present junctures circumstances as what we have lately. What used to be national is today global, such is the marked nuance.
Yes while there is no guarantee that these efforts would work, synchronized moves could allow central banks more arsenal at their disposal. In other words, the inflationary system could last longer more than what the depression advocates may think of.
Further global central bankers appear to operate under the concept of the game theory called the NASH equilibrium, from which we quote the old article of one of my favorite analyst John Maudlin (highlight ours),
``The Nash equilibrium (named after John Nash) is a kind of optimal strategy for games involving two or more players, whereby the players reach an outcome to mutual advantage. If there is a set of strategies for a game with the property that no player can benefit by changing his strategy while (if) the other players keep their strategies unchanged, then that set of strategies and the corresponding payoffs constitute a Nash equilibrium.”
Put differently, in the eyes of central bankers, there is less of an incentive to upset today’s conditions, regardless of the imbalances built under the present setup. Hence, they would probably attempt to work for the status quo, while gradually attempt (or at least pay lip service) to deal with the imbalances —the NASH equilibrium!
Third, the financial markets are not limited to reflect on the economic domain but transmissions of monetary policies…
Figure 5: zse.co.zw: Soaring
We discussed this in our April 9th to 13th edition [see
Maybe under a PROTECTIONIST or “closed” world order, the depression scenario could possibly have more clout.
Lastly, the Japan LOST DECADE scenario has been the frequently cited case of the deflation disorder, where Keynesian infers this phenomenon as the “liquidity trap”-- ``that awkward condition in which monetary policy loses its grip because the nominal interest rate is essentially zero, in which the quantity of money becomes irrelevant because money and bonds are essentially perfect substitutes (Paul Krugman)”—allegedly responsible for over a decade of economic slump.
The peculiar thing is that Bank of Japan has followed to the hilt the prescriptions of its Keynesian and Monetarist mentors to no avail--from exhaustively heaving up of public spending (which today led to the largest public debt among developed nations 176% to GDP -CIA, 2006 est) to adopting monetary policies as Quantitive Easing.
Of course, there are some extreme and elaborate distinctions; culturally, Japanese is the world’s biggest saver against the
Second, the polemics boils down to the valid analysis of the present conditions.
We quoted self-development author Robert Ringer in his article “Beware of False Perceptions” in the past (highlight mine), ``Action is the starting point of all progress, but an accurate perception of reality is the foundation upon which a successful person bases his actions. A false perception of reality leads to false premises, which in turn leads to false assumptions, which in turn leads to false conclusions, which, ultimately, leads to negative results…Which is why it’s incumbent upon you to become adept at distinguishing between reality and illusion. A false perception of reality — regardless of the cause — automatically leads to failure. An accurate perception of reality doesn’t guarantee success, but it’s an excellent first step in the right direction.”
From which we question, “could the liquidity trap theory be erroneous if not fallacious?”
The
``Many are those who believe
``As Murray Rothbard points out in his book, America's Great Depression, "saving, investment and the rate of interest are each and all simultaneously determined by individual time preferences on the market. Liquidity preference has nothing to do with it." In other words, the consumers' choices drive the rate of interest—not vice versa.
``Other analysts obsess over the "deflation problem." The idea that deflation is the villain of the piece misses an obvious fact: money supply continues to grow. However you slice it, be it M-1, M-2 or "broadly-defined liquidity"—they have all been growing every year since 1984, the earliest date provided by the BOJ data bank on its website. M-1 grew 8.5% in 2001, 27.6% in 2002 and 8.2% in 2003. M-2, a broader index, grew 2.8%, 3.3% and 1.7% in each of these years.”
The St. Louis Fed has charts on
Again click on this link from the St. Louis Fed on
``It seems to defy common sense to suggest that the problem with
``The central problem of
``In general terms, the Japanese wanted to protect their exporters, despite the fact that the marketplace had changed and moved against them. They wanted to persist in the belief that the blue chip debtors of yesteryear were still creditworthy. The Japanese economy was like a shopkeeper in denial of what his customers were telling him. Pretending not to hear it, he goes about his daily business as before only driving himself further into losses.”
Yes, mainstream analysts today espouse the view that
As Robert Ringer suggests above, misdiagnosis leads to the wrong cures or even worst, possibly a cure worst than the disease. The anatomy: False perception leads to false assumptions, which then leads to false conclusions thereby rendering negative results on the actions applied.
Obviously
It goes the same with investment analysis…
A FED induced economic and financial markets turnaround and…
A global depression operates on a common thread…
They are based on Nassim Taleb’s “Platonicity”- makes us think that we understand more than we actually do- or…
OVERESTIMATING what we know and UNDERESTIMATING on what we don’t. We don’t give room enough for randomness but rather play up on our biases.
Which is why we give weight to the second probability, a potential recessionary risks coupled with open ended global outlook…
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