Showing posts with label asset inflation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label asset inflation. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

The Symbiotic relationship between Crony Capitalism and the Welfare State

The welfare state has been built on the popular delusion that the major beneficiaries have been the underprivileged or the poor. 

In reality, such welfare programs favor the crony elitist class.

Austrian economist Gary North explains: (bold original)
October 1 is the day of the new fiscal year of the United States government. Little known to the general public, it is the supreme day of celebration for the American Establishment. Let me explain why. It has to do with government spending, specifically this: Who wins? Who pays?

The American welfare state is generally supported by the very rich. They clean up by means of the welfare state. Why? Because the welfare state is seen by political liberals as justifying the expansion of the federal government, and the federal government then protects the interests of the super rich. This has gone on for so long that it is astounding to me that the chattering class -- mostly Leftists -- does not understand it.

Leftist Democrats constantly lobby for more welfare state programs. They think the rich will pay for them. To see why this is silly, look at this pie chart on federal spending. Ask yourself: Who wins? Who pays?

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Look at defense spending. Who wins? A handful of large defense firms. This is fat city for the rich. It always has been.

Look at net interest payments. Do you think that money goes to the rich? What does the U.S. government pay? Under 3% a year. The super rich do not buy such low-paying investments. Who does? Retirement funds, insurance companies, money market funds, and banks. This rate of return is for the middle-classe. The interest rate returns after taxes do not keep up with price inflation. Who pays? The rich pay a good chunk of it as taxpayers. They do not care. Why not? Because this level of federal debt guarantees a huge federal government. With the government-enforced restricted-access profits they make, it's just a cost of doing business.

Now let's look at the biggies: Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. They constitute 45% of federal spending. Who pays? Working stiffs. The Social Security taxable salary cutoff is about $110,000 a year. So, the worker and his employer pay about $16,000 a year, max. For the super rich, this tax is irrelevant -- invisible.

Do you see what the voters have done? They have created two gigantic, politically untouchable welfare programs that the working class finances. These programs are so huge that no new major spending program will be imposed. They have put a ceiling on the growth of the welfare state. The welfare state cannot touch them. They are now immune.

ObamaCare? The workers will pay. Small business owners will pay.

How about food stamps, called SNAP? This costs $75 billion a year. Who gets this money? Agribusiness. In short, food stamps are a subsidy to the super rich in the name of helping the poor.

The income tax was a problem, which went from 25% in the 1920s to 63% in 1932, to 79% in 1936, to 94% in 1944. Truman took it back to 91% in 1948, where it stayed until Kennedy, who got Congress to drop it to 70%. Reagan got it lowered in stages to 28% in 1988. No President since has got it above 40%.

We know that Americans will not accept federal taxes above 20% of GDP. In 1944, in World War II, it got to 20.8%. That was the top. So, the voters have placed a ceiling on total taxation. The federal government is at that ceiling. New programs must come from borrowing. When that gets cut off at low rates, as it will at some point, the welfare state will go belly-up, except for payments to oldsters.

The Left has shot its wad politically. There is no extra federal money to tap. The oldsters lay claim to the federal government's biggest welfare programs, and these programs are paid for by the working class, not the rich.
More on the the Middle class as carrying the cross of the poor….(bold mine)
Crony capitalism favors the super rich. The super rich are willing to pay income taxes to fund a small portion of the welfare state, because the bulk of the welfare state is funded by taxes on the middle class. The super rich don't pay much into Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. The working class pays: "regressive" taxation. These are the largest welfare programs there are. The super rich avoid having to pay much of anything into the two largest welfare state programs there are. It is a sweet deal for the super rich. The federal government's regulatory apparatus keeps growing, and the super rich's balance sheets keep growing.
Add to this Bernanke’s and or the central bank dogma of promoting quasi permanent booms (bubble cycles) or asset inflation
 
The welfare state as protectionist shield in favor of cronies. (bold mine)
Crony capitalism removes the most important threat to the Establishment, namely, the threat of free market competition. It makes certain that existing large firms have the advantage. The existing large firms can afford the high-powered and highly expensive legal talent to make the system work for them. This locks out competitors whose only advantage is that they can serve the customer more efficiently. That doesn't count, because federal regulation makes it illegal for these firms to serve the customer.

