Showing posts with label divergences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label divergences. Show all posts

Thursday, May 29, 2014

US Economy Contracts in the 1st Quarter 2014, But Stocks are at Record Highs!

Has any expert anticipated this?


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From Bloomberg:
The economy in the U.S. contracted for the first time in three years from January through March as companies added to inventories at a slower pace and curtailed investment.

Gross domestic product fell at a 1 percent annualized rate in the first quarter, a bigger decline than projected, after a previously reported 0.1 percent gain, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The last time the economy shrank was in the same three months of 2011. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a 0.5 percent drop.
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Has the stock market factored this in? Apparently not. And perhaps they never will. That’s because some major indices like the Dow Industrials and the S&P 500 are at record highs.

But again like all rationalization, this slowdown has been justified as an anomaly brought about by weather.

From the same article:
A pickup in receipts at retailers, stronger manufacturing and faster job growth indicate the first-quarter setback will prove temporary as pent-up demand is unleashed. Federal Reserve policy makers said at their April meeting that the economy has strengthened after adverse weather took its toll.
“Will prove temporary’'” exudes  the confidence to justify stock market actions. So the “growth” story, whether real or not, has metastasized into a fairy (DEBT) godmother meant to justify stocks market prices bound for the never-never land.

Also the above divergences serves as more evidence that the stock market hasn’t about the economy. Today's world has been warped into parallel universes.

Thursday, May 01, 2014

US GDP Grew by .1% hit by EM Contagion and Housing Downturn

Thanks” to US government spending on “Obamacare”, which spared the US economy a negative growth rate, 1st quarter statistical GDP grew by a paltry .1%! [As a side note: Shouldn't record stocks be saying otherwise? Or more signs of redistribution from Main Street to Wall Street, thus the dichotomy or parallel universe?]

While the mainstream has attributed the substantial slowdown to “weather”, I have been saying that such represents a part of the unfolding periphery-to-the-core phenomenon of the global bubble cycle.

Last February I wrote
If emerging markets has been attributed by some as having pulled out the global economy from the recession of 2008, now will likely be the opposite dynamic, the ongoing mayhem in emerging markets are likely to weigh on the global economy and equally expose on the illusions of strength brought upon by credit inflation stoked by inflationist policies.
I have also pointed out in March signs of a material decline in growth rates of exports by many of the world’s major exporters would imply that the “world will be faced with a dramatic decline in the rate of growth” 

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My observations of slowing exports seem to have been validated by the Wall Street Journal “Combined exports from Asia's four export powerhouses—China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan—slid 2% in the first three months of this year from the same period last year.”

And this has not just been in Asia, as I recently posted  “global trade in early 2014 registered its “first negative reading since October 2012”.  

I also noted in the same post that in the US a 130 basis points hike in interest rates has impacted housing negatively that will likely have a spillover effect on the GDP.
And according to the US BEA data, finance, insurance, real estate and leasing accounts for the largest share of US GDP (in 2013 19.67% of Gross Value added) add construction’s share 3.6%, finance and housing accounts for one fifth of the statistical GDP. So a sustained slowdown in real estate industry will materially weigh on US GDP.
All these revealed in the US 1st Quarter GDP

Here is a summary of the “puny” .1% growth from the Wall Street Real Time Economics Blog: (bold mine, double asterisk mine)
Hey, Big Spender

Consumer spending accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic output, and it rose at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.3% in the fourth quarter. It slowed in the first quarter, but not much, growing at a 3% pace. Spending on goods slowed to a 0.4% pace, but spending on services – like health care and energy** – rose to a 4.4% pace. Personal consumption expenditures were the single biggest boost to economic output in the first three months of the year, and helped offset big drags on growth like trade.

Businesses Close Their Checkbooks

Spending by businesses was another story. Fixed nonresidential investment fell at a 2.1% rate in the first quarter after surging 7.3% in 2012 and rising a more modest 2.7% in 2013. Spending on equipment fell at an annual pace of 5.5% in the first quarter of 2014, the worst drop since the second quarter of 2009, after rising at a 10.9% pace in the fourth quarter of 2013.

