Showing posts with label commodity politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commodity politics. Show all posts

Monday, October 20, 2014

Phisix: Real Time Market Crashes and The S&P Smells Domestic Credit Bubbles

The advice that sounds the best in the short run is always the most dangerous in the long run. Everyone wants the secret, the key, the roadmap to the primrose path that leads to El Dorado: the magical low-risk, high-return investment that can double your money in no time. Everyone wants to chase the returns of whatever has been hottest and to shun whatever has gone cold. Most financial journalism, like most of Wall Street itself, is dedicated to a basic principle of marketing: When the ducks quack, feed ‘em. --Jason Zweig

In this Issue

Phisix: Real Time Market Crashes and The S&P Smells Domestic Credit Bubbles
-Strong US Dollar Wreaks Havoc to Asia’s Stock Markets
-Bulls Desperately Yearns For Steroids
-Have Stock Market’s Price Discovery and Discounting Function Been Lost? The Russell 2000 Example
-Phisix: The Massaging of the 7,000 Level
-Real Time Market Crashes: the Appetizer, the Main Course and the Dessert
-The S&P Smells Credit Bubbles in the Philippines

Phisix: Real Time Market Crashes and The S&P Smells Domestic Credit Bubbles

What a week.

Volatility has returned with a stunning vengeance!

Strong US Dollar Wreaks Havoc to Asia’s Stock Markets

I have warned in mid-September[1] that the sharp rise of the US dollar index has traditionally been accompanied or has highlighted a risk OFF environment.
Yet a rising US dollar has usually been associated with de-risking or a risk OFF environment. Last June 2013’s taper tantrum incident should serve an example.
The US dollar index zoomed by a whopping 8.7% from July until its recent peak October 3. Since the October zenith, the US dollar index has retraced some 1.7%. 


The recent cascade in Asian currencies, based on Bloomberg-JP ADXY (upper window) relative to the US dollar, has been in conjunction with swooning Asian ex-Japan stocks (AAXJ).

The ADXY as I recently explained[2] comprises of the Chinese yuan 38.16%, Korean won 12.98%, Singapore dollar 11.07% Hong Kong dollar 9.22% Indian rupee 8.75% Taiwan dollar 6.1% Thai baht 4.92% Malaysian ringgit 4.3% Indonesia rupiah 2.85% and Philippine peso 1.65%.

The descend of Asian currencies only commenced at the end of August even as the US dollar index has risen against her Developed Market (DM) peers since July. The reinvigoration of the US dollar index undergirds a transmission mechanism which for me represents a symptom of the diffusion of declining “liquidity”.

Since the debilitation of Asian currencies, many major Asian equity benchmarks have exhibited meaningful deterioration in prices: based from the recent highs relative to Friday’s close; Japan’s Nikkei has been down 11.1%, Australia’s All Ordinaries off by 7%, Taiwan’s TWII retraced by 10.5% which has been larger than the June 2013 Taper Tantrum where the TWII lost 8.8%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slid 9%, South Korea’s KOSPI dropped by 8.7% and Singapore’s STI down by 5.54%.


But of course, I doubt that this scenario will last, since we seem to be seeing a spreading of the outbreak of the US dollar triggered global asset deflation.

As I recently noted[3]
Developed Asia has apparently borne the brunt of the selling pressures relative to emerging Asia. Apparently, this has been due to the stronger US dollar which has affected the relatively more export dependent nations.

Also the degree of response differs.

In June 2013, Developed Asia’s drastic response has equally been met by dramatic recoveries. For emerging Asia, the recovery has been gradual and only picked up speed during the second quarter of 2014.

So a divergence developed, emerging Asia’s belated ferocious rally came in the face where developed Asia began to reveal signs of stock market strains as the US dollar gained momentum against the region's currencies.

Developed Asia’s weakness has been reinforced by the US. Since the US has been de facto leader of the world, in terms of central bank sponsored debt financed asset inflation, the recent tremors in her booming overextended and overvalued stock markets has spread to cover most of the major world equity benchmarks. Such strains seems to have diffused to Asia’s high flyers which aside from ASEAN, includes the New Zealand (NZ50), India (SENSEX) and even Vietnam (Ho Chi Minh).

So divergences seem as transitioning into convergence.

As one would note, initial pressures surfaced on Emerging Markets (June 2013), then this spread to Developed Markets (revealed by divergent market internals), and now a seeming convergence (both developed and emerging markets)—the periphery to the core dynamic.

The feedback from such phenomenon loops in a two way transmission mechanism. If the downside volatility will continue to reassert its presence in the stock markets of developed economies led by the US, then this should reinforce the current convergence downhill trend in Asia and in emerging markets. And pressures on Asia and EM markets will likewise reverberate on Developed Markets.
From the mainstream perspective weak currencies translates to strong exports. This hasn’t been true. But this hasn’t been the issue.

