Showing posts with label euro crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label euro crisis. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

French Labor Minister: France is “Totally Bankrupt”

ECB’s Mario Draghi in self congratulatory mode recently said that worst days of the Euro may have diminished
 
From Bloomberg,
We can begin 2013 on a more confident note, precisely because significant progress was made during 2012,” Draghi said in a speech in Frankfurt late yesterday. “The darkest clouds over the euro area subsided. Europe’s leaders recognized that monetary union needs to be complemented by a financial union, a fiscal union, a genuine economic union and eventually a deeper political union.”
Well, if French politics should serve as an anchor, today may represent the proverbial calm before the storm 

Senior French politicians have been forced to defend the state of the country’s economy after Labor Minister Michel Sapin set off a storm of controversy by claiming France was “totally bankrupt”.

Sapin made the remarks in a radio interview on Jan. 27 after he was asked about Former Prime Minister Francois Fillon comment in September 2007 that France was a “bankrupt state.” Sapin responded, “But it’s a totally bankrupt state,” adding “that’s the reason we have to put deficit- reductions programs in place.”

The minister immediately took back the statement, saying he was being “ironic.”
This rereverberates with the recent public relations faux pas by Japan's finance minister who likewise stirred a tempest by asking old people to "hurry up and die"

More signs of the growing fractures in the entropic welfare state.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Germany’s Bundesbank Consolidates Gold Holdings

Possibly in response to German’s federal authorities call for the audit the gold holdings of their central bank, the Bundesbank—which has the second largest after the US of nearly 3,400 tonnes (valued at 133 billion euros $174 billion) held at foreign central banks, particularly at the vaults at Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Banque France and the England—has begun to redeem them, despite their disagreements with the Feds.

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Writes Telegraph’s Ambrose Evans Pritchard 
Roughly 66pc is held at the New York Federal Reserve, 21pc at the Bank of England, and 8pc at the Bank of France. The German Court of Auditors told legislators in a redacted report that the gold had "never been verified physically" and ordered the Bundesbank to secure access to the storage sites.

It called for repatriation of 150 tons over the next three years to test the quality and weight of the gold bars. It said Frankfurt has no register of numbered gold bars.

The report also claimed that the Bundesbank had slashed its holdings in London from 1,440 tons to 500 tons in 2000 and 2001, allegedly because storage costs were too high. The metal was flown to Frankfurt by air freight.
Has German’s federal government smelled something fishy? Or have they been influenced by the concerns of US Texas Congressman Ron Paul whom has urged, through a bill, for the audit of the US Federal Reserve’s gold?

What if central bank vaults have indeed over-declared their holdings through accounting wizardry? What if central bankers have used of gold for loans, swaps and repurchase agreement partly to control or manipulate or suppress gold prices?

If the suspicions of gold bugs are exposed as true, will the German “audit” prompt for a wider international or domino effect of gold audits that would force central banks, who could have been naked short on gold, to cover or buy them back which should drive gold prices significantly higher?

Or will this be just another white wash? Thus, perhaps the recent price pressures on gold?

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Or by securing their gold holdings, have German federal authorities been dabbling with the prospects of an eventual departure from the euro?

More questions than answers from such interesting turn of events.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Exodus in Spain: More Foreign and Local Residents Emigrate

Early this year, I posted about the coming European diaspora. Current events seem to confirm on such trends as Spain continues to suffer from an exodus of foreign and local residents.

From ABC.es 
In the first nine months of the year have left Spain 420 150 people, of which 365,238 were foreigners and 54,912 Spanish, 37,539 more than in the same period in 2011, primarily for the Spanish emigration. 

Nationals who have left Spain increased by 21.6 per cent from the 45,161 who were between January and September 2011 to 54,912 this year, according to current population estimates published on Monday that the INE. The net migration-the difference between people coming and going, which was less than 137,628 people, of which 25 539 112 089 Spanish and foreign-and for the first time has been negative for the Spanish in all the Autonomous Communities.
As previously pointed out such dynamics are cumulative symptoms of the manifold policy failures in providing economic opportunities from the rampant interventionism by European governments such as Spain.

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Europe’s ESM Activated, Expect ECB to Rev Up on the Printing Press

Europe’s permanent bailout fund has been activated. This means that ECB’s “unlimited” bond purchasing program which the ESM serves as part of the conditionality for bailouts of crisis stricken member states will go into full throttle.

From the Bloomberg,
European governments set up a full- time 500 billion-euro ($648 billion) fund to aid debt-swamped countries and, not for the first time in the three-year crisis, expressed confidence that the extra financial muscle won’t be needed anytime soon.

Finance ministers from the 17 euro countries declared the European Stability Mechanism operational, while saying that Spain, its biggest potential near-term customer, isn’t on the verge of tapping it. Decisions were also put off on Greece’s next aid payment and on an assistance program for Cyprus.

Creation of the ESM “makes the strategy of member states credible and equips the euro area with much better tools to appropriately respond to future crises,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters in Luxembourg today before a meeting of euro finance chiefs that began at 5 p.m.

The fund’s birth was eased by the European Central Bank’s offer in August to buy bonds of fiscally struggling countries, which has driven down interest rates in Spain and Italy and bought European governments time to address the root causes of the crisis.

The ESM will replace the temporary European Financial Stability Facility, which has spent 192 billion euros of its 440 billion euros on loans to Ireland, Portugal and Greece. The two funds will run in parallel until the EFSF is phased out in mid- 2013.

Oh you may ignore the propaganda about "financial muscles won't be needed anytime soon".

This marks the path towards further centralization of the EU. Again from the same article.
Controlled by euro finance ministers, the ESM can lend directly to governments, intervene on bond markets, offer credit lines and provide loans that can be used to recapitalize banks. It would be authorized to pump capital into banks directly only once the euro zone sets up a central supervisor, possibly in 2013.

The ESM inherited those powers from the temporary fund. For now, it will go without two other EFSF tools that have yet to be used: debt-insurance certificates and co-investment vehicles that were designed to use leverage to multiply their impact.
With the ESM in place, expect the ECB to rev up on the presses.

Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Signs of Dancing on the Grave of Keynesianism

Yesterday my quote of the day was about Austrian economist Gary North’s prediction of the twilight of the Keynesian political economy.


Apparently 6 of them represent symptoms of Mr. North’s prophesy.

