Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

German DAX Revisits Bear Markets, Erases ECB’s QE gains!


Following last night’s 3.8% quasi crash, the German major equity bellwether the DAX has succumbed once again to the bear markets. 

Last night's action brought the DAX down 22.7% down from its April 2015 peak. This marks the second attempt by the DAX to cross the bear market threshold. The first was in August 24 2015. But this time the DAX BROKE the August 24th low!



The Volkswagen scandal partly contributed to this (table from Yahoo Finance). The car company supposedly 'cheated on emissions test' by programming some 500,000 vehicles to show they had lower than legally allowable emissions. The VOW was crashed by a shocking 19.82% last night.

But remember, the DAX has already been in a decline and touched the bear market even prior to the VOW scandal. 

It just took a big headline event to escalate on the momentum.


What’s even more interesting has been that the DAX now drifts at levels where the ECB announced its QE version last January 2015. This was implemented last March. 

These means that all the accumulated monetary subsidies, mostly through the ECB’s balance sheet expansion seem to have been engulfed by the law of diminishing returns such that the magical effects on asset prices from these policies have become impotent!!!

Yes, said differently, the central banks can be analogized as 'the emperor has no clothes'!

Again this serves as a wonderful example of the boom bust cycle in motion.

Expect bear markets to become a dominant feature for global stock markets. And global bear markets will be the harbinger of a global recession-crisis.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

In Pictures : Sign of Times: Euphoria!

What a week. Global stocks on a record ramp.



The above represents the performance charts of the Philippine Phisix, Japan's Nikkei, the German Dax and Hong Kong's Hang Seng from stockcharts.com. I chose 2013 as reference point in order to highlight the effects of Japanese government's Abenomics, China's multiple easing measures and the ECB's do whatever it takes QE.

All stocks indicated have been at various records or milestone highs!

The following pictures highlights on the prevailing sentiment.

The Nikkei Asia cheers on Japan's Nikkei's touching the 20,000 milestone last April 10


Mainland Chinese stock market retail participants stampeded to aggressively bid up Hong Kong's stocks as the state run China Security Journals called for a buy! (image from the Financial Times)


German publication Deutsch Welle celebrates the Dax's 15 year high!



The Philippine Stock Exchange believes that economic nirvana has been attained  as the Phisix broke through 8,000

All of the above have been expressive of the following:



Harvard's Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff documented and chronicled all financial crises in the world during the last two centuries (1810-2010) and found a common denominator:
The essence of the this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crises are things that happen to other people in other countries at other times; crises do not happen to us, here and now. We are doing things better, we are smarter, we have learned from past mistakes. The old rules of valuation no longer apply. The current boom, unlike the many booms that preceded catastrophic collapses in the past (even in our country), is built on sound fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and good policy. Or so the story goes.
This time is different!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Currency Values Hardly Impacts Merchandise Trade

In the eyes of the mainstream the only way to generate export growth is to devalue a currency or impose punitive tariffs on trade partners whom are deemed as 'currency manipulators'.


Yet, facts belie these misguided conventional beliefs.

Referring to the above charts, analyst Howard Simons argues, (bold highlights mine)

``First, three-quarters of the import weights and two-thirds of the export weights derive from five sources: China, Canada, Mexico, Japan, and the eurozone; the others will be aggregated for visual clarity. Let’s take a look at the imports first.

``The most prominent development over time has been the seizing of market share by China from Japan and Canada. Mexico’s share expanded after the passage of NAFTA, but it has stagnated in recent years as maquiladora plants have become uncompetitive with Asian exports. In economic terms, Mexico now is exporting labor, a factor in production, as it has lost a competitive advantage in the production itself.

``On the export side, China is displacing Japan as a customer of the US. Exports to both Mexico and Canada expanded after the passage of NAFTA, as have exports to “all-others;” this category includes important growing customers such as Brazil, India, the Middle East, and the Asian periphery.

``What is or should be striking in the pictures above are the rather constant weights for the eurozone. Given the euro’s prominence for financial flows and for traders, and given its outsized 57.6% weight in the dollar index, you might think all of the changes over the years in the rates between the dollar, the euro, and its predecessors would lead to substantial changes in trade weights.