Yet current events have been more than an issue of exports but of liquidity and debt. 

When Asian central banks support their domestic currency, they effectively sell their foreign currency reserves and buy local currency mainly through the banking system. The current infirmities in Asian currencies has led to either the cresting or to declining foreign exchange reserves for many Asian governments such as Hong Kong (September), South Korea (September), Singapore (September), Australia (August), India (October), Malaysia (August), Thailand (September) and the Philippines (September). 

Indonesia’s rupiah has been testing the January 2014 lows (USD-IDR). Curiously, Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves as of September 2014 have been rising since July 2013 (but still down 10.8% from July 2011 record high). This ironically comes in the face of swelling twin deficits, particularly fiscal deficit (2013), a big part of which has been from fuel and electricity subsidies, and current account deficit (2Q 2014). It looks as if the Indonesian government has been stuffing their foreign exchange reserves through external borrowings in 2013 or as seen from 11% year-on-year growth based on August figures from Bank of Indonesia. This may have been intended to superficially improve their macro outlook

The siphoning of domestic currency in the financial system could be seen as partial tightening. This is unless the domestic banking system continues to rollout liquidity through credit expansion to neutralize such actions.

Yet weak domestic currency relative to a strong US dollar means more domestic currency required to pay for US denominated liabilities.


The region, like a sponge, has been soaking up humungous amount of foreign (aside from domestic) debt, Morgan Stanley recently warned that emerging Asia’s foreign debt has ballooned to $2.5 trillion from $300 billion over the last decade, which has “surpassed extremes seen just before” the Asian financial crisis[4]. The above is an example of the dramatic upscaling of Asia’s foreign borrowing growth (chart from Financial Times’ Alphaville).

A weak domestic currency relative to stronger US dollar also means more domestic currencies required to pay for imports which should add to consumer price inflation pressures.

Price instabilities from currency volatility function as obstacles to real economic growth as they distort economic calculation and the economic coordination process.

Yet price instabilities are products of interventionism, or in the present case inflationism, as part of the financial repression policies.

So systemic high debt levels in and of itself are stumbling blocks to economic growth, while slowing growth increases risks of a credit event. Because high debt levels extrapolates to increased fragility, thus they are vastly sensitive to changes in domestic and foreign interest rates, foreign exchange ratios and inflation rates which may serve as a trigger for their unraveling.

Thus a sustained rise in the US dollar relative to Asia and emerging Asia increases the risks of a regional credit event.

Coming from an electrified ramp, the US dollar index and the US dollar-Asian currencies for now seems in a pause. So the lull may serve as a window for a technical bounce. 


With the collapse in the yields of US treasury long term (10 year notes and 30 year bonds), I doubt if such hiatus will last.

Bulls Desperately Yearns For Steroids

Yes a technical bounce may be due early next week.

Friday’s monster ‘short covering’ rally in US-European markets from oversold conditions should filter into Asia. But the question is how lasting will this rebound be?

Friday’s gigantic rally has been largely anchored from hopes of more central banking support.

The seeds of Friday’s rally have been sown when San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams said that “If we really get a sustained, disinflationary forecast ... then I think moving back to additional asset purchases in a situation like that should be something we should seriously consider”[5]

US markets recovered from Thursday’s over 1% lows for the S&P and Dow Jones Industrials when St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard said “Inflation expectations are declining in the U.S. That’s an important consideration for a central bank. And for that reason I think that a logical policy response at this juncture may be to delay the end of the QE.”[6]

Markets starved for support responding in exemplary Pavlovian classical conditioning fashion may have read Mr. Williams and Mr. Bullard’s statements as representing the sentiment of the Fed.

Friday’s run came as the European Central Bank’s Benoit Coeure stated that they will “start buying assets within days”[7].

Such statements intended to mitigate the current selloff demonstrates what I have been saying as political agents fearful of short term consequences from a financial market downturn: I recognize the problem of addiction but a withdrawal syndrome would even be more cataclysmic

It has been in a not so distant past we saw the same furious degree of rally, predicated on Fed minutes which signaled an extended low interest rates regime and a talk down of the US dollar, only to be neutralized the following day, so a fantastic rollercoaster ride in a span of two days (October 8th and 9th). What this suggests has been of the narrowing room for the market’s permissiveness to central bank jawboning.

Will the effect of last week’s signaling of more S-T-I-M-U-L-U-S last longer? Or will the recent past repeat?

Have Stock Market’s Price Discovery and Discounting Function Been Lost? The Russell 2000 Example
When the bulls stormed back to reclaim the Philippine Phisix 7,400 which they failed to hold, I wrote[8],

Logic also tells us why the current stock market conditions are unsustainable: Has the stock market permanently lost its fundamental function as a discounting mechanism for it to permit or tolerate a perpetual state of severe mispricing as seen by excessive valuations of securities???