The 6 signs from Simon Black:
3) Last month, a school district in California sold $164 million worth of bonds at 12.6% interest; this is more than Pakistan, Botswana, and Ecuador pay in the international bond market.

4) Based on the Treasury’s most recent statistics, US government interest payments to China will total at least $26.055 billion this year. The real figure may be much higher given that China has been purchased Treasuries for decades, back when interest rates were much higher. They’re still getting paid on those higher rates today.

Even still, this year’s interest payment to China totals more than ALL the silver that was mined in the world last year.

5) In August 2008, just before the Lehman Brothers collapse, the number of employed persons in the United States was 145.47 million persons. Over the subsequent years, the employment figure dipped to as low as 139.27 million. Today it stands at 142.1 million.

Even if this is considered recovery, to ‘rescue’ those 2.8 million jobs, it took the federal government an additional $6.421 trillion worth of debt ($2.3 million per job), and a $1.9 trillion (203%) expansion of the Federal Reserve balance sheet.

6) Meanwhile, despite trillions of euros in debt and bailouts, the unemployment rate in the eurozone just hit a record high of 11.4%… and a second Spanish bailout is now imminent.

7) Inflation in Zimbabwe (3.63%) is lower than inflation in the UK (3.66%, August 2011-July 2012).

8) Last week, the French government reached a ‘historic’ budget compromise, shooting for a budget deficit that’s ‘only’ 3% of GDP. This is based on an assumption that the economy will grow by 0.8%.

In other words, France’s official public debt (which is already at 91% of GDP) will increase by 2.2% of GDP next year amid flat growth. And this is what these people consider progress.

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From Cato’s Dan Mitchell

To add, last month the French government approved of the 75% tax on those earning over one million euros a year — by holding public spending and not cutting government jobs (IBD). So the French class warfare policy essentially kills the proverbial goose that lays the golden eggs.

So by maintaining the unproductive segments of a society who entirely depends on the shrinking the productive sectors, French politicians believe that the Santa Claus Fund will never end and instead would bring about prosperity.

The populist measures undertaken by the French government essentially assures of the diffusion and the intensification of the Euro crisis which most likely serves as the death warrant for the euro.

Events in France will perhaps herald the coming global debt default that will engulf most of developed nations and emerging economies whose economies have been predicated on the Keynesian parasitical relationship welfare-warfare states.

In a world of politics, common sense is uncommon specially backed by obtuse theories moored on the belief of the Philosopher’s stone of turning lead into gold.

As the distinguished Ron Paul recently wrote,
It's because too many politicians believed that a free lunch was possible and a new economic paradigm had arrived. But we've heard that one before — like the philosopher's stone that could turn lead into gold. Prosperity without work is a dream of the ages.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Risk ON Risk OFF is Synonym of The Boom Bust Cycle

Prices are relative: high prices may go higher, while low prices may go lower.

The accretion of price actions is what constitutes a trend. Trends can be seen in a time variant lens: intraday, day, weekly, monthly, yearly or decades.

A bullmarket is when the dominant or major trend is up, while the opposite, a bearmarket is when the major trend is down. A market in consolidation means neither the bulls nor the bears get the dominance.

Yet price trends can be seen in many ways depending on reference points. Having said so, people can make biased and deceptive claims by the manipulating the frame of the trend’s reference points to uphold their perspective.

Meanwhile inflection points extrapolate to a reversal of trends which may allude to major or minor trends.

The actions over the past two weeks may yet be seen as normal correction. That is what I hope it is. But I can’t vouch for this.

We Have Met The Enemy And He Is Us

Yet relying on hope can be a very dangerous proposition. As a popular Wall Street maxim goes, bear markets descends on a ladder of hope. While I am not saying we are in a bear market, it pays to understand that quintessentially “hope” represents the basic shortcoming of vulnerable market participants.

Managing emotional intelligence or having a street smart-commonsensical approach, or prudence is a better a part of valor is my preferred option in dealing with today’s torturous bubble plagued markets[1]. There are times that require valiance, however, I don’t see this as applicable today yet.

As an aside, in testy times as these, market participants should learn how to control their emotions or temperaments so as to prevent blaming somebody else for one’s mistakes, and learn how to take responsibility for their own actions. Self-discipline should be the elementary trait for any investors[2].

Regrets should be set aside for real actions. This means that we can opt to buy, sell or hold, depending on our risk tolerance, time orientation and perception of the conditions of the markets. People forget that holding is in itself an action, because this represents a choice—a means to an end.

And because the average person are mostly afflicted by the heuristic of loss aversion[3] or the tendency to strongly prefer avoiding losses to acquiring gain, in reality since a loss taken signifies an acknowledgement of mistakes, the pain from such admission leads to one to take on more risks that leads to more losses, than to avoiding losses.

As American financial historian, economist, author and educator Peter Bernstein wrote[4],

When the choice involves losses, we are risk-seekers, not risk averse.

Egos, hence, play a big role in shaping our trading, investing or speculative positions.

To borrow comic strip cartoon character Pogo most famous line[5]

We have met the enemy and he is us

The Essence of Risk ON Risk OFF Moments

Nevertheless current developments continue to reinforce my perspective of the markets.

1. Despite all the recent hype about local developments driving the local market, external factors has remained as the prime mover or influence in establishing Phisix price trend. This has been true since 2003. Remember, the Philippine President even piggybacked on this[6]

The good thing about market selloffs is that this has been unmasking of the delusions of greatness and its corollary, the deflation of many puffed up egos.

This also shows that there has been no decoupling

2. Global financial markets have moved in on a Risk On or Risk Off fashion.

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While the degree of performances may differ, actions in the global financial markets today have shown increasingly tight correlations. The general trend direction and even the undulations of the Phisix, the US S&P 500, the European Stox 50 and the Dow Jones Asia Pacific index over past 3 years have shown increased degree of conformity.

Risk ON moments are mostly characterized by greater appetite for speculative actions as seen in the correlated upside movements of prices of corporate bonds, equities, commodities, and ex-US dollar currencies.

On the other hand, Risk OFF episodes or risk-averse moments like today, have accounted for “across the board selloffs” a flight to safety shift to the US dollar and US treasuries.

There has been little variance in price trends that merits so-called portfolio diversification. As pointed out before these have been signs of “broken”[7] or highly distorted financial markets.

Observe that whether the actions WITHIN the Philippine Stock Exchange, or among major developed and emerging market bellwethers or the other asset markets, current market trends produces the same Risk ON-Risk OFF patterns.