Exports a Boost No More

Net trade subtracted 0.83 percentage point from GDP growth in the first quarter as exports lagged and the trade gap widened. Exports fell at a 7.6% pace, the most since the recession ended in 2009. Trade had been a big boost to economic output in the second half of 2013, contributing 0.14 percentage point in the third quarter and 0.99 percentage point in the fourth quarter. Stay tuned, though: Trade data from March will be released by the Commerce Department next Tuesday, which could lead to significant revisions in GDP.

Housing Hurting

The U.S. housing recovery’s slowdown was a drag on GDP in the first quarter. Residential fixed investment — spending on home building and improvements — pulled down GDP growth to the tune of 0.18 percentage point in the first quarter after contributing 0.33 percentage point to GDP growth for all of last year.

Inventories Drag

A big buildup in private inventories helped boost economic output in the third quarter last year to a 4.1% annual rate. In the first quarter of 2014, by contrast, slowing inventories subtracted 0.57 percentage point from GDP growth. A measure of GDP that strips out inventory changes, final sales of domestic product, grew at a 0.7% pace in the first quarter, down from its 2.7% pace in the fourth quarter.
**increase in energy spending has been due to energy “price inflation
 
So we have a combo of weak consumer, a downturn in housing, capital spending and likewise in global trade which means a broad based slowdown that has been cushioned only by government spending in health services and energy spending via higher price inflation. Yet the forces that counterbalanced the fall in the statistical economic growth has their own respective costs that will billed to taxpayers and to US dollar holders in the future.

So the recent rise in interest rates (via higher bond yields) and the initial smack down on Emerging Markets by the same force, have both become significant factors in the US economic slowdown. Think of it, yields of 10 year treasuries have barely breached the 3% level yet we get all these signs of troubles. The 3% barrier has almost been reached in September and was touched last in December (see chart here) while today trades range bound between 2.6% and 2.8%. So for me, the 3% looks like a crucial threshold level indicative of the viability or serviceability of the critical mass of world debts denominated in US dollars. In short, the farther yields of US 10 year notes go beyond 3%, the greater the likelihood of chains of default. For now, events have been suggesting of a slow motion progression of internal entropy.
The US 1st quarter GDP should represent a red flag for emerging markets. Again as I wrote last February: (bold original)
if the adverse impact of emerging markets to the US and developed economies won’t be offset by growth (exports, bank assets and corporate profits) in developed nations or in frontier nations, then there will be a drag on the growth of developed economies, which would hardly be inconsequential. Why? Because the feedback loop from the sizeable developed economies will magnify on the downside trajectory of emerging market growth which again will ricochet back to developed economies and so forth. Such feedback mechanism is the essence of periphery-to-core dynamics which shows how economic and financial pathologies, like biological contemporaries, operate at the margins or by stages.
Contradictory forces of significantly slowing economic growth combined with the Federal Reserve’s continued tapering—the Fed cut monthly asset purchases to $45 billion at the April meetingamidst  record (Dow Jones) stock market…looks like ingredients for the Wile E. Coyote moment.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Indonesian Stocks Sinks, Chinese Stocks Soar and More on the Peso and the BSP ‘Tightening’

As noted here, like the Philippines, Indonesian stocks have been in a frenzied mania. 

In mid March, reports where the populist leader—Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo announced that he would be running for presidency—sent the JCI to a one day boom of 3.23%. Despite a interim few obstacles, Indonesian stocks charged to approach the pre-taper highs of May.

Today, what seems as a ‘one way trade’ embedded in Indonesia’s Wall Street’s expectations may have hit a roadblock as the man on the streets have voted in a different direction and this sparked a mini-selloff.

Indonesian stocks fell on Thursday — sending the main index to its biggest decline in seven months — after early legislative results showed that presidential candidate Joko Widodo’s party may not have enough seats to secure its own pick and would have to form a coalition, disappointing investors who hoped for an easy nomination…

Joko’s Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) managed to get about 19 percent of the votes, as shown by most quick count polls in Wednesday’s elections, but short of the 25 percent needed to secure its own presidential candidate. PDI-P collected 19.64 percent of the popular vote, according to a survey by LSN. Official results are scheduled to be released on May 7-9.

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The JCI tanked by 3.16% today

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The Indonesian currency ,the rupiah, was also hit. The USD-rupiah gained by .61%.

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I doubt if today’s steep decline may turnout to be an inflection point. Like in the Philippines, the Indonesia’s Wall Street will likely find other justifications to “buy the dip”.

