Showing posts with label oil importers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil importers. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Phisix: Domestic Participants Panic! Bottom Ahoy?!

``Time is what matters most. Just as time is the friend of the great business and the enemy of the not-so great business, so to time, like volatility, makes friends with the long-term investor and antagonizes the short-term one.” –Josh Wolfe Timeless Space & the Mismeasure of Risk

Post Holy week of 2008, we noted of an article by a high profile domestic analyst in a business broadsheet satirically provoking local stock market participants to “panic” so as to “end” the anguish of the present bear market.

The article appeared to be a “reverse psychology”, as we wrote in In A Crisis, Be Aware Of The Danger But Recognize The Opportunity, ``which was meant to do otherwise, it signifies pretty much of a deeply entrenched state of denial-the inability to accept the persistence of the present conditions. This seems to reflect signs of impatience and deepening frustration from a supposed market expert. As German-Swiss author poet Hermann Hesse in his novel Steppenwolf wrote, ``All interpretation, all psychology, all attempts to make things comprehensible, require the medium of theories, mythologies and lies."

Instead we suggested that prudent investors ought to understand the global credit-equity cycle, which appears to be of more impact to our equity market more than simply reading too much of sentiment as a potential indicator of the direction of our market.

Let us see why…

Figure 1: stockcharts.com: World Equity Markets Have Basically Tracked US Financials

Figure 1 courtesy of stockcharts.com depicts of the Dow Jones World Index (main window), whose peak seems to resemble the local Phisix (not shown), has been winding down since the US General Financial Services (lowest pane) has broken down in July of 2007. In short, global equity markets have been heavily correlated with the performance of US financial stocks and apparently have signified as a drag.

However, in contrast to the Dow Jones World index, which remains above its recent low, the local benchmark the Phisix has severely underperformed by successively carving out new lows despite this week’s technical rally.

Will Global Financial Markets Survive High Oil Prices?

In addition, we hear many of today’s pains pinned on oil prices. However, such causality seems specious. The same chart shows oil prices (pane below main window-$WTIC) and global equities have not been strongly associated. On the contrary, the recent rally of oil prices coincided with the rebound of global equity markets.

When oil prices pinnacled at nearly $140, global equity markets were already rolling over concomitantly alongside with the US financials. Thus, the pain from high oil prices is clearly a subordinate source of concern relative to the headwinds from the US financials.

On a positive note, $135 oil today also translates to strong demand from emerging countries, which is a peculiarity or an unprecedented characteristic given today's environment see Figure 2.

Figure 2: British Petroleum: World Oil Consumption: Signs of Decoupling?

British Petroleum notes that ``world consumption rose by about 1 million barrels in 2007, just below the 10 year average. OECD consumption declined nearly 400,000 barrels per day. China accounted fro the largest increment to consumption even though growth rate was below average. Consumption in oil exporting regions was robust.” (BP)

Essentially with oil at $135, the outperformance of emerging markets relative to advanced economies in terms of oil consumption could also be seen as another sign of "decoupling".

Yes, China surprisingly raised energy prices this week-18% diesel, 16% gasoline (NYT) and electricity prices nearly 5%-which means easing of subsidies to alleviate the growing incidences of crippling shortages arising from losses of petrol refineries, whom have been curbing production, aside from the prospects of power failure (as the Olympic season nears), as power companies have become reluctant to operate oil fired power stations for the lack of revenues to cover oil costs. Anyway, despite such increases, refined crude oil prices are still about 30% BELOW world market prices!

Of course while we may expect price increases to somewhat dampen demand for energy usage (it is expected to hurt mostly countries that don’t use subsidies), this won’t be enough to curtail overall demand as evidenced by some countries who recently undertook measures to lift subsidies as Indonesia-recently hiked oil prices last May (Reuters), saw vehicle sales 24.4% year on year but 1.8% down from April (automotive world).

Besides, the market have learned how to adjust to the recent high oil price landscape by introducing fuel efficient yet affordable motor vehicles, as shown in Figure3.