A dramatic upside move during the first four months only to be substantially reduced this month exhibits little evidence of conventional wisdom at work. Neither earnings can adequately explain the excessive gyrations in market fluctuations nor has contemporary economics.

Risk ON and Risk OFF, are in reality mainstream’s euphemism for boom bust cycles, which have been caused by inflationism and various forms of interventions—that has engendered outsized volatility in price actions.

Knightean Uncertainty: Greece Exit, China Slowdown and Fed’s End Program Volatility

As pointed out last week, there have been three major forces that have been instrumental in contributing to the recent distress being endured by global financial markets, particularly, the SEEN factor: Greece and the Euro crisis, the UNSEEN factors—China’s slowdown (or an ongoing bust???) and anxieties over US monetary policies.

Since risks implies of measured probability of future events while uncertainty refers to the incalculable probability of future events[8], current events suggests of GREATER uncertainty than of the average risk environment.

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For the third time in 6 months, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) last week cut reserve requirements[9], yet the Shanghai index ignored the credit easing measures and posted a significant weekly loss.

Moreover, the economic slowdown in China has hardly abated.

China’s four biggest banks reported almost zero growth of net lending over the past two weeks[10].

In addition, according to a study by made by a think tank affiliated with PRC’s state council, the estimated the debt-to-asset ratio[11] of Chinese state and private companies, as well as individuals, has reached about 105.4 percent, the highest among 20 countries.

These represent the increasing likelihood of the unwinding of China’s unsustainable bubble. For the moment China’s authorities seems to be in a quandary as they have implemented half-hearted measures which her domestic markets appear to have taken in blase.

Yet if the economy does sharply deteriorate, I would expect more forceful policies to be put in place. So far this has not been the case.

It has been no different in the Euroland where politics have posed as an obstacle to further interventions from the European Central Bank (ECB)

The risks of a Greece exit from the Eurozone seem to have been intensifying. This has been evidenced by the open acknowledgement by Mario Draghi, European Central Bank president, that Greece could leave the Euro. The ECB has even halted to provide loans to four Greek banks[12].

Lending to banks in Greece, which has been experiencing slow-mo bank runs but seem to be escalating over the last week on fears of massive devaluation from the return to the drachma[13], are presently being funded by the national central bank of Greece[14] via the Emergency Lending Assistance.

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While there have been estimates as to the degree of exposures by major banks of several nations on Greece, particularly €155 billion for Germany and France[15], no one can really assess on the psychological impact that would translate to financial losses that may occur once official ties have been disconnected. Even Singapore has reportedly been exposed with “a stunning 60%-plus of GDP tied up in European bank claims” according to Zero Hedge[16].

Add to this undeclared the derivatives exposure on Greek securities at an estimated $90 billion[17], the losses from a full blown contagion can reach trillions to the global banking system.

Thus, the probability looms large that that major central banks would use this as an excuse to justify massive inflationism to protect their respective banking systems.

Again the problem that prevents the ECB from further inflating today has been the uncertain status from the politics of Greece. Since nobody in Greece seems to be in charge, the ECB doesn’t know whom to strike a deal with yet. And perhaps in an attempt to influence Greek politics, as stated above, the ECB has partially cut off funding to some Greece banks.

So this should be another evidence of the interruptions of the money spigots.

But the issue here will be the scale of interventions once the process of the Greece exit is set on motion. This will practically be a race between the market and central bank interventions.

And this is why I believe the markets could be exposed to excessively huge volatility during this May to June window, mostly likely with volatility going in both directions, but having more of a downside bias, until the forcefulness of interventions would be enough to temporarily provide patches to malinvestments from becoming evident.

And perhaps in the realization of the risks from financial isolation and the benefits of conditional redistribution from their German hosts, the good news is that the pro-austerity or the pro-bailout camp appears to be gaining ground.

Recent polls seem to suggest that pro-bailouts as having a slight edge[18] or are in dead heat[19] with former favorites, the anti-austerity camp.

The term austerity has been deliberately contorted by the neoliberals. In reality there has been NO real[20] austerity[21] in the Eurozone as government spending (whether nominal, real or debt to gdp) has hardly been reduced. What has been happening has been more of tax increases with little reforms on the labor market or on the regulatory front to make these economies competitive[22][23].

Finally, compounded by external developments, US markets are likewise being buffeted by the uncertainty towards the Fed’s monetary policies where each time the FED ended their easing measures, downside volatility follows.

This was the case for QE 1 and QE 2, and apparently with the closing of OPERATION TWIST this June, US markets have become volatile again.

And as the US markets has recently sagged, the Federal Market Open Committee (FOMC) once again has signaled that they are open to more credit easing measures using the Euro crisis and the US government budget and or debt-ceiling issues[24] as pretext.

The so-called Bush Tax cuts which is set to expire at the end of the year, will translate to a broad increase in tax rates for all[25], will also be a part of the economic issue. Tax increases in a fragile economy heightens a risk of a downturn, and this will likely be met with more easing policies.

Bottomline: The major issues driving the markets has been about the feedback loop between the markets and inflationism (bubble cycles).

Lethargic prices of financial assets have accounted for as symptoms of the artificiality of price levels set by the governments and major central banks through credit easing programs and zero bound interest rates meant to protect the banking system that has been integral to the current political structures which includes the welfare-warfare state and central banking.

In short, falling markets are simply signs of pricked bubbles.

Outside additional support from central banks, asset prices have been weakening, supported by some episodes of debt liquidations, particularly in the Eurozone and in China.

Currently the PBoC, ECB or the FED appear to be constrained or reluctant to pursue with further aggressive interventions for one reason or another. As previously noted, the BoE has officially put to a halt their QE[26].

It could be that they may be waiting for more downside volatility, which should provide them political cover for such action. Also the unresolved political problems of Greece have been an impediment.

So yes, today’s markets have still principally been driven by the ON and OFF steroids or inflationism from central bankers and will continue to do so until markets or politics forces them to cease.