From the point of view of the Establishment, the cost of the welfare state is chump change. The two big kahunas of the welfare state, Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid, are financed by the working class. So, they are no sweat off the brows of the super rich. These two programs make it impossible to expand any other major welfare programs. Even if we think of ObamaCare as such a program, it still serves the interests of the super rich, because it will make it more difficult for smaller firms to compete. Once you've established the dominant position in the market, you can afford lots of regulation. Regulation becomes a gigantic barrier to entry that is placed in front of your potential competitors.

The political Left sees that the rich are getting richer, and its response is always the same: more welfare state. They don't understand that the federal government is what has created the existing distribution of income, which favors the super rich. They don't learn that welfare state politics makes things worse for the poor. They have been barking up the wrong tree ever since 1896, when William Jennings Bryan got his first nomination by the Democratic Party for President. His candidacy killed the old Democracy, best represented by Grover Cleveland, a limited-government vision of politics, and firmly committed to low tariffs and the gold standard. It did not survive Bryan's three runs for the presidency.
Oh by the way, who has been benefiting from America’s existing healthcare programs?

Again it is the rich, from Zero Hedge: (bold original)
According to the latest data compiled by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, in 2010, just 1% of the population accounted for a whopping 21.4% of total health care expenditures with an annual mean expenditure of $87,570. Just below them, 5% of the population accounted for nearly 50% of all healthcare spending. Just as stunning is the "other" side: the lower 50 percent of the population ranked by their expenditures accounted for only 2.8% of the total for 2009 and 2010 respectively. Perhaps in addition to bashing the "1%" of wealth holders, a relatively straightforward and justified exercise in the current political climate, it is time for public attention to also turn to the chronic 1% (and 5%)-ers who are the primary issue when it comes to the debt-funding needed to preserve the US welfare state.

The spending distribution in chart format
see more charts here

Liberal media and their experts have served no more than mouthpieces for cronies. 

And another thing, this hasn't just been exclusively a US dynamic.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Horse Racing Inflation

For the mainstream, price inflation has been seen as inexistent because the CPI indices tells them so.  Government data for them is seen as inviolable or sacrosanct even when real world experience suggest otherwise.  

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They ignore the fact that money flows into the economy have been in a relative manner: different stages, different industries at distinct levels, speed and degree, such that the consequence of monetary policies has been a relative price inflation (chart courtesy of Doug Short).

Never mind too that record high stock markets and surging property prices have been emblematic of price inflation on the asset markets.

And that money flowing into asset markets have likewise led to bubbles in art and to other collectible markets.

Well add to this collection of bubbles, the thoroughbred racehorses. From CNBC
The market for racehorses took a big spill during the recession and didn't look ready for a comeback anytime soon. But suddenly, Thoroughbred prices are charging ahead.

The Keeneland September Yearling Sale—the nation's premiere Thoroughbred auction—is just winding down, and the numbers resemble those from precrisis boom times.

Keeneland said 18 yearlings sold for $1 million or more. That's the highest total since 2008 and more than twice last year's total. The most expensive sale was $2.5 million. Though that's below the top-horse price in 2006, which topped $11 million, it's more than double last year's.

Sales this year total over $264 million, up 23 percent from last year and the highest since 2008. The average price of $130,780 is up 31 percent from 2012.

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The ballooning prices of "toys for the big boys", amidst tepid economic growth (chart from Zero Hedge)  are signs of the inequitable distribution of wealth—a subsidy to rich at the expense of society—brought about by central bank’s current zero bound rates and QE policies.


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

How Collectible Markets Performed

Since the US Federal Reserve went into an expansionary mode in order to supposedly "reflate" the US economy following the dot.com bust, the collectible markets seems to have been one of the major beneficiaries of such policies
 
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According to CNBC’s Robert Frank
According Knight Frank's Wealth Report, an index of the nine main collectibles markets grew by 175 percent over the past 10 years – a far better record than U.S. stocks. All nine categories tracked by Knight Frank increased in value except collectible furniture.
Over a ten year period, classic cars, coins, stamps and fine arts returned about 200% and above.

However, popular themes lagged. Again from the CNBC,
As Knight Frank says, however, "performance doesn't go hand in hand with popularity." Sometimes the most beloved collectibles are dogs as investments.
Art remains far and away the most widely collected collectible among the world's wealthy and affluent. The world's millionaires plan to increase their spending by 13 percent on art this year. 

The second most popular collectible is watches – led by Asian collectors. That was followed by fine wine, jewelry and then cars.
Bottom line: The impact of central bank policies on asset prices are different. Also, popular themes may not be the best choice.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Are Central Bankers Poker Bluffing the Gold Markets?

