Showing posts with label US debt ceiling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US debt ceiling. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

Histrionics of US Politics: Markets in Buying Orgy on Hopes of Debt Ceiling Deal

US stocks went into a frenzied jubilation today on hopes of a deal by the US congress and President Obama on the debt ceiling-shutdown-Obamacare impasse.

From Bloomberg:
U.S. stocks jumped, with benchmark indexes rallying the most since January, as lawmakers moved toward an agreement to increase the debt ceiling and avoid a default….

Investors reacted to a House Republican proposal for a short-term increase in the debt ceiling that would reduce the prospects for a U.S. default. The plan would push the lapse of U.S. borrowing authority to Nov. 22 from Oct. 17. It wouldn’t end the 10-day-old partial shutdown of the federal government.

President Barack Obama would support a short increase in the U.S. debt limit with no “partisan strings attached,” though he prefers a longer extension, Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, said today. The proposal could come up for a vote on the House floor as soon as tomorrow.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew warned Congress today that “uncertainty” over the debt limit is starting to stress financial markets and trying to time an increase to the last minute “could be very dangerous.”
Yet rising CDS (default risks) will be used as political leverage to justify the call for raising the debt ceiling. (Have the CDS markets been stage managed?)

image

Americans have been deeply hooked on entitlements. More than 70% of Federal Spending has been due to dependency programs and growing.

image
This means that despite the hullabaloo in the US Congress, which really is just a vaudeville, as congress people will fear the wrath of losing political power and privileges from entitlement dependent-parasitical voters, eventually the debt ceiling will be raised. (charts from the Heritage Foundation).

Like actions of central banks led by the US Federal Reserve, America’s welfare state will be pushed to the brink of a crisis or will fall into a crisis first, before real reforms will be made.

In the world of politics, cost-benefit tradeoffs has been reduced to short term expediencies.
And the fear of the wrath of the public which means losing political power have become a potent force in the shaping of the supposed deal…the American public has been putting the blame on the GOP (Republicans).

From Gallup:
With the Republican-controlled House of Representatives engaged in a tense, government-shuttering budgetary standoff against a Democratic president and Senate, the Republican Party is now viewed favorably by 28% of Americans, down from 38% in September. This is the lowest favorable rating measured for either party since Gallup began asking this question in 1992.
Republican and Democratic Party Favorables, 1992-2013
The Democratic Party also has a public image problem -- although not on the same elephantine scale as that of the Republican Party -- with 43% viewing the Democratic Party favorably, down four percentage points from last month.
Pieces of the jigsaw puzzle falling into its rightful places.

image

Most of the so-called fear over a UST default  has been felt in the short end of the curve as shown by the 1 month, 6 month and 1 year USTs. Today’s gigantic stock market seem to have only put a dent on the recent spike.

image

However, the fear has not been evident in the longer end of the curve or when US stocks went up, bonds fell (yields surged) and when US stocks fell, bonds rallied (yields declined) as shown by the 10 year and 30 year USTs

Today’s rally seem to have only rekindled the bond vigilantes.

Notice too that US stocks have become hostaged to politics as measured by the Dow Industrial's recent performance.

The fears from the FED's “Taper” supposedly prompted for a selloff in May-June. This was reversed when Fed officials went into media blitz to cushion on Taper fears. 

The Syrian crisis, speculation over Bernanke's replacement and bond vigilantes remerged to haunt the Dow which plummeted to September lows.

The discounting of the taper, Larry Summer's withdrawal and the surprise FED’s "untaper" sends the Dow to new highs. 

Then the lows from the shutdown-debt ceiling-Obamacare stalemate.

Funny, how stockmarkets have seemingly been transformed into puppets or instruments of governments.

Monday, October 07, 2013

Government Shutdown, Debt Ceiling, Obamacare Showdown and Imaginary Hobgoblins

A short note on the government shutdown, debt ceiling and Obamacare issue which for me has been nothing more than histrionics
Officials of the US treasury[1] and the IMF[2] warns that should there be no increase in the debt ceiling there will crippling effects on economy and financial markets.
While such threats may turn out to be true, it hasn’t been for now
image
Figure 10 US Treasury in the face of the US Government Shutdown

I believe that the bond markets in combination with other markets will determine if such threats are for real.

If there will be a threat of default then markets will be selling bonds first. So far this hasn’t been the case, as US treasury prices (falling yields) has rallied across the curve. Prices of 10 year notes, 2 year (USTU), 5 year (USFV) and 30 year (USB) has mostly rallied from the government shutdown.

Again if the threat of default is real, then we should expect a reversal from the above. Prices fall yields rise. And because political uncertainty will haunt the bond markets this is likely to spillover to the equity markets. So bonds and stocks are likely to drop as US credit default swaps and volatility indices soar. We will see a risk OFF phase if this becomes a reality.

And so with the US dollar to remain pressured as investors are likely to scamper for alternative foreign currency reserve alternatives. I believe that gold will remain mixed until a resolution on this matter occurs.

But unless we see the above scenario, all the politicking amounts to stoking fear as a conventional ploy of the politics of control. In the moving words of the great libertarian H. L. Mencken[3]
Civilization, in fact, grows more and more maudlin and hysterical; especially under democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere combat of crazes; the whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary. Wars are no longer waged by the will of superior men, capable of judging dispassionately and intelligently the causes behind them and the effects flowing out of them. They are now begun by first throwing a mob into a panic; they are ended only when it has spent its ferine fury. Here the effect of civilization has been to reduce the noblest of the arts, once the repository of an exalted etiquette and the chosen avocation of the very best men of the race, to the level of a riot of peasants. 