[1] See Applying Emotional Intelligence to the Boom Bust Cycle, August 21, 2011

[2] See Self-Discipline and Understanding Market Drivers as Key to Risk Management, April 2, 2012

[3] Wikipedia.org Loss aversion

[4] Bernstein Peter Against The Gods, The Remarkable Story of Risks, p. 273 John Wiley & Sons

[5] Wikipedia.org "We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo (comic strip)

[6] See The Message Behind the Phisix Record High May 7, 2012

[7] See “Pump and Dump” Policies Pumps Up Miniature and Grand Bubbles April 30, 2012

[8] See The Fallacies of Inflating Away Debt August 9, 2009

[9] See China Cuts Reserve Requirement May 14, 2012

[10] Businessweek.com/Bloomberg.com Loan Growth Stalled at China’s Biggest Banks, News Says May 15, 2012

[11] Bloomberg.com Chinese Company Debt Is At ‘Alarming Levels,’ Xinhua Says May 17, 2012

[12] See Hot: ECB Holds Loans to Select Greek Banks, ECB’s Draghi Talks Greece Exit May 17, 2012

[13] MSNBC.com Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks?, May 16, 2012

[14] Brussel’s Blog The slow-motion run on Greece’s banks Financial Times, May 17, 2012

[15] See Greece Exit Estimated Price Tag: €155bn for Germany and France, Possible Trillions for Contagion May 17, 2012

[16] Zero Hedge Why Stability Stalwart Singapore Should Be Seriously Scared If The Feta Is Truly Accompli, May 18, 2012

[17] Zero Hedge, Alasdair Macleod: All Roads In Europe Lead To Gold, May 19, 2012

[18] See Are Greeks turning Pro-Austerity? May 19, 2012

[19] Reuters India Greek election race tightens into dead heat May 20, 2012

[20] See More on the Phony Fiscal Austerity, May 16, 2012

[21] See In Pictures: The Eurozone’s “Austerity” Programs, May 8, 2012

[22] See Choking Labor Regulations: French Edition, May 14, 2012

[23] See Greeks Mount Civil Disobedience, Scorn Taxes, May 16, 2012

[24] Bloomberg.com Several on FOMC Said Easing May Be Needed on Faltering, May 17, 2012

[25] See What to Expect when the Bush Tax Cuts Expire May 19, 2012

[26] See Bank of England Halts QE for Now, May 10, 2012

Could Gold Prices be Signaling a Reprieve in Selloffs or a Bottom?

Over at the commodity markets, gold’s and silver’s recent bounce could yet signal a reprieve to the market’s selloff.

On the one hand, this bounce could signify a reaction to extremely oversold levels but may not be indicative of a bottom yet.

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On the other hand, if gold and silver have found a bottom then they could likely be signaling the coming tsunami of inflationism, where the tendency is that gold leads other assets in a recovery, perhaps like 2008.

Also, the recent bounce came amidst Greek polls exhibiting improvements of the standings of pro-austerity camp, perhaps indicative of reduced odds of a Greece exit. A victory by pro-bailout camp government would allow the ECB to orchestrate the same operations that it has been conducting at the start of the year.

For most of the past 3 years prices of gold and the US S&P 500 have been correlated but with a time lag. Since March an anomalous divergence occurred, the S&P rose as the gold fell. For most of the past two weeks both gold and the S&P fumbled which seem to have closed the divergence gap.

But over the two days gold rose as stocks fell. Such anomaly will be resolved soon.

Again, gold cannot be seen as a standalone commodity and should be seen in the context of both the general commodity sphere and of other financial assets.

Focusing on gold alone misses the point that gold represents one of the contemporary assets that competes for an investor’s money. Such that changes in the gold prices would likewise affect prices of other relative assets.

Prices are all interconnected, the great Henry Hazlitt explained[1]

No single price, therefore, can be considered an isolated object in itself. It is interrelated with all other prices. It is precisely through these interrelationships that society is able to solve the immensely difficult and always changing problem of how to allocate production among thousands of different commodities and services so that each may be supplied as nearly as possible in relation to the comparative urgency of the need or desire for it.

To fixate only on gold without examining the actions of other assets would risk the misreading of the gold and other asset markets.

Let me further add that a Greece exit or a collapse of the Euro doesn’t automatically mean higher gold prices. This entirely depends on the actions of central banks.

Since gold is not yet money today, based on the incumbent legal tender laws, it would be totally absurd to argue that under today’s fiat money system—where financial contracts have been underwritten on paper currencies mostly denominated in US dollars or the foreign currency alternatives, European euro, British pound, Swiss franc, Japanese yen or even China’s renminbi—all debt liquidations, be it ‘calling in of loans’ or ‘margin calls’ will be consummated in paper money currency and not in gold.

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This means that a genuine debt deflation would translate to greater demand for cash balance (based on Irving Fisher’s account of debt deflation[2]) which means more demand for the US dollar and other currencies of ex-euro trade counterparties.

And that’s what has been happening lately to the marketplace, the US dollar (USD) and US Treasuries 10 year prices (UST) has risen opposite to falling gold prices and other financial assets.

This means part of the global system has been enduring stresses from debt liquidations, which again bolsters the relative effects of money and boom bust cycles.

As pointed out before[3], it would be mistake to equate the 1930 eras (gold bullion standard) or the 1940 eras (Bretton Woods standard) with today’s digital and fiat money system. That would be reading trees for forest when gold was officially money then.

And given that gold has long been branded a “barbaric relic” and has practically been taken off the consciousness of the general public in Western nations, gold has hardly been appreciated as money, perhaps until a disaster happens.

It has only been recently and due to sustained gains of gold prices where gold’s importance has begun to percolate into the American public[4].

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Yet the Americans see gold more of an investment than as money

But of course, this is different with many Asians who still values gold as money. For example, many Vietnam banks are even paying gold owners fee for storage[5] in defiance of government edict.

Gold’s rise would be premised from central banking inflationism designed to protect the certain political interests, which today have represented the banking institutions and the Federal and national governments.

As proof, the latest quasi bank run in Greece, which I pointed out above, has reportedly been due to concerns over devaluation of the drachma, should Greece exit from the EU and NOT from deflation.

While I remain long term bullish gold, short term I remain neutral and would like see further improvements in gold’s price trend and subsequently the relative trends of other “risk ON” assets.


[1] Hazlitt Henry How Should Prices Be Determined? , May 18, 2012

[2] Wikipedia.org Fisher's formulation, Debt Deflation

[3] See Gold Unlikely A Deflation Hedge June 28, 2012

[4] Gallup.com Gold Still Americans' Top Pick Among Long-Term Investments, April 27, 2012

[5] See Vietnam Banks Pay Gold Owners for Storage, April 12, 2012

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Are Greeks turning Pro-Austerity?

Recent polls seem to suggest that Greeks may after all, still want handouts from their Germans hosts, as pro-austerity votes seem to be gaining ground.