Stocks have now become a one way trade. The bigger the risks, the more frenetic the upside response have been. 

For instance, Indonesia whom almost tipped into a crisis, have instead incited violent rallies in bonds, stocks and the currency at a pace seemingly beyond the pre-taper levels.

Nonetheless the importance of today’s event has been the revelation of a vital disconnect between Indonesia’s financial markets and her version of the main street.

And such divergence or parallel universes can be seen not only in Indonesia, but in Chinese stocks as well. 

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Despite the news of a sharp fall of external trade in March for both exports –6.6% and imports –11.3%, signifying a deepening slowdown in the Chinese economy (chart from Zero Hedge)…

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…the Shanghai Composite Index surged by 1.38% today.

Why?

Because supposedly of a proposed cross listing…

From Reuters
Hong Kong shares closed at their highest level in more than three months on Thursday, lifted by news that Beijing's securities regulator will allow cross-border stock investment between Hong Kong and Shanghai.

The announcement also boosted mainland indexes, with the Shanghai composite index reaching a two-month high…

The new rules will allow mainland investors to trade shares in designated companies listed in Hong Kong, and at the same time let Hong Kong investors buy shares in Shanghai-listed firms.
Cross listings are indeed a positive signal over the LONG term, but there are considerable short term activities that can serve as impediments to the long term.

One example, another prospective default. Just the other day, a small polyester yarn manufacturer in Zhejiang, the Zhejiang Huatesi Polymer Technical Co Ltd filed for bankruptcy and thus heightening the risks of another bond default. (Reuters). Week in week out, we get more reports of troubled Chinese companies or financial institutions.

As one would note the feedback loop between credit woes and economic slowdown has been intensifying. Again more signs of parallel universes. And again more interim potential sources for economic or financial black swans which can upend any long term gains from reforms.

The same divergence can be said of the rally in the Peso today. 

I wrote earlier today that  the BSP has been intervening and that exports as driver of the rallying peso has been largely misguided.

And I belatedly read a media report where the BSP chief supposedly hinted at 'tightening'. The BSP governor said that they are “mindful of strong domestic liquidity and credit growth that could heighten financial stability risks”. [As a side note, the same report shows how demand morphs into a black hole when discussing inflation]

Yet the market’s response has been divergent. While the peso rallied strongly partly perhaps to such proposed actions, stocks ignored the threats and even got bidded higher, and Philippine treasuries seemed indifferent.

So soaring stocksmostly publicly listed companies which have been acquiring alot of debtfrom the BSP’s signaling only heightened financial stability risks. What do you call stocks trading at 30-60 PERs and PBVs at 3 and above?

I have argued lengthily why so far this has just been a rhetoric. That’s because the so-called magical transformation of the Philippine economy has all been about the domestic markets response to distortive policies which has promoted 'aggregate demand' that went 'specific' demand or select supply side credit driven demand. In short, a credit fueled demand boom or an inflationary boom.

And since July, the BSP governor has sporadically attempted at influencing the markets by threatening to tighten—  unfortunately a tightening that has hardly occurred except for superficial or symbolical actions like the thinly raising of the reserve requirements.

And market divergences are a natural consequence to discounting such a move.

Friday, March 14, 2014

Ireland’s Parallel Universe

By parallel universe, I imply of a wide chasm in the performance between the economy and the financial markets.

First economic performance.

Ireland’s economy has been stagnating.

From the Irish Times:
The Irish economy unexpectedly shrank last year on the back of a sharp fall-off in net exports linked to the so-called pharma patent cliff.

Preliminary figures from the Central Statistics Office (CSO) showed gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 2.3 per cent in the fourth quarter and by 0.3 per cent for the year as a whole.

Published on the same day as the State’s first full return to the bond markets, the figures represent something of a setback for the Government’s recovery plans and reflect the volatile nature of Ireland’s post-bailout economy.

The Department of Finance had predicted GDP growth of 0.2 per cent for 2013 on the back of a surge in employment growth which saw the creation of 60,000 new jobs.

Gross national product (GNP), which screens out the effects of multinational operations, however, increased by 3.4 per cent last year and by 0.2 per cent in the final quarter.