Dr. Ed Yardeni at his blog writes
Other than profit-taking, what might be the fundamental reasons behind gold’s weakness? Perhaps the most important reason for the weakness in gold is that after three years of “living dangerously”--with lots of panics about apocalyptic endgame scenarios--the global economic and financial outlook is improving. That means that central banks may start to ease off on easing.
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Earlier he wrote of the important role played by the FED in influencing stock market prices, (chart from Dr. Yardeni)
The Fed has contributed greatly to the bull market with its NZIRP and QE ultra-easy monetary policies, as evidenced by the close correlation of the S&P 500 and the securities holdings of the Fed. Bond yields fell to historic lows as the Fed purchased more fixed-income securities, increasing the attractiveness of stocks.
If gold prices indeed has been anticipating a forthcoming squeeze in the monetary environment due to an alleged "improving" fundamentals, which has bolstered the stock market, then we can easily deduce that tightening policies may similarly lead to falling stock markets.

This means that gold prices could be a leading indicator of the stock markets.

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One can easily correlate the substantial contraction of the ECB’s balance sheet (left window), with the recent collapse in gold prices (right window).

The ECB’s balance, which has shrank to its lowest level since March of last year, began its accelerated descent since October almost simultaneously with peak gold prices.

Also, China’s government has announced pulling back on her easing policies through “a net 910 billion yuan ($145.89 billion) drain from the interbank market this week” (Reuters) which has coincided with a slump in her stock markets.

Of course, today’s booming US stock markets, as well as property markets, has prompted for the increasing hawkish statements from FED officials.

As Bloomberg’s Caroline Baum rightly points out,
Market participants forget that the Fed is neither omniscient nor a very good forecaster. What it is is the sole proprietor of the printing press. If the hint of cutting back on its hours of operation is enough to frighten the stock market, then the Fed really has to be concerned by what it hath wrought. 
This only means the Fed has been caught in a box. Once the stock markets gets freaked out by the prospect of a money squeeze, two question arises: 

-Will the central bankers stand firm and let the market clear (bubble bust)?  
-Or will they come rushing back to reflate the markets?

At the end of the day, my bet is that all these hawkish talks will pave way for future easing, thus a resurgent gold.

Euro Pacific Peter Schiff, in the following video, expounds on this matter:

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Video: Greenspan Says Stock Markets causes Economic Growth

In the face of US fiscal problems, former Fed chief Alan Greenspan says in the following video interview that only the stock market is truly important.

Quotable:
[3:40] data shows that not only are stock markets a leading indicator of economic activity, they are a major cause of it – the statistics indicate that 6% of the change in GDP results from changes in market values of stocks and homes.
This is just an example of experts who resort to statistics to misleadingly associate asset inflation with economic growth: a post hoc fallacy. This has been anchored on the so-called Wealth Effect myth which sees consumption as drivers of the economy.

As I previously explained real economic growth is about the acquisition of real savings or capital accumulation from production.

And that the real concealed reason for the promotion of the wealth effect has been to justify government intervention.
But of course the principal reason behind the populist consumption economy narrative has been to justify myriad government interventions via ‘demand management’ measures applied against the supposed insufficient “aggregate demand” from so-called “market failures”.

Moreover, the consumption story aims to buttress mostly indiscriminate debt acquisition as a means of attaining statistical rather than real growth based on value creation.
The central banks' serial blowing of asset bubbles is really an illusion that eventually will implode, thus the bubble cycles. 

Also a major reason for such undertaking has been to subsidize the crony banking system, who serves as agents for central banks and as financiers of the political class at the expense of the economy.

Nonetheless, inflating asset bubbles has become the de facto central banking standard adapted by the world monetary authorities, that has been articulated by Mr. Greenspan’s successor, the incumbent Ben Bernanke, as a “smart way” of protecting the economy.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Japan’s Economic Minister: We Will Print Money to Boost the Stock Market

Japan’s economic minister announced a target for their stock market.

From the Business Insider
it appears that the Japanese government is trying to talk up stock prices in the same way it's talking down the yen.

Take a look at what Japan's economy minister Akira Amari said on Saturday, via The Japan Times:

“It will be important to show our mettle and see the Nikkei reach the 13,000 mark by the end of the fiscal year (March 31),” Amari said in a speech...“We want to continue taking (new) steps to help stock prices rise” further, Amari stressed, referring to the core policies of the Liberal Democratic Party administration — the promotion of bold monetary easing, fiscal spending and greater private sector investment.