From the Independent

Less than a day after taking office, Greece's new caretaker government was faced with yet another credit downgrade as Fitch that warned Athens of a "probable" exit from the eurozone if pro-bailout parties failed to win new elections due on 17 June.

And it appears that Greeks might be taking this message on board. A new poll yesterday indicated that politicians backing austerity – a necessary condition of the rescue package – would secure up to a 167-seat majority in the new Parliament with the conservative New Democracy party maintaining its lead over Syriza, a left-wing party whose leader has vowed to stop the country's painful public sector cuts.

The poll, conducted for Alpha TV, predicts New Democracy would gain up 123 seats in the 300-member legislative assembly, leaving left-wing Syriza with 66 seats and Socialists Pasok 41. The findings will calm nervous European leaders and financial markets that panicked after an anti-austerity sentiment prevailed in the hung parliament after the 6 May election.

However, as the country embarks on the new campaign some newspapers were left doubtful over the accuracy of the poll. "Elevator polls" read the headline of centre-left daily Ethnos. Political leaders are only just starting to forge alliances with smaller parties in the hope of forming a coalition.

This is yet too early to say. Nevertheless caught between the choice of financial isolation on the one hand, and as beneficiary of conditional redistribution as member of the European Union, on the other hand, the shift in sentiment seems plausible. And it could be that the pro-austerity camp may yet prevail.

As caveat, “austerity” remains a vaguely defined concept today, as the term has been grotesquely mangled by neoliberals.

Greece Exit: Fall Back to Better Leap Forward

Historian Eric Margolis argues that Greece must exit the EU to save the euro

At the LewRockwell.com, Mr. Margolis writes,

What would happen to Greece if it quit the euro? Financial chaos, capital flight, riots, and bank failures. But after the apocalypse, Greece would eventually revert to its 1960’s status: a poor but proud nation living off tourism, shipping, agriculture and fishing.

Devaluing a new drachma won’t do much for a nation whose main export is olives and feta cheese. Besides, the Greeks have severely damaged their tourist industry by endless strikes and surly service.

Angela Merkel is rightly concerned that Greece’s exit from the euro would be a blow to Europe’s political unity. This aspect of the crisis is as important as the economic/financial dimension.

But Merkel should also recall the timeless dictum of Prussia’s king and renowned general, Frederick the Great: "he who defends everything, defends nothing."

Greece should never have been admitted to the euro. It snuck into the currency union by hiring those miscreants at Goldman Sachs to falsify its financial books.

Admitting Greece to the euro zone was a bridge too far. Euro membership should be limited to those nations that have solid finances and honest reporting. In short, a club of northern European nations that follow Germanic good government. Unprepared nations, like Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Moldova or Ukraine do not belong in the euro zone. Most have no business in the EU either.

The European Union and euro zone expanded too far, too fast. Retrenchment is now in order. As the French say, "fall back to better leap forward."

Amidst this crisis, what many forget is that it was caused by politicians borrowing too much to buy votes and shady bankers lending recklessly to boost their own bonuses.

If there is one thing we learn from the Euromess it is the Golden Rule: governments must raise any and all funds they spend.

Borrowing from the money lenders is poison. More empires and nations have been ruined by unsustainable borrowing than by wars. Politicians should not be allowed to borrow except for well-defined, long-term projects, likes roads or bridges, in which revenue streams and repayment schedules are clearly defined.

Well, government spending which has led to massive borrowing has been the main culprit that has brought upon this crisis. And to reduce government spending means to allow forces of productivity to flourish. And productivity comes from the free markets. It’s the only way.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Greece Exit Estimated Price Tag: €155bn for Germany and France, Possible Trillions for Contagion

Estimates have been made as to the cost of a Greece exit

Writes Ambrose Pritchard at the Telegraph, (Hat tip Bob Wenzel)

Eric Dor's team at the IESEG School of Management in Lille has put together a table on the direct costs to Germany and France if Greece is pushed out of the euro.

These assume that relations between Europe and Greece break down in acrimony, with a full-fledged "stuff-you" default on euro liabilities. It assumes a drachma devaluation of 50pc.

Potential losses for the states, including central banks

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They conclude:

The total losses could reach €66.4bn for France and €89.8bn for Germany. These are upper bounds, but even in the case of a partial default, the losses would be huge.

Assuming that the new national currency would depreciate by 50 per cent against the euro, which is realistic, the losses for French banks would reach €19.8bn. They would reach €4.5bn for German banks.

Sounds about right.

I doubt that the US, China, and the world powers would sit back if the EU tried to "teach Greeks a lesson" by making life Hell for them.

There would be massive global pressure on Europe to handle the exit in a grown-up fashion, with backstops in place to stabilize Greece. The IMF would step in.

And here is the part to worry about.

More from Mr. Pritchard,

Needless to say, the real danger is contagion to Portugal, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Belgium, France, and the deadly linkages between €15 trillion in public and private debt in these countries and the €27 trillion European banking nexus.

The ECB will likely resort to printing of money in the scale like never before and will likely be backed by the US Federal Reserve.

If hell breaks lose and the Euro comes undone the more money printing will be unleashed by independent central banks to protect their banking system.

As a side note, this is about the preservation politically protected banking system which has functioned as an integral part of the current structure of political institutions—the welfare-warfare governments and central banks.

So we should expect markets to be highly volatile in either directions as events unfold.

Just a reminder, I bring this up NOT to scare the wits out of market participants (funny how from being a perceived Panglossian analyst, I am precipitately seen as the present day Jeremiah). Some people reduce stock market logic into a groupthink fallacy ("either you are with us or against us").

Paradoxically, the article I quoted above comes from the mainstream.

I am simply presenting the risks that faces the marketplace given the current conditions.

As an old saw goes, pray for the best, prepare for the worst.

As to whether Greece will exit the Eurozone or is beyond my knowledge. The Greek government emerging from the June elections will decide on that. I can only guess or toss a coin. But I can either act to ignore this or include this in my calculation for my positioning.

The fact is that in case the new Greek government decides to opt out of the EU, this would have a material impact on the marketplace—all over the world, the Phisix not withstanding.

Since the overall impact to the markets will likely be unknown, except for some numerical estimates to rely on (which may or may not be reliable) and where the psychological impact cannot be quantified or even qualified, such environment is called as uncertainty.

The current conditions suggests of greater than usual uncertainty. Add to that the China factor and the Fed’s monetary policies.

