Showing posts with label US exports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US exports. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

EM Contagion: Based on Exports, Global Economic Growth appears to be Downshifting Fast

I have pointed to the recent collapse of exports by China and by Japan as potential harbinger of a substantial downshift in the growth rate of the global economy. 

Signs are that the world will be faced with a dramatic decline in the rate of growth if measured in exports. 

First of all here is the list of the top 15 exporting countries as provided by wikipedia.org
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These countries, whose estimated US dollar priced exports at $13.885 trillion for 2013, constitute a substantial share in the (non-fixed) pie of global exports.

I have no figures for total world exports in 2013. So while this would be apples to oranges, if I use the above to compare with 2011 global export data then the top 15 countries would account for about 78% of global export share. A WTO report says that the share of the top 5 exporters represents 36% in 2012 almost equal to the trading volume of regional trading blocs. The point is to show the importance of the share of the above exports relative to the total.

Now aside from China and Japan here are the export trends of the other top 15 exporters
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Eurozone exports have been in a sharp decline over the past (3 months) quarter.

But Eurozone performance have been unequal. Seen in the context of some of the Eurozone members within the top 15 ranking, German exports (ranked 3rd in the world) remain buoyant although markedly down from September highs. French exports (ranked 5th) have stagnated through most of 2013 compared to 2012 level. Spanish exports have substantially declined over the past 3 months while Italian exports marginally slowed over the same period.
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Meanwhile US exports have been slightly down
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South Korean exports have also been in a substantial downtrend. February exports plummeted by 5.7%. February data signifies a decline of 8.5% from October highs

Netherland exports fell sharply down by 5.3% in December (no latest updates yet)
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Russia’s exports, ranked 8th in the world, have collapsed last January! Russian exports cratered by 19.8% (m-o-m), and have essentially mirrored China. 

Meanwhile Hong Kong exports have been marginally down.

Ninth largest exporter, the United Kingdom broke the 5 month declining trend with a 2.1% (m-o-m) gain last January. Has this been a quirk or a recovery?

11 spot Canadian exports has also shown a marginal decline over the past 5 months. 

13th ranked Singapore exports posted a modest increase (2.86% m-o-m) in January but the gains have been far off from the highs of October. 

Saudi Arabian exports have been strong as of the third quarter of 2013
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15th spot Mexican exports tanked by 15.73% (m-o-m) in January! 

To have a better view of emerging markets where we can see the extent of the recent damage, let us take a look at the export data of the other majors. 

Brazil’s exports have stagnated in February following a 23% crash in January.

India’s export trend has been in a moderate decline over the past 5 months.  

In Southeast Asia, Malaysia’s exports though posting a marginal decline in January, has remained robust relative to most of 2013.  

Meanwhile Thailand’s exports have fallen sizably over the past 5 months.  

And after a spike in December exports, Indonesia’s January data plunged by 14.63%. Indonesian exports collapsed in August 2013 but recovered until December.  

Following September and October highs Philippine exports have moderately declined over the past 3 months

In sum, for the top 15 only Saudi Arabia, Germany, UK and Singapore have shown recent export (marginal to modest) gains, whereas the export declines have been pronounced in emerging markets (e.g. Russia, Mexico, South Korea). And this has become even more evident with the inclusion of Brazil, Indonesia and Thailand.

The dramatic fall in Japan, the marked slowdown in the Eurozone and the recent downshift in US exports may be signs of the deepening emerging market contagion. 

Emerging market financial market disruptions seem to have now been manifesting real economic effects through the global economy.

Yet the current rate of decline in exports of emerging markets seems alarming. 

[As a side note, this is a treatment of aggregate exports without delving into their details]

And they seem to be reinforcing my fears and suspicions. As I wrote early February
If emerging markets has been attributed by some as having pulled out the global economy from the recession of 2008, now will likely be the opposite dynamic, the ongoing mayhem in emerging markets are likely to weigh on the global economy and equally expose on the illusions of strength brought upon by credit inflation stoked by inflationist policies.
All these comes as major stocks markets seem to be in various stages of a mania (either from record highs or for those bourses fighting off the bear markets with violent denial rallies).