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Here is the Q-on-Q GDP chart

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And here is the annualized GDP chart 

Whether q-q or y-y, Ireland’s economy has been laboring her way out of the recession.

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Meanwhile, Ireland’s Non Performing loans stood at 18.7% of overall bank loans in 2012 according to the World Bank. For 2013, credit ratings agency the Fitch estimates Ireland’s NPLs at 17%.

The point of the above is to exhibit that there has hardly been any material economic recovery and that Ireland still has a significant debt burden.

But financial markets says ‘don’t worry be happy’.

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Yields of Irish 10 year bonds has been in a collapse since 2011. This means bonds have rallied strongly in the face of rising NPLs.

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And Irish stocks, as measured by the Irish Stock Overall Index,  have not only been ascendant rising from 2012, current gains have been accelerating. This comes even amidst a stagnating economy.

More proof of that global financial markets have been a central bank sponsored Truman Show.

Sunday, March 02, 2014

Italian Government Bails Out Rome

2014 is turning out to be a very interesting year. Two months into the year, we have seen several bank runs (Thailand, Kazakhstan and Ukraine) and also we saw China’s bailout of a delinquent shadow bank.  

Fresh reports say that cash strapped Rome has been bailed out by financially beleaguered Italian government.

Decadent and in decline, its beauty imperilled by physical and moral decay, the Rome portrayed in Paolo Sorrentino’s film La Grande Bellezza could end up giving Italy a yearned-for win at the Oscars on Sunday night. But off-screen and far from the glitz of Hollywood, the financial troubles of the eternal city – and the daily trials of its long-suffering residents – are no cause for celebration.

On Friday, at the end of a week which saw the spectre of bankruptcy loom large over the ancient capital, the Italian federal government said it had approved a last-minute decree that would give an urgently-needed injection of funds to the city, thus staving off imminent disaster.

While not detailing the new plans, cabinet undersecretary Graziano Delrio said the sum to be transferred to the municipality “remains the same”– around 500 million euro (HK$5.3 billion) – as had been envisaged under a previous decree ditched earlier in the week by the government.

Nicknamed “Save Rome”, that decree had become so bogged down in a verbose and venomous parliamentary process that Mateo Rienzi’s new administration withdrew it and said it would find a new way of helping the Rome authorities plug an 816 million euro hole in their budget.
So bailouts of financial boils appear to be a deepening global trend.

Mired in stagnation, it’s a wonder how Italy can afford to conduct such actions

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Italy’s debt levels remain one of the highest in the Eurozone (chart from CFR)

And Italy’s economy continues to grapple with record level of unemployment. 

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Italy’s unemployment rate rose to a record high in January, signaling that companies may fail to hire even after the economy returned to growth in the last quarter of 2013.

Unemployment increased to 12.9 percent from 12.7 percent in December, the Rome-based national statistics office Istat said in a preliminary report today. The January rate is the highest since the data series began in the first quarter of 1977. The median estimate of five economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for an unemployment rate of 12.7 percent last month.

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Not to worry, the bailout, which will likely be funded by more debt issuance, will benefit from the reemergence of Italy’s convergence trade as bond yields shrink to record lows.

This means zero bound interest rates will accommodate Italy’s spendthrift ways (chart from Danske Bank).

The reason for record low yields? 

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Italian banks have been stuffing their balance sheet with sovereign debt…


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…as Japanese investors chase yields also by piling into Italian yields, notes the Zero Hedge. Rallying yields have been inspired by ECB’s Mario Draghi pledge to “do whatever it takes” to preserve the Euro

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Italian stocks as measured by the FTSEMIB has also been booming.

So in Italy we see a parallel universe, stagnating economy in the face of booming stocks and bond markets. Convergence in interest rates and divergence in economic performance. Wonderful no? 

And Rome’s bailout will add only to Italy’s economic woes via a larger debt burden and a shift of resources to uses of lesser value or more malinvestments.

On the political front, the Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta recently resigned and has been replaced by Matteo Renzi who at the moment has been working to gather support for a coalition government. As noted by the Economist in 2013, in 67 years the Italian government has had 62 governments due to a highly fragmented political sphere.

So in order to gain broad political support, politicians will have to ensure doleouts to various interest groups, and Rome’s bailout has just been one of them. 