Figure 3: Economist: Where low-cost car sales are set to grow

From the Economist, ``WITH one eye on emerging markets and another on fuel restrictions more carmakers are entering the low-cost car market. Renault, which already manufactures the €7,600 ($12,000) Logan, recently announced a venture with Nissan and an Indian carmaker, Bajaj Auto, to develop a car that will compete with Tata's Nano, which goes on sale in India in October for a tiny $2,400. Sales of basic and small low-cost cars are predicted to leap by nearly 4m cars a year to 17.7m by 2012, according to Roland Berger, a consultancy. Growth is set to be highest in the emerging economies of Asia and Eastern Europe, but sales in America, home of the big gas-guzzler, will also grow by an average of 8.7% a year.”

Figure 4: Economist: Falling US Light Truck Sales

So yes, while SUVs and Hummers (figure 4) are on the decline in the US, we don’t see the same with China which has a black market for Hummers and some growing variants-Beijing Auto’s Trojan and Dongfeng Auto’s HanMa (Financial Times).

The world has survived high oil prices. And is likely to get over high oil prices provided the world can adapt to the changes brought forth in time.

In fact, as seen in above, it is not high oil prices per se that has been contributing to the angst of the financial markets and the real economy, but the rate of change of oil prices, given that oil has doubled year on year. But then again the world markets seem to be finding ways and means to adjust to a given environment.

The point is that high oil prices reflect the reality of distortive government policies on one hand, and the seismic shift in the sphere of global economic progress on the other.

Short Credit-Short Equity In The Face of Global Monetary Inflation

Next, as we further commented, the pang of the recent bear market here and abroad looks likely one which tracks the cyclical credit-equity cycle. As we earlier quoted Citibank’s Mark King’s credit-equity cycle, it looks likely that we have segued into the fourth phase, where…

``Phase 4: Short credit, Short equity

``This is the classic bear market, when equity and credit prices re-couple and fall together. It is usually associated with falling profits and worsening balance sheets. Concerns about insolvency plague the credit market, while broad profit concerns plague the equity market. A defensive strategy is most appropriate - cash and government bonds are the best performing asset classes.”

Going back to figure 1 shows that LIBOR rates have remained high signifying continuing stress in the credit markets.

The London Interbank Offered Rate (wikipedia.org) is a daily reference rate based on the interest rates at which banks offer to lend unsecured funds to other banks in the London wholesale money market (or interbank market). To quote David Kotok of Cumberland Advisors, ``LIBOR is perhaps the most important interest rate in the world, in US dollar terms. It’s the pricing reference for probably $150 trillion. Trillion with a T. That number includes lots of derivatives.”

While falling credit and falling equities seem to be the classic bear market which we envisage today, we are faced with an environment where rising goods and services inflation makes the classic defensive strategy (cash and bonds) as an unlikely viable option.

Why? Because the inflation phenomenon has been transformed into a global affair. To aptly quote Doug Noland, in his Credit Bubble Bulletin (emphasis mine),

``First, there is the massive flow of dollar liquidity inundating the world. Despite huge dollar devaluation, a major Credit crisis, and economic downturn, our system is on track for yet another year of $700bn plus Current Account Deficits (and this doesn’t include the massive speculative outflows to participate in the global inflation). Global economies, especially booming Asia, are awash in dollar liquidity to use to bid up the prices of oil and other strategic resources.

``Second, today’s massive dollar flows have increasingly gravitating to speculative endeavors (hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, commodities speculation, etc.) – each year ballooning the “global pool of speculative finance” that by its very nature chases rising prices (“liquidity loves inflation”).

``Third, the confluence of the flood of global liquidity and unfettered domestic Credit systems has exerted its greatest stimulatory effect upon the highly populated countries of China, India, and Asia generally. This, then, has created a historic inflationary bias throughout the energy, food and commodities complexes.-Doug Noland Good Inflation?


Figure 5: Brad Setser: US Exports More Financial Assets

Proof? Figure 5 courtesy of the Brad Setser of the Council of Foreign Relations shows that the US exports TWICE more Financial Assets than its exports of goods and services.

To quote the meticulous Brad Setser, ``No one has argued that the main benefit of globalization is that it allows America’s bankers to sell US debt – and increasingly shares of American companies – to governments in the emerging world. But that is a fairly accurate description of current trade and financial flows.”