[1] Marketwatch.com Treasury warns of dire consequences of default October 3,2013

[3] H. L. Mencken 13. Women and the Emotions IN DEFENSE OF WOMEN gutenburg.org

Friday, October 04, 2013

Video: Peter Klein on Goverment Shutdown, Spending Cuts and other Media Spins

Mises Institute's Peter Klein smokes out Media's spin (propaganda-Orwellian doublespeak) on the Shutdown, Spending cuts and etc...

Wednesday, October 02, 2013

Murray Rothbard on the Budget Crisis and the Government Shutdown

The great dean of the Austrian school of economics, Murray Rothbard on the budget crisis and the shutdown from Making Economic Sense (hat tip Mises Blog) [bold mine]
In politics fall, not spring, is the silly season. How many times have we seen the farce: the crises deadline in October, the budget "summit" between the Executive and Congress, and the piteous wails of liberals and centrists that those wonderful, hard-working, dedicated "federal workers" may be "furloughed," which unfortunately does not mean that they are thrown on the beach to find their way in the productive private sector.

The dread furlough means that for a few days or so, the oppressed taxpaying public gets to keep a bit more of its own money, while the federal workers get a rare chance to apply their dedication without mulcting the taxpayers: an opportunity that these bureaucrats invariably seem to pass up.

Has it occurred to many citizens that, for the few blessed days of federal shutdown, the world does not come to an end? That the stars remain in their courses, and everyone goes about their daily life as before?

I would like to offer a modest proposal, giving us a chance to see precisely how vital to our survival and prosperity is the Leviathan federal government, and how much we are truly willing to pay for its care and feeding. Let us try a great social experiment: for one year, one exhilarating jubilee year, we furlough, without pay, the Internal Revenue Service and the rest of the revenue-gathering functions of the Department of Treasury.

That is, for one year, suspend all federal taxes and float no public debt, either newly incurred or even for payment of existing interest or principal. And then let us see how much the American public is willing to kick into, purely voluntarily, the public till.

We make these voluntary contributions strictly anonymous, so that there will be no incentive for individuals and institutions to collect brownie-points from the feds for current voluntary giving. We allow no carryover of funds or surplus, so that any federal spending for the year--including the piteous importuning of Americans for funds--takes place strictly out of next year's revenue.

It will then be fascinating to see how much the American public is truly willing to pay, how much it thinks the federal government is really worth, how much it is really convinced by all the slick cons: by the spectre of roads falling apart, cancer cures aborted, by invocations of the "common good," the "public interest," the "national security," to say nothing of the favorite economists' ploys of "public goods" and "externalities."

It would be even more instructive to allow the various anonymous contributors to check off what specific services or agencies they wish to earmark for expenditure of their funds. It would be still more fun to see vicious and truthful competitive advertising between bureaus: "No, no, don't contribute to those lazy louts in the Department of Transportation (or whatever), give to us." For once, government propaganda might even prove to be instructive and enjoyable.

The precedent has already been set: if it is proper and legitimate for President Bush and his administration to beg Japan, Germany, and other nations for funds for our military adventures in the Persian Gulf, why shouldn't they be forced, at least for one glorious year, to beg for funds from the American people, instead of wielding their usual bludgeon?

The 1990 furlough crisis highlights some suggestive but neglected aspects of common thinking about the budget. In the first place, all parties are talking about "fair sharing of the pain," of the "necessity to inflict pain," etc. How come that government, and only government, is regularly associated with a systematic infliction of pain?

In contemplating the activities of Sony or Proctor and Gamble or countless other private firms, do we ask ourselves how much pain they propose to inflict upon us in the coming year? Why is it that government, and only government, is regularly coupled with pain: like ham-and-eggs, or . . . death-and-taxes? Perhaps we should begin to ask ourselves why government and pain are Gemini twins, and whether we really need an institution that consists of a massive engine for the imposition and administration of pain and suffering. Is there no better way to run our affairs?

Another curious note: it is now the accepted orthodoxy of our liberal and centrist establishment that taxes must be raised, regardless of where we are in the business cycle. So strong is this article of faith that the fact that we are already in a recession (and intelligent observers do not have to wait for the National Bureau of Economic Research to tell us that retroactively) seems to make no dent whatever in the thirst for higher taxes.

And yet there is no school of economic thought--be it New Classical, Keynesian, monetarist, or Austrian--that advocates raising taxes in a recession. Indeed, both Keynesians and Austrians would advocate cutting taxes in a recession, albeit for different reasons.

So whence this fanatical devotion to higher taxes? The liberal-centrists profess its source to be deep worry about the federal deficit. But since these very same people, not too long ago, scoffed at worry about the deficit as impossibly Neanderthal and reactionary, and since right now these same people brusquely dismiss any call for lower government spending as ipso facto absurd, one suspects a not very cleverly hidden agenda at work.

Namely: a love for higher taxes and for higher government spending for their own sake, or, rather, for the sake of expanding statism and collectivism as contrasted with the private sector.

There is one way we can put our hypothesis to the test: shouldn't these newfound worriers about the deficit delight in our modest proposal one year with no deficit at all, one year with no infliction of pain whatever? Wanna bet?

