Monday, March 22, 2010

After The Philippine Peso’s Breakout, Is The Phisix Next?

``Every restriction on the freedom of entry into a trade reduces the security of all those outside it.” Friedrich A. Hayek, Road To Serfdom

It didn’t take long for our expectations to happen.

Last week we argued that while the local mainstream media and the public have been overly fixated on politics, which they presumed as THE overwhelming force that would drive the domestic markets, external forces seemed to have a greater influence[1].

In contrast to the local mainstream mindset where many have argued for “election risks” and henceforth suggested a “sell” we have been taking the opposite stance, the PESO and the PHISIX have, in colloquial, been “rarin’ to go”-ergo a BUY!

And true enough, the first phase of the impact of our external influence theory have manifested in the markets as the Philippine PESO hit a 19 month high!

And local media appears lost for explanations!

One outfit imputed the Peso’s rise to the recent actions of the US Federal Reserve. Another pointed to a firming US recovery. A foreign report alluded to an alleged arbitrage between offshore and onshore funds and finally the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reportedly said that the strengthening Peso has been due to “country’s higher export earnings, in spite of jitters about the coming elections and sovereign debt concerns in some European countries”[2].

My reply: DUH!

Since the Peso’s gain have been in a winning streak, instead of just an outsized aberration or anomaly as signified by a one week jump, hardly any of these explanations “fit” the actuations from which underpins the true dynamics of a buoyant Peso.

Say for example, if a strong peso had been a result of an arbitrage, then the impact is likely to be a short-term reaction. But why a 4 straight week of gains?

In addition, how can ‘jitters about elections’ explain the gains of export earnings? If global consumers see the output from local producers as being ‘affected’ or disrupted by elections, then the former would have probably coursed their transactions with producers of some other nations than from the Philippines. But has this been so? Based on the reply of the BSP official, the answer is an obvious NO! The official’s reply reveals of the apparent self-contradiction or cognitive dissonance.

So how can we SQUARE election jitters with, not only advances in the Peso, but also of export earnings?

Moreover, if these have all been about the US, then an outperformance by the US relative to Asia or the Philippines should translate to a gain in the US dollar vis-a-vis the Peso. What a dichotomy!

Available bias is an intuitive attribution of activities in the marketplace to current events. Unfortunately, market signals appear to have completely diverged from popular sentiment to even warrant the use of such behavioural lapse.

In short, popular sentiment has been so confounded. Yet media, and even officials, obstinately insist on the claptraps of false linkages!

In essence, popular sentiment is all about SENSATIONALISM!

Commons sense is, thus, sacrificed for irrational passion.

To further exacerbate the mainstream anguish of cognitive dissonance, the Philippine equity benchmark, the Phisix, added another week of gains to score its SIXTH straight.

The Phisix is just about [less than] 1% away from a breakaway run.

And if we earlier exhibited how the Peso tracked Asian currencies, then this week’s first chart features Asian equities (see Figure 1)


Figure 1: Bloomberg: ASEAN and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index

At the upper window is the performance of our main ASEAN neighbours.

One would note that Thailand (SETI-orange) and Indonesia (JCI-red) appear to be on a turbocharged performance following recent resistance breakouts.

Singapore [FSSTI-yellow] echoes the price activities or the chart of the Phisix [not included] and appears poised to test on the resistance levels set last January.

Only Malaysia [KLSI-green], which also broke out earlier, seemed to have lost momentum. While bears may take the Malaysian case to argue that this could serve as an indicator for the rest of the region, in my opinion, this isn’t likely so.

Why?

Because the actions of the MSCI Asia Pacific index, a free float-adjusted market capitalization weighted index that is designed to measure the equity market performance of the developed and emerging markets in the Pacific region. As of June 2007, the MSCI AC Pacific Free Index consisted of the following 12 developed and emerging market countries: Australia, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand[3], suggest that Malaysia is an exception rather than the rule.

The MSCI, as exhibited in the lower window, replicates the actions of the Phisix and Singapore and appears in position for the same momentum as we have seen in Thailand, and Indonesia and somewhat in Malaysia.

In short, the overall story that can be gleaned from the region’s equity markets today is one of RISING and not falling markets!

Besides, the foundering momentum in Malaysia may not last long, given the constructive general ambiance, unless of course there is an untoward quirk which we have yet to identify.