If the answer is YES, then PEs of 30, 40,50, 60 and PBVs 3,4,5,6,7 can reach, in the words of cartoon Toy Story character Buzz Lightyear “to infinity and beyond”!!!

If the answer is NO, then the obverse side of every mania is a crash.
Take the US small cap Russell 2000 (RUT), which has been the de facto leader to the current downturn of the US markets. 

From its twin March and July peaks (double top?) to its recent lows last week, the small cap benchmark has declined by 13%. Yet following the substantial two day bounce, the RUT remains down 10.45% as of Friday. 


Yet according to Wall Street Data’s market data center on P/E and Yields of Major Indices, RUTs trailing 12 month PE ratio remains at a staggering 69.99 also as of Friday. Bulls would say this is a buy. But such a call would be absurd for the simple reason of overpaying for a security or egregious mispricing. Unless the rate of earnings growth races far far far faster than its price increase, increases in the RUT equates to PE multiple expansion. 

Yet based on small business sentiment from National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) survey in September[9], optimism seems to have climaxed. Small business optimism has hardly grown in 2013. However there has been a short burst of optimism sometime in the second quarter from whence it has been a struggle. Government mandates, red tape and taxes remain as the largest impediment to small business growth according to the survey.

So there has barely been any worthwhile justification for buying at current levels since doing so would necessitate reliance on a “Greater Fool” who would expect PE ratio to rise to even more ridiculous levels. When crowds buy because of expectations of a greater fool, then this isn’t about investing but about GAMBLING.

For the week, the RUT closed 2.8% up. But according to the Bank of America, the small cap rebound has been due to “net short positioning largest since 2008 after fifth consecutive week of selling.”[10] In short, the RUT’s rebound has essentially been about a massive short squeeze. 

Such massive short squeeze, which represents the “biggest weekly short-squeeze in 11 months” according to the Zero Hedge has been evident in the most shorted issues and has contributed to the “miraculous surge in Dow Transports, Small Caps, and Homebuilders”[11]

That’s exactly the role of modern day inflationism: destroy the market’s price discovery mechanism so that people will be hardwired to see asset levitation as permanent feature.

Unfortunately some political groups seem to have realized that such an arrangement isn’t sustainable.

An example the IMF[12] (bold mine, italics original): Policymakers are facing a new global imbalance: not enough economic risk-taking in support of growth, but increasing excesses in financial risk-taking posing stability challenges… At the same time, prolonged monetary ease has encouraged the buildup of excesses in financial risk-taking. This has resulted in elevated prices across a range of financial assets, credit spreads too narrow to compensate for default risks in some segments, and, until recently, record-low volatility, suggesting that investors are complacent. What is unprecedented is that these developments have occurred across a broad range of asset classes and across many countries at the same time. Finally, corporate leverage has continued to rise in emerging markets.

Phisix: The Massaging of the 7,000 Level

Such perversion of market mechanism can also be seen in the Philippines.

The Philippine Phisix would have seen larger losses if not for price massaging last Thursday.

The 2.78% dive by the domestic equity benchmark last Monday has been offset by mid-week gains. The Phisix closed 2.29% over the week.

Following the 1% decline in the US markets, the Phisix opened Thursday down by 44 points.

But certain entities ensured that the downside momentum wouldn’t take hold. So the same parties spent three-fourths of the session in a scramble to push up 3 key index heavyweight issues in order to buoy the index. At the pinnacle, the Phisix approached the 1% gain while almost all bourses in the region hemorrhaged, except for Australia ASX 200 which closed marginally higher (.18%). Even Indonesia’s JCI which was marginally up near the end of the session closed in the red.

It was a bizarre spectacle: Domestic panic buying in the face of an apprehensive region!

At one point I even asked myself, have domestic punters become so dense?

When the session closed, market breadth didn’t share the sanguinity of the Phisix. Declining issues were down relative to advancers by a ratio of almost 2:1. The day’s 37.39 or .53% gains had been centered again on a two sector-three company pump.

Yet this can’t be about momentum, since the attempted crossover to a new high, momentum seems to have faded. Monday’s 2.78% drubbing underscored this point.

The only possible explanation for such peculiar reaction has most likely been not about profits but about symbolisms.

The 7,000 level has served as a symbolical trophy which wounded bulls have been reluctant to relinquish and has fought fiercely to hold. Or that stock market operator/s had to ensure that 7,000 level would be maintained regardless of valuations or profits but for other agenda.

As I recently wrote[13],
Phisix 7,000 and 7,400 will have to be reclaimed as the 2016 national election nears. Rising stocks because of G-R-O-W-T-H may help spur chances for a re-election or for the election of an appointed representative. So much of these 3 company pump or massaging of the Phisix may have been part of the publicity machinery campaign to boost the political capital of the incumbent. If public pension money have been used, then pensioners may likely face future funding problems.