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

The US Government Shuts Down for the First Time in 17 Years

Political impasse has prompted for a partial shutdown of the US government.

From the Bloomberg:
The U.S. government began its first partial shutdown in 17 years, idling as many as 800,000 federal employees, closing national parks and halting some services after Congress failed to break a partisan deadlock by a midnight deadline.

Congressional leaders have scheduled no further negotiations on spending legislation, raising concerns among some lawmakers that the shutdown could bleed into the more consequential fight over how to raise the U.S. debt limit to avoid a first-ever default after Oct. 17.

Chances of a last-minute deal -- seen so often in past fiscal fights -- evaporated shortly before midnight as the House stood firm on its call to delay major parts of President Barack Obama’s health-care law for a year. Senate Democrats were equally firm in refusing to concede and planned a morning vote to reject the House’s call for formal talks.
Liberal media immediately raised the shutdown bogeyman, as Currency Wars author Jim Rickards points out

From another Bloomberg article
A partial shutdown of the federal government would cost the U.S. at least $300 million a day in lost economic output at the start, according to IHS Inc.

While that is a small fraction of the country’s $15.7 trillion economy, the daily impact of a shutdown is likely to accelerate if it continues as it depresses confidence and spending by businesses and consumers.

image

What the shutdown really means is that current political trends have simply been unsustainable. The real shutdown (a crisis) will inevitably arrive if current trends won’t be reversed.

And importantly the shutdown will only be symbolic. Eventually like the so-called taper, there will be some compromise on the debt ceiling and the Obamacare.

Austrian economist Robert Higgs sees the irony
Government shutdown? Nonsense. Only in our dreams will the U.S. government shut down. The current flap about an impending shutdown represents only the latest episode in the soap opera that stars the government as the hysterical teenage drama queen.

For fiscal year 2013, which will end in a week, estimated federal revenue is expected to be about $2.7 trillion. In real terms, this revenue is roughly equal to the amount the government spent ten years ago, near the beginning of the Bush II administration.
Yet there has been little evidence that shutdowns extrapolates to economic harm.

First Trust’s Brian Wesbery and Robert Stein even sees positive effects from the previous shutdowns (bold mine)
Some pundits and analysts say a shutdown will hurt the economy, but it’s hard to say that based on history. The Washington Post recently listed every shutdown from 1976 to 1996. There were 17 shutdowns totaling 110 days. Out of those 110 days, only 6 days were during recessions. That’s very few given that we were in recession about 14% of the time during that twenty–year period.

Of course, maybe that’s because politicians are more likely to forge a budget agreement during economic downturns. But the last and longest shutdown doesn’t appear to have hurt the economy either

That was the three-week shutdown from mid-December 1995 to early January 1996 under President Clinton. Real GDP grew 2.3% in the year before the shutdown, a 2.9% annual rate in Q4-1995 and then at a 2.6% pace in Q1-1996, despite the shutdown and the East Coast Blizzard, a multiple day massive snowstorm in January that was followed by large floods.

The real result of the 1995-96 shutdown was that politicians could no longer hide the fact that government was overspending. And when politicians can’t hide, when the public finally finds out the “Emperor Has No Clothes,” there is a political reaction. In the late 1990s, that reaction slowed government spending relative to GDP dramatically and the US eventually moved into surplus.
Meanwhile the Gallup sees ambiguous  impact from a shutdown: 
As the federal government prepares to shut down for the first time since 1995/1996, historical Gallup data reveal that the repercussions of that past conflict ranged from none to short-lived, in terms of Americans' concerns about the U.S. and the political players involved.
The Gallup says that perhaps the 'shutdown' may exacerbate the public’s already faltering confidence on the economy
Beyond the politicians though, Americans' confidence in the economy is already floundering and their satisfaction with the way things are going in the U.S. remains in the low-20% range. If history is a guide, it is possible that their views of the situation in the country may worsen in the short term, which for an economy -- and job market -- still in recovery, is troublesome. But, long term, it is unclear whether a possibly short-lived government shutdown will ultimately negatively impact the economic situation in the U.S.
It’s important to note that all previous shutdowns has had different circumstances that led to the unique historical event, as shown by the Washington Post here. For instance some shutdowns occurred during recessions.

image

So market reactions on shutdowns, such as the S&P 500, has largely reflected on the underlying trend rather from the event itself. And given that most shutdowns occurred during the bullish epochs, the outcome tends to give weight on the positive. The chart above from JP Morgan highlights on these. But blindly interpreting returns without understanding the circumstances behind the shutdown events would be like seeing the forest for trees.

And this gives weight to the suggestions of FT and the Gallup where shutdowns tend to have short-lived effects. So a shutdown seems neither bullish or bearish over the long run. 

This means that there will be bigger forces that will drive the markets.

The shutdown only reminds us of this resonating words of the great Frédéric Bastiat
Government is the great fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else.

Friday, September 27, 2013

US Debt Ceiling Showdown: Price to Insure U.S. Government Debt Soars

Threats over an alleged US government shutdown, which has become the centerpiece focus of the debt ceiling debate, has sent cost of insuring debt higher this week

image
chart from Deutsche Bank

Notes the Wall Street Journal:
The cost of insuring against a U.S. default for a year has risen sixfold in the past week, reaching its highest level since 2011, reflecting investor bets that the government could fall behind on its debt payments in the coming weeks.