This is the epitome of the US dollar standard- the US sells promises to pay (sovereign debt or treasuries/agencies) in exchange for goods and services, aside from selling equity ownership in the US to foreigners (mostly emerging markets).

Thus, the ongoing wealth transfer and inflationary pass through from the US to world which has begun to boomerang back to the US.

Local Investors Gripped By Panic! Bottom Ahoy?

Well going back to the local analyst who called for the domestic participants to panic, the Philippine stock market appears to be accommodating his wishes.

Market internals suggests, despite the rally in the Phisix last week, of panic stricken activities led by local mostly retail investors.

Let us look at some of the evidences:

Figure 6: PSE: Net Foreign Trade

Figure 6 accounts for the year to date representation of net foreign trade. The chart shows that despite the most recent burst of foreign selling largely brought upon by the intense politicking amidst a drab global equity market sentiment, the intensity of foreign selling seems to have been thawing (red arrow) compared to the earlier bouts of liquidation.

In fact, for this week, foreign trade accounted for a marginal net buying of Php 152 million. But, this came amidst a negative net foreign trade breadth or the number of companies with positive foreign trade minus number of companies with negative foreign trade.

For the Phisix to bottom, foreign trade needs to revert to both a positive net Peso value and positive market breadth. We anticipate improvements on the said variables as the BSP raises interest rates in the face of high goods and services inflation, provided the politicking will abate.

However, market breadth persisted to decline despite the modest rally posted by the Phisix this week.


Figure 7: PSE data: Deteriorating Advance-Decline Spread

As can be seen in Figure 7, market breadth has turned deeply negative, but this has been smaller compared again to the earlier bouts of selling seen last January or March.

A bottoming phase would likely show lesser degree (smaller incidences of declining companies) and intensity (smaller number of declining companies during down days) of negative market breadth coupled with stability or improvement in the technical picture.


Figure 8: PSE: Collapsing Average Peso Trade Amidst Rising No. of Trades

And the kicker, as shown in Figure 8, is the surging number of trades (violet) amidst a materially diminishing Peso volume per trade (maroon).

During the earlier bouts of selling (since the second round of credit driven fears emerged in October 2007), the number of trades had been declining as the Phisix headed lower. This basically reflected a retreat of buyers.

However during the past two months we can see a reversal of this pattern, the Phisix persisted towards its downdraft but the number of trades amplified. This apparently reflects FEAR.

In addition, the latest episode of selling shows that the average Peso volume per trade has dramatically weakened. Again the lower volume plus heightened trading activity could possibly indicate fear among small accounts or retail investors!

Usually, the inflection point of any cycle is marked by a shift in ownership. In a bullmarket cycle, the strong hands give way to the weak hands who pushes the market to its maturity or until the pivotal turning point. On the other hand, we should expect the same but an antipodal ownership shift in a bearmarket, where weak hands are expected to give way to the strong hands.

So for our analyst whose wishes appear to have come in full circle, perhaps this could be indicative of the nearing culmination of the bearmarket.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Energy and Food Crisis: The Fallacy of Government Heroism

``The genius of capitalism lies in its ability to make self-interest serve the wider interest. The potential of a big financial return for innovation unleashes a broad set of talented people in pursuit of many different discoveries. This system driven by self-interest is responsible for the great innovations that have improved the lives of billions.” –Bill Gates

I’d like to profusely thank profound thinker and international fund manager, Mr. Louis Vincent Gave, CEO of the Hong Kong based Gavekal Capital for bequeathing two of their latest marvelous books to your lowly analyst, the Roadmap for Troubling Times and Jesus: The Unknown Economist. It feels wonderful to be in good graces with people whom I wish to emulate.

****

Over the week we came across an article where a high ranking church personality, South Cotabato Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez, threatened to withhold communion rites to rice hoarders because of “greed” and correspondingly called on the Philippine President to impose “political will” to resolve the crisis.

GMANews quotes Bishop Guiterrez ``Something is wrong. The reason is greed of the businessmen. Some people are hoarding and the others are taking advantage of the crisis to get more money….She has all the power, so use the power to solve the rice crisis because there is supply but the price is critical. There is rice so it’s only a matter of will power of the president."