Sad to say economic realities have began resurface which should upend and expose all the delusions that has enthralled the public during the past 6 years.

The bottom line: the obverse side of every mania is a crash.
Real Time Market Crashes: the Appetizer, the Main Course and the Dessert 

The obverse side of every mania is a crash.

This isn’t just my slogan anymore, it has become a reality.


There is no exact numerical threshold to define a crash.

However if stocks of developed economies as Japan and Taiwan fall by 5% in a week, this looks like a crash for me. Emerging Asia Vietnam has been the third nation to fall over 5% for this week. For three Asian national benchmarks to collapse is a worrying sign for me. 

But this is just the appetizer.

Now to the main course.


If Friday’s titanic rally (see red bars) has made people believe that Europe’s crash[14] has been averted then they are misreading the whole market action.

Let me cite an example: Greece’s Athens Index flew by 7.21% Friday, but at the end of the week the same Greek index has been down by a staggering -7.27%. This implies that Friday’s rally chipped off only half of the Greek benchmark’s horrific losses over the week. Without Friday’s gains, the Greek bellwether would have been down by a shocking 14.4%!

Those huge gains last Friday has not been able to cover the weekly losses (blue bars) of Portugal (-3.36%), Italy (-2.6%) and Spain (-2%).

I placed a green oval on them for emphasis.

Interestingly, Friday’s stock market surge has also failed to erase the weekly losses of the bigger European peers, France 1%, Switzerland 1.5% and Netherlands 1.8%.

In addition, it has not been just stocks anymore. Pressures have begun to spillover to Europe’s periphery bonds. The Greek government’s 10 year bonds have endured most of the selloff so far, followed by Portugal, Italy and Spain.

Once market carnage shifts to cover bonds then a crisis can be expected.

So will Europe has fully recover this week’s crash? Or will the crash find a second wind? My bet is on the latter.

Bullish eh?

Now for the dessert.


Since oil has collapsed to $80 level, apparently equity benchmarks of Gulf oil producing nations have crashed by even a larger scale.

As caveat, since their bourses have been closed last Friday, they haven’t partaken of the rally which should come early this week.

Anyway, Oman’s Muscat has collapsed by 7.06%, UAE’s Dubai Financial crashed 9.84% and Saudi’s Tadawul dived by 12.02%! Nonetheless year to date the returns have mostly been positive: Bahrain 15.87%, Oman .55%, Saudi 24.69% and UAE 26.73%. Kuwait is the exception down -1.84%. The obverse side of every mania is a crash.

A collapse in oil prices has very significant ramifications for the welfare states of these nations. Current levels of oil prices have now been below the break-even point to maintain the welfare states of most oil producing nations. Only Kuwait, UAE and Qatar have a small surplus.

It’s not just welfare state, sinking oil prices will affect the region’s economic activities, debt exposure as well as domestic, regional and geopolitics.

Here is what I recently wrote[15]
Some will argue that this should help consumption which subsequently implies a boost on “growth”, but I wouldn’t bet on it.

Current events don’t seem to manifest a problem of oversupply. To the contrary current developments in the oil markets seem to signify a problem of shrinking global liquidity and slowing economic demand whose deadly cocktail mix has been to spur the incipient phase of asset deflation (bubble bust)

Others argue that this could part of an alleged “predatory pricing” scheme designed as foreign policy tool engaged by some of major oil producers to strike at Russia, Iran or even against Shale gas producers in the US.

This would hardly be a convincing case since doing so would mean to inflict harm on the oil producers themselves in order to promote a flimsy case of “market share” or to “punish” other governments.

Say Shale oil. There are LOTS more at stake for welfare states of OPEC-GCC nations than are from the private sector shale operators (mostly US). Shale operators may close operations or defer investments until prices rise again. There could also be new operators who could pick up the slack from existing “troubled” Shale oil and gas operators. Such aren’t choices available for oil dependent welfare governments of oil producing nations. As one would note from the above table from Wall Street Journal, at current prices only Kuwait, the UAE and Qatar remains as oil producers with marginal surpluses.

And a shortfall from oil revenues means to dip on reserves to finance public spending. And once these resources drain out from a prolonged oil price slump, the risks of a regional Arab Spring looms.

And the heightened risk of Arab Springs would further complicate the region’s social climate tinderbox. Add to this the economic impact from a weak oil prices-strong dollar, regional malinvestments would compound on the region’s fragility.

Thus, the adaption of "predatory pricing" supposedly aimed at punishing other governments would only aggravate the region’s already dire conditions that risks a widespread unraveling towards total regional chaos.
Let me add more. Government adaption of "predatory pricing" will have far reaching effects than just economics. That’s because governments of oil producing nations have the welfare functions to consider. And it is because of such welfare mechanism that has provided political privileges to those incumbent leaders such that losing grip on political power would hardly be an option. So there will most likely be counteractions. The repercussions won’t be seen in media until it becomes evident.

