Showing posts with label monetary aggregates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monetary aggregates. Show all posts

Friday, July 20, 2012

US Stocks Markets: Earnings Trump Economic Data, Leading Economic Indicators Fall

The recent rally by US stock markets seems quite impressive but not convincing enough to suggest that treacherous days have been mitigated.

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The S&P 500 has nearly broken out of the current resistance levels

Earnings, which the rally has mostly been attributed to, have fundamentally trumped economic data.

From the Bloomberg,

U.S. stocks rose, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to a two-month high, amid better- than-estimated earnings and bets that disappointing economic data will lead the Federal Reserve to add stimulus.

International Business Machines Corp. (IBM), the biggest computer-services provider, and EBay Inc. (EBAY), the largest Internet marketplace, gained at least 3.7 percent as profits beat forecasts. Walgreen Co. (WAG) soared 12 percent after renewing a contract with Express Scripts Inc. (ESRX) Morgan Stanley (MS) slid 5.3 percent after missing estimates as trading revenue plunged. Google Inc. (GOOG), owner of the most popular search engine, rose 3.1 percent at 5:34 p.m. New York time as revenue surged 35 percent.

The S&P 500 (SPX) advanced 0.3 percent to 1,376.51 at 4 p.m. New York time, the highest since May 3. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 34.66 points, or 0.3 percent, to 12,943.36. The Nasdaq Composite Index gained 0.8 percent to 2,965.90. Volume for exchange-listed stocks in the U.S. was 7 billion shares today, up 4.8 percent from the three-month average…

Today’s advance extended a three-day rally in the S&P 500 to 1.7 percent. Earnings have exceeded analyst estimates at about 71 percent of the 108 S&P 500 companies that have reported quarterly results so far, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Analysts project a 2.1 percent decline in second- quarter profits, the data showed.

As one would note: aside from earnings, equity markets again, are being serenaded by the prospects of more steroids from the FED. The article devotes two more paragraphs on these.

Bad news is good news again.

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Extreme bearish sentiments or the ‘crowded trade’, chart from Bespoke Invest, may have provided the fulcrum for the current bullish momentum.

But current economic figures does not seem to support the continuation of this rally.

From the same article,

Sales of existing U.S. homes unexpectedly dropped and manufacturing in the Philadelphia region contracted for a third month. Other reports today showed consumer confidence weakened, claims for unemployment benefits rose and an index of leading economic indicators declined more than forecast.

Moreover, leading economic indicators fell more than expected.

From another Bloomberg article.

The index of U.S. leading economic indicators fell more than forecast in June, a sign the U.S. economic expansion is slowing.

The Conferences Board’s gauge of the outlook for the next three to six months decreased 0.3 percent after a revised 0.4 percent increase in May, the New York-based group said today. Economists projected the gauge would drop by 0.1 percent, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

Retail sales unexpectedly declined in June for a third straight month, indicating that slow progress in job creation is holding back consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said July 17 that progress in reducing unemployment is likely to be “frustratingly slow.”…

Six of the 10 indicators in the index contributed to the decrease, led by a drop in a gauge of manufacturing orders and consumers’ expectations for business conditions. Four indicators increased.

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And worst, % annual change of M2 have been dropping steeply which should impact both the economy and the markets in the coming months.

Again, outside real actions from the FED, eventually US stock markets, which provides the leadership to world markets, will have to price in real events to sustain such momentum.

But don’t forget political deadlocks, as manifested by Bernanke’s recent warning on the fiscal cliff and taxmaggedon, and on other issues, such as the debt ceiling and or even the Barclay’s LIBOR scandal, can simply swell out of proportions that may trigger mayhem in an environment clouded by immense UNCERTAINTY.

Even external shocks as the worsening of the Euro debt crisis or of a China economic recession could also tilt the balance of risks in US stocks.

Eventually promises are not going to be enough.

Sunday, February 05, 2012

Has Ben Bernanke Been Working to Ensure President Obama Re-election?

Following the closure of the QE 2.0, the US Federal Reserve’s monetary aggregate M2 has ironically been reaccelerating

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Part of this may be due to actions undertaken by team Bernanke to erect a firewall to protect the US banking system that has been vulnerable to a contagion from the Euro crisis.

And perhaps another very important interpretation could be to insidiously promote the probability of President Obama’s re-election.

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Chart from Bespoke (green superimposed arrows mine)

An ascendant S&P 500 has so far coincided with President Obama’s improving re-election odds. That’s because a rising S&P 500 has been projecting an ‘economic recovery’, albeit a manipulated one, viz., flooding the system with enormous liquidity to engineer an artificial boom that eventually leads to a bust.