In a world of villains and heroes, Bishop Guiterrez espouses “hook line and sinker” the government propaganda that business people are “evil” and government as the “savior”.

And since rice is only a “matter of willpower of the president” this implies that Philippine government has an infinite stash, or like money, can “print up” the supply of rice that the people requires-where all PGMA needs to do is to wave the magical fairy wand and everybody’s problem will be settled. What Hooey!

This is exactly the oversimplistic socialist fantasy that has brought about the present predicament. When absurd politicking overwhelms economic reality or commonsense, then populist solutions will only lead to short term appeasement at the expense of greater and prolonged pain.

In a skewed sense, Bishop Guiterrez is right. More government “power” leads…not to resolve the crisis but to further exacerbate it.

Since the food crisis is related to the soaring oil and energy prices we might as well give some illustrations on why more government “heroism” or euphemism of interventionism is nothing but a fallacy.

Saudi’s King Abdullah, US President Bush Does Not Need The Bishop’s Communion

Hoarders and speculators have been vilified by the government, the pious and the populace as having “caused” today’s troubles.

But at $135 oil who is doing the hoarding?

From Reuters last April 13th (highlight mine),

``Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah said he had ordered some new oil discoveries left untapped to preserve oil wealth in the world's top exporter for future generations, the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported.

``"I keep no secret from you that when there were some new finds, I told them, 'no, leave it in the ground, with grace from god, our children need it'," King Abdullah said in remarks made late on Saturday, SPA said.

``The U.S. President George W. Bush in January urged the Saudi king to help tame soaring prices by encouraging OPEC to pump more oil. On separate trips to Saudi Arabia this year, the U.S. energy secretary also asked for more oil, while the vice president discussed high prices with the king.

``The kingdom has spent billions on building over 2 million bpd of spare crude capacity and is the only country in the world able to bring online large volumes of crude supply quickly to deal with unexpected supply shortages.”

More from the Business Intelligence, ``During the meeting, King Abdullah highlighted the significance of oil revenue and said that as long as there is oil, the Kingdom would not experience economic problems. “I told them once, 'may God give it long life'... they asked me what is that... I told them petrol. As long as petrol is there, we will remain well. Our country will not have any problems,” he said.

So not only has the request of the US President, the world’s most powerful nation, been rebuffed, the world’s largest oil producer has openly declared that it has purposely been withholding supplies because “their children need it”.

According to Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar of the Cato Institute, ``But countries imposing export controls, have, in effect, become hoarders themselves, creating an artificial scarcity in the world market, and an artificially high world price.” (underscore mine)

This simply epitomizes the escalating symptoms of the politics of RESOURCE NATIONALISM where government themselves have been the major hoarders and price manipulators of oil! Stated differently, the world’s oil or food crisis has been MOSTLY about geopolitics, or global governments’ attempt to control natural resources as an instrument to exercise the political heft.

From this perspective it wouldn’t be a farfetched notion to expect the increasing likelihood of prospective military conflicts emanating from heightening resource competition.

Of course the recent volatility in the marketplace has prompted the Saudi leadership to moderate its outlook, according to the New York Times, ``Saudi Arabia is currently pumping 9.45 million barrels a day, which is an increase of about 300,000 barrels from last month.

``While they are reaping record profits, the Saudis are concerned that today’s record prices might eventually damp economic growth and lead to lower oil demand, as is already happening in the United States and other developed countries. The current prices are also making alternative fuels more viable, threatening the long-term prospects of the oil-based economy.”

As you can see, when the winds of the political interest shifts, the Saudi leadership has shown its willingness to adjust accordingly in order to maintain its advantage.

But this is not just about Saudi, the US is the MOTHER of all “hoarders” with an above ground oil stockpile of 702.7 million barrels or representing 97% of capacity which is more than twice the size of private crude inventories with enough reserves to cover against 58 days of supply disruptions (AFP) through its Strategic Petroleum Reserves. Nevertheless, the US congress recently compelled the Bush administration to halt its shipments to the SPR.

And this is not restricted to the US alone, above ground stockpiles or strategic oil/petroleum reserves in China has been estimated at 292 million barrels or 30 days of import (eMediawire) and keeps growing.