Saudi Arabia has lately stated that they will protect their oil market share[16]. What if those affected oil welfare deficit governments resist? What if Russia or any of Saudi’s chief adversaries, say Iran, for instance finance rogue groups within Saudi to sabotage the latter’s pipelines? 


So predatory pricing will spur more geopolitical complications that would heighten the region’s stability risks already hobbled by intensifying wars.

Greater stability risks in the Middle East are bullish for stocks?

The S&P Smells Credit Bubbles in the Philippines

I was once the lone crusader in saying that the Philippine financial markets and her economy has been a bubble.

Not anymore. The establishment is beginning to smell of bubbles, as in the case of the S&P.

From Bloomberg[17]: (bold mine)
By year-end, Philippine companies would take as long as a record four years to repay debt using operating earnings, said Xavier Jean, the Singapore-based director of corporate ratings at Standard & Poor’s. By comparison, the figure is one year or less for Indonesian businesses, and about two years for Malaysian ones. Philippine corporate exposure to foreign debt climbed to 26 percent of total debt last year from 15 percent in 2011, he said, citing a study of 100 Southeast Asian firms.

“The big risk is that they mis-time market conditions and they don’t slow down capital spending soon enough before another financial crisis occurs,” Jean said in an Oct. 15 interview. “If one of the conglomerates starts facing some financial tightness, you could have confidence issues between the banking system and the conglomerates.”
More…
“At present, we view refinancing risk as moderate because companies have a lot of cash,” Jean said. “But large cash balances aren’t going to remain there forever if they keep spending the cash they have.”

In a financial crisis, company revenue and cash flows can suffer, creating the potential of short-term debt repayment problems, he said. In such a situation, banks mightn’t be willing to extend additional lines of credit, he said.

Debt held by the 17 Philippine companies included in the study nearly trebled to $40.7 billion in the first quarter of this year from end-2008, S&P estimated.
On San Miguel…
San Miguel, the biggest Philippine company, saw its debt surge more than five fold to 631.9 billion pesos ($14 billion) in the second quarter from end-2008 as it expanded into energy and infrastructure, according to data compiled by Bloomberg…
Debt Servicing…
The median ratio of net debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of Philippine companies is estimated to be 3.5 times to 4 times by the end of 2014, from 1.9 times in 2008, S&P’s Jean said.

The companies reviewed had varied financial risk profiles, S&P said in an Oct. 7 report. About 30 percent had large debt loads while some 25 percent had conservative balance sheets with moderate-to-low debt levels, according to the report.
The S&P rightly reads on the statistics of the surfacing Philippine debt problem. This is only because the substance of debt growth rates and levels can’t be ignored anymore.

However, the S&P fails to appreciate debt’s logical connection to the political economy, as well as how financial crisis unfolds.

In one of his latest speeches the BSP chief gives an update of the banking system[18]; as of March 2014, the Philippine banking system had 37.8 million depositors who had saved 7.7 trillion pesos in 46 million deposit accounts. 

The implication here is that of the 100 million population, only 37.8% are banked. I am not sure how the BSP defines “depositors” so I’ll just take on the top line number as it is. But if depositors include corporations, partnerships or even perhaps same individuals then the banking penetration number level could be a lot smaller than the nominal number cited.

My point is here is that there are only a minority group of people who have access to the banking and financial system.

Because only a minority group of people have access to the banking and financial system, debt absorption by these segment of people due to zero bound rates will tend to be large. This implies that both benefits and risks have been concentrated.

So consumer debt in the Philippines has been low because of the lack of access by the majority to the formal banking system. So it would foolhardy to make a statistical comparison with nations whose consumers have larger access to formal sector debt as against consumers who hardly share the same faculties or even on overall debt levels alone.

In addition because Philippine economic opportunities have been cornered by the elite where “just 40 of the country’s richest famillies account for, control and enjoy the benefits of 76 per cent of annual production” according to analyst Martin Spring, this means most of the country’s debt has been concentrated on the myriad of companies owned by these elites.

A wonderful example is San Miguel Corp, my prime candidate for a Lehman moment, whose debt which the Bloomberg quotes at 631.9 billion pesos ($14 billion) likely includes short, long term debt and financial lease liabilities[19].

In perspective, as of June 2014, the Philippine banking system’s total resources have been quoted at Php 10.606 trillion. So SMC’s liabilities represents around a startling 5.9% of the Philippine banking system! While a significant segment of SMC may come from non-banking sector debt, outside foreign holders of SMC debt, SMC’s debt papers may likely be held by domestic banks or by non bank financial institutions or by individuals (mostly elites through the formal financial system). Again this is because given the lack of access to the formal banking system by the majority, financial depth has been limited. In short SMC’s bank and non bank loans will circulate within the same concentrated system.