The 13,000 index target implies around 17 percent upside in February and March. The pace may sound ambitious, but then again, Japan is one of the hottest momentum trades in the world right now.

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Well such announcement resonates with what I call as the Bernanke doctrine.

The following was written by incumbent US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke when he was still in the academia. (I have posted this numerous times here)

There's no denying that a collapse in stock prices today would pose serious macroeconomic challenges for the United States. Consumer spending would slow, and the U.S. economy would become less of a magnet for foreign investors. Economic growth, which in any case has recently been at unsustainable levels, would decline somewhat. History proves, however, that a smart central bank can protect the economy and the financial sector from the nastier side effects of a stock market collapse.
In short, the de facto character of social policies today has been to inflate asset bubbles. A policy assimilated by global political authorities as embodied by Ben Bernanke’s theories.

Don’t forget that debasing of the currency or the yen in support of the stock market implies for a redistribution of resources from the main street or the real economy to stock market investors. 

Japan’s banking and insurance industry are said to be heavily exposed to the stock market (Takeo Hoshi and Anil K Kashyap 2004) 

Contradicting the supposed intent sold to the gullible public as promoting competitiveness, debasing the yen to boost the stock market seems more of a concealed form of redistribution scheme that benefits Japan’s version of Wall Street.

Yet at the end of the day, unsustainable bubbles will pop.

Again as I said last Sunday, policymakers hardly ever learn, which is why bubble cycles exist.

Friday, February 08, 2013

Quote of the Day: The Danger of Wealth Illusions from Asset Inflation

The rising Dow is of course good news for savers, who have been forced into equities to try to find a decent return on investment. Thanks to Fed policy, "safe" 10-year Treasury bonds yield a near-zero or negative return, depending on whether you measure price inflation at the official rate or at higher private estimates.

Winners on stocks or land holdings should happily accept their gains as the best to be expected in a very unsettled financial environment. But they should also remember the 2000s, when so many people thought their newfound riches were real and cashed them in for yet more debt, such as home-equity loans.

They later had a rude awakening. The "wealth illusion" of asset inflation is seductive, which is why central banks in charge of a fiat currency and subject to no external disciplines so often drift in that direction. Politicians smile in satisfaction and powerful Washington lobbies cry for more.

But an economy built on an illusion is hardly a sound structure. We may be doomed to learn that lesson once again before long.
This is from George Melloan, former columnist and deputy editor of the Journal editorial page, and author of "The Great Money Binge: Spending Our Way to Socialism" at the Wall Street Journal OpEd (hat tip Mises Blog)
 

Monday, February 04, 2013

Is the Phisix in a Mania?

The global asset boom seems to be intensifying. And it bears the characteristics of a brewing credit bubble mania.

This comes amidst the combined efforts by global central banks to adapt and coordinate aggressive easing policies.

The Grand Era of Asset Class Bubbles

The confirmation[1] of the Bernanke led FOMC’s unlimited QE 4.0 which consists of $85 billion of monthly asset purchases ($40 billion on Agency securities and $45 billion in US treasuries) has coincided with a major push key US benchmarks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Averages (DJIA)—now is at the 14,000 level—along the S&P 500, have both breached the 5 year highs, and has returned nearly an incredible 8% for the first month of 2013. 

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It’s been a broad based run though. 

If the actions of the broader Russell 2000 (RUT) and Dow Transports (DJT) should serve as clues, then we are bound to see the Dow Industrials and the S&P in new record territory soon. That’s because both the RUT (brown) and DJT (black) are at fresh milestone highs.

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Japan’s Nikkei seems head to head with the US S&P 500, similar to the ongoing race between the Philippine Phisix and Thailand’s SET.

In the meantime, China’s Shanghai index powered up a substantial 5.57% weekly rally amidst a mixed economic picture. Manufacturing indicators grew less than expected while profits of industrial companies rose by 17% from last year according to Bloomberg[2].

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But it seems most likely that the spike in China’s Shanghai index has been more about the belated effects from the ramping up of stealth government stimulus channelled through State Owned Enterprises (SOE) as accounted for by the surge in Fixed Asset Investments (FAI)[3] in 2012 and from the previous efforts by China’s central bank, the PBoC, to inject record amount of money into the system[4].

Of course the prominent features of manias are the aggravation of misperceptions between widely held beliefs—reinforced by ascendant prices and the widespread dissemination of misinformation or even propaganda—and reality, which results to the chasm of mispricing.

One would note that in today’s asset boom, there have been many evidences of what seems as a parallel universe. 