Coming from both the supply-export side to the demand-import side, the proverbial 800 lb gorilla in the room has been global governments in the race to corral oil stockpiles! Yet it has been the small fries, who have been simply responding to the incentives set by the authorities, who always take the blame.

Unfortunately, for our beloved Bishop Saudi’s King Abdullah, US President George Bush and China’s Premier Wen Jiabao won’t need his blessings.

The Tragedy Of The Commons

Has the world run out of oil to justify today’s price?


Figure 1: BP: World Oil Reserves in 2007 at 1237.9 billion barrels!

Not if you ask British Petroleum, see figure 1.

From BP’s website, ``Reserves have grown 107.8 billion barrels since 2001 and 168.5 billion barrels, or 14%, over the last decade.” Proven Oil Reserves are estimated at 1.23 TRILLION barrels! Wow that’s a lot of oil out there.

So why has oil prices been climbing?

Like us, British Petroleum chief honcho, Tony Hayward argues that it is due to policy instituted distortions.

From the Economist (highlight mine), ``Mr Hayward blames poor policy-making or, in his florid phrase, “the madness of men”. Some 80% of the world’s oil reserves, he says, are in the hands of state-owned oil firms, which tend to allow firms like his only limited access. He believes that if these riches were fully exploited, the world could easily produce 100m barrels a day (b/d) or more. That’s a big increase on last year’s figure of 82m b/d, and a level that other oilmen, such as the boss of Total, another big Western firm, think impossible.”

Figure 2: API: Myth of Big Oil, 80% of Oil Reserves are Controlled by National Oil companies!

Figure 2 from API shows that government owned companies control 80% of oil supplies!

Since global government owned companies control 80% (some says more) of the world’s proven reserves, any speculation or hoarding can handily be counteracted upon simply by the release surpluses or by producing more supplies as previously discussed in If Oil Is A Bubble, Then It Is A Government Sponsored Bubble!, but has this happened? Unfortunately for us the answer is a NO.

In theory, in a well functioning market, rising prices should trigger supply side responses by attracting and increasing investments that should lead to more production output that would meet demand thereby lowering prices in the future. But, with national governments essentially CONTROLLING and RESTRICTING ACCESS to oil for political (resource nationalism, environmentalism et. al.) or other reasons (lack of capital or technology, unrest and etc…), this hasn’t happened.

And this applies within the US too. High prices simply mean demand far exceeds supply, so much so as bidders are willing to bid up prices for whatever reasons. In corollary, this means that the solution to high prices is to introduce more supplies.

Figure 3: Prof. Mark Perry: Environmental Restrictions

Figure 3 courtesy of Professor Mark Perry at the University of Michigan demarcates the areas from which the US government has restricted oil or energy drilling because of environmental concerns.

To consider, even the world’s premiere capitalist country can be shackled by politics.

CNSNews notes that there are about 279 million acres under Federal management with a potential 117 billion barrels broken down into onshore 31 billion barrels onshore (19 billion barrels inaccessible & 2 billion barrels for standard lease) and offshore 85.9 billion barrels (all off limits).

This is a concrete example of how political based regulations have basically stymied the supply equation contributing to the imbalances reflected in today’s record high oil prices!

Nonetheless, the distortions are also seen from the demand side, Christof Rühl author of the BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy 2008 says taxes and subsidies likewise impact the demand dynamics, again from the Economist, ``According to Mr Rühl, consumption is falling in countries with heavy taxes and rising only sluggishly where taxes are moderate. But in countries with subsidies, it is rising faster than normal, and fastest of all in the countries with the highest subsidies.”

RGE Monitor quotes CIBC (Hat Tip: Craig McCarty), ``Fuel subsidies breed soaring rates of domestic fuel consumption, particularly in OPEC countries, where gasoline is 25 cents/gal in Venezuela and 50-60cents/gal in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iran. No sign of plans to remove subsidies soon in any of these countries.”

Yes, with oil prices drifting at near record levels, additional revenues for oil exporters is expected to reach $400 billion while official assets of oil exporting economies could expand by $800 billion at a conservative estimated average oil price of $115 bbl (Brad Setser), thus curbing consumer subsidies is indeed an unlikely scenario.