The Treasury Department said on Wednesday that by Oct. 17 it would have only $30 billion left to pay bills, and that money is only expected to last one or two more weeks unless Congress raises the so-called debt ceiling, which limits U.S. borrowing. Many Republicans have said they would approve such a move only in exchange for a long list of demands, such as changes to the White House's health-care law and lower tax rates. The White House has said it won't negotiate with Republicans at all and wants the debt ceiling raised immediately.

The stark political divisions have led many lawmakers, analysts and investors to wonder whether policy makers will be able to reach an agreement in time.

This has driven the annual cost to insure $10 million of U.S. government debt for one year using derivatives called credit-default swaps, or CDS, to €31,000 ($41,930), according to Markit data. That is up from about €5,000 as recently as last Friday and is the highest it has been since August 2011, the month in which U.S. debt was downgraded from the highest level by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services.

Default protection on U.S. Treasurys is quoted in euros, just as European sovereign CDS contracts are quoted in dollars, sparing investors the risk the hedge will fall in value at the same time as the currency itself.

image

Actions of the CDS markets have hardly been consistent with the bond markets.

As shown above, the 1 year (UST1Y) 3 year (UST3Y) and 6 months (UST6M) has recently been rallying (falling yields) mostly from the FED’s UNtaper—a deliberate tactic conducted by the FED similar to the Pearl Harbor surprise bombing equivalent of the bond vigilantes. 

This means that while cost of insuring of US debt has meaningfully risen, the treasury markets (particularly the short maturities) have been saying otherwise.

Yet rising CDS (default risks) will be used as political leverage to justify the call for raising the debt ceiling. (Have the CDS markets been stage managed?)

image

Americans have been deeply hooked on entitlements. More than 70% of Federal Spending has been due to dependency programs and growing.

image

This means that despite the hullabaloo in the US Congress, which really is just a vaudeville, as congress people will fear the wrath of losing political power and privileges from entitlement dependent-parasitical voters, eventually the debt ceiling will be raised. (charts from the Heritage Foundation).

Like actions of central banks led by the US Federal Reserve, America’s welfare state will be pushed to the brink of a crisis or will fall into a crisis first, before real reforms will be made.

In the world of politics, cost-benefit tradeoffs has been reduced to short term expediencies.

Updated to add

Including "housing, other loan guarantees, deposit insurance, actions taken by the Federal Reserve, and government trust funds”,  economist James Hamilton estimates at over $70 trillion or 6 times official debt (RT.com)

Meanwhile Boston University Laurence Kotlikoff has even far staggering figure. He pins the fiscal gap which includes unfunded liabilities at $222 trillion or 20 times bigger than official figures. 

Mr. Kotlikoff as quoted by Real Clear Policy
The official debt is something that has to be repaid, and the government is committed to principal and interest payments. But the government has other commitments, like Social Security payments, health care and Medicare payments, Medicaid payments, and defense expenditures. And it also has negative commitments, namely taxes. So you want to put everything on even footing. Most of the liabilities the government has incurred in the postwar period have been kept off the books because of the way we’ve labeled our receipts and payments. The government has gone out of its way to run up a Ponzi scheme and keep evidence of that off the books by using language to make it appear that we have a small debt.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Video: Mises Institute's Mark Thornton on the US "Government Shutdown"

Mises Institute's Senior Fellow and Professor Mark Thornton clarifies the sensationalism over the alleged "government shutdown" (source Mises Blog)


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Fodders for the Bond Vigilantes: US Debt Ceiling, Japanese Government’s Interest Payments

The following developments signify as fodder for the bond vigilantes

In the US, increased political pressure to increase the debt ceiling.

From the  New York Times;
Unless Congress raises the debt ceiling, the Treasury Department said on Monday that it expected to lose the ability to pay all of the government’s bills in mid-October.

That means a recalcitrant Congress will face two major budget deadlines only two weeks apart, since the stopgap “continuing resolution” that finances the federal government runs out at the end of September.

Members of Congress are sharply divided over what to include in measures financing the government and raising the debt ceiling…

The debt ceiling stands at about $16.7 trillion. Congress passed a measure increasing it by about $300 billion in January.
The insatiable US government will keep racking up on debts to finance her extravagant spending. Improving budget deficits today are only temporary.

In Japan, the ramifications of higher bond yields, the Japanese government requests an increase in  budget for servicing debt. From Reuters:
Japan's Finance Ministry will request a record 25.3 trillion yen ($257 billion) in debt-servicing costs under its fiscal 2014/15 budget, up 13.7 percent from the amount set aside for this year, a document obtained by Reuters showed on Tuesday.

The decision, aimed at guarding against any future rise in long-term interest rates, underscores the increasing cost Japan must pay to finance its massive public debt.

The country's debt is double the size of its $5 trillion economy and is the biggest among major industrialised nations.
Rising bond yields in the face of slowing global economic growth means higher costs of real funding. This entails higher credit risks which should be manifested in interest rates.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

US Debt at Record $16.19 Trillion!

US debt levels continues with its record streak.