So, for me, it pays to keep a balanced understanding of how the local markets may become vulnerable to a contagion transmission from external events, than from blindly embracing or getting married to a single position.

I always try to keep in mind the legendary trader Jessie Livermore’s precious advice: There is only one side of the market and it is not the bull side or the bear side, but the right side

Since the markets are about managing opportunities, then opportunities will arise for profits, and opportunities will also arise for wealth preservation.

For now I see the right side of the trade as balancing my portfolio tilted towards the preservation of resources.

On the other hand, I must add that bloated egos will eventually be humbled by the marketplace.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Germany Wants New EU Constitution: Lebensraum Merkel Version?

Sometimes I ponder upon the possibility that today’s crisis has been engineered to impose ulterior goals. In the resonant words of former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel,

You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before.

This I think may apply to the European Union

The Reuters reports,

Germany wants to reignite a debate over creating an EU constitution to strengthen the bloc's ability to fight off financial troubles and counter-balance the rising influence of emerging economies, Germany's foreign minister said on Friday.

Guido Westerwelle said the bloc's Lisbon treaty, drafted after Dutch and French voters rejected a proposed constitution in 2005, was not enough to keep European decision-making structures effective.

"We have to open a new chapter in European politics," Westerwelle told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Copenhagen. "We need more efficient decision structures."

The German minister presented the idea to his counterparts at the Copenhagen meeting, during which they also discussed plans to run foreign policy more cheaply. He said discussions on the issue of a new constitution should continue in Berlin.

The desire and the insistence to centralize the EU translates to an implied expansion of Germany’s political power over the region. Since the EU crisis unfolded, it has dawned on me that the path towards a fiscal policy union seems like a variant of one of Adolf Hitler’s major goalsLebensraum (living space) for the German people.

But instead of forcible (military based) annexations, the Germans have leveraged the acquisition of political power through stealth ‘expansionist policies’ such as bailouts and the attendant ‘proposed’ changes in EU’s political and regulatory framework as the above.

Yet in a world where forces of decentralization has been snowballing, these surreptitious designs are likely to meet the same fate as with the Hitler version.

Integrating the EU, should not be coursed through centralization but through economic freedom and sound money. With economic freedom, the relevance of geographical political borders diminishes.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

I Told You Moment: Philippine Phisix At Historic Highs!

This is the fundamental problem with relying on macro-accounting tautologies; people often bring in causal arguments from economic theories without realizing they are doing so. Robert P. Murphy

The Philippine Phisix posted a blistering start for 2012, which also seems as a lucky initiation for me. That’s because the performance of the local composite benchmark has been realizing what I have been saying especially last December where I pounded the table on the likelihood of this occurrence.

Even better, the Philippine Phisix closed the week to take on the second spot as the best performer[1], based on nominal local currency, among global equity benchmarks (of 78 nations).

Where we had been told by an establishment analyst in a conference that the Phisix will NOT break into NEW highs unless the Euro crisis will get resolved, I argued otherwise.

As I wrote last December[2],

And even more, any hiatus from the perceived worsening of the EU crisis, which will likely be treated with the band-aid approach most likely emanating from massive ECB purchases and possibly from the US Federal Reserve, will likely lead to ASEAN bourses outperforming the region or the world.

This means that contra mechanical chartists and consistently wrong mainstream deflationists, my bet is for the Phisix to breach the August highs perhaps sometime within the first quarter of 2012. Again, all these are conditional or subject to the premise where global central banks will continue to unleash waves and waves of inflationism. Otherwise all bets are off.

Of course the other point is that charts patterns, as I previously noted, will not fulfill its gloomy portent which again validated my projections.

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Charting theory says that long term patterns should have a stronger effect[3] than the short term, yet the 15 month bearish head and shoulder (blue arcs) has clearly been neutralized by the shorter 5 month reverse head and shoulder (red arcs).

In short, the limits of using chart patterns as an investing guide can clearly be observed in the above.

Breaking Out Amidst the Euro Crisis; Refuting Some Euro Crisis Bunk

The Phisix breakout DOES NOT come amidst the resolution of the Euro crisis.

Instead, as I have been repeatedly pointing out, aggressive ECB intervention will work to defer the impact of the crisis and give the pretext for the bulls and for the yield chasers to push up the markets.

Again as from the same article I wrote,

If global central bankers will inflate massively, far more than the market’s expectations from the adverse effects of the crisis then the answer should be a conditional “yes”.

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This exactly is what has been happening as provided by the charts from Danske Bank[4],[5].

So far yields of Spain and Italy has positively responded to such ‘back door’ intervention[6] by the ECB, as debt auctions were reportedly oversubscribed as Euro banks took advantage of subsidized cheap loans from the ECB to acquire sovereign debt of Italy and Spain. Essentially the subsidized rates give EU banks breathing room to earn from the yield spreads and at the same time helps to finance government funding requirements.

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Also, the above debunks the mainstream claims that Eurozone policy operates on a quasi “gold standard”. We won’t see monetary inflationism of such magnitude being conducted on a gold standard as this would result to capital flight or a massive outflow of gold reserves.

Writes Joseph Salerno[7],

Briefly, according to the Currency School, if commercial banks were permitted to issue bank notes via lending or investment operations in excess of the gold deposited with them this would increase the money supply and precipitate an inflationary boom. The resulting increase in domestic money prices and incomes would eventually cause a balance-of-payments deficit financed by an outflow of gold. This external drain of their gold reserves and the impending threat of internal drains due to domestic bank runs would then induce the banks to sharply restrict their loans and investments, resulting in a severe contraction of their uncovered notes or “fiduciary media” and a decline in the domestic money supply accompanied by economy-wide depression.

Also this refutes the masquerade about the alleged deleterious effects of austerity. There has hardly been a meaningful austerity (reduction of government expenditures or debt) taking place whether in Europe or the US.

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This certainly has not the case in the US, where government debt has been replacing the deleveraging process being experienced by the private sector components as shown in the chart from PIMCO[8]

What has been happening instead in the Eurozone has been a transfer of resources mainly from the welfare state and the real economy into the highly politically privileged and protected banking sector and even to the arms or weapons industry (!), where the latter seems to be part of a quid pro quo agreement[9] with crisis affected PIIGS in return for bailouts.

And it is also absurd or simply false to claim that a dysfunctional banking system will aggravate current economic conditions in the Eurozone, which are premised on faulty assumptions that credit only drives growth.