So in spite booming markets, which is a sign of resource redistribution from the economy to the banking and political class, the Italian financial crisis still lingers and may resurface soon. Rome's bailout may have signified the proverbial "shot across the bow" of the periphery spreading to the core dynamic.

The Rome bailout also demonstrates why Eurozone is also a fertile candidate for a global Black Swan event.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Global Markets: How Sustainable is the Recent Risk ON?

From Risk OFF suddenly to Risk ON. 

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Most of global stock markets led by the US went into hyperdrive mode.

Some bulls have come out of their hibernation to aver “you see I told you, forex reserves, floating currency, low NPLs neatly did the trick. And this has been all about ‘irrationality’”. Of course, I will keep pointing out—the so-called financial market ‘irrationality’ represents a two way street, because such involves the base human impulses of both greed and fear. Bluntly put, fear can be irrational as much as greed. However, any idea of a one directional bias for irrationality signifies in and on itself “irrational” logic

A mainstream foreign report even implied that the “short-lived” emerging market woes have passed. I can’t agree to the notion that 7 ½ months of Emerging Market volatility represents a “short” time frame period. Neither can I reconcile how the repeated ON and OFF volatilities over the same period equals the conclusion that EM troubles have passed.

EM guru Franklin Templeton’s Mark Mobius, for instance, flip flopped for the second time in 2 weeks, earlier by noting how EM selloff will “deepen” to this week’s “probably nearing the end of this big rush out of emerging markets.”[1]

Such seeming state of confusion from the mainstream signifies desperation to resurrect the boom days underpinned by cheap money.

Yet has the current rally been really indicative of the end of the EM selloff? Or has this been the proverbial calm before the storm or the maxim “no trend goes in a straight line”? Or a stock market lingo—a dead cat’s bounce?

Nonetheless as I keep pounding on the table, we should expect “sharp volatility in the global financial markets (stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies) in the coming sessions. The volatility may likely be in both directions but with a downside bias”[2]

Acute market volatilities represent a normative character of major inflection points whether bottom or top. Incidentally since the present volatilities has been occurring at record or post-record highs of asset prices particularly for the stock market, then current volatility logically points to a ‘topping’ formation rather than to a ‘bottoming’ formation.

Severe gyrations tend to highlight the terminal phase of a bull market cycle. Again in whether in 1994-1997 or in 2007-2008, denial rallies can be ferocious to the point of expunging all early bear market losses but eventually capitulate to the full bear market cycle[3].

The bottom line is that stock markets operate in cycles and that the best way to play safe is to first understand the cycle and ride on the cyclical tide.

China: Stocks Soar as Default Risks Escalates

Let us examine why global stock markets resumed a risk ON scenario this week. 

Take China, the Shanghai Composite celebrated the first week of the year of the wooden horse with a blistering 3.5% run.

Monday’s ramp was allegedly prompted by the extension of subsidies by the Chinese government to automakers[4]. Incidentally one of the beneficiaries of the extended subsidies to automakers has been BYD Co., an automaker with investments from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway. More signs that Mr. Buffett once a value investor has transformed into a political entrepreneur.

Moreover, this one week stock market blitzkrieg has partly been an offshoot to the Chinese government’s rescue of a troubled shadow banking wealth management ‘trust’ product worth 3 billion-yuan ($496 million) at the near eve of the New Year’s celebrations[5].

So prior to the New Year, the Chinese government conducted a bailout. After the New Year, the Chinese government extends a subsidy (another bailout?) to a politically privileged sector.

Yet will the two interventions be enough to stabilize China’s markets? Or will the Chinese government have to employ serial bailouts in increasing frequency in order to keep the China’s highly fragile financial markets and economic system from falling apart?

How about reports where six trust firms which has 5 billion ($826.6 million) loan portfolio to a delinquent coal company have been in danger of default[6]? The debt exposure by the six trust firms account for 67% more than the size of the one recently bailed out by the world’s largest China’s state owned bank, the Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC).

The Reuters’ report adds that another trust, Jilin Province Trust Co Ltd, with exposure to struggling coal company Shanxi Liansheng Energy Co Ltd have failed to pay off “763 million yuan in maturing high-yield investments it sold to wealthy clients of CCB (China Construction Bank)”.