Finally, only one article seemed to have referenced on what truly mattered most, a Chinese yuan/renmimbi revaluation as we will discuss below.

In essence, two factors, one structural and one cyclical, will drive the global financial markets over the medium to long term; specifically, the record steep yield curves and the prospects of a rising Chinese yuan.



[1] see Philippine Markets And Elections: What People Do Against What People Say

[2] Manila Times, March 13, 2010 Foreign money in RP financial assets keeps flowing

[3] MSCI Barra, Index Definitions


Influences Of The Yield Curve On The Equity And Commodity Markets

``The interest rates for more distant maturities are normally higher the further out in time. Why? First, because lenders fear a depreciating monetary unit: price inflation. To compensate themselves for this expected (normal) falling purchasing power, they demand a higher return. Second, the risk of default increases the longer the debt has to mature.-Gary North

The first structural factor, the record steep yield curve, should be a familiar theme to those who regularly read my outlook.

This accounts for as the “profit spread” from which various institutions take advantage of the “borrow short term and lend or invest in long term assets”[1].

The Yield Curve (YC) is a very dependable tool for measuring boom bust cycles (see figure 2).

That’s because artificially lowered interest rates, a form of price control applied to time preferences of the individuals relative to the use of money, creates extraordinary demand for credit and fosters systematic malinvestments or broad based misdirection of resources within markets and the economies.


Figure 2: Economagic.com: Yield Curve and the Boom Bust Cycle in the S&P 500

Sins Of Omission: The Influences of Habit or Addiction

It’s fundamentally misplaced to also conclude that just because balance sheet problems exist for many consumers, particularly for developed economies in the West, as they’ve been hocked up to their eyeballs on debt, that they would inhibit themselves from taking up further credit to spend. This also applies to some corporations.

Such presumption fatally ignores individual human action, particularly, for people to develop and sustain irrational habits. Some of these habits grow to the extent of addiction, which could have a beneficial (reading) or negative or neutral effect (mowing lawns). Albeit, addiction has a predominantly negative connotation.

While addiction[2] has many alleged modal causes, e.g. disease, genetic, experimental, and etc., some models have been argued on the basis of purely psychology, specifically:

-choice [The free-will model or "life-process model" proposed by Thomas Szasz],

-pleasure [an emotional fixation (sentiment) acquired through learning, which intermittently or continually expresses itself in purposeful, stereotyped behavior with the character and force of a natural drive, aiming at a specific pleasure or the avoidance of a specific discomfort."- Nils Bejerot]

-culture [“recognizes that the influence of culture is a strong determinant of whether or not individuals fall prey to certain addictions”]

-moral [result of human weakness, and are defects of character]

-rational addiction [as specific kinds of rational, forward-looking, optimal consumption plans. In other words, addiction is perceived as a rational response to individual and/or environmental factors. There wouldn’t be an addict or substance abuse problem, if those affected are disciplined enough to correct habit abuses.]

If affected persons, in recognition of such problems, simply applied self-medication or took preventive measures to avoid the worsening development of negative addiction, then obviously we wouldn’t have addiction problems at all! But certainly this hasn’t been true.

From a psychological standpoint, it would seem quite apparent that addiction is largely a stimulus response feedback mechanism or very much a behavioural predicament.

In other words, negative addiction is fundamentally a choice between temporal happiness over future consequences (frequently adversarial outcomes) or where habit interplays with choices, rational alternatives, environment, moral frailty, cultural influences or seductiveness of pleasure vis-a-vis normal behaviour.

Simply put, there is an incentive for people to develop different forms of addictions.

Applied to the markets or the economy, what if the source of profligacy [or Oniomania[3] or compulsive shopping or compulsive buying], a form of addiction, stems from government initiatives, by virtue of artificially suppressed interest rates?

And what if government induces people to spend on things they can’t afford with money they don’t have, out of the desire to fulfil economic ideology or to promote certain industries?

Will the teetotaller refuse government’s offer of free drinks?

How much of government induced behaviour from reckless policies will force individuals and businesses to take the low interest rate bait?

And this seems to be the story behind the yield curve.

The Stock Market And The Yield Curve Over The Long Term

Notice that every time the long term yield (30 year treasury constant maturity-red) materially diverges from the short term yield (1 year treasury constant maturity-blue) to form a steepened yield curve (black arrow pointed upwards), the S&P 500 (green) blossomed.