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The double dip recession in Spain’s economy has reportedly worsened during the fourth quarter of 2012[5]. Compounding on this negative sentiment includes last week’s revelation of a corruption scandal by the ruling party for operating or maintaining a slush fund from the donations of the construction industry[6].

Spain’s Madrid Index slumped by 5.7% this week but still on the positive side; up 1.8% for the year. The Madrid index lost 4.33% in 2012. Yet the above chart shows that even if we consider this week’s losses, the Spanish equity bellwether surged by about 38% from the trough of July of last year. Such rally came amidst the worsening of the economy.

And what the parallel universe truly represents are the deepening malaise of the global monetary system.

And this should hold the same for the Philippine Phisix.

Current developments have only been validating my view since late 2012 where I hold that the Phisix will have a strong performance into at least the first quarter of 2013[7],
While no trend moves in a straight line, which means there should be interim corrections, we are likely to see a reinforcement of the yearend rally which perhaps may get extended until the first quarter of 2013.
And that if the low interest rate regime remains unperturbed from either internal or external developments for the rest of the year, then we may see a blowoff phase that may bring the Phisix near my long held target of 10,000[8].
For the Phsix, if domestic interest rates continue to remain low, perhaps we may see a blowoff phase (Phisix 8,000-8,500???) by the yearend.

Such boom may be compounded by the acceleration of capital flight into ASEAN from developed economies whose central banks have been massively expanding their balance sheets such as Japan whose outflows to Emerging Markets have been ballooning
And that one of the most prominent character of an inflationary boom will be an internal rotation.
Nonetheless, for as long as the inflationary boom remains, I also expect a rotation towards last year’s laggards: the mining sector and possibly the service industry.
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We are seeing signs of rotation alright. 

But the blistering property sector just took the lead from the mining sector with a fantastic 6.56% surge this week.

Now the mines and the property sector seem to be in a tight race for the leadership.

Yet the ongoing rotation means that the general prices of securities listed in the PSE have been increasing, although at different rates and at different times: yes, all signs of an inflationary boom.

Again given the severely overbought conditions it would seem natural for profit taking to rule the day. Yet 5 weeks into 2013, the bullish sentiment, which signify as manifestations of a ballooning mania, seem relentless.

Such dynamic hasn’t been exclusive to the Philippines but covers the world as well.
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With all the tsunami of money thrown to the US and Japan since 2008, there has been meagre impact on the real economy.

Yet one shouldn’t omit the fact that the marked decline of investments in both countries have become an attribute, not only from the recent bust, but from earlier bubble busts (1990s) for Japan and (2001 dot com bust) for the US.

The reason for the bubble bust is a predecessor bubble boom caused by interventionist policies. So if the boom has been caused by interventions, the bust has been applied with more interventions that led to another boom-bust cycle. So current policies have merely been recycling via the same prescriptions whose impact of has been one of diminishing returns.

Pimco’s Bond guru Bill Gross hits the nail in the head in his latest outlook[9],
Unless central banks and credit extending private banks can generate real or at second best, nominal growth with their trillions of dollars, euros, and yen, then the risk of credit market entropy will increase.
So central banks will either unleash more and more money or face the risk of credit market entropy.

Rising stock markets detached from the real economic developments represents a massive flaw of perception in the perspective of George Soros’ reflexivity theory

This marks the grand era of the global asset class bubbles.

Differentiating Economics from Statistics

Most people think that when they communicate by referring to statistics they are making an economic argument. The fact is that these people tend to confuse economic reasoning, which is supposed to be based on human action, with historical or ex-post activities which is what statistics truly represents. These people have been allured to view where science is seen as measurement.

But since human action is complex, this means that people respond differently to a combination of changes in social interrelationships, in people’s interaction with the environment and in changes of the stream of knowledge from such interplay of unique events. The point is the past cannot be relied on to foretell of the future simply because future circumstances are predominantly different from the past.

As the great Ludwig von Mises explained[10],
Experience of economic history is always experience of complex phenomena. It can never convey knowledge of the kind the experimenter abstracts from a laboratory experiment. statistics is a method for the presentation of historical facts concerning prices and other relevant data of human action. It is not economics and cannot produce economic theorems and theories. The statistics of prices is economic history. The insight that, ceteris paribus, an increase in demand must result in an increase in prices is not derived from experience. Nobody ever was or ever will be in a position to observe a change in one of the market data ceteris paribus. There is no such thing as quantitative economics. All economic quantities we know about are data of economic history. No reasonable man can contend that the relation between price and supply is in general, or in respect of certain commodities, constant.
The validation of my prediction of the Philippine property boom when it was yet at the fringes should be an example,

I wrote[11]:
Here is one more prediction.