Ironically this is the same coal company with which the ‘first’ bailed out trust firm has exposure to. Has Jilin Province Trust’s debt payment delinquency been in the hope for a bailout? Will other creditors with exposure to the same coal company follow suit?

So has the pre-New Year bailout of the ICBC sponsored Trust firm exposed to Shanxi Liansheng Energy, opened the Pandora’s box of the moral hazard of dependency on government life support system? Will shadow banks resort to defaults or threats of defaults in order to be bailed out? Should we expect a wave of bailouts? How will the Chinese government pay for all these?

Yes while foreign currency reserves of the Chinese government tabulates to a record high of $3.82 trillion at the close of December 2013, as proportion to shadow banking debt this represents only half of $7.5 trillion based on JP Morgan estimates[7] and one fourth if based on the estimates of the controversial former Fitch’s analyst Charlene Chu[8]

And this is just the shadow banks. Of course not every shadow banks will fail, but the point is how deep will a potential contagion be? This is some dynamic which I think no one has a clue.

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Aside from tremors from the shadow banks, private Chinese companies who lack implicit guarantees from the government have either postponed or canceled debt issuance. The Zero hedge reports[9] 9 companies who recently backed down from raising $1 billion worth of debt.

Moreover, Chinese non-performing loans (NPL) have been racing higher for the 9th consecutive quarter to the highest level since the 2008 crisis.

As you can see, the Chinese NPL experience demolishes the false notion that falling NPLs are free passes to bubbles. Credit bubbles implode from their own weight or from rising interest rates or from a reversal of confidence by lenders. In China’s case, rising NPLs are symptoms of the hissing overstretched credit bubble which has been transmitted via higher consumer price inflation and rising interest rates.

The growing risk of debt default, shrinking access to credit and rising NPLs are troubling signs of rapidly deteriorating China’s credit conditions. Yet these are signs of stability?

Even the China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, has been cognizant of the growing risks of debt defaults. As quoted by Bloomberg[10]:
China’s central bank signaled that volatility in money-market interest rates will persist and borrowing costs will rise, underscoring the risk of defaults that could weigh on confidence and drag down growth.

“When the valve of liquidity starts to tame and curb excessive credit expansion, money-market rates, or the cost of liquidity, will reflect that,” the People’s Bank of China said in a Feb. 8 report. “The market needs to tolerate reasonable rate changes so that rates can be effective in allocating resources and modifying the behavior of market players.”
Meanwhile China’s banking regulator, the China Banking Regulatory Commission, in the face of rising concerns of defaults has ordered some small financial institutions to “set aside more funds to avoid a cash shortfall” according to another Bloomberg report[11].

As you can clearly see, the Chinese government has been preparing for their financial Yolanda.

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Moreover, the Chinese government dramatically infused money into the financial system last January based on the latest PBOC data where the Zero Hedge observed, “this month's broad liquidity creation was the largest monthly amount in China's history!”[12]

China’s infusion of a tsunami of liquidity, where China’s loan creation (left window) totalled $218 billion in January while total social financing (right window) spiked by $425 billion has essentially dwarfed the $75 billion by the US Federal Reserve and the $74 billion by the Bank of Japan.

Why the gush of government sponsored loan creation-total social financing in the face of rising risks of defaults? Has the Chinese government been forced to play the debt musical chairs in the recognition that a stoppage in credit inflation would extrapolate to a Black Swan event[13]

All these represents newfound stability and a conclusion to the EM sell off? All these are bullish reasons to bid up on stocks? Will ASEAN or the Philippines be immune to a potential debt implosion?

Or have the recent spurt in China’s stocks been signs of communications (public relations/ signalling channel in central bank gobbledygook) management by Chinese government aimed at creating a financial Potenkim Village in order to assuage creditors?

As risk analyst, I’d say good luck to all those who believe that “this time is different”.

US Stocks: Fed’s Janet Yellen Gives Go Signal for More Stock Market Bubble

How about US stocks?

US stocks sprinted for the two successive weeks expunging most if not all of the earlier losses. As of Friday, the S&P 500 knocks at the door of new record highs.

The melt up in US stocks began the previous week when the ECB made a “teaser” to further ease by suspending sterilization in March.

As a side note, this week the enticement for more easing came with a report the ECB has been “seriously considering” negative overnight bank deposit rates[14]. This may have also compounded on the frenzied charge by US-European stock market bulls.