Notes the Zero Hedge: (bold original) 
The number in question:$16,190,979,268,766.67, which is the closing number for total US public debt outstanding, which also happens to be a record closing all time high and an increase of $33 billion from yesterday courtesy of the settlement of last week's bond auctions. There is now $242 billion in debt left under the debt ceiling, which at the current recently slowed down pace of debt issuance, which is posed to pick up substantially again, will be exhausted in well under 2 months.

image

Remember: there is never such a thing as a free lunch. The benefit of this unrepayable debt and ruinous fiscal policy is precisely what the administration is taking benefit for, namely the soaring stock market. The offset, of course, is that as Reinhart and Rogoff never tire of showing, piling up well over 100% in public debt/GDP means that there is only one way out for the host country: either a hard default, or inflating the debt away.
As per economist Herb Stein’s Law: "If something cannot go on forever, it will stop”

Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Global Debt Default Binge: US Debt Now at $16,159,487,013,300.35

Speaking of the global debt default binge, the US debt clock according to the US treasury direct have now been at $16,159,487,013,300.35 as of October 1, 2012

Writes the Zero Hedge (bold original)
September 30 was the last day of Fiscal 2012 for the US which explains why despite the barrage of debt issuance in the past month, the year closed with total debt of just $16.066 trillion, a modest increase of just $50 billion in the month. Luckily, moments ago we got the first DTS of the new fiscal year, which eliminated any residual confusion we had. As of the first day of FY 2013, total US debt soared by $93 billion overnight, and is now a record $16,159,487,013,300.35. One can see why Tim Geithner wants to push all the debt under the coach for as long as possible (and the scariest thing is that the actual increase in Treasury cash was a mere $11 billion). But wait, there's more. As a reminder, final Q2 US GDP was recently revised lower by $20 billion, which if we extrapolate into Q3 (leading to a nominal GDP print of $15.71 trillion), means that as of today, total US Federal debt to GDP is 103%. And rising about 1.5% per month.

image

At the Brilling.com US debt clock time bomb, as of this writing is now $16.164 trillion!

image

Tic tic tic boom!

Thursday, August 30, 2012

US Debt at $16 Trillion, a Precarious Confidence Game

Great stuff from Sovereign Man’s Simon Black,

If you haven’t heard yet, the United States of America just hit $16 trillion in debt yesterday. On a gross, nominal basis, this makes the US, by far, the greatest debtor in the history of the world.

It took the United States government over 200 years to accumulate its first trillion dollars of debt. It took only 286 days to accumulate the most recent trillion dollars of debt. 200 years vs. 286 days. This portends two key points:

1. Anyone who thinks that inflation doesn’t exist is a complete idiot;

2. To say that the trend is unsustainable is a massive understatement.

At an average interest rate of 2.130%, Uncle Sam will shuffle $340 billion out the door just in interest payments this year… and it’s a number that’s only going up. To put it in context, China owns so much US debt that the INTEREST INCOME they receive from the Treasury Department is nearly enough to fund their entire military budget.

It’s rather disgusting when you think about it.

Many mainstream observers (who largely are apologists of the government) argue that because US debt is denominated in the domestic currency, this has been nothing to worry about, as the US Federal Reserve can do the bidding.

Well they are to be proven eventually wrong, because economic reality will prevail. Again Simon Black

History is full of examples of superpowers bucking under the weight of their debt. This is not the first time that it’s happened, and it won’t be the last.

Sovereign debt is a giant confidence game. Investors buy bonds on the belief that governments can (and will) pay. When that confidence is chipped away, the cost of capital becomes debilitating. And people tend to notice a $16 trillion debt burden.

This is banana republic stuff, plain and simple… and smart, thinking people ought to be planning on capital controls, wage and price controls, pension confiscation, and selective default. Because the next trillion will be here before you know it.

Include political and other social controls, banana republic stuff…like totally.

Friday, January 27, 2012

US Senate Approves Debt Ceiling Increase

From the New York Times,

The Senate voted on Thursday to allow a further increase in the federal debt limit, permitting President Obama to borrow $1.2 trillion more to operate a government that spent about 55 percent more than it collected in revenue last year.

The 52-to-44 vote generally followed party lines, with Democrats supporting the increase in borrowing authority and Republicans opposed.

In the House last week, Republicans passed a “resolution of disapproval” to stop the increase in the debt limit. But the Senate refused on Thursday to take up that measure.

The upshot is that the debt limit will rise immediately to $16.4 trillion, from the current ceiling of $15.2 trillion.

Here is a very relevant quote from the great Professor Ludwig von Mises

What the doctrine of balancing budgets over a period of many years really means is this: as long as our own party is in office, we will enhance our popularity through reckless spending. We do not want to annoy our friends by cutting down expenditure. We want the voters to feel happy under the artificial short‑lived prosperity which the easy money policy and a rich supply of additional money generate.

Ever wonder why the world will continue to experience crisis after crisis?

Sunday, January 15, 2012

I Told You Moment: Philippine Phisix At Historic Highs!

This is the fundamental problem with relying on macro-accounting tautologies; people often bring in causal arguments from economic theories without realizing they are doing so. Robert P. Murphy

The Philippine Phisix posted a blistering start for 2012, which also seems as a lucky initiation for me. That’s because the performance of the local composite benchmark has been realizing what I have been saying especially last December where I pounded the table on the likelihood of this occurrence.

Even better, the Philippine Phisix closed the week to take on the second spot as the best performer[1], based on nominal local currency, among global equity benchmarks (of 78 nations).

Where we had been told by an establishment analyst in a conference that the Phisix will NOT break into NEW highs unless the Euro crisis will get resolved, I argued otherwise.

As I wrote last December[2],

And even more, any hiatus from the perceived worsening of the EU crisis, which will likely be treated with the band-aid approach most likely emanating from massive ECB purchases and possibly from the US Federal Reserve, will likely lead to ASEAN bourses outperforming the region or the world.

