Showing posts with label anxiety disorder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anxiety disorder. Show all posts

Sunday, April 05, 2009

The Growing Validity Of The Reflexivity Theory: More PTSD And Periphery

``It is commonly appreciated that China has about $2 TN in reserves to go with its population of 1.3 billion. This alone provides China unprecedented reflationary capabilities. China also maintains a tight relationship between its banking system and government policymakers, and it is worth noting that recent reports have Chinese bank lending posting another eye-opening month of expansion ($234bn!). China is also now aggressively using currency swaps and other financing mechanisms to drive exports and trade, especially in Asia. There is also increased talk of the Chinese government providing global vendor financing for its major industries, a potentially huge development from both China and global perspectives. Clearly, if Chinese industrial policy seeks to elevate the status of key domestic industries, current global tumult provides quite a rare opportunity to press decidedly ahead. Moreover, if China moves to develop its northern region as it has developed the south, there is really no bounds to the amount of “money” that could be spent.”-Doug Noland, Periphery Rising

At the start of the year, we forecasted that the Asian and local markets will register gains at the end of the year.

Our idea is that this isn’t one coming out of a “valid” economic recovery but one from the tsunami of money being drenched into the financial and economic system that had been meant to offset the loses from the OECD financial sector and from the recessionary forces affecting the global economy.

Such trend seem to get reinforced by the day.

Into last week’s G-20 meeting the multinational assembly had produced a spending plan aimed to augment the resources of the IMF, funded by Japan and Europe. In addition, ``Rich countries such as America will provide a $500 billion credit line, known as New Arrangements to Borrow. This was trailed several weeks ago. Significantly, the IMF will print $250 billion of its own currency, known as special drawing rights, allocating sums to its members according to their quotas” reports the Economist (see table 1).


Table 1: New York Times: The G-20 Mission

Of course this won’t be complete without the additional promise of further inundation of fiscal stimulus programs which was pegged at $5 trillion aimed “to raise output by 4%” and “accelerate the transition to a green economy” as indicated by their official communiqué.

Politicians love to babble about promises which usually remain only as that…promises, considering that most of the agreement drawn appears to be “motherhood” statements and bereft of details.

But there is one thing we can be sure of, that which politicians love to do…spend!!! And spending we believe it would be.

From Core To Periphery

And with the augmented resources, revitalized role of a supercharged IMF, many see this as bolstering the positions of emerging markets.

Again from the same article in the Economist (bold highlight mine),

``Now the new money must be directed to developing countries, especially in eastern Europe. Many such countries have been loth to tap the fund because of the stigma involved. A pledge by the G20 to reform the fund’s governance soon may convince them that the leopard has changed its spots. This week Mexico secured a $47 billion credit line with the fund, with no strings attached, which may set a trend…

``The importance of offering new sources of funds to the developing world should not be underestimated, however. By some estimates poor countries have $1.4 trillion of debts to roll over this year alone and Western creditors are hoarding their cash. These countries have far less fiscal room for manoeuvre than rich economies. They are also areas of the world where growth could rebound quite quickly, because households are not weighed down by the crushing debts typical in America and Europe. In a further fillip to many of them, the G20 agreed to ensure $250 billion in trade finance to help reboot global trade—though it was not clear how much of this was new money.”

In short money appears as being transmitted to support growth in the developing countries as part of the collaborative efforts to inflate the system.

And some market savants seem to be looking from the same angle as we had projected.

This from Barron’s Randall Forsyth, ``Ms. Pomboy points out that while emerging economies account for 43.7% of global output, they represent only 10.9% of global stock market capitalization. China by itself makes up 15% of the global economy but less than 2% of market cap while the U.S. provides 21% of output but 43.4% of market cap.

``With so much room to grow…and so much money to flow..might the Emerging Markets become the next bubble?" she asks rhetorically. "All the ingredients are there, the persuasive story line (from their savings to their demographics), the dearth of compelling investment alternatives and, of course, the Fed's flowing font of cheap capital."

Oh lala.

More Evidence Of The Impact From PTSD

Moreover we pointed out that the severe drop in global trade had primarily been a function of a seizure in the operations of the US-European banking system, where the reemergence of barter trade belied the notion of an absolute deflationary collapse which had been propounded by deflation advocates.

For us, the disruption appears to have been a function of an anxiety disorder called PTSD or Posttraumatic Stress Disorder [see Global Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): The After Lehman Syndrome], where a distressing shock event basically traumatized international trade flows.

Nevertheless PTSD’s seem to heal overtime.

Figure 3: Danske Bank: Global Business Cycle

And economic data appears to be reinforcing our stand, where global leading indicators and manufacturing orders of major OECD and BRIC economies appear to have meaningfully rebounded from the lows as shown in the Figure 3 from Danske Bank.

The appearance of synchronized recovery from the harrowing last quarter crash suggests that the massive decline could have been ‘overrated’.

Albeit we can’t rule out that a typical reactionary response from big crashes are large oversold bounces similar to the stock markets, our idea is that the flood of money generated by global governments to replace “lost demand” appears to be gaining traction especially in Emerging Market economies, who were disrupted not by a dysfunctional domestic financial system but by trade linkages brought about by credit freeze in the OECD banking system.

And given that EM economies have low leverage uptake, we believe that they have the potential to absorb much of the global government’s serial bubble blowing.

The Growing Validity Of The Reflexivity Theory

Importantly we believe that George Soros’ theory of Reflexivity has underpinned all these.