The current “boom” phase will not be limited to the stock market but will likely spread across domestic assets.

This means that over the coming years, the domestic property sector will likewise experience euphoria.

For all of the reasons mentioned above, external and internal liquidity, policy divergences between domestic and global economies, policy traction amplified by savings, suppressed real interest rate, the dearth of systemic leverage, the unimpaired banking system and underdeveloped markets—could underpin such dynamics.
Then I was making a prediction predicated on how the markets will likely respond to first social policies, second, the prevailing state of the financial system and finally to the possible feedback mechanism between market forces and social policies. I was making use of theory buttressed by statistics to make my case.

When government and media chime in to say that 2012 economic growth has been “stellar”[12] which has been manifestations of “good economics” as consequence from good policies or from the political slogan of “good governance” assimilated by the incumbent authorities, they are essentially describing recent past events from where good news had been used as to generate political capital and passed off as an economic discussion

Yet hardly anyone dealt with the details to see if such ballyhooed economic growth deserves to be called good, if not sound or sustainable, economics.

Good’ economics or Bubble economics?

I have been warning about the growing risks of the shopping mall-property bubble.

Recent data sourced from the “good economics” department or from the Philippines’ National Statistics Coordination Board (NSCB) only reinforces my worries

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I have been saying that the real estate sector which has been experiencing an accelerating boom, partly via shopping malls[13] and mostly via high rise or vertical projects, has been vastly overestimating the potential growth of Filipino consumers.

In reaction to the low interest rate regime, popular theme, competition, overconfidence and mainstream ideological espousal of the ‘consumption economy’ has been prompting for an onrush to build capacity through credit expansion.

One would note that Filipino consumers as measured by the Household Financial Consumption Expenditure (HFCE)[14] in 2012 have grown 6.11% in constant prices and 9.18% in current prices. In 2011 growth was 6.3% constant and 11.41% current.

Contrast this to the growth in the real estate sector (which is part of the NSCB’s Gross Value Added in Real Estate, Rental & Business Activities[15]) where in 2012 expanded at the rate of 18.89% (constant prices) and 22.58% (current prices). In 2011, it was 16.54% constant and 21.77% current.

The difference is remarkable. The growth rate on the supply side has been more than double whether measured from constant and current prices. Basic economics tells us that at the current rate of growth, such imbalances would translate to a net doubling of supply in about 6 years. Oversupply will thus function as a symptom of the deeper problem called misallocation of resources fuelled by a credit boom.

Economic theory, particularly the Austrian Business Cycle, tells us that malinvestments, which represents distortions in the capital structure by artificially prompting for a shift in the public’s savings-consumption patterns induced by policy induced credit expansion, will lead to capital consumption via a systemic bust.

As the great dean of Austrian economics, Murray N. Rothbard wrote[16],
For businessmen, seeing the rate of interest fall, react as they always would and must to such a change of market signals: They invest more in capital and producers' goods. Investments, particularly in lengthy and time-consuming projects, which previously looked unprofitable now seem profitable, because of the fall of the interest charge. In short, businessmen react as they would react if savings had genuinely increased: They expand their investment in durable equipment, in capital goods, in industrial raw material, in construction as compared to their direct production of consumer goods.

Businesses, in short, happily borrow the newly expanded bank money that is coming to them at cheaper rates; they use the money to invest in capital goods, and eventually this money gets paid out in higher rents to land, and higher wages to workers in the capital goods industries. The increased business demand bids up labor costs, but businesses think they can pay these higher costs because they have been fooled by the government-and-bank intervention in the loan market and its decisively important tampering with the interest-rate signal of the marketplace.
Yet there are real economic risks from fallouts of bubble cycles.

The domestic hotel industry, for instance, hardly seems as a bubble. The industry has reported a growth of only 3.2% from 2004 until 2011[17] with most of the growth occurring at the upscale level which accounts for 57% of the hotel pie. Over the next five years growth will accelerate to 37% which implies 7.4% on the average. Yet the average foreign visitor growth has been at 8% a year[18], according to local economist.

Yet not all tourism is about foreign visitors. In fact, domestic tourists accounted for 59.1% share of tourism spending in 2011[19].