This means that contra mechanical chartists and consistently wrong mainstream deflationists, my bet is for the Phisix to breach the August highs perhaps sometime within the first quarter of 2012. Again, all these are conditional or subject to the premise where global central banks will continue to unleash waves and waves of inflationism. Otherwise all bets are off.

Of course the other point is that charts patterns, as I previously noted, will not fulfill its gloomy portent which again validated my projections.

clip_image002

Charting theory says that long term patterns should have a stronger effect[3] than the short term, yet the 15 month bearish head and shoulder (blue arcs) has clearly been neutralized by the shorter 5 month reverse head and shoulder (red arcs).

In short, the limits of using chart patterns as an investing guide can clearly be observed in the above.

Breaking Out Amidst the Euro Crisis; Refuting Some Euro Crisis Bunk

The Phisix breakout DOES NOT come amidst the resolution of the Euro crisis.

Instead, as I have been repeatedly pointing out, aggressive ECB intervention will work to defer the impact of the crisis and give the pretext for the bulls and for the yield chasers to push up the markets.

Again as from the same article I wrote,

If global central bankers will inflate massively, far more than the market’s expectations from the adverse effects of the crisis then the answer should be a conditional “yes”.

clip_image003

This exactly is what has been happening as provided by the charts from Danske Bank[4],[5].

So far yields of Spain and Italy has positively responded to such ‘back door’ intervention[6] by the ECB, as debt auctions were reportedly oversubscribed as Euro banks took advantage of subsidized cheap loans from the ECB to acquire sovereign debt of Italy and Spain. Essentially the subsidized rates give EU banks breathing room to earn from the yield spreads and at the same time helps to finance government funding requirements.

clip_image004

Also, the above debunks the mainstream claims that Eurozone policy operates on a quasi “gold standard”. We won’t see monetary inflationism of such magnitude being conducted on a gold standard as this would result to capital flight or a massive outflow of gold reserves.

Writes Joseph Salerno[7],

Briefly, according to the Currency School, if commercial banks were permitted to issue bank notes via lending or investment operations in excess of the gold deposited with them this would increase the money supply and precipitate an inflationary boom. The resulting increase in domestic money prices and incomes would eventually cause a balance-of-payments deficit financed by an outflow of gold. This external drain of their gold reserves and the impending threat of internal drains due to domestic bank runs would then induce the banks to sharply restrict their loans and investments, resulting in a severe contraction of their uncovered notes or “fiduciary media” and a decline in the domestic money supply accompanied by economy-wide depression.

Also this refutes the masquerade about the alleged deleterious effects of austerity. There has hardly been a meaningful austerity (reduction of government expenditures or debt) taking place whether in Europe or the US.

clip_image005

This certainly has not the case in the US, where government debt has been replacing the deleveraging process being experienced by the private sector components as shown in the chart from PIMCO[8]

What has been happening instead in the Eurozone has been a transfer of resources mainly from the welfare state and the real economy into the highly politically privileged and protected banking sector and even to the arms or weapons industry (!), where the latter seems to be part of a quid pro quo agreement[9] with crisis affected PIIGS in return for bailouts.

And it is also absurd or simply false to claim that a dysfunctional banking system will aggravate current economic conditions in the Eurozone, which are premised on faulty assumptions that credit only drives growth.

Fact is, like Japan’s experience in the 1990s, as the bust phase deepened, credit supply flowed from the impaired banking system to the non-banking sector[10].

In Italy today, organized crime groups or the Mafia has taken over credit provision in many parts of their economy and was even reported as having assumed the “number 1 bank”[11]. So we seem to be seeing the same dynamics of having non-bank sectors taking over.

clip_image006

And this certainly has NOT been true with the US, where despite falling business loans, the US recession cycle ended in 2009. Credit conditions only bottomed out during the late 2010 way after the US economy have convalesced. Today, improving commercial and industrial loans seem to augmenting the current momentum fuelled by an inflationary boom.

Yet the mainstream gives us false choices premised on accounting tautologies premised on “400 years of accounting understanding”[12].

Try applying this to the stateless Somalia (or failed state as per media’s lingo) to see if such appeal to math and aggregates has been valid. Since there is no state (ergo government spending) such statistics becomes irrelevant. [Perhaps this could be the likely reason Somalia has been excluded in many statistics]

Yet the false dilemma being presented is that Europe’s policy option has been limited to a choice from the following: private sector leverage or public sector leverage or adjusting trade balances. The focus on accounting leads to a solution that requires MORE government intervention by acquiring MORE debt or by inflationism.

The fact is, what prompts for massive trade deficits and deficiencies in trade competitiveness has been brought about by the capital consumption effects of government spending and the boom bust cycles. Political, legal, bureaucratic and regulatory risks also contributes to the business environment uncertainties which put a shackle on entrepreneurship that drives competitiveness.

And proof to this assertion is that despite cheaper wages compared to their developed counterparts, as previously pointed out[13], the crisis affected PIIGS has been least competitive in terms of labor efficiency mainly due to bureaucratic and regulatory impediments. Most of the PIIGS rank nearly (except for Ireland) at the bottom relative to their counterparts in terms of Doing Business.

As for consumption effects of government spending let me quote the great Murray Rothbard[14], [italics original]

All government expenditure for resources is a form of consumption expenditure, in the sense that the money is spent on various items because the government officials so decree. The purchases may therefore be called the consumption expenditure of government officials. It is true that the officials do not consume the product directly, but their wish has altered the production pattern to make these goods, and therefore they may be called its “consumers.”