It is interesting to see if there will be a collision course between global real economy and the steroid dependent stock markets hoping for a sustained economic recovery.

P.S. Thanks to the wonderful tradingeconomics.com for all the charts and the very helpful data they provide.

Monday, August 02, 2010

US and Global Economy: Pieces Of The Jigsaw Puzzles All Falling In Place

``Deflationary credit contraction is, necessarily, severely limited. Whereas credit can expand (barring various economic limits to be discussed below) virtually to infinity, circulating credit can contract only as far down as the total amount of specie in circulation. In short, its maximum possible limit is the eradication of all previous credit expansion.” Murray N. Rothbard

Mainstream expert analyses are mostly hinged on heuristics (mental shortcuts), except that they often argue from the context of technical gobbledygook which appeals and overwhelms the naive public to assume such abstraction as universal reality.

For instance, many go at length to argue that low interest levels in US Treasury exhibit signs of deflation. Heck, as if deflation or falling prices in the mainstream definition means the end of world. Well, falling prices also means greater purchasing power, which from the fundamental standpoint of demand and supply, it means more goods that one can acquire. So the end of the world, it is not.

For us, deflation isn’t a one size fits all dynamic. We see this market force as operating from different previous actions; one that deals with productivity growth or one that deals with government property confiscation, or bank credit contraction or cash building. So the social impact won’t be the same. Yet when the mainstream hears or reads of deflation they seem to develop a reflexive revulsion to the word.

What the mainstream actually refers to is of the credit contraction order- which according to them has a feedback mechanism which forces liquidation, reduces collateral values, curbs aggregate demand, which leads to excess supplies and subsequently falling prices which gets exacerbated by expectations of people to hoard cash and back to the loop.

It’s a story long been told even during the days of my Dad, but this has hardly occurred. Not even with Japan, which the mainstream has arrantly mislabelled[1].

Although deflation had an instance of reality in 2008, our rebuttal has been that in a world central banking, governments have the incentive and the tools to temporarily offset credit contraction by serially blowing up new bubbles. How? By keeping interest rates excessively low and by printing an ocean of money.

Yet mainstream insist that this is a demand problem and that government actions won’t have an impact.

On the contrary we persist to argue that this is mostly a supply dilemma—one where banks have been stuffed with questionable assets and that reluctance to lend is a function of some distrust.

And the disruption from the near seizure in the US banking system, which prompted for a short episode of deflation, as consequence to the Lehman bankruptcy is why the US government put to risk some $23.7 Trillion worth of taxpayer money[2], according to a US official.

In short, US officials have been acting on the current financial quandary predicated on a liquidity issue.

It’s funny how many gawk at the actions of the marketplace only to put meaning into them based on their bias or economic religion.

The mainstream refuses to acknowledge that government are people too and are driven by incentives. They see government in a paradox. On one aspect, they believe government operates like supermen whom would act on every single social problem that emerges. Yet on another aspect, particularly on the financial markets, they treat governments as passive onlookers!

From our perspective, the abnormally low yields in the US treasury markets may not be due to the fear of lending or the lack of demand to borrow, but rather from government intervention.

With the US budget deficit expected to hit $1.56 trillion in 2010[3], what better way to attract cheap private financing and create an environment of marketplace confidence (animal spirits) than by manipulating interest rates down!

Since there have been little signs of inflation in the past, then the US government can simply use its covert dealers to conduct interest rate manipulation operations.

And it may not be limited to stealth actions; it may even be reported.

In three weeks since June 30, the Federal Reserve balance sheet has registered consecutive additions to its US treasury positions by $45 billion, according to the data provided by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland[4].

This seems consistent with some signs of unease from select Federal Reserve officials, such as James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, who called for renewed buying of treasury securities or the resumption of quantitative easing[5].

Yet these guys seem to be looking at the wrong picture.

First of all, the banking system doesn’t represent the entire US capital markets.