True enough, some countries mostly in Asia have acted to ease the government’s fiscal burden by passing the price increases to its consumers at some political costs as previously discussed in Philippine Politics: The Nationalist Hysteria Over Energy Issues.

But overall, where it counts most, like China which accounted for 50% of the global energy consumption growth in 2007 (Tanser-Kiplinger), gasoline prices remain heavily subsidized ($2.6 per gallon-LA Times), which means they are unlikely to get negatively impacted compared to other countries with less subsidies. Let us not forget China’s forex reserved climbed to a new record $1.76 trillion at the end of April (AFP) which also means China can afford to sustain such subsidy for a longer period. This is bad news for us because China and the other Oil exporting countries will continue to ravenously consume oil from which the pain of higher prices will be felt by those incapable of subsidies.

The Economist concludes, ``In other words, the root of the high oil price in BP’s view is not a mismatch between strong demand and feeble supply, but failure on the part of various governments to allow markets to work their magic. There are hints of an improvement on the demand side: several Asian governments have recently decided they can no longer afford subsidies. But it is hard to imagine the world’s ardent energy nationalists suddenly throwing their doors open to foreign investment.”

Politics, Not Greed Result To Higher Food Prices!

Basically, the same dynamics apply to food crisis seen in rice or the wheat markets but with an additional twist,

This quote again from Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar of the Cato Institute,

``International rice and wheat prices have doubled or tripled in the last two years, but world grain production will reach a record high this year. So how come millions are falling into poverty and starting food riots across the world? The answer lies not in any outsized surge in world demand or fall in world supply, but in the fact that several countries have imposed duties, quotas and outright bans on agricultural exports. This has reduced the amount of grain available for world trade.

``The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that world production of cereals was a record 2,108 million tons in 2007, and will hit a new record of 2,164 million tons in 2008. Rice production will rise by 7.3 million tons and wheat by 41 million tons. World cereal consumption has been growing slightly faster (3%) than production (2%) for a decade, so global stocks have fallen to 405 million tons. But this is not a disaster scenario, and it hardly explains skyrocketing prices.

``In the U.S., one-fifth of the corn crop has been diverted to ethanol, and in Europe, some vegetable oil has been diverted to biodiesel. These ill-conceived policies have induced farmers to switch significant acreage from wheat to corn, soybeans and rapeseed, but world wheat output has nevertheless risen from 596.5 million tons in 2006 to an estimated 647.3 million tons in 2008. Corn-based ethanol cannot explain the runaway increase in the price of rice, which grows in very different conditions.”

Yes the added twist comes with the subsidies to biofuels, which was nobly aimed at reducing dependence on fossil based fuels. Of course since regulations by nature are responses to unfolding predicaments then the great tendency for the lack of indepth appraisal. Hence, unintended consequence occur, in this case biofuel subsidies distorts the farmer’s incentives for cropping, see Figure 4.

Figure 4 courtesy of Prof. Mark Perry: Corn From Food to Gas

Figure 4 courtesy of Professor Mark Perry at the University of Michigan shows of how agriculture as signified by corn production originally intended for food to feed people now has to compete with feeding the gas tank…US Corn production for ethanol is expected to climb to nearly 30% of total harvest in 2008!

Nonetheless, since growing corn requires fertilizers- about 90% of the cost of manufacturing nitrogen fertilizer depends on natural gas prices- this leads to a parallel increase in demand for natural gas which means higher prices for natural gas!

From James Finch (highlight mine), ``Nearly 95 percent of U.S. ethanol distilleries use natural gas boilers. Citigroup analyst Gil Yang estimated 28 billion cubic feet of natural gas would be consumed for every one billion gallons of ethanol produced. Cumulative ethanol production could surpass 12 billion gallons. Some analysts are predicted a natural gas demand increase up to one percent from the ethanol boom. But their estimates do not include increased fertilizer demand to increase corn yields.”