This implies that the supply side, which SMC has been part of, has provided the bulk of the statistical economic growth through the accelerated racking up of debt. And because of the rapid outgrowth in debt levels the supply side has now become too dependent on zero bound.

But again even at zero bound, debt has natural limits. Philippine debt uptake has become too evident to disregard, such that the usually blind establishment can already see them

And because the supply side which again has been the key source of demand for the economy, from which debt levels has grown far more than the output it provides, see 2Q GDP BSP Loan ratios table here, this means that if these companies follow the S&P’s prescription to “slow down capital spending soon enough” then the economic growth in the formal economy will follow suit or statistical economic growth will swoon.

And a slowdown in growth will bring about “confidence issues” that would lead to “financial tightness” and expose on the nature or degree of credit risks in the system.

And the reason there still has been a lot of cash has been because there is still “confidence” in the system, whereby access to the financial system remains ‘loose’ thus the system remains highly ‘liquid’.

However when confidence becomes an issue, or once there will be a corrosion in confidence such would lead to “financial tightness”. For instance a financial system margin call will evaporate excess cash almost instantaneously. Likewise, all assets will have to be repriced to reflect on the intensified demand to raise and acquire cash in order to settle obligations. And since every participant had been doing the same thing during the boom (borrow and spend), then the corollary would be that same participants will do the same thing when credit issues arise (sell to pay back loans).

Credit expansion led to money supply growth which provided artificial boost to the economy. In contrast credit contraction will shrink money supply and lead to a recession and a crisis due to the intensive build up of imbalances.

So whatever fundamentals we are seeing today (under the ambiance of confidence) will vastly be different with the fundamentals in the future (under the face of loss of confidence). Remember, confidence signifies a behavioral response or a symptom of entropic fundamental underpinnings. They don’t just happen.

The establishment is starting to grasp at what I have been saying all along.

The obverse side of every mania is a crash.







[4] Ambrose Evans Pritchard Morgan Stanley warns on Asian debt shock as dollar soars Telegraph.co.uk September 29, 2014














[18] Amando M Tetangco, Jr: Banking on social safety nets Balikat ng Bayan Awarding Ceremonies and the launching of the Personal Equity and Savings Option Fund of the Social Security System, September 25, 2014

[19] San Miguel Corporation Sec Form 17-Q Second Quarter 2014 p 29

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

War on Gold: CME and Shanghai Gold Raises Gold, Silver Margins

image
Gold’s has been utterly clobbered for the past two days. Yesterday price of gold got crucified down by 8.71%. Silver had also been razed down 12.48%

Part of that steep dive has been exacerbated by the raising of trading margin requirements from the CME and the Shanghai Gold Exchange.

From the Bloomberg:
CME Group Inc. (CME) increased the margin requirements on gold trading after prices plunged.

The minimum cash deposit for gold futures will rise 19 percent to $7,040 per 100-ounce contract at the close of trading tomorrow, Chicago-based CME said in a statement. For silver, the minimum cash deposit was raised to $12,375 from $10,450.

The CME’s Comex unit is making it more expensive for speculators to trade after gold fell the most in 33 years today, dropping to the lowest since February 2011, after prices entered a bear market last week. Silver, also in a bear market, slumped 11 percent today and extended the year’s loss to 23 percent.
From CityIndex.co.uk (bold original)
The plunge in gold and silver was also accelerated by reports that the Shanghai Gold Exchange may hike margins on gold and silver contracts to 12% and 15%. Margin hikes were carried out in 2011 by Comex in order to stabilize speculation, whereas an increase in Shanghai following violent price plunge may reflect the stability of the Exchange’s clearinghouse.
Intervening supposedly to “stabilize” gold-silver markets apparently backfired.

Yet two exchanges doing the same thing, as if they had been coordinated.

Such actions signify as the proverbial “kick a man when he is down” or may have been meant to ensure that gold-silver’s decline continues.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Why the Neo-Malthusian Premise of “Peak Resources” are Misguided

Writing at the Daily Reckoning, Chris Mayer, managing editor for several newsletters has a rejoinder to neo-Malthusians led by GMO’s Jeremy Grantham.
Yet whether it is oil or copper or iron ore or whatever resource, people insist on relying on the same faulty reasoning that “the easy stuff is gone.” They continue to make the same tired case for chronic natural resource shortages and a decline in our standard of living.

The great economist Joseph Schumpeter’s (1883-1950) criticism of the Malthusian position still holds. On Malthus and his ilk, he wrote: “The most interesting thing to observe is the complete lack of imagination which that vision reveals. Those writers lived at the threshold of the most spectacular economic developments ever witnessed.” Yet they missed it.

So here is my prediction: I believe we are on the cusp of even greater levels of innovation and development — another industrial revolution is in progress right now. So ignore the gloom and doom on natural resources. Contra Grantham, the days of abundant resources and falling prices are far from over.
Mr. Mayer is basically right.

