The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate hut at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups—Henry Hazlitt
Friday, April 24, 2020
A Note to My Family: Prepare for Depression
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Chart of the Day: US Dow Jones: Worst Annual Decline in History
``Continued concerns regarding the credit crisis, a slowdown in consumer spending, and a further weakening of the US economy sent the Dow down more than 7% on the day. Today also marks the one-year anniversary of the current correction. The Dow put in its record high of 14,164.53 back on October 9, 2007. Today, the Dow closed at 8,579.19 -- down 39.4% from its one year old peak. For some perspective on the magnitude of the current decline, today's chart illustrates how the Dow performed during the first year of all major corrections since 1900. As today's chart illustrates, the first year of the current correction has been more severe than the first year of any correction since 1900 -- and that includes the correction that began in 1929."
1. Could the collapse in US stocks signify more than just deleveraging and its economic spillover such that losses have topped 1929?
2. Relative to the Phisix which is down by 45% from the peak as of Friday's close, it used to be far worst, e.g. when US markets fell by 1% we dropped by 2-3%. Have we become low beta? Nonetheless despite the market's rout, the Phisix has held up well. So far so good.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Decoupling Recoupling Debate As A Religion
``The highest intellects, like the tops of mountains, are the first to catch and to reflect the dawn.” - Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859), British Poet, historian and Whig politician
If we accept the US-OECD-Asia-Emerging Market sequencing of the global slowdown as proposed by the doomsayers, then by the chain of logic, the
But this is unlikely to be the case since, aside from a busted financial-real estate sector, NET exports have been a key factor to the apparent resilience of the
This is where we part from the doomsayers whom have made the decoupling-recoupling debate as a religion or as some form of abstractionism similar to “If you are not with me then you are against me.” Such rigidity makes us unconvinced.
Merrill Lynch’s Richard Bernstein (HT: Craig McCarty) notes that “only 32% of the world’s equity markets are outperforming the S&P 500 so far this year (in local currency). With that performance backdrop, an appreciating dollar could attract “momentum” capital to the
In such a case where then is the recoupling? With 1/3 of the equity markets outperforming the
Think of it another way, if oil and food prices will remain depressed over the interim wouldn’t we be seeing some reprieve to the headline inflation pressures of non-commodity export emerging market economies from which they may be allowed room for a recovery and possibly see a reacceleration of economic growth?
Besides, if Mr. Bernstein is right and a strong dollar could push up the
Commodity Prices Reflect Fundamentals Aside From Monetary Factors
Another, we find it puzzling how the logic of “commodities-will-decouple-but-emerging markets-won’t” will prevail. The cornerstone of such theme is US dollar-paper money oriented.
True, we agree that the US dollar has been an important variable in shaping oil or commodities prices. But again, the world doesn’t seem to operate in simple cause and effect clauses, see figure 2.
From the CFTC report, ``The key driver of oil demand has been robust global economic growth, particularly in emerging market economies….world gross domestic product (GDP) growth (with countries weighted by oil consumption shares) has averaged close to 5 percent per year since 2004, marking the strongest performance in two decades.”
In other words, the price dynamics reflected the imbalances derived from variance in the pace of world economic growth against global oil production output more from than speculative activities. Oil production simply couldn’t keep up with global economic growth especially from emerging economies.
In the recent downturn in oil and commodity prices we see the same phenomenon at work, see figure 3 from BCA Research.
Figure 3: BCA Research:
BCA’s view buttresses our position on the slowing economic world growth and the sensitivity of the
So as we mentioned above, the US-OECD-Asia-Emerging Market sequencing on the recent economic downshift could be the case today, but from a recovery perspective the market leadership will unlikely come from the same order.
The Acceleration Phenomenon: A Key Emerging Market Dynamic
Now take a look at this commentary from Bloomberg (highlight mine),
``In the past, when the
``That didn't happen this time. The world expansion barely slowed last year and oil prices surged, even as the
And such outlook seems to square or match with the idea the world has been significantly less correlated with the
This very important observation from Mohamed El-Erian, author of When Markets Collide: Investment Strategies for the Age of Global Economic Change and co-CEO of bond-investing giant Pimco (emphasis mine),
``In the old days, if the
And perhaps the economic principle that underpins such dynamic is called “The Acceleration Phenomenon”, which was developed by Aftalion a French economist as shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4: Gavekal: The Acceleration Phenomenon
``In
``If, in China, the purchasing parity adjusted average income in 1998 was US$2,000/year, then the number of people earning more than US$10,000 was have been quite small. But if, by 2003, the average income had risen to US$3,000 per person, then the number of people earning more than US$10,000 will have probably increased by a lot more than 50%.
The above chart shows a hypothetical case. If a country’s average per capita is $10,000 where the elite class (having over $15,000 per annum) comprises 2.28% of the population, an average income growth of 25% will push those in the higher echelon from 2.28% to 15.87% of the population!
The significance, again from the eloquent Mr. Gave,
`` Because we know that when it comes to the buying of certain goods and services, the historical evidence seems to suggest the existence of ‘’thresholds’’.