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Figure 4: St. Louis Fed: Consumer and Bank Credit at ALL Commercial Banks

But even if we deal with the banking system we are seeing not widespread signs of contraction but signs of credit expansion (see figure 4)!

True business and industrial loans are still down, but nominal lending in US dollars by consumers at all commercial banks have recently skyrocketed (upper window). And we seem to be seeing material improvement in credit activities of bank credit of all commercial banks, perhaps directed at consumers.

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Figure 5: Yardeni.com[6]: Flow of Funds

We predicted[7] that the influence of the yield curve lags by about 2-3 year period, which if we are right we could see an acceleration in the activities in the US credit markets by this yearend, could we be seeing the seeds of this turnaround (see figure 5)? Oops....

Now as we earlier said, banks aren’t the sole source of funding for the US economy, which the mainstream loves to fixate on. And I think signs have saying they’re dead wrong.

Why? Because the corporate bond market is likewise booming!

This from Businessweek/Bloomberg[8],

``U.S. corporate bond sales soared 31 percent to $85.7 billion this month, the busiest July on record, as yields fell to the lowest in more than six years on growing investor confidence in the economic recovery. The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, which banks say they can borrow at for three months in dollars, fell the most today in almost 11 months, dropping to the least since May 14.”

And the boom in the bond markets aren’t restricted to the US markets but around the world!

According to the Wall Street Journal[9], (bold emphasis mine)

``The global corporate-bond boom is gathering steam as companies rush to take advantage of some of the lowest borrowing costs in history....

``This month has been the busiest July on record for sales by U.S. companies with junk-credit ratings. Asia's debt market is on pace for a record year, and European companies are also raising money apace.

``The low borrowing costs are the culmination of an unprecedented bond-market rally that began in the depths of the credit crisis in late 2008 and early 2009 and has defied every prediction that it would soon run out of steam. But individual and professional investors continue to plow money into the bond market, giving companies a constant source of funds to tap.”

Defied every prediction? Not for us, as we have been predicting this all along!

And in terms of bank lending guess where the gist of the activities has been? (see figure 6)

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Figure 6: Yardeni.com Lending by International Banks

If you guessed the Emerging Markets and Asia, then you are absolutely correct!

Now if we examine the contribution of economic growth in the US by sector, the mainstream seems caught somewhat surprised. Growth expectations didn’t come from the sectors they’d expected them to be (see figure 7).

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Figure 7: Northern Trust: Sectoral Contribution To Growth Rates

According to Asha Banglore of Northern Trust[10], (bold highlights mine)

``In the second quarter of 2010, equipment and software spending (+1.36%) made the largest positive contribution to real GDP, followed by exports (1.22%), consumer spending (1.15%), inventories (1.1%), and residential investment expenditures (0.6%).

``In terms of growth rates, equipment and software spending posted a hefty increase of 21.9% after an upwardly revised 20.4% gain in the first quarter. Consumer spending moved up 1.6% in the second quarter after a downwardly revised 1.9% gain in the first quarter.

So technology and the world economy appear to be heavy lifting the growth momentum of the US economy.

As per the technology sector, here is what I wrote last February[11],

``What I am trying to say is that the contribution of the technology sector to the real economy could perhaps be more accurately reflected on the performance of S&P, however, such contribution may have been underrepresented by conventional statistical metrics.”

Not anymore.

For us, the current developments postulates to the following:

-US economic growth dynamics seem to be shifting from the housing to the technology and export sector.

-Investment in the US and the job growth will likely gravitate into these sectors.

-The pattern of growth in the US seem to confirm the boom in the global bond markets and the bank lending patterns of international banks

-Since technology is partly tied to exports, wealth accumulation in emerging markets is likely to fuel increasing demand for tech savvy products

-the global economy should be expected to sustain momentum as globalization deepens, and this will be in stark contrast to the prediction of deglobalization advocated by PIMCO’s Bill Gross.

-Of course, this is another bubble cycle. The next bubble will likely emanate from the emerging markets or the US technology industry[12], or the US treasury. But the risk of bubble implosion would only surface as inflation accelerates and hamstrings government efforts to intervene.