Europe’s stocks have been on a blitz. But ECB’s overture for more easing reveals of the stagnation of Europe’s real economy. 

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Europe’s economic stagnation has been reflected on corporate earnings. Forward revenues of European stocks have been in a steady decline since 2012.

Ironically, European stock markets seem to see heavenly bliss from such negative streak of earnings.

Such parallel universe exhibits why this has hardly been your granddaddy’s stock markets.

Central bank policies have transformed financial markets into a loaded casino (backed by central bank PUT or implicit guarantees) where people mindlessly chase yields with the singular aim of jumping on the stock market bandwagon financed with a deluge of credit money and rationalizing such actions by shouting statistics, regardless of their relevance.

Moreover, the unimpressive US job data whetted on the speculative appetite of the Pavlovian momentum chasing crowd. 

Bad news in the real economy has been good news for Wall Street. Why? Because Wall Street expects subsidies provided by the US Federal Reserve to them, via zero bound rates and asset purchases charged to the real economy, to continue.

In terms of present policies, this implies that the Fed’s “tapering” may be truncated.

Bad news in the real economy is good news for Wall Street has been one of this week’s main theme.

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Retail sales fell most since June 2012 blamed mostly on the “bad weather”. Revised data showed that retail sales slumped also even in December but at a lesser degree[15]. So this has hardly been about bad weather or that bad weather represents a convenient rationalization for the stock market meltup.

The chart from Businessinsider reveals that core retail sales has been in a downtrend even as retail employment has been rising[16]. Yet how will a sustained fall in retail sales continue to finance retail employment?

Most importantly factory production dropped most since 2009[17] again blamed on the bad weather.

So the unexpected declines in factory output, jobs and retail sales, which not only translates to sluggish economic growth but may even reinforce on each other, have been seen as bullish for stocks by Wall Street.

This reveals how central banking policies have been driving a wedge or a gulf between the Main Street and Wall Street as evidenced by such seeming economic and social schadenfreude, where Wall Street benefit from the sufferings of the real economy. This also means more polarization or partisanship in the political sphere.

Another very significant catalyst for US stock market melt UP has been the debut testimony given by Fed Chairwoman, Ms. Janet Yellen, at the House Financial Services Committee hearing[18].

While Ms. Yellen admits that low interest rate can fuel asset bubbles, she denies that US stocks have been a bubble, where her personal sentiment sent a flurry of bid orders that powered stocks to a frenetic melt up mode.

Ms. Yellen’s admission that low interest rates serves fuel to bubbles…(bold mine)
We recognize that in an environment of low interest rates like we've had in the Unites States now for quite some time, there may be an incentive to reach for yield. We do have the potential to develop asset bubbles or a build up in leverage or rapid credit growth or other threats to financial stability. Especially given that our monetary policy is so accommodative, we are highly focused on trying to identify those threats.
Ms. Yellen’s grants a license to the US stock market bubble…
I think it's fair to say our monetary policy has had an effect of boosting asset prices. We have tried to look carefully at whether or not broad classes of asset prices suggest bubble-like activity. I have not seen that in stocks, generally speaking. Land prices, I would say, suggest a greater degree of overvaluation.
First, admit it and then deny it. Except for land prices, for Ms. Yellen “threats to financial stability” has been anything but relevant to the US. Does Ms. Yellen own a lot of stocks?

As another side note: Contra other central bankers like those from the Philippines, at least Ms Yellen acknowledges that low interest rates “may be an incentive to reach for yield” and thus “have the potential to develop asset bubbles”.

I don’t know which metrics Ms Yellen uses in valuing stocks or measuring credit growth. But the Russell 2000 at 81 price earnings ratio (!!!) as of Friday February 14th close, certainly looks like a bubble from whatever angle.

And that “potential to develop asset bubbles or a build up in leverage or rapid credit growth or other threats to financial stability” has already been present via record net margin debt, and record issuance of various types of bonds e.g. junk bonds, corporate bonds that has been used to finance equity buybacks.

Perhaps the FED may be looking at solely the credit from the banking sector. If so, then such blinders will come at a great cost. Are bonds not financial assets held by US banks?

Yet systemic build up in leverage or rapid credit has been relentless.