This implies that there is a risk of contagion from the prospects of a property-shopping mall bubble busts that can adversely impact on the tourism industry, despite being in a non-bubble state. But the impact will likely be less than her contemporaries. But again this will depend on how companies within the industry are leveraged.

This also exhibits the concentration or clustering effects of bubble cycles.

Theory likewise posits that economics cannot be treated as isolated variables, as all human actions are interconnected or deeply entwined.

For instance whether tourism, retail trade, food-agriculture, services, housing or other sectors including the government, all these sectors will compete for the limited Peso of the domestic consumers.

Aside, all these sectors will also compete for available resources in the domestic markets. The Philippine government’s proposed expenditures for Php 432.15 billion ($10.8 billion) of infrastructure projects[20] should also put strains on the available resources and labor in competition with booming sectors.

Economic theory also tells us that the competition for scarce resources from credit expansion will lead to relative increases in prices, and secondarily, but not necessarily to ‘general price levels’.

Again from the late Professor Rothbard[21],
as the early-eighteenth-century Irish French economist Richard Cantillon, that, in addition to this quantitative, aggregative effect, an increase in the money supply also changes the distribution of income and wealth. The ripple effect also alters the structure of relative prices, and therefore of the kinds and quantities of goods that will be produced, since the counterfeiters and other early receivers will have different preferences and spending patterns from the late receivers who are "taxed" by the earlier receivers. Furthermore, these changes of income distribution, spending, relative prices, and production will be permanent and will not simply disappear, as the quantity theorists blithely assume, when the effects of the increase in the money supply will have worked themselves out.
Today’s deepening of financialization reveals of how policy induced credit expansion tends to flow into asset prices and germinate into boom bust cycles rather than outright price inflation.

Moreover greater demand for credit will lead to higher interest rates that will put to risks marginal projects that have existed only because of artificially low interest rates.

Theory also suggests that faddish themes may represent as “displacements” or “new paradigms” that may be large and pervasive enough to fuel a bubble cycle as proposed by the late economist Hyman Minsky through the late author and historian Charles Kindleberger.

Mr. Kindleberger in Manias, Panics and Crashes wrote[22] (bold mine)
According to Minsky, events leading up to a crisis start with a “displacement,” some exogenous, outside shock to the macroeconomic system. The nature of this displacement varies from one speculative boom to another. It may be the outbreak or end of a war, a bumper harvest or crop failure, the widespread adoption of an invention with pervasive effects—canals, railroads, the automobile—some political event or surprising financial success, or debt conversion that precipitously lowers interest rates. An unanticipated change of monetary policy might constitute such a displacement and some economists who think markets have it right and governments wrong blame “policy-switching” for some financial instability. But whatever the source of the displacement, if it is sufficiently large and pervasive, it will alter the economic outlook by changing profit opportunities in at least one important sector of the economy. Displacement brings opportunities for profit in some new or existing lines and closes out others. As a result, business firms and individuals with savings or credit seek to take advantage of the former and retreat from the latter. If the new opportunities dominate those that lose, investment and production pick up. A boom is under way.
Moreover, faddish themes may also rely on stories to feed on the bubble cycle, as Gene Callahan and Austrian Professor Roger Garrison writes[23],
every bubble needs a story, which early investors can tell to later ones to justify rising asset price
The fictional tale of the consumption economy that underpins the shopping mall bubble fits such theories to a tee.

I have already mentioned the psychology of bubbles advocated by George Soros via the Reflexivity theory where people’s view of the market will be based on convictions or entrenched beliefs that departs from reality. Such perceptive failure will eventually be upended. So when people yammer about economic booms from zero bound rates we know how the public is being seduced by the outcome bias.

Theory also says that given the world of scarcity, we can only spend what we produce. In short, no economy can spend their way to prosperity. Artificial stimulants are likely to engender massive misallocation of the capital structure that will eventually backfire, as the Japan-US experience above.

While individuals may spend through income, or by running down on savings, or from borrowing, they can also generate spending from one-off events like winning the lottery, from inheritance or from theft.

However in the real economy, real spending growth for an economy emanates from productivity growth. Digital money entries or zero bound rates will not solve the problem of scarcity or opportunity costs. Credit based expenditures only frontloads such activities at the expense of the future.

And along that plane, since the basic economy is about people’s activities broken down into savings, consumption or investment, in looking at the potential effect of the real estate imbalances one doesn’t have to rely on government data alone, as if to imply that government statistics are infallible, accurate or even divine, one can look at real economic growth, per capita growth, wage levels and other related data, perhaps even provided by the private sector, or even the stock market to countercheck on the validity of imbalances.