Fact is, like Japan’s experience in the 1990s, as the bust phase deepened, credit supply flowed from the impaired banking system to the non-banking sector[10].

In Italy today, organized crime groups or the Mafia has taken over credit provision in many parts of their economy and was even reported as having assumed the “number 1 bank”[11]. So we seem to be seeing the same dynamics of having non-bank sectors taking over.

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And this certainly has NOT been true with the US, where despite falling business loans, the US recession cycle ended in 2009. Credit conditions only bottomed out during the late 2010 way after the US economy have convalesced. Today, improving commercial and industrial loans seem to augmenting the current momentum fuelled by an inflationary boom.

Yet the mainstream gives us false choices premised on accounting tautologies premised on “400 years of accounting understanding”[12].

Try applying this to the stateless Somalia (or failed state as per media’s lingo) to see if such appeal to math and aggregates has been valid. Since there is no state (ergo government spending) such statistics becomes irrelevant. [Perhaps this could be the likely reason Somalia has been excluded in many statistics]

Yet the false dilemma being presented is that Europe’s policy option has been limited to a choice from the following: private sector leverage or public sector leverage or adjusting trade balances. The focus on accounting leads to a solution that requires MORE government intervention by acquiring MORE debt or by inflationism.

The fact is, what prompts for massive trade deficits and deficiencies in trade competitiveness has been brought about by the capital consumption effects of government spending and the boom bust cycles. Political, legal, bureaucratic and regulatory risks also contributes to the business environment uncertainties which put a shackle on entrepreneurship that drives competitiveness.

And proof to this assertion is that despite cheaper wages compared to their developed counterparts, as previously pointed out[13], the crisis affected PIIGS has been least competitive in terms of labor efficiency mainly due to bureaucratic and regulatory impediments. Most of the PIIGS rank nearly (except for Ireland) at the bottom relative to their counterparts in terms of Doing Business.

As for consumption effects of government spending let me quote the great Murray Rothbard[14], [italics original]

All government expenditure for resources is a form of consumption expenditure, in the sense that the money is spent on various items because the government officials so decree. The purchases may therefore be called the consumption expenditure of government officials. It is true that the officials do not consume the product directly, but their wish has altered the production pattern to make these goods, and therefore they may be called its “consumers.”

And boom bust policies likewise alters time preferences of consumers and producers that encourages consumption and misdirection of investments

Writes Professor Robert P. Murphy[15]

The low interest rates of the boom period mislead entrepreneurs into borrowing too much, but they also mislead consumers into borrowing too much and saving too little. This is physically possible because resources that otherwise would have gone into replenishing the capital structure are instead devoted to new projects or additional consumption goods.

Also the great Ludwig von Mises[16]

The essence of the credit-expansion boom is not overinvestment, but investment in wrong lines, i.e., malinvestment. The entrepreneurs employ the available supply of r + p1 + p2 as if they were in a position to employ a supply of r + p1 + p2 + p3 + p4. They embark upon an expansion of investment on a scale for which the capital goods available do not suffice. Their projects are unrealizable on account of the insufficient supply of capital goods. They must fail sooner or later. The unavoidable end of the credit expansion makes the faults committed visible. There are plants which cannot be utilized because the plants needed for the production of the complementary factories of production are lacking; plants the products of which cannot be sold because the consumers are more intent upon purchasing other goods which, however, are not produced in sufficient quantities; plants the construction of which cannot be continued and finished because it has become obvious that they will not pay.

In other words, what the mainstream cannot see as the principal cause of a society’s orientation towards consumption, hence the trade deficits, are government interventionism and the welfare state. The crisis affected Euro economies look as great examples of these policy induced imbalances.

And even worse is the reverential awe towards statistics as an accurate measure of the functioning economy, particularly via the GDP. Little do many understand that such spending biased statistics has been designed towards looking at the economy from the Keynesian perspective, and which in corollary, would lead to Keynesian policy prescriptions.

The fact is the GDP is a highly flawed metric.

Professor Bryan Caplan explains[17],

Gross Domestic Product is staunchly atheoretical. If someone spends money on X, X is GDP - even if "someone" is Congress, and X="a bridge to nowhere."

There are exceptions; most notably, the stats supposedly exclude "intermediate goods" to avoid double counting. I say "supposedly" because the list of "intermediate goods" is so inconsistent. Insofar as police protection and the military protect firms from harm, aren't the police and military intermediate goods? But despite these tensions, a big part of the philosophy of GDP is to eschew philosophical arguments about what's "really productive."

On reflection, though, the standard approach is anything but agnostic. Official stats tacitly make an extreme assumption: waste does not exist. Astrology counts, even though astrologers can't predict the future. Every penny of health care counts - regardless of its efficacy. The whole defense budget counts - even if it's provoking war rather than deterring it. Indeed, if two countries' militaries mutually annihilate, both countries count the cost as a benefit.

So the mainstream case has immensely been pockmarked by half-truths and by reading effects as the cause, all dedicated to the promotion of the status quo whose policies paradoxically constitutes the roots of the current crisis.

And more ironically is that their prescribed policies seem to signify as political insanity—doing the same actions and expecting different results—or as similar to engaging the mythical beast Lernaean Hydra[18] which Greek legendary hero Hercules fought as part of his second labor[19], where for each head that had been cut off from the hydra, two grows in replacement.

The crux of the matter is that current interventionist policies being applied by EU authorities have been contrived at bolstering asset prices in order to keep the balance sheets of the banking sector afloat, and in tandem, to ensure access to financing for the unsustainable welfare state.

So essentially, the tight interdependence of the banking sector and governments can be analogized as two drunks trying to prop each other up by consuming more alcohol which is continually being provided by the bartender (the ECB abetted by the FED).

And this has not been limited to the Eurozone. Mr. Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US Federal Reserve, has reportedly been itching for QE 3.0, but this time, the Bernanke led FED appears to have changed tactic to focus on providing support to the mortgage industry[20] which may reduce political opposition than from the previous QE which concentrated on acquiring US treasuries.

Analyst and portfolio manager Doug Noland thinks the FED will make a go on a mortgage based QE3.0[21],

Fed is quite worried about Europe, global de-risking/de-leveraging, and the strengthened dollar. Especially if the euro faces additional selling pressure, the Fed will talk – and at some point implement- additional quantitative ease in hopes of dampening dollar bullish sentiment. With more Treasury purchases posing significant political risk, they’re cleverly building a case for buying MBS.