Speaking of which, where inflation is thought to be non-existent, here is a little surprise (see figure 8)...

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Figure 8: stockcharts.com: Commodity Laggards

Oops, even the commodity laggards seem to be generating some reanimated activities!

We seem to seeing resurgence in agricultural products (DBA-Powershares DB Multisector Commodity Trust Agricultural Fund), as well as in Natural gas (NATGAS), the Industrial metals (Dow Jones UBS Industrial Metals-DJAIN) and the broad based commodity index (Reuters-CRB).

So far, pieces of the grand jigsaw puzzle seem to be falling in their rightful place, as we have seen it.


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

[2] See $23.7 Trillion Worth Of Bailouts?

[3] CNN Money U.S. deficit streak at 20 months, June 20 2010

[4] Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Credit Easing Policy Tools

[5] New York Times, Fed Member’s Deflation Warning Hints at Policy Shift, July 29, 2010

[6] Yardeni.com: Flow of Funds, July 7, 2010

[7] See Influences Of The Yield Curve On The Equity And Commodity Markets, March 22, 2010

[8] Businessweek, Bloomberg: U.S. 10-Year Swap Negative for Fourth Day as Debt Sales Rise, July 30, 2010

[9] Wall Street Journal, Bonds Soar to Rare Heights, July 29, 2010

[10] Northern Trust, U.S. Economy – Q2 GDP Contained a Few Surprises Although Headline Was Close to Forecast, July 30, 2010

[11] See Statistics Don't Reveal Extent Of The Evolution To The Information Age, February 15, 2010

[12] See ASEAN Markets Surge, Where will The Next Bubble Emerge?, July 11, 2010

Friday, May 14, 2010

Emerging Asia Surpasses EU As Top US Export Destination

This should be a very interesting and promising development-Asia has surpassed the EU as the biggest US export market!

As reported by the Wall Street Journal Blog, (all bold highlights mine)

``Yet John Lonski, chief economist at Moody’s Investor Service, points out an interesting nugget within the March trade figures, released on Wednesday by the Commerce Department, in a note to clients today. March was “a watershed month,” he says, as “For the first time in recorded history, the moving 12-month sum of $227.6 billion of U.S. merchandise exports to Asia’s emerging market countries surpassed the… $223.7 billion of such exports to the European Union.”

``In the year through March, he notes, U.S. merchandise exports to emerging Asia — which includes China, India, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea plus a handful of smaller nations — rose by 3.7% while shipments to the EU dropped by 13.9%. In other words, U.S. exports to Europe have already been dwindling while Asia has become an increasingly important destination for U.S. goods. That should help U.S. companies avoid too much of a hit from euro zone woes.

``But the development carries risks of its own: Asian economies are growing so strongly at the moment that China in particular is scaling up efforts to damp inflation through tighter monetary policy. While a “soft landing” outcome in which the Chinese economy slows to say at 8% annualized growth rate would be ideal, a harder landing whereby higher interest rates slow demand precipitously can’t be ruled out. Indeed, it’s one of the top risks to the global growth outlook. Though much attention has been focused across the Atlantic lately, it’s actually the Pacific Rim which perhaps should merit closer scrutiny."

As we'd habitually point out, social actions are always dynamic, where people respond to ecological changes rather than being static-except in the eyes of retrogressive anti-development protectionists.

Moreover, the trade and competitive issues are not predicated solely on currency values (or the pixie dust economics for mercantilists), but on many many many factors such as the willingness or openness to trade, economic freedom, hurdle rate, market size and composition and relative costs in terms of tax and regulatory compliance costs, transaction costs, accessibility to finance, raw materials, technology, communication, labor and infrastructure, quality of communication and infrastructure platforms, accessibility to labor, relative labor costs, labor regulations, labor productivity and etc...

Otherwise this shifting trade development wouldn't be happening.

Moreover, this also goes to show of the broadening importance of Emerging Asia's role in global trade.

So yes the composition of world trade is changing, so will geopolitics.