Whatever the underlying reason/s, we are seeing the business (boom-bust) cycle in progress.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Trick Or Treat: The Federal Reserve’s Expected QE Announcement

``But on the other hand inflation cannot continue indefinitely. As soon as the public realizes that the government does not intend to stop inflation, that the quantity of money will continue to increase with no end in sight, and that consequently the money prices of all goods and services will continue to soar with no possibility of stopping them, everybody will tend to buy as much as possible and to keep his ready cash at a minimum. The keeping of cash under such conditions involves not only the costs usually called interest, but also considerable losses due to the decrease in the money’s purchasing power. The advantages of holding cash must be bought at sacrifices which appear so high that everybody restricts more and more his ready cash. During the great inflations of World War I, this development was termed “a flight to commodities” and the “crack-up boom.” The monetary system is then bound to collapse; a panic ensues; it ends in a complete devaluation of money Barter is substituted or a new kind of money is resorted to. Examples are the Continental Currency in 1781, the French Assignats in 1796, and the German Mark in 1923.-Ludwig von Mises, Interventionism: An Economic Analysis, Inflation and Credit Expansion

What I think would be the most important driver for the global financial markets over the coming weeks would be the prospective announcement by the US Federal Reserve’s Quantitative Easing version 2.0 on Wednesday.

The Gist of QE 2.0

I do NOT share the view that QE has been FULLY factored IN on the financial markets for the simple reason that estimates of the scale and duration and or terms have been widely fragmented. And there hardly appears to be any consensus on this.

The QE 2.0, in my analysis, is NOT about ‘bolstering employment or exports’, via a weak dollar or the currency valve, from which mainstream insights have been built upon, but about inflating the balance sheets of the US banking system whose survival greatly depends on levitated asset prices.

And all talks about currency wars, global imbalances and others are most likely to be diversionary ‘squid’ tactics to avoid the public from scrutinizing on the Fed’s arbitrary actions.

I see the ongoing QE 2.0 as heavily correlated with the legal issues surrounding the ownership[1] of many mortgage securities that has plagued the industry over the past few weeks.

Of course, it is also possible that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and company maybe pre-empting the results of the midterm elections, which they might think, could upset the current policy directions directed at providing subsidies to the banking system. The possibility of Cong. Ron Paul taking over the banking committee in Congress, they might see as a potential risk that could disrupt the viability of the banking system.

More Evidence Of Inflation

Yet there is hardly any convincing evidence that the US will likely succumb to another recession even without QE 2.0.

Even the credit markets have been saying so as we earlier pointed out[2].

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Figure 2: Improvement On US Credit Markets (charts from St. Louis Fed)

For an update (see figure 2): Bank Credit of All Commercial Loans seem to be picking up momentum anew (top window), even Individual loans at ALL commercial which have recently skyrocketed, seem to be in a short pause but still looking vibrant (bottom pane) while Commercial and Industrial Loans of ALL Commercial banks seem to be bottoming out (mid window).

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Figure 3: US Monetary Aggregates Points To Inflation (St. Louis Fed)

And even US monetary aggregates[3] appear to be saying the same story: MZM (upper window) and M2 (mid window) have recently been exploding skywards, while the M1 multiplier, a former favourite tool of permabears which tries to measure velocity of money, appears to be emerging fast from a bottom. And this is even prior to the Fed’s supposed renewed engagement with QE.

What all these seem to be pointing out isn’t what the mainstream and the officialdom has been looking at: we seem to be seeing are convergent signs of emergent inflation!

You have seen the actions US credit markets and US monetary aggregates, now the actions of the financial markets.

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Figure 3: EM Equities, US Bonds and Commodities In A Chorus

We have argued that the convergence between rallying US bonds and a bullmarket in gold and or commodity markets would seem incompatible, from which the incoherence the markets would eventually resolve.

We seem to be seeing clues of this happening now, of course, going into our direction.

And deflationistas, whom have adamantly argued that bonds will likely benefit from a so-called liquidity trap, and have used the deflation bogeyman as justification for more inflationism, appear to be on the wrong the trade anew.

As one would note in Figure 3, emerging market equities (MSEMF or the MSCI Emerging Market Free Index), the CRB or a major commodity benchmark, a bellwether of Treasury Inflation Protection Securities or TIPS (iShares Barclays TIPS Bond Fund) and 10 year US Treasury Yields appear to be in a chorus.

What all these (credit market, monetary aggregates, financial markets) seem to be indicating isn’t what the mainstream and the officialdom have been looking at. (They’ve been fixated with employment figures).