On the other hand, inverted yield curves, where short term yields had been higher than the long term yields (green arrow pointed downwards), had preceded recessions and severe market corrections.

Like normal yield curves, the yield curve’s impact on the economy has a time lag, a 2-3 year period.

Even the October 1987 Black Monday crash appear to have been foreshadowed by an account of relatively short inversion in 1986.

And the inflation spiral of the late 70s saw short term rates race ahead of short term rates for an extended period.

So why does an inverted yield curve occur?

Because the debt markets reveal the amount or degree of misallocations in the market ahead of the economy.

According to Professor Gary North

``This: the expected end of a period of high monetary inflation by the central bank, which had lowered short-term interest rates because of a greater supply of newly created funds to borrow.

``This monetary inflation has misallocated capital: business expansion that was not justified by the actual supply of loanable capital (savings), but which businessmen thought was justified because of the artificially low rate of interest (central bank money). Now the truth becomes apparent in the debt markets. Businesses will have to cut back on their expansion because of rising short-term rates: a liquidity shortage. They will begin to sustain losses. The yield curve therefore inverts in advance.”[4]

This means that when consumers and businesses compete for short term funds, demand for short term money raises interest rates. Nevertheless, as the fear of inflation recedes, “an ever-lower inflation premium”[5] forces down long term yields.

As a caveat, since corporations operate on the principle of a profit and loss outcome, they’re supposedly more cautious. But this hasn’t always been the case. And it should be a reminder that a fallout from an imploding bubble does not spare so-called blue-chips, as in the case of the US investment banking industry, which virtually evaporated from the face of earth in 2008.

Industries that have been functioned as ground zero for bubbles are usually the best and worst performers, depending on the state of the bubble.


Figure 2: Business Insider: Falling Net Debt To Cap

Figure 2 is an interesting chart.

Interesting because the chart shows of the long term trend of the S & P 500 Net debt to Market cap-which has been on a downtrend, for both the overall index (red spotted line) and the ex-financials (blue solid line).

Since it is a ratio, it could mean two things: debt take up has been has been falling or market cap has been growing more than debt. My suspicion is that this has been more of the growth in market cap than of debt (since this is a hunch more than premised on data, due to time constraints, I maybe wrong).

In addition, since the tech bubble, corporate debt hasn’t grown to the former levels in spite of the antecedent boom phase prior to the crash of 2008.

Nevertheless, the substantially reduced leverage from corporations, particularly the net debt (red spotted line) which has reached the 2005 low, suggest of a recovery. This could signify a belated play on the yield curve.

Prior to the recent crisis, the S&P net debt began to recover at the culminating phase of the steep yield curve cycle.

Could we be seeing the same pattern playout?

Commodities And The Yield Curve

Finally, the link of the yield curve relative to US dollar priced commodities has not been entirely convincing. (see figure 3)


Figure 3: Economagic: Yield Curve and the Precious Metals

Over the span of 3 decades, we hardly see an impeccable or at least consistent correlation.

Precious metals in the new millennium soared during the steep yield curve. But it also ascended but at much subdued pace during the inversion.

In the late 70s precious metals exploded even during inverted yield curve. While it may be arguable this has been out of fear, it does not fully explain why gold and the S & P moved in tandem see figure 4.


Figure 4: Economagic: Precious metals and the S&P 500

Moreover, between the 80s and the new millennium, correlations have been amorphous.

And perhaps as we earlier averred this could have been due to the formative phase of globalization where much of liquidity provided by the US Federal Reserve had been “soaked up” by the inclusion of China and India and other emerging markets in global trade as a result of policies from Reaganism and Thatcherism and the collapse of the Soviet Union.[6]

The various bubbles around the globe, during the said period, serve as circumstantial evidence of the core-to-the-periphery dynamics.

Overall, as the yield curve remains steep, we believe that the upward thrust of markets should continue to hold sway as the public will be induced to take advantage of the “profit spread” as well as with central banks continued provision of stimulus conditions that would revive the compulsive manic behaviour seen in persons afflicted by varied forms of addiction.



[1] See Does Falling Gold Prices Put An End To The Global Liquidity Story? and Why The Presidential Elections Will Have Little Impact On Philippine Markets

[2] Wikipedia.org, Addiction

[3] Wikipedia.org Oniomania

[4] North, Gary; The Yield Curve: The Best Recession Forecasting Tool

[5] North, Gary; When the Yield Curve Flips. . . .