``For example, if the average income in a country is below US$1,000, nobody owns a television; when the income moves above US$1,000, then almost everybody buys one. For the automobile industry, the critical level seems to be US$10,000/year. For university education US$20,000, etc… Today, as
While indeed international channels through trade, capital flows, labor and financial linkages or even monetary pegs could combine to impact an economy, especially in today’s more globalized settings, they don’t constitute everything.
Other significant variables as political, monetary and economic framework similarly determines the internal savings and investing patterns of a country and can present itself as the defining difference to a boom or gloom. As in
Thus, it is possible that the prospective recovery could even come from a MIRROR progression of the proposed US-OECD-Asia-Emerging Market ranking. Likewise, monetary aspects cannot totally be distinct from economic fundamentals.
Overall, recoupling and decoupling debate should not be seen from an absolutist stand. There will be no perfect decoupling as much as there won’t be perfect recoupling.
Sunday, August 03, 2008
Global Markets: The End Of The World? Or Overestimating Global Consequences?
``I cannot find a single convincing argument that tells me that astrologers won’t do better than economists…The problem is the arrogance of these economists, they’re making people rely on theories that have not worked, do not work, and are really dangerous.” Nassim Nicholas Taleb
If you look at today’s prevailing sentiment, especially from those within the
Of course, such sentiment has been bolstered by falling asset prices, which if we borrow George Soro’s “reflexivity theory” basically means irrational beliefs or convictions reinforced by market actions can help shape reality- or that market trends have the tendency of molding fundamentals than the other way around.
In the US signs of a deepening economic slowdown, tighter access to credit, rising cost of money, declining collateral prices, forcible liquidations, rising bankruptcies and foreclosures, the seeming paucity of capital, diminishing consumer spending, decreasing business spending, falling corporate profits and a continuing gridlock in the global financial system compounded by high food and energy costs have combined to impinge on the country’s socio-ecosystem.
And the inference is that trade, finance, credit and labor linkages, aside from unpredictable tide of capital flows, effects from intertwined currency regimes and consumer sentiment channels in a more intensified and interlinked world raises the risks of a contagion-a global recession or even a world depression. (The latter has been a popular topic searched at my blog. Besides, google search shows 3,020,000 links, compared to world recession of 546,000-meaning a surge of topical resource materials)
Meanwhile, emerging markets former darlings of global investors predicated on economic growth outperformance appears to have now been consumed by the conflagration of soaring food and fuel prices or mainstream’s definition of “inflation”.
So, from the chain of linkages shown above, the world “recouples”.
Add to this dimension is that since globalization has so far bolstered the faltering US economy via the underlying strength of the global economy fed by the transmission link of dollar links and currency pegs, manifested through via the export and financial assets channels; thus, a softening of the ex-US economic growth tends ricochet back to the US economy, reinforcing a vicious countercyclical trends around the world.
Shrinking US Deficits Mean Lower Liquidity and Higher Risks
Figure 1: Gavekal: Shrinking Global Liquidity via US Trade Deficit (HT: John Maudlin)
However, the recent decline in Oil and commodity prices seem indicative of two important dynamics: one global economic growth could be in decline (see Philippine Economy: World Financial Markets Allude To Diminishing Risks of Inflation) and second, diminishing trade or current account deficits have translated to reduced US dollar based liquidity circulating throughout the world financial system.
Since most of the world transactions remain anchored to the US dollar the
Figure 2: Economagic: US Current Account, S&P 500 and US Dollar Index
We have been seeing many of these factors in motion-recession still unofficial, faltering US equity benchmarks, global credit crunch, and consolidation of trade weighted US dollar index-as the current account balance deficits have markedly improved.
So the point is global liquidity have been greatly impacted by the ongoing deleveraging process in some of the major developed economies and the pronounced transfer of wealth from oil consumers and oil producers which can equally be seen as a transfer of wealth from the private sector to the public sector (which likewise adds to the tightening). Thus, the risk environment remains elevated for MOST of the world’s financial markets.
But When The Parasite Is Removed, The Host Will Thrive.
It can also be said that we can’t disagree with the analysis that the world risks transiting into a recession, considering that OECD economies constitute nearly 2/3 of GDP (nzherald.co.nz).
But then again, given the high levels of risk aversion and the impact from contracting liquidity, we can’t also read too much of the aggregate as representative of all the parts, lest be engaged in the fallacy of division- what must be true of a whole must also be true of its constituents, because of the following:
1. There are inherent nuances in the risks profiles of every nation due to the idiosyncratic political, economic and financial/capital markets structure or in the policy directions by respective authorities, see table 1.
Table 1 Economist: Country Risks Scores
Thus, the different risk profiles will result to diverse outcomes relative to economic wellbeing or financial market performance.
2. Doomsayers could be overestimating the risks associated with the chain effects from global linkages while underestimating other variables such as domestic investment and consumption patterns aside from regionalization trends or policy levers available to authorities.