Instead, what we seem to be seeing is a convergence of surging inflation worldwide!

And this is even prior to the Fed’s coming actions.

Not only that.

Last week, the US government sold $10 billion of 5 year Treasury Inflated Securities (TIPS) at minus .55% or negative interest rates for the first time in US history[4]!

TIPS investors don’t just earn from coupon yields, they earn from the adjustment of the securities’ par value[5] along with that of the consumer price index (CPI) thus giving protection against inflation as measured by CPI (which I think is vastly underreported).

This only means that the aggressive bid up of TIPS, which has led to a milestone of negative interest rates, represents a monumental swing in investor sentiment towards a deepening recognition of our transition to an inflationary environment which over the recent past had only been a fringe idea!

And this, in essence, would validate our 2009 prediction that inflation will be a key theme for 2010[6]!

And this also means that the premises of deflationistas are being demolished or dismantled as inflation expectations emanating from central bank policies deepens.

What To Expect

So how does QE 2.0 translate to the actions in the Financial markets?

If the Fed announcement should fall substantially below market expectations (perhaps $ 1 trillion or less) then we are likely to see some downside volatility which should prove to be our much awaited correction.

Yet any substantial volatility in the financial markets would translate to the Fed likely upping the ante on the QE 2.0. Remember falling asset prices would pressure the balance sheets of the banking system, and thus, would prompt for the Fed to make additional injections.

However, given the penchant of the Fed to resort to shock and awe, I wouldn’t be surprised if the FED would equal or go over the previous $1.75 trillion[7] monetization of treasury and mortgage related securities in 2009.

Of course, the other important aspect would be how other central banks would react to the Fed’s actions. We cannot take the Fed’s action as isolated.

If Bank of Japan and Bank of England would augment the Fed’s QE 2.0 by increasing its exposure on its current programs, then we should expect money flows into emerging markets to expand significantly. And this should go along with commodity prices and commodity currencies.

From the current market actions, we seem to be witnessing the early stages of a crack-up boom.

I remain bullish on equity markets, which I see as protection or serving as insurance against the currency debasement programs being undertaken by central banks to promote covert political agendas.

For Emerging Markets and Philippine stocks, we should remain exposed to commodities, energy and property issues.

[1] See The Possible Implications Of The Next Phase Of US Monetary Easing October 17, 2010

[2] See The Road To Inflation, August 29, 2010

[3] M1: The sum of currency held outside the vaults of depository institutions, Federal Reserve Banks, and the U.S. Treasury; travelers checks; and demand and other checkable deposits issued by financial institutions (except demand deposits due to the Treasury and depository institutions), minus cash items in process of collection and Federal Reserve float.

The M1 multiplier is the ratio of M1 to the St. Louis Adjusted Monetary Base.

MZM (money, zero maturity): M2 minus small-denomination time deposits, plus institutional money market mutual funds (that is, those included in M3 but excluded from M2). The label MZM was coined by William Poole (1991); the aggregate itself was proposed earlier by Motley (1988).

M2: M1 plus savings deposits (including money market deposit accounts) and small-denomination (under $100,000) time deposits issued by financial institutions; and shares in retail money market mutual funds (funds with initial investments under $50,000), net of retirement accounts.

St. Louis Federal Reserve, Notes on Monetary Trends

[4] Financial Times, US Treasury sells negative-rate bonds, October 26, 2010

[5] Investopedia.com Treasury Inflation Protected Securities - TIPS

[6] See Following The Money Trail: Inflation A Key Theme For 2010, November 15, 2009

[7] The Economist, A roadmap for more Fed easing, December 4, 2009

Saturday, November 01, 2008

US Federal Reserve: Accelerator to the Floor!

In the battle against debt deflation, TEAM Federal Reserve has gone full blast!

All charts from St. Louis Fed, through October 30

Monetary Aggregates:

Adjusted Monetary Base


MZM (Money with Zero Maturity)

M2

Bank Credit and Federal Reserve Balance sheet holding of US Treasuries
Even as the FOMC brought interest rates down to 1% Fed Fund Futures appear pointing to another 25 basis point cut!

One recent impact: The moribund Commercial Paper and Asset backed markets evincing signs of renewed life!

Kenneth S. Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and now a professor at Harvard quoted at the New York Times,

``We’re entering a really fierce global recession. A significant financial crisis has been allowed to morph into a full-fledged global panic. It’s a very dangerous situation. The danger is that instead of having a few bad years, we’ll have another lost decade.”

Mr. Rogoff adds, “If you print enough money, you can create inflation.

That's what the Fed is doing now.