But today’s high prices of commodities hasn’t just been a function of market prices operating from a laissez faire environment but importantly represents interventionism on a massive scale, particularly from central banks, whose inflationism has resulted to severe economic distortions that has been reflected on market prices. In short, prices of commodities may also represent monetary dislocations. 

Also the mining-energy industry, for instance, are tightly regulated, where regulations serve to inhibit supplies. There is also a political bias for green energy that has caused economic disruptions at the costs of taxpayers.

Nonetheless, despite these interventions, I would add that trends towards improving the supply side, buttressed by technology, are on the way. In the world of commodities, notably deep sea mining and asteroid mining are great examples.

On deep sea mining from wired.com
Deep-sea mining is poised as a major growth industry over the next decade, as large developing-world populations drive consumer demand for metal-containing products, climate change makes previously inaccessible regions like the Arctic Ocean seabed attainable, and improved extraction technologies turn previously uneconomical rock into paydirt.

Cindy Van Dover is a Professor of Biological Oceanography at Duke University and a leading voice in the development of policy and management strategies for deep-sea extraction activities.  Van Dover has studied the ecology of hydrothermal vents for years, and she takes a measured, pragmatic approach to the coming industrialization of her study sites.  If mining is going to happen – a event that the more strident faction of the environmental movement will no doubt contest – “we need to work with industry to make sure we do it right,” says Van Dover.
Taking a leaf out of deep sea mining, asteroid mining seems also in the pipeline. From Mining.com
A newly launched asteroid miner is looking to the history of deep sea mining as it attempts to navigate laws governing exploitation of space.

Deep Space Industries, which rolled out its plan for space mining today at a news conference in the Santa Monica Museum of Flying in California, said the laws regarding resource mining beyond the earth are largely unformed, and the company will rely on co-operation between the main players. (Video embed of the press conference is below.)

"If you look at parallels, like deep sea mining, that went forward without a global treaty. The companies that wanted to do deep sea mining shook hands: 'We won't interfere with you if you don't interfere with us', that was the general approach going forward," said David Gump, Deep Space's chief executive officer.

Gump said the company will be relying on the 1967 space treaty, which he says will give the company the right to utilize space resources but will not grant the right to claim any sovereign territory.
Like the shale gas boom which has exposed the major flaws in the economic interpretation of “peak oil theory”, neo-Malthusians always mistakenly construe the causal link of prices as signifying a fixed pie for the supply side while downplaying the importance of human capital in providing innovation that contributes to the rebalancing of the economics of commodities.

Professor Don Boudreaux aptly quotes the great Julian Simon from his 1996 book The Ultimate Resource 2 
“[N]atural resources are not finite in any meaningful economic sense, mind-boggling though this assertion may be.  The stocks of them are not fixed but rather are expanding through human ingenuity.”

Monday, October 22, 2012

China’s Cumulative Gold Imports Surpasses ECB Holdings

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China’s total gold imports has surpassed ECB holdings with imports from Australia soaring by 900%

The Zero Hedge notes (italics original)
First it was more than the UK. Then more than Portugal. Then a month ago we said that as of September, "it is now safe to say that in 2012 alone China has imported more gold than the ECB's entire official 502.1 tons of holdings." Sure enough, according to the latest release from the Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department, through the end of August, China had imported a whopping gross 512 tons of gold, 10 tons more than the latest official ECB gold holdings. We can now safely say that as of today, China will have imported more gold than the 11th largest official holder of gold, India, with 558 tons….

one unspinnable aftereffect of China's relentless appetite for gold comes from a different place, namely Australia, where gold just surpassed coal as the second most valuable export to China. From Bullionstreet: 

Australia's gold sales to China hit $4.1 billion in the first eight months of this year as it surged by a whopping 900 percent.

According to Australian Bureau of Statistics, the yellow metal became the second most valuable physical export to China, surpassing coal and only behind iron ore…. 

In other words, take the chart above, showing only Chinese imports through HK, and add tens if not hundreds more tons of gold entering the country from other underreported export channels such as Australia. One thing is certain: China no longer has any interest in buying additional US Treasurys.
I may add that the Philippine’s informal gold sector has been one of the underreported source for China’s soaring gold imports.

China seems to be preparing for a major black swan event.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Growing Risks of Food Crisis: Blame US Government’s Ethanol Policies

Surging food prices ‘has not merely been caused by drought, it has been rooted from government policies intended to promote the ethanol biofuel energy industry.

Jeffrey A. Tucker at the Laissez Faire Books explains:

Looking this up and examining the history, it appears that government has been trying to put corn in our gas tanks for decades, even back to the 1960s. There were tax breaks, subsidies, lofty national goals, smiley stickers for executives who publicly backed this nonsense, but none of it took. Finally, our masters brought out the brass knuckles and everyone shaped up, culminating in a coercive mandate imposed six years ago.