And I would add that since the mandated debt ceiling by the US congress has already been breached[22], there seems to be a big likelihood for another accord to hike the debt ceiling levels, of course after some vaudeville opposition acts.

This means that we should expect the US Federal Reserve to actively but perhaps indirectly facilitate the financing of these liabilities possibly through the banking system in exchange for the Fed’s buying of mortgages.

So the ECB and the FED will work to overcome political obstacles by resorting to legal loopholes. They who make the rules, break it.

The bottom line is that we will likely see intensification of central bank actions in 2012. Although I share the view that such conditions are unsustainable and represent as boom bust cycles, it is unclear that any unwinding will happen anytime soon.

As explained last week[23], interest rates will most likely determine the popping of this bubble where interest rates may be driven by any of the following dynamics, changes in: 1) inflation expectations 2) state of demand for credit relative to supply 3) perception of credit quality and or 4) of the scarcity/availability of capital.

And as interest rate levels remain benign, this should mean more upside for global equity markets including the Phisix perhaps until the end of the first quarter. It would be best to assess issues periodically and see how politicians respond to market developments.

The Permanence of Change Represents the Endgame

I might add that it is utter poppycock to talk about any grand finale or Mayan type Armageddon—usually heard from mainstream jeremiads—as outcomes for the current imbalances.

In reality, the ultimate outcome we should expect is the permanence of change.

For instance, the collision of the forces of decentralization with forces of the relics of the industrial era via 20th century political institutions, legal framework and current top-down policies and mindset will likely intensify and may increase social tensions that may lead to some upheavals. Because of the many entrenched groups, profound changes will not be seamless. But eventually people will adapt.

As for inflationism, these have signified as boom bust CYCLES throughout the ages, with the worst consequence leading to death and the eventual birth, or if not, drastic reforms of the monetary system or through defaults. But again people learn to live or move on.

We must realize that in over 200 years, despite 2 major world wars and the grand but botched wretched experiments of communism, aside from pandemics[24] (e.g. Swine Flu) which resulted to massive losses of human lives and large swath of property destructions, world living standards has remarkably spiked[25].

Internal Market Conditions Supports The Phisix’s Breakaway Run

As I wrote in my last major article on the stock market for 2011[26]

Any sustained rally in the Phisix which may come during the yearend or during the first quarter of 2012 will likely translate to a broad market rally.

The 2012 rally has largely been supported by substantial advances in market internals.

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The weekly averaged advance decline-spread has decisively swung to the side of the bulls.

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Average daily trades have also sprung higher. This means more participation (possibly from neophytes) or more churning from existing participants or both. The spike in the trading activities exhibits snowballing confidence.

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This is where the recent breakout seems amiss though, while average daily volume has improved this has not been as extensive as the intensity of the breakout would suggest.

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Finally foreigners appear to be more bullish as net foreign buying averaged on a weekly basis has been on the upside.

As I used to point out, once foreigners become bullish their tendency is to push up major Phisix components or the heavyweights (largest market caps which are most liquid). The consequence is to amplify the gains of the Phisix.

Such bullishness may have filtered into the Philippine Peso, which almost in line with the Phisix was unchanged in 2011, but eked out .8% gain for this week. The Peso was at 44.11 last week compared to this week’s close at 43.75 per US dollar.

Given the strong move by the Phisix which seems to have significantly outraced our neighbors, there is a possibility that interim profit taking would be the order of the coming sessions. Yet even if profit taking mode occurs, the likelihood would be rotational activities—where previous winners may take a recess while the laggards gain the market’s attention—than a broad based decline.

However in a bullmarket, overbought conditions usually may extend.

Overall, since the market is likely to move higher overtime, the short term bias is likely to reflect on a positive sentiment despite interim volatilities.

And for as long as markets remain politicized and highly dependent on actions of policymakers, our task is to monitor their activities and assess and project the possible impacts from such actions on the markets.


[1] See Global Equity Markets: Philippine Phisix Grabs Second Spot, January 14 2012

[2] See Can the Phisix rise Amidst the Euro Crisis? December 4, 2011

[3] Learntechnicaltrading.com Buying signals using trend lines

[4] Danske Bank FX Top Trades 2012 December 14, 2011

[5] Danske Bank Weekly Focus, January 13, 2012

[6] Reuters.com UPDATE 3-Yields fall sharply at Spanish, Italian debt sales, January 12, 2012

[7] Salerno Joseph T. Money and Gold in the 1920s and 1930s: An Austrian View, thefreemanonline.org

[8] Gross William H. Towards the Paranormal, January 2012

[9] See Greece Bailout: The Military Industry as Beneficiaries, January 12, 2012

[10] See Japan’s Lost Decade Wasn’t Due To Deflation But Stagnation From Massive Interventionism, July 6, 2010

[11] Reuters.com Mafia now "Italy's No.1 bank" as crisis bites: report, January 10, 2012

[12] Mauldin John The End of Europe? January 14, 2012 Goldseek.com

[13] See Euro Debt Crisis: The Confidence Fairy Tale and Devaluation Delusion, November 28. 2011

[14] Rothbard Murray N. 1. Introduction: Government Revenues and Expenditures Man, Economy & State Mises.org

[15] Murphy Robert P. Correcting Quiggin on Austrian Business-Cycle Theory, Mises.org

[16] Mises Ludwig von 6. The Gross Market Rate of Interest as Affected by Inflation and Credit Expansion, XX. INTEREST, CREDIT EXPANSION, AND THE TRADE CYCLE, Human Action Mises.org

[17] Caplan Bryan Real Real GDP, Library of Economics and Liberty, January 14, 2012

[18] Wikipedia.org Lernaean Hydra

[19] Wikipedia.org Labours of Hercules

[20] Bloomberg.com, Bernanke Doubles Down on Fed Mortgage Bet, January 11, 2012

[21] Noland Doug, The Year Of The Central Bank Credit Bubble Bulletin January 13, 2012 Prudent Bear.com

[22] See US Debt Ceiling Breached, President Obama to Seek Increase, January 12, 2012

[23] See What To Expect in 2012, January 9, 2012

[24] CNN.com Deadliest pandemics of the 20th century April 27, 2009

[25] See BBC’s Hans Rosling: 200 Years of Remarkable Progress and a Converging World, December 3, 2010

[26] See Phisix: Primed for an Upside Surprise, December 11, 2011