The latest financial engineering has been to increasingly use shadow banks via “synthetic” derivatives based on corporate bonds in the face of shrinking liquidity in the bond markets. This novel approach has been meant to hedge on assets or to bet on their performance which according to the Financial Times represents a “dramatic shift in the nature of the corporate bond market”[19].

Moreover equities have increasingly played an important role as collateral for repo trades. From a Bloomberg report[20] “Repurchase agreements, known as repos, backed by equities rose 40 percent during the year ended Jan. 10, according to Federal Reserve data. Rising equity-collateral usage combined with a slide in repos backed by government securities pushed equities share to 9.6 percent of the $1.55 trillion tri-party repo market in January, up from 5.7 percent a year earlier, Fitch said in a report published yesterday.”

This growing moneyness or liquidity yield of equities seem to play right into Mr. George Soros’ reflexivity theory[21] in that “when people are eager to borrow and the banks are willing to lend, the value of the collateral rises in a self-reinforcing manner and vice versa.”

Hence soaring stocks, which leads to increasing values of equity based collateral, feeds on the borrowing appetite of stock market participants. The latter are likely to use proceeds from such borrowing to finance even more equity purchases that would be used to obtain more credit for speculation. Such collateral-lending-price feedback loop mechanism only serves as fodder to a deeper stock market Wile E. Coyote mania.

Manias may persist for as long as return on assets outpaces the cost of servicing debt or upon the sustained confidence of creditors on the capability and willingness of borrowers to fulfil their financial obligations.

If the cost of servicing debt is measured by the actions of the US treasury markets, then we should see how the latter has recently behaved.

Yet the dramatic melt UP in stocks have translated into wild swings in the yields of 10 year UST notes.

Why? Because rising stocks based on intensifying demand for credit tends to push up on yields, while adverse main stream economic data tend to push down yields as economic uncertainty spurs concern over asset selloffs or asset “deflation”.

Yet over the week, yields of 10 year notes climbed 7 bps to 2.75%. This means that the stock market melt UP seem to have bigger influence on the UST markets than the sluggish growth data.

This also means that regardless of what the Fed does (whether they persist on tapering or Untapers) for as long as, or in the condition that the stock market (and real estate) mania persists, yields of USTs are most likely to edge up.

This seems as signs that the US inflationary boom has reached a maturation phase where available resources have not been adequate to finance bubble projects on the pipeline. The entrepreneurial cluster of errors has been based on the misplaced belief of the abundance of savings from artificially lowered interest rates. Such errors are being reflected on rising interest rates and or an up creep of inflation.

Bernanke’s QE 3.0 in September 2012 had only a 3 month impact in the suppression of yields. Since July 2012, yields of USTs trekked higher, but the upside momentum accelerated when Abenomics and the Bernanke’s “taper” was announced in the second quarter of 2013.

This also is one reason why past data can hardly be relied on. That’s because central policies have so vastly distorted the pricing mechanism that has altered the traditional functional relationship of firms, markets and the economy.

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What has driven yields of USTs down of late has been a pseudo meltdown in US stocks. While “bad news is good news” may hinder rising yields, strength in economic data will expedite the advance.

As one would note from the above overlapped charts of the yields of 10 year notes (TNX) and the S&P, over the last 9 months, there seems to be new correlation where yields of 10 year USTs decline ahead of the S&P (green rectangle). And the S&P rallies ahead of the bottoming TNX.

And rising UST yields (higher interest rates) amidst rising asset prices fuelled by massive debt expansion only exacerbates on the Wile E. Coyote momentum which eventually will lead to the Wile E. Coyote moment or what Ms. Yellen calls as “threats to financial stability”.

And all the RECORD credit inflation seems to escape the eyes of an econometric technician like Ms. Yellen who seems to think that all these operates in a vacuum.

Unfortunately blindness leads to Black Swans.














[12] Zero Hedge Spot The Real Liquidity Bubble February 15, 2014


[14] Wall Street Real Time Economic Blog ECB Considers Negative Deposit Rate February 12 2014,


[16] Businessinsider.com Something Has To Give Here February 13, 2014



[19] Financial Times Investors turn to ‘shadow’ bond market February 10, 2014


[21] George Soros The Alchemy of Finance John Wiley & Sons p 23