Now we are stuck with this de facto mandate that we have to put corn in our gas tanks, all based on the kooky idea that fossil fuels are just too primitive, that we have to mix our gas with a movie-theater treat to make it truly clean and efficient.

But clean and efficient are two things that ethanol is not. The reason your edger and weed whacker don’t fire up in the spring months is most likely due to the presence of corn in the tiny gas tanks. The fuel mixture does not stay stable over time and tends to gum up engines. This is why the store shelves are filled with gas-tank additives of all sorts that did not used to exist. The whole point is to correct for the mess that ethanol makes.

Of course, there is a huge industry out there dedicated to debunking the idea that there is anything the matter with ethanol. But here’s the problem: People who make the pro-ethanol argument are either 1) the same people who think we ought to turn our toilets into composting pits or 2) speaking for industries highly dependent on the many forms of ethanol subsidies, so they have every incentive to deny the obvious for as long as possible.

But ask people who depend on a stable and reliable fuel for their livelihoods, and sometimes their lives. Talk to any boaters. You don’t have to know any. Head over to any boaters’ forums and see what they say. They go out of their way to find the few gas stations that actually sell ethanol-free gasoline, mainly because they can’t afford to take risks that come with bad gas and bad engines. They find stations that sell no ethanol gas, like those listed at pure-gas.org.

Another fact: Though people have thought for centuries that corn is a decent fuel, it took the mandates to force it into cars. Why? Because consumers knew better. Manufacturers knew better. The petroleum industry knew better. Government and the corn industry had a different idea and gave it to us all good and hard.

Nor is it efficient. As even Paul Krugman admits, “Even on optimistic estimates, producing a gallon of ethanol from corn uses most of the energy the gallon contains.” We also have to add the huge expenditure associated with fuel additives, engine fixes, lawn mower replacements and the vast frustration that comes with the regulatory wrecking of the internal-combustion engine.

Now let’s look at what’s happened to crops since 2005. The percentage of crops devoted to corn have gone from 24% in 1999 to 30% today. Meanwhile, the crops devoted to soybeans, hay and wheat have all gone down, thereby increasing feed costs for ranchers and consumers. Again, this is not the market talking. This is not what any actual market players are pushing. This all results from government mandates.

Meanwhile, the price index of Illinois farmland has tripled in the same period. Even though every price signal would otherwise indicate to farmers to plant less corn, they plant more. And even though land values all over the U.S. went into a major bust in 2008 and following, Illinois farmland goes up and up. This is a result of government intervention, building artificiality into the system and creating unpredictable distortions.

It almost seems hard to believe. It’s a scandal that government has degraded home appliances, indoor plumbing, paint, cosmetics, gas cans and so much else. Yet the ethanol nonsense might be the worst of all, because it represents a fundamental attack on the technology and literal fuel of modernity itself. As you look back at it, it’s been going on a very long time, from the initial ban on lead fuels, and now look where we are.

In the name of efficiency and “clean fuels,” the government is shutting down the technology essential to life as we know it. And the spillover effects are everywhere, affecting nearly everything we eat. As usual, all these regulations are premised on the supposition that conditions will never change and that the state can take the existing world and pound it into its preferred shape. But the existing world as the state knows it is always a world of the past. Introduce one change and the whole model blows up.

That is what is happening with ethanol right now. The mandate is causing vast distortions and crazy costs for everything and everything. The scandal is how little we know or care. Maybe famine will make the difference?

Add central banks inflationism to the above conditions and we end up with the potential risks of stagflation and a food crisis.

Yet a global food crisis does seem like a growing menace. Proof?

China’s government announced of the release corn and rice reserves to ease shortages

Reports the China Daily

China will release corn and rice from state reserves to help tame inflation and reduce imports as the worst US drought in half a century pushes corn prices to global records, creating fears of a world food crisis.

Friday's announcement was the first release since September last year, when China said it would sell 3.7 million tons of state corn to keep inflation under control.

The release may prompt Chinese importers to cancel shipments in the near term and take some pressure off international corn prices, which set a new all-time high on Friday as the US government slashed its estimate of the size of the crop in the world's top grain exporter.

"Bottom line - rationing is in full force, and given the continually declining state of the US corn crop, more will be needed," said Christopher Narayanan, head of agricultural commodities research at Societe Generale.

China's State Administration of Grain did not specify the volume of corn or rice to be released from reserves. The Grain Reserves Corp will be responsible for selling the crops, but no details were given on the timing.

Some traders estimated the government might sell around 2 million tons to help stabilize prices ahead of the harvest, when supply is usually tight.

Beijing will probably need to replenish reserves towards the end of the year, and therefore the release will have only a limited impact on prices.

More uncertainties ahead.