Figure 3: ADB: Emerging Asian Regionalism
In addition, learning from the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997, it is noteworthy to cite the region’s attempt to undertake insurance measures such as monetary cooperation like the Chiang Mai Initiative (CMI), or a resource pooling strategy consisting of bilateral currency swap arrangements to cushion potential recurrence of external shocks. Another is the Manila framework, “a regional surveillance mechanism to monitor economic development and issues that deserve attention by the participating members.” (ADB)
Next, in the perspective of policy leverage, the humongous currency reserves of China ($1.81 trillion as of June 2008- Bloomberg) and the rest of the emerging market rubric which accounts for 76% of the $4.9 trillion global reserves in 2007 (Michael Sesit-Bloomberg) allows for much leg room for domestic investment spending or stimulus.
Investment bank Merrill Lynch estimates that Emerging Markets are expected to pour a huge amount of these reserves into infrastructure expenditures as shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4: US Global Investors: Expected Share of EM Infrastructure expenditures
``The company's latest forecast said EM infrastructure spending would rise from US$ 1.25 trillion to US$ 2.25 trillion annually over the next three years, thanks to more aggressive government spending programmes, fuelled by decades of under-investment in power, transportation, and water, and higher analyst estimates.” (highlight mine).
So while the much dreaded consumer goods and services inflation wanes in the following months, we can expect EM governments to address its policy leverage by renewing its focus to build internal productive capacity.
Here in the
From the investor's point of view, areas where such huge investment undertaking will take place should translate to massive growth potentials and outsized prospective returns.
3. As we have repeatedly been saying, the problem of systemic overleveraging and the attendant market prompted deleveraging process has been mostly an Anglo Saxon or US-Europe affair with very little or minimal exposure in Asia or in the Emerging Market economies see figure 5.
Figure 5: IMF Global Financial Stability Report Update: Bank Writedowns and Capital Raised
Thus, it is essential to understand the distinction among countries baggaged by cyclical or by structural variables. This also means countries affected by countercyclical factors are likely to experience shorter term pain compared to the structurally impaired markets whose recovery are likely to be protracted due to the sizable market clearing process coming out of severe malinvestments.
So we can’t buy on the notion that the world will evolve towards absolute “convergence” based on financial market performance and or in the economic outlook in as much as we can’t expect total “divergence”.
Under today’s environment, economic and financial market performances will likely be discriminatory than a holistic episode as seen during the recent past.
To quote Peter Schiff of Euro Pacific Capital (emphasis mine), ``The world is over-reacting to our problems, almost to the extent that we are under-reacting. Investors are over-estimating the global consequences of the collapse of the American consumer. I have long argued that American consumers have been functioning as global economic parasites, feeding off the productivity of the rest of the world. When the parasite is removed, the host will thrive. While those who have loaned us money will finally recognize their losses, the truth (belatedly recognized) will set them free. Once they move on, the world will enjoy enhanced growth, as it reclaims the savings, resources and consumer goods previously sent to
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Recoupling and Inflation Doesn’t Explain Everything…
Amidst all the gloom and doom, we are told that the entire financial world is going to the gutter out of either the deflation laced recoupling theme or a global inflation contagion.
Thus, the focusing effect or placing too much emphasis on one aspect of an event essentially ignores spots in the world where divergences continue to exist.
Remember, historical performance, as shown below, may not replay.
The point of the exercise is to show you that generalized thinking can be pockmarked with inconsistencies.
Here are some of the world’s outliers…
Bloomberg: The BCT Corp Costa Rica Stock Market Index is a market capitalization weighted index. Above is the 5 year chart.
May inflation rate is 11.9%, according to focus-economics.com
Bloomberg: The BLOM Stock Index (BSI) is a capitalization-weighted index of all the listed companies on the Beirut Stock Exchange. Above is the five year chart.
Inflation is about 10% year on year in march (Reuters). Aside according to Daily Star, ``Fitch Ratings' Inflation Vulnerability Index ranked Lebanon as the 29th most vulnerable country among 73 emerging economies in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin America, and the second most vulnerable in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, said the latest issue of Byblos Bank's Lebanon This Week.”
Bloomberg: The Namibian Overall Stock Exchange Index is a weighted market capitalisation index. Above is the five year chart.
The annual rate of inflation increased moderately from 7.8% in January to 7.9% in February 2008. (allafrica.com)
Bloomberg: The Tunis Stock Exchange TUNINDEX is a capitalization weighted index containing equities from the Tunis Stock Exchange. Above is the five year chart.
Bloomberg:
Above is the 5 year chart.
"Month-on-month figures cited by the Central Bank of
Bloomberg:
“
Bloomberg: The DSM 20 Index is a capitalisation weighted index of the 20 most highly capitalized and liquid companies traded on the Doha Securities Market. Above is the 5 year chart.
“The figure, however, was 'hardly catastrophic' compared to neighbouring Qatar, which has seen inflation surge to almost 15 per cent year-on-year” (menafn.com)
Bloomberg: The Muscat Securities Market Index, MSM 30, is a capitalization-weighted index of the 30 most highly capitalized, liquid and profitable companies listed on theMuscat Securities Market. Above is the five year chart.
“
Of course there could be many other factors (hot money etc…) which may have contributed to their outperformance.
Bottom line: Inflation and Deflation doesn’t explain everything.