[6] See Gold: An Unreliable Inflation Hedge?


Spurious Mercantilist Claims And Repercussions Of A Strong Chinese Yuan

``As no one can purchase the produce of another except with his own produce, as the amount for which we can buy is equal to that which we can produce, the more we can produce the more we can purchase.” John Say to Thomas Malthus

The second cyclical variable that should drive the markets over the short to medium term could be the Yuan factor.

For those reading the international scene the Chinese currency the yuan has hugged the limelight of late. That’s because prominent personalities associated with leftist politics have stridently assailed the Chinese government for allegedly perpetuating what they claim as “global imbalances”. It’s a spurious populist claim though, specifically meant to divert the public’s attention from their failed policies.

Nevertheless some variables are proving to be very compelling to suggest for a Yuan appreciation (see figure 5)


Figure 5: Danske Research: Implications of the Rising Yuan

The money printed by China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, utilized to accumulate foreign exchange has been generating unwieldy inflation and bubble-like pricing activities in the housing markets. This hoard has reached $2.4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves as of 2009.

China has attempted several times since last late year to arm twist several industries to stem credit expansion which has led to inflation. Lately she has threatened to nullify loans granted to local governments and has similarly instructed 78 state owned enterprises (SOE) to quit the real estate market leaving 16 SOE property developers.

And economic overheating presents as a real risk. There has been an acute shortage of labor where factory wages have risen by as much 20% as the inland now competes with the coastal areas and reduced migration in search of jobs.

We are now witnessing a classic adjustment in trade balances as taught in classical economics. As Adam Smith once wrote, ``When the quantity of gold and silver imported into any country exceeds the effectual demand, no vigilance of government can prevent their exportation.[1] (emphasis added)

In short, this leaves the Chinese government little or no option but to allow its currency to rise as a safety valve against a runaway inflation.

As shown in Figure 5, left window, USD-China’s yuan currency forward has been trending downwards which shows how the markets today have been factoring in the rise of the yuan. The right corner shows how adjustments were made in 2005 to reflect the advances in inflation. So yes, the Chinese policymakers in 2005 have responded to such scenario, and is likely to apply the same soon.

This means political pressure or no political pressure, China’s yuan will need to appreciate soon, simply because the economic pressures have been endogenously seething which will require for policy adjustments.

This leads us to the next issue which deals with why the cry for protectionism is spurious and the potential impact of the rise of the China’s yuan.

Mercantilism is a form of economic nationalism, which has long been rebuked by Adam Smith in his magnum opus, the Wealth of Nations. Mercantilism today has served as a basis for calls of protectionism.

Here we will unmask the partisanship of protectionist overtures against China.

First, the fallacy of the notion that trade is a zero sum game.

For the myopic protectionists who sees the world as confined to the equation GDP= C (Consumption) + I (Investments) + G (Government spending) + X - M (Exports-Imports), the mathematical operation involved in the equation which subtracts exports from imports engender a negative connotation for imports on economic growth. Hence, the bias or slant against imports for exports.

For instance, as I walked out of the pizza house following a hearty meal, I realized that the Pizza house, which earned the money I spent on, incurred a trade surplus. This left me with lesser money in my wallet, which accounts as my trade deficit. Although after the delectable meal, I also realized that my need for nourishment has been satisfied, unfortunately this has not been represented for in the GDP equation.

If I continue going to the same pizza house because I enjoyed the food, the ambiance, the services, the pretty youthful waitress or for many other reasons, the Pizza house will continue to incur surpluses while my wallet gets drained by deficits.

In the view of mercantilists whom tunnels on the flow of money only, but not the impact of or the satisfaction attained from the voluntary exchange, I would demand from the government that the Pizza house ‘balance its trade’ with me, by forcing them to take my services as a stock market agent, even if the owner isn’t inclined to deal with stock markets. If this sounds nonsensical, that’s exactly how the protectionists think.

If all the entities that I spent money on will be required to take on my services, from which rule applies to everyone, do you think the economy will prosper? Apparently not, that’s because people will probably stop trading with each other legally and do it behind the scenes.

In the above case, the pizza house will refuse me as a customer, that’s because they don’t need my services, even if I need them. In essence, forcing the people to buy or sell beyond their self-interests will cause a restriction of activities.

