While Glorietta 2 will take our markets down for over the short-term, one potential variable with far greater risk influence is the recent turn of events in the
As the investing public widely knows, July’s market downturn had been an offshoot to the recent seizure in the global credit system that has led to a bout of liquidity driven selling prompted by the commonly touted “subprime” losses.
Following the coordinated efforts by global central banks to restore or normalize the liquidity flows in the global financial system, the markets have shown strong signs of recovery to the point that many global equity indices have succeeded to surpass previous highs. This astounding pace of rebound has somewhat restored confidence into the marketplace.
Yet, regardless of the stream of successes in the equities front, we pointed out how the global credit markets have failed to completely normalize which posed as the proverbial “Damocles sword” over the recent bacchanalia.
The justification from which has lent the global markets a considerable upside momentum had been
1.) the expectations that the vigorous global economy would continue to cushion the US economy from a hard landing as evidenced by the robust performances of industries with substantial exposure to the global economy, and
2.) the “don’t fight the FED” arguments or that investors would continually be shielded from steep losses by the “Bernanke PUT” or the tendency of the US Federal Reserve to keep injecting liquidity into the system to buoy the financial markets and keep the
Such positive spin has concomitantly been reflected in the performance of the US dollar index which has evinced of continued infirmities (drifting in uncharted lows) in the face of potential inflationary actions by the US FED.
US Dollar Woes: Exodus of Foreign Investors in August
Yet, the somber part shows that where US had been heavily dependent on foreign central banks as a backstop to bridge the capital flow gaps from its current account deficits, the recent turmoil has prompted these stopgap actors to visibly reduce their holdings on US dollar assets. The
According to the US Treasury International Capital flow for August the
Figure 2: Yardeni.com: Net Security Purchases By Foreigners Turns Negative!
The aggregate losses over a weekly scale were remarkably broadbased which can be seen in Figure 3.
Figure 3: S & P: Week on Week performance by Sector
While figure 2 tells us that most of the damages were associated with the industries DIRECTLY linked to the US housing recession and sectors affected by slackening domestic consumption, which has been as expected, we are alarmed by the steep falls in the previously globally levered sectors as the information technology and the energy sectors and the consumer staples with overseas revenue exposures of 56%, 56% and 47% respectively (revenue weightings according to the Sam Stovall of the S & P).
Week on week the financials continue to bleed heavily down 7.62%, followed by consumer discretionary, Utilities, Materials and Industrials with losses of over 3%.
Could it be that foreign selling in the
Figure 4: Yardeni.com: Foreign buying of US Equities still positive but dropping steeply!
However, the sharp drops in the degree of buying in August comes mainly from Europe and the ROW and has steeply dragged down the overall 12-month sum and the 3 month annual rate as shown in Figure 4 courtesy of Dr. Ed Yardeni’s Yardeni.com.
In others words, given that the US dollar trade weighted index is now trading at its ALL time lows as shown in figure 5, there is that big chance where the outflows which began in August could be a START of a new trend and not merely an aberration.
A Tug of War Between the US Dollar and US Markets
Figure 5: Netdania.com. US dollar index at All time Low
The distinction is that THEN Global central banks were quick to respond to the credit seizure with an admixture of policy adjustments to provide for band-aid treatments which apparently succeeded, as measured by the performance of the equity markets.
Today the problem seems different, while the credit woes implied monetary tightening; the aftereffect could now be seen in surfacing in corporate earnings as shown by the S & P chart in Figure 6.
Figure 6: Stockcharts.com: S&P, Phisix, Gold and US 10 year Treasuries
Recently we have pointed out that the Philippine Phisix (above window) has been increasingly correlated with the movements of the US dollar index than to the
This has also been mostly true with gold…until February. But apparently, the latest activities in gold prices have considerably shown a MARKED DIVERGENCE; it was least affected during the July credit squeeze and has grown strongly despite the recent weakening in the
Nonetheless, the collapse of 10 year Treasury yields (red circle in the lowest pane) in the light of probable foreign selling depicts overarching concerns over the vitality of the
As we have repeatedly said, despite the record high oil and gold prices, Chairman Bernanke and the US Federal Reserve, who realizes of the sensitivity of its financial driven economy to the degree of leverage embedded within its system, aside from protecting the primary conduits of the Fiat Paper Currency standard, will risk to err on the side of inflation, where its monetary policies will adjust depending on the performance of its equity markets in lieu of the accelerating decline in the housing industry.
The
To put bluntly, if the US equity markets continue to drop and hit our 10% strike price (Dow Industrials 12,780 or S&P 1,410), we should expect the FED to cut by another 50 basis points, where the sharper the drop, the bigger or the more frequent those cuts will be.
Otherwise if the
With Friday’s move, we can expect the market to test the downside.
Across the Pacific, at the current clip we expect the Phisix and Asia to trail the
In other words, volatilities prompted NOT by Glorietta 2 but by the actions in the US dollar and the
But, we expect buoyant gold and oil prices to support or cushion emerging markets as well as the “strongest link” embodied in the Asian region.
In effect, we should expect to see the deepening of such divergences as the foreign central banks and private institutions reallocate more of their funds away from US dollar assets, where the incentives to own and support these appear to have greatly waned by:
1. Rising Asian and OPEC inflation rates which could lead to the depegging of currency links (Gulf countries) or should translate to further domestic currency appreciation requiring less to recycle surplus funds into US dollar denominated assets.
2. Losses could prompt Central Banks to cut positions as the declining US dollar reinforces the loss in the price values of their portfolios.
3. The prospects of an economic wide spillover from the accelerating deterioration in the
4. A rapidly slowing
5. Through Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWF), global central banks have now been shifting to non-US dollar assets to increase returns via purchases in mostly global equities.
Even the IMF recently says that the US dollar remains overvalued.
The US dollar may bounce due to being technically oversold. But if the August trends reveals of a sustained outflow from its foreign principals then the US dollar will likely head lower and should mark an all important inflection point. And asset allocations would ultimately adjust to such developments.
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