So far the growth rates of the Philippine real estate sector appear to confirming the rate of the industry’s borrowings to bankroll their growth.

As I previously pointed the BSP noted[24] that last November on a year on year basis, real estate, renting, and business services borrowing soared by a hefty 24.8 percent while wholesale and retail trade by 26.9 percent.

So from the bubble theories of the Austrian school, Hyman Minsky-Charles Kindleberger, George Soros or even from the behavioral  perspective, what is said of good economics is really about bubble economics

Welcoming the Greater Fool 

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This week’s astronomical 6.56% sprint by the domestic property sector may have been parlaying the manic-blowoff phase in the Phisix and exhibiting signs of the property-shopping mall economic bubble.

The rally was actually spearheaded by Ayala Land’s [PSE: ALI; black candle] phenomenal 9.9% weekly gains combined by the exemplary performances by the other heavyweights as SM Prime Holdings [PSE:SMPH; red line] 5.89% and Megaworld [PSE: MEG; blue line].

From the market troughs of 2009, the returns of the top 4 majors, has been 510%, 287% and, 489% respectively. One of the fourth biggest property market cap Robinson’s Land Corporation [PSE: RLC] yielded 269% over the same period.

Unless there would be a major positive development in the consumer front, I don’t believe that those prices are manifesting the state of the industry’s economics.

Such accelerating gains only signify the time where the public have come to believe that stock markets are all about easy money or free lunches.

I am thus reminded by the legendary trader Jesse Livermore, whom I will quote again[25],
But the average man doesn’t wish to be told that it is a bull or bear market. What he desires is to be told specifically which particular stock to buy or sell. He wants to get something for nothing. He does not wish to work. He doesn’t even wish to have to think. It is too much bother to have to count the money that he picks up from the ground.
The same “something for nothing” speculative orgy has been the mirror image of the same “something for nothing” policies that has led the public astray and straight into a virtual trap of bubble cycles.

The Greater Fool theory[26] —the theory premised on hope where making money from stocks would mean buying securities, whether overvalued or not, and later selling them at a profit based on the anticipation that there will always be someone (a bigger or greater fool) who is willing to pay the higher price—which is largely momentum trading or price chasing actions will become the dominant feature of the market

Let me be clear. We are seeing increasing signs of a blowoff phase. Yet such mania doesn’t automatically mean the end of the cycle or a reversal or inflection point today, or perhaps this year. It means that the feedback loop of the market’s prices and the real economy will extrapolate to an acceleration of leverage in the economic and the financial system—which is where all the risks lies.

And as the boom prevails, people’s risk appetite grows. Lending standards will decline as borrows jump into the bandwagon to take advantage of what appears as free lunches in the stock market and the property sector.

In addition, as I have been saying if interest rates remain at current low levels throughout the year, then we may see the Phisix hit 8,000-8,500 or even more. That’s a big IF.

Yet markets will be driven ultimately by the actions policymakers.

And as previously discussed, 1993 brought about a stratospheric 154% nominal returns for the Phisix. Huge extraordinary gains are the typical outcomes of manic phases. I am not suggesting for 154% returns, I am saying that it would not be a surprise to see really enormous gains if indeed we are in such a transition. But as markets get higher, risks also becomes bigger.

And yet the build up of credit risks will likely become apparent over the coming year or two. And this will be accompanied by more entrenched belief by the public of “good governance equals good economics” charade which will be exposed when the bubble pops.

In the meantime, fasten your seatbelt enjoy your ride while it lasts.







[4] See On China’s New Leaders November 19, 2013




[8] See What to Expect in 2013, January 7, 2013

[9] William H. Gross Credit Supernova! February 2013 PIMCO



[12] Inquirer.net Stellar economic growth at 6.6%, February 1, 2013




[16] Murray N. Rothbard Economic Depressions: Their Cause and Cure, The Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle and Other Essays Mises.org p.83


[18] Gerardo Sicat Philippine foreign tourism — promising but still behind February 10, 2012 PER SE Economics Department of UP

[19] World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2012 Philippines


[21] Murray N. Rothbard, The Case Against the Fed, p.25 Mises.org

[22] Charles Kindleberger Manias, Panics and Crashes John Wiley & Sons 1996 p.12. Also quoted at CyclesMan.net


[24] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Bank Lending Continues to Grow in November January 17, 2013


[26] Investopedia.com Greater Fool Theory