``The US and the eurozone have structurally similar economies and factors of production. As a result, we trade in similar goods where differences in customer tastes and small quality differentials mean more than price. Moreover, much of the trade between the two zones is inter-subsidiary and represents a transfer."
True enough, (chart courtesy of netdania) despite the Euro's 5 year uptrend, this has hardly affected the trade weightings of the Eurozone vis-a-vis the US.

In addition, many other factors also seem to impact trade more than currency values, such as Free Trade Agreements, differentiation of goods, transfer pricing from inter-subsidiaries, and etc...

In other words, currency values hardly is the major factor that influences trade balances.

I'd like to interpose another perspective--how did the Euro become an export giant, in spite of the currency's elevated valuation levels?

Analyst Martin Spring enumerates the strength of Germany as the Eurozone's driver: (all bold emphasis mine)

-Germany is a hugely powerful exporting power, only recently overtaken by China, and still a far bigger exporter than the US or Japan. This year it is forecast to have a foreign trade surplus of $187 billion, not far behind China’s $219 billion.

-Despite some of the highest labour costs in the world, it has high productivity to match them.

-Due to the cohesion that comes from good employer-employee relationships, manufacturing industry has the flexibility to meet adverse circumstances. In the global recession it has kept growth in unemployment to just half a percentage point through measures such as pay cuts and state-subsidized short-time working.

-Instead of looking to currency depreciation to ease its problems, it survived the period of a strong euro by meeting competition head on. The OECD, in its latest economic survey, says the nation used the adversity to spur innovation, make allocation of resources more efficient, and invest strongly in advanced production techniques.

-Its companies have diversified internationally and outsourced to low-cost countries – about half the added value of exports is now produced abroad.

-Although Germany does, like so many countries, have a problem of high and growing public debt, it is at last addressing that problem decisively. Over the 2008-2012 period, despite the biggest stimulus programme in Europe, its debt is forecast to grow by only 17 percentage points, compared to 22 per cent in France, 33 per cent in Greece and the US, 34 per cent in the UK and 39 per cent in Japan.

-The Economist says Germany “no longer suffers from an arthritic labour market, an obese state or a suffocating tax burden.”

-At the core of the engineering sector that is the cornerstone of the nation’s industrial economy are thousands of dynamic Middelstand enterprises (small and midsized firms, often family-owned) that export almost 80 per cent of their production, selling not only highest-quality machines, but also the panoply of expert support services that go with them.

-Germany is a world leader in fields such as automotive technology and renewable energy. It can sell machinery in China at four times the cost of Chinese competitors’.

All these can be summed up into competition, division of labor, competitive advantage and high level of entrepreneurship. In short, Germany's export powerhouse came about from fundamentally embracing free market principles and not from devaluation and closed door isolationist policies.

This bring us to the surprise announcement by China to gradually allow her currency to rise. Will these alleviate the so called global imbalances?

In 2005 the yuan appreciated by 9.8%, yet there has hardly been any improvements in the trade balance (deficit) standing of the US vis-a-vis China, as shown in the above chart.

And the narrowing of the trade gap in 2008 can't be attributed to the rising Yuan, because the world suffered from convulsions of the 2008 financial crisis, which had been a far larger factor.

Besides, China then repegged her yuan to the US dollar at the onset of the crisis (also shown above-chart courtesy of Northern Trust).

So the answer is a NO--the appreciation of the yuan is unlikely to make a significant dent to the US deficits. Moreover, for as long as the US dollar is the de facto medium of account "currency standard" for global trade, the US is likely to maintain huge deficits.

However for China it could be a different story.

China's surpluses could narrow, not because of the appreciating yuan, but because of policies aimed at shifting internal dynamics.

According to Northern Trust's Paul Kasriel,

``Now, I do believe that the rate of increase in China's trade surplus will be slowing in the coming years, but not primarily because of an appreciating renminbi. But rather because rising incomes among Chinese households will lead to increased discretionary spending by them. Also, in order to keep the population relatively happy, Chinese politicians will re-allocate government spending more toward services and infrastructure spending to benefit households rather than export industries."

Bottom line: currency values signify only as one variable out of the many that influence trade activities. Therefore tunneling on the "currency" valve as means to rebalance trade by indirect (inflationism) or direct protectionism is not only fallacious and deceptive but also unwarranted.

Borrowing Howard Simons conclusion, ``the world’s protectionists are better at making noise than making sense".