Here is what we wrote in Inflationary Policies Drives China’s Shanghai Market; Clues of Reflexivity Theory at Work

``…markets aren't just about traditional economics or conventional finance. It is mostly about psychology or how government inflationary policies may trigger significant "reflexivity" in market psychology….

``The reflexivity theory applied to the Shanghai's index suggests that if the course of actions (inflationary policies) succeeds to alter participants thinking, then the subsequent changes in perception will ultimately be followed by changes in the facts.

``Put differently, if the Shanghai Index's will continue to rally, it will be 'rationalized' by the public as a recovery (perception), when this is all about central banks' massive 'serial bubble blowing' inflation (fact).

``Eventually when the perception of recovery is reinforced by economic data, (fact) the market trend deepens (perception).”

And suddenly we seem to be witnessing a growing number of observers acting as what we have long anticipated…

From Harvard Professor and former Chairman of President Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisors and President of National Bureau for Economic Research, Martin Feldstein (bold highlight mine)

``China is likely to be the first of the major economies to recover from the current global downturn. Its pace of expansion may not reach the double-digit rates of recent years, but China in 2010 will probably grow more rapidly than any country in Europe or in the western hemisphere.”

Further signs of the burgeoning bandwagon from China’s repeated gains…

From Bill Witherell of Cumberland Advisors, ``Japan surely will benefit from the expected resumption of strong growth in China and the anticipated beginning of a recovery in the US in the second half of 2009.” (bold highlight mine)

From John Derrick of USfunds.com, ``We may already be seeing early signs of the initial round of stimulus having an impact. China responded aggressively back in November announcing a $586 billion stimulus package. This week China’s purchasing manager’s index (10) rose to 52.4, indicating economic expansion and the first reading above 50 since September.” (bold highlight mine)


Figure 4: Shanghai’s Reflexivity Theory At Work

While most of China’s peers, namely Emerging Markets (EEM) and the Dow Jones Asia ex-Japan ($DJP2) have only seen a belated recovery last March, the Shanghai index has significantly pulled away breaking into bullish territory-namely a breakout from resistance levels and breakout from 200 day moving averages.

The Phisix which has lagged the latest market levitation due to local controversial quirks (particularly the Meralco and the PLDT affair) seems likely to follow suit.

In short, the reflexivity theory -from fact to perception and now perception to facts-seems to be succeeding at recalibrating the market’s mood.

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Global Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): The After Lehman Syndrome

We opined that the collapse in world economic and market activities in the last quarter of 2008, which was principally an outgrowth of the seizure in the US banking system, engendered a psychological "shock and awe" trauma for the world.

Similar to infamous 9/11 tragedy, such anxiety disorders overwhelmed the public's psychological defenses, wherein the subsequent reaction have been to dramatically undertake massive adjustments in the ecosystem as fear governed. [See discussed in "What Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Have To Do With Today’s Financial Crisis."]

This is what I think the world is presently enduring.

And we seem to have found clues to support our thesis. Mr. Andrew Foster, Chief Investing Officer of Matthews Asia/Matthews International capital noted of a "Before Lehman and After Lehman" stigma, in his recent sojourn in 4 Asian countries.

This is his observation (all bold highlights mine)...

``I would venture to guess that many of the managers I met on my trip would have struggled to recognize the name “Lehman” prior to last September, and very few could claim to have suffered directly as result of Lehman’s collapse (e.g. exposure as a creditor or an investor). Yet what was interesting about the phrase was the universal way that these managers were using “Lehman” as a means to explain (or excuse) the frustrating downturn in the performance of their companies. For me, this highlighted the external nature of the current crisis: these managers were not coping with changing technologies, heightening competition or demand destruction; rather, a strange and unseen external shock had suddenly crippled the outlook for their businesses. It was as if all the managers were struggling simultaneously to understand the nature of this invisible shock, and had picked up the same newspaper on the same day, read the same headline, and said to themselves, “Oh, that’s what it is.”

``One illustration of this comes to mind: a newspaper company in Delhi that I visited publishes two editions, one in English and the other in Hindi. The former was seeing ad revenues decline by roughly a 20% annual clip, presumably because gloomy headlines in the English-language press were reverberating around the world, robbing confidence, and with it, economic prospects. Meanwhile, the Hindi version was seeing growth of nearly 30% in its ad rates. This growth may not be sustained; the global shock may come to roost in the Hindi segment as well. I asked management about this anomaly. They had asked the same question of some of their customers, to which the somewhat ironic reply was, “What recession?” Apparently the dour headlines had yet to penetrate those parts of India."...

Here is the clincher...

Again from Mr. Foster...

``But interestingly, most are simply frozen in stasis, paralyzed by a sort of uncertainty about what the future might hold. People everywhere are struggling to cope with what the headlines mean for them. While the shock Lehman precipitated was severe, the uncertainty—even fear—it generated has been more widely felt."

Like us, Mr. Foster believes that time will heal such mental stresses...

Again from Mr. Foster, ``Yet it is my experience that with time and stability fear tends to pass. And here is a possible silver lining: when the present fear does pass, many of these Asian companies might find that the fundamentals they once enjoyed (save perhaps easy access to financing) have not deteriorated to the same extent as they have elsewhere in the world, especially here in the United States. "B.L. / A.L." will undoubtedly be scorched in investors' memories permanently. Yet with a bit of luck, it will become more of a catch phrase rather than destiny itself."

So I'd be wary of any analysis, which omits the context of human psychology to deal with anxiety disorders such as the PTSD, and utilize the "After Lehman syndrome" to project into the future.