And boom bust policies likewise alters time preferences of consumers and producers that encourages consumption and misdirection of investments

Writes Professor Robert P. Murphy[15]

The low interest rates of the boom period mislead entrepreneurs into borrowing too much, but they also mislead consumers into borrowing too much and saving too little. This is physically possible because resources that otherwise would have gone into replenishing the capital structure are instead devoted to new projects or additional consumption goods.

Also the great Ludwig von Mises[16]

The essence of the credit-expansion boom is not overinvestment, but investment in wrong lines, i.e., malinvestment. The entrepreneurs employ the available supply of r + p1 + p2 as if they were in a position to employ a supply of r + p1 + p2 + p3 + p4. They embark upon an expansion of investment on a scale for which the capital goods available do not suffice. Their projects are unrealizable on account of the insufficient supply of capital goods. They must fail sooner or later. The unavoidable end of the credit expansion makes the faults committed visible. There are plants which cannot be utilized because the plants needed for the production of the complementary factories of production are lacking; plants the products of which cannot be sold because the consumers are more intent upon purchasing other goods which, however, are not produced in sufficient quantities; plants the construction of which cannot be continued and finished because it has become obvious that they will not pay.

In other words, what the mainstream cannot see as the principal cause of a society’s orientation towards consumption, hence the trade deficits, are government interventionism and the welfare state. The crisis affected Euro economies look as great examples of these policy induced imbalances.

And even worse is the reverential awe towards statistics as an accurate measure of the functioning economy, particularly via the GDP. Little do many understand that such spending biased statistics has been designed towards looking at the economy from the Keynesian perspective, and which in corollary, would lead to Keynesian policy prescriptions.

The fact is the GDP is a highly flawed metric.

Professor Bryan Caplan explains[17],

Gross Domestic Product is staunchly atheoretical. If someone spends money on X, X is GDP - even if "someone" is Congress, and X="a bridge to nowhere."

There are exceptions; most notably, the stats supposedly exclude "intermediate goods" to avoid double counting. I say "supposedly" because the list of "intermediate goods" is so inconsistent. Insofar as police protection and the military protect firms from harm, aren't the police and military intermediate goods? But despite these tensions, a big part of the philosophy of GDP is to eschew philosophical arguments about what's "really productive."

On reflection, though, the standard approach is anything but agnostic. Official stats tacitly make an extreme assumption: waste does not exist. Astrology counts, even though astrologers can't predict the future. Every penny of health care counts - regardless of its efficacy. The whole defense budget counts - even if it's provoking war rather than deterring it. Indeed, if two countries' militaries mutually annihilate, both countries count the cost as a benefit.

So the mainstream case has immensely been pockmarked by half-truths and by reading effects as the cause, all dedicated to the promotion of the status quo whose policies paradoxically constitutes the roots of the current crisis.

And more ironically is that their prescribed policies seem to signify as political insanity—doing the same actions and expecting different results—or as similar to engaging the mythical beast Lernaean Hydra[18] which Greek legendary hero Hercules fought as part of his second labor[19], where for each head that had been cut off from the hydra, two grows in replacement.

The crux of the matter is that current interventionist policies being applied by EU authorities have been contrived at bolstering asset prices in order to keep the balance sheets of the banking sector afloat, and in tandem, to ensure access to financing for the unsustainable welfare state.

So essentially, the tight interdependence of the banking sector and governments can be analogized as two drunks trying to prop each other up by consuming more alcohol which is continually being provided by the bartender (the ECB abetted by the FED).

And this has not been limited to the Eurozone. Mr. Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US Federal Reserve, has reportedly been itching for QE 3.0, but this time, the Bernanke led FED appears to have changed tactic to focus on providing support to the mortgage industry[20] which may reduce political opposition than from the previous QE which concentrated on acquiring US treasuries.

Analyst and portfolio manager Doug Noland thinks the FED will make a go on a mortgage based QE3.0[21],

Fed is quite worried about Europe, global de-risking/de-leveraging, and the strengthened dollar. Especially if the euro faces additional selling pressure, the Fed will talk – and at some point implement- additional quantitative ease in hopes of dampening dollar bullish sentiment. With more Treasury purchases posing significant political risk, they’re cleverly building a case for buying MBS.

And I would add that since the mandated debt ceiling by the US congress has already been breached[22], there seems to be a big likelihood for another accord to hike the debt ceiling levels, of course after some vaudeville opposition acts.

This means that we should expect the US Federal Reserve to actively but perhaps indirectly facilitate the financing of these liabilities possibly through the banking system in exchange for the Fed’s buying of mortgages.

So the ECB and the FED will work to overcome political obstacles by resorting to legal loopholes. They who make the rules, break it.

The bottom line is that we will likely see intensification of central bank actions in 2012. Although I share the view that such conditions are unsustainable and represent as boom bust cycles, it is unclear that any unwinding will happen anytime soon.

As explained last week[23], interest rates will most likely determine the popping of this bubble where interest rates may be driven by any of the following dynamics, changes in: 1) inflation expectations 2) state of demand for credit relative to supply 3) perception of credit quality and or 4) of the scarcity/availability of capital.

And as interest rate levels remain benign, this should mean more upside for global equity markets including the Phisix perhaps until the end of the first quarter. It would be best to assess issues periodically and see how politicians respond to market developments.