``Corn acreage is one of the largest consumers of nitrogen-based fertilizer. And because of the recent ethanol subsidies, more corn will be planted this year than in the past six decades. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, corn growers intend to plant 90.5 million acres in 2007. Because forecasts of ethanol production are expected to increase, expect more corn to be grown. In 2008, about 25 percent of U.S. corn production is planned to produce ethanol. By 2012, 4.3 billion bushels of corn are anticipated for ethanol production. It takes about 450 pounds of corn to produce 25 gallons of ethanol fuel to power an SUV.

So by tweaking on one sector’s incentives, i.e. corn for biofuels, via policy directives, this creates a feed back loop- where more demand for natural gas equals higher energy-and a vicious chain effect of rising energy and food prices!

Moreover, the US corn based ethanol story doesn’t here.

Brazil’s sugar based ethanol, the world’s largest and the most efficient producer (Ethacane is twice as productive as ethacorn -- 6,800 liters per hectare for the former and 3,100 liters per hectare for the latter. It also produces 24 percent more fuel per hectare than the beet- or wheat-based ethanol common in Europe.-Alexandre Marinis) has been restricted entry to the US by virtue of a tariff of 54 cents per gallon. The tariff was introduced in 1980 with the intention of protecting US corn based ethanol producers.

Yet who benefits from the tariffs and farm subsidies instituted by the US government?

Figure 5: Heritage Foundation: Subsidies for the Rich, Famous and the Elected

The rich, the famous and the elected as shown in Figure 5 by the Heritage Foundation.

According to Heritage Foundation’s Brian M. Riedl, ``Eligibility for farm subsidies is determined by crop, not by income or poverty standards. Growers of corn, wheat, cotton, soybeans, and rice receive more than 90 percent of all farm subsidies: Growers of nearly all of the 400 other domestic crops are completely shut out of farm subsidy programs. Further skewing these awards, the amounts of subsidies increase as a farmer plants more crops.

``Thus, large farms and agribusinesses--which not only have the most land, but also are the nation's most profitable farms because of their economies of scale--receive the largest subsidies. Meanwhile, family farmers with few acres receive little or nothing in subsidies. Farm subsidies have evolved from a safety net for poor farmers to America's largest corporate welfare program.”

The recent passage of the expanded subsidies of the Farm bill has generated uproar among other WTO member countries. Why? According to Reuters, ``Critics say high U.S. farm subsidies distort the world trading system and squeeze poor-country farmers out of their markets, as well as putting a burden on U.S. taxpayers and giving incentives to U.S. farm businesses that do not need them.”

So again you have governments subsidizing the rich and maligning market signals (which impacts spending investment cropping etc) to the detriment of less fortunate American farmers or the taxpayers as well as farmers in the emerging markets as the Philippines.

Of course, subsidies in the US or Europe (Common Agriculture Policy) isn’t the only story. It’s almost everywhere. And collectively speaking such imbalances have been building overtime.

An example, Steve Hanke of Forbes magazine on Japan’s subsidies, ``Japan announced last month that it wants to export rice. The Japanese rice industry is superprotected, and the government holds huge stockpiles. Part of these stocks are accumulated because Japan agreed, as part of a World Trade Organization deal, to make regular purchases from foreign producers, mainly the U.S. To keep domestic rice prices high, the Japanese government hoards its WTO-mandated imports. Now that Japan wants to unload some of its rice, opposition is flaring up in Washington and other capitals, claiming that re-exports are not allowed under the agreement. When it comes to filling or releasing government stockpiles, politics clearly rules the roost.

Again with politics as the top agenda for global governments instead of allowing market forces to seek direction, we can be assured that energy and food prices will continue with its upward trek until market forces will ultimately prevail via a recession or crisis of sorts.

The belief that governments can micromanage an economy in a highly globalized world is an illusion. Why? Because, to quote Steve Hanke, ``it assumes that government bureaucrats possess the same knowledge of market fundamentals and face the same incentives as well-financed, farsighted private traders. It also assumes that politics will not raise its ugly head. Both of these heroic assumptions are not met in the real world. Government buffer-stock schemes are rife with politics, and instead of generating profits from buying low and selling high, they tend to generate losses.”

So we suggest that our venerable bishop visit instead the embassies of the countries mentioned above and deliver his sermon of “greed” on the politicos.