The Permanence of Change Represents the Endgame

I might add that it is utter poppycock to talk about any grand finale or Mayan type Armageddon—usually heard from mainstream jeremiads—as outcomes for the current imbalances.

In reality, the ultimate outcome we should expect is the permanence of change.

For instance, the collision of the forces of decentralization with forces of the relics of the industrial era via 20th century political institutions, legal framework and current top-down policies and mindset will likely intensify and may increase social tensions that may lead to some upheavals. Because of the many entrenched groups, profound changes will not be seamless. But eventually people will adapt.

As for inflationism, these have signified as boom bust CYCLES throughout the ages, with the worst consequence leading to death and the eventual birth, or if not, drastic reforms of the monetary system or through defaults. But again people learn to live or move on.

We must realize that in over 200 years, despite 2 major world wars and the grand but botched wretched experiments of communism, aside from pandemics[24] (e.g. Swine Flu) which resulted to massive losses of human lives and large swath of property destructions, world living standards has remarkably spiked[25].

Internal Market Conditions Supports The Phisix’s Breakaway Run

As I wrote in my last major article on the stock market for 2011[26]

Any sustained rally in the Phisix which may come during the yearend or during the first quarter of 2012 will likely translate to a broad market rally.

The 2012 rally has largely been supported by substantial advances in market internals.

clip_image007

The weekly averaged advance decline-spread has decisively swung to the side of the bulls.

clip_image008

Average daily trades have also sprung higher. This means more participation (possibly from neophytes) or more churning from existing participants or both. The spike in the trading activities exhibits snowballing confidence.

clip_image009

This is where the recent breakout seems amiss though, while average daily volume has improved this has not been as extensive as the intensity of the breakout would suggest.

clip_image010

Finally foreigners appear to be more bullish as net foreign buying averaged on a weekly basis has been on the upside.

As I used to point out, once foreigners become bullish their tendency is to push up major Phisix components or the heavyweights (largest market caps which are most liquid). The consequence is to amplify the gains of the Phisix.

Such bullishness may have filtered into the Philippine Peso, which almost in line with the Phisix was unchanged in 2011, but eked out .8% gain for this week. The Peso was at 44.11 last week compared to this week’s close at 43.75 per US dollar.

Given the strong move by the Phisix which seems to have significantly outraced our neighbors, there is a possibility that interim profit taking would be the order of the coming sessions. Yet even if profit taking mode occurs, the likelihood would be rotational activities—where previous winners may take a recess while the laggards gain the market’s attention—than a broad based decline.

However in a bullmarket, overbought conditions usually may extend.

Overall, since the market is likely to move higher overtime, the short term bias is likely to reflect on a positive sentiment despite interim volatilities.

And for as long as markets remain politicized and highly dependent on actions of policymakers, our task is to monitor their activities and assess and project the possible impacts from such actions on the markets.


[1] See Global Equity Markets: Philippine Phisix Grabs Second Spot, January 14 2012

[2] See Can the Phisix rise Amidst the Euro Crisis? December 4, 2011

[3] Learntechnicaltrading.com Buying signals using trend lines

[4] Danske Bank FX Top Trades 2012 December 14, 2011

[5] Danske Bank Weekly Focus, January 13, 2012

[6] Reuters.com UPDATE 3-Yields fall sharply at Spanish, Italian debt sales, January 12, 2012

[7] Salerno Joseph T. Money and Gold in the 1920s and 1930s: An Austrian View, thefreemanonline.org

[8] Gross William H. Towards the Paranormal, January 2012

[9] See Greece Bailout: The Military Industry as Beneficiaries, January 12, 2012

[10] See Japan’s Lost Decade Wasn’t Due To Deflation But Stagnation From Massive Interventionism, July 6, 2010

[11] Reuters.com Mafia now "Italy's No.1 bank" as crisis bites: report, January 10, 2012

[12] Mauldin John The End of Europe? January 14, 2012 Goldseek.com

[13] See Euro Debt Crisis: The Confidence Fairy Tale and Devaluation Delusion, November 28. 2011

[14] Rothbard Murray N. 1. Introduction: Government Revenues and Expenditures Man, Economy & State Mises.org

[15] Murphy Robert P. Correcting Quiggin on Austrian Business-Cycle Theory, Mises.org

[16] Mises Ludwig von 6. The Gross Market Rate of Interest as Affected by Inflation and Credit Expansion, XX. INTEREST, CREDIT EXPANSION, AND THE TRADE CYCLE, Human Action Mises.org

[17] Caplan Bryan Real Real GDP, Library of Economics and Liberty, January 14, 2012

[18] Wikipedia.org Lernaean Hydra

[19] Wikipedia.org Labours of Hercules

[20] Bloomberg.com, Bernanke Doubles Down on Fed Mortgage Bet, January 11, 2012

[21] Noland Doug, The Year Of The Central Bank Credit Bubble Bulletin January 13, 2012 Prudent Bear.com

[22] See US Debt Ceiling Breached, President Obama to Seek Increase, January 12, 2012

[23] See What To Expect in 2012, January 9, 2012

[24] CNN.com Deadliest pandemics of the 20th century April 27, 2009

[25] See BBC’s Hans Rosling: 200 Years of Remarkable Progress and a Converging World, December 3, 2010

[26] See Phisix: Primed for an Upside Surprise, December 11, 2011