And be reminded that it is the individual that conducts trade. Whether it is done through personal, or through various forms of enterprises (proprietorships, partnerships or corporations), trade balances are incurred as individuals but only represented as enterprises or as states or nations.

In short, trade is exchange, where people conduct exchanges in order to fulfill a desire. The difference between local trade and trade with foreign enterprise is matter of classification. But the rudiments are the same, it is meant to satisfy some desires.

Hence, trade is not merely an accounting entry. It deals with human satisfaction.

In addition, trade balances do not include the sale of financial assets, as Robert Murphy writes, ``When economists compute the trade balance (or more accurately the current account), they don't include the sale of financial assets. So if foreign investors want to spend more (once we convert to a common denominator) on American assets than US investors want to spend on foreign assets, the trade balance is negative. The capital-account surplus is counterbalanced by a current-account deficit.”[2]

Once again Adam Smith[3], ``To import the gold and silver which may be wanted, into the countries which have no mines, is, no doubt, a part of the business of foreign commerce. It is, however, a most insignificant part of it.” (emphasis added)

Second, money isn’t wealth; inflation isn’t a Philosopher’s stone.

For instance current ploy of protectionists today is to arrive at a comparison of benefits. In such an instance, they distort the data to produce the account of which country is more dependent on trade. From here they argue, that by imposing trade restrictions, whatever vacuum left by closing the trading doors might be covered by money from central banks.

In other words, government can be relied to print money to produce jobs and investments. Had this logic been true then people don’t need to work at all, since the government can just print money.

Since voluntary exchange is aimed at satisfying human desires, then the role of money is essentially just as a medium of exchange.

And as medium of exchange, the valuation of a monetary unit, according to Ludwig von Mises, depends not on the wealth of a country, but rather on the relationship between the quantity of, and demand for, money.[4]

In other words inflating away out of protectionism will not achieve the desired prosperity.

What inflation will do is to vastly reduce the purchasing power of a nation which would redound to an erosion of wealth.

It is another absurdity to suggest that inflation won’t transpire because of output gaps. England has shown resilient inflation in spite of the similarities of condition with the US. To assume that the US is beyond the scope of the laws of scarcity is no more than living in a fantasy land.

Instead, it must be reminded that wealth is attained by accumulating capital, again Adam Smith ``The wealth of the country consists, not in its gold and silver only, but in its lands, houses, and consumable goods of all different kinds.”[5] (emphasis added)

Third, Protectionism Is Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD).

It is naive to believe that protectionism applied to China will not spillover to other countries. Such intellectual weenies fail to learn from the lessons of the Smoot Hawley act during the Great Depression.

To consider, should the US government engage in reckless inflation to finance the said gaps from protectionism with China, as the other holders of US treasuries realize of the scale of indirect default applied to their assets, many, if not all of them, will be panic sellers of US sovereign papers. And Americans will probably impose capital controls to curtail the exodus, and the ensuing capital controls would result to political counteractions.

And as reminder, the US is so dependent on oil that it imports 65% of what it consumes.[6] Guess who suffers more from a MAD policy?

According to Ludwg von Mises, ``The philosophy of protectionism is a philosophy of war. The wars of our age are not at variance with popular economic doctrines; they are, on the contrary, the inescapable result of consistent application of these doctrines.”[7]

Fourth, it is a myth that the appreciating Yuan and depreciating US dollar would expand US competitiveness while derail Chinese growth.

Pieter Bottelier and Uri Dadush writes in the International Herald Tribune, ``The immediate effect of renminbi appreciation will be to raise prices for U.S. consumers. A 25 percent revaluation of the renminbi, which some economists have said is needed, would — if not offset by a reduction in China’s prices — add $75 billion to the U.S. import bill. And since the United States imports three times as much from China as it exports there, higher U.S. exports to China would not nearly offset the welfare loss to U.S. consumers from higher Chinese prices.

``In the end, though some U.S. firms would gain and some export jobs would be created, the U.S. consumer would be the loser.”[8]

Fifth, fix currencies do not automatically equate to arbitrary currency manipulation, that’s because there is no free markets in currency, today. All governments control or somehow manipulate respective currencies to a certain degree.

The US dollar is pegged to 23 nations according to wikipedia.org. By definition of the protectionists, all 23 nations are also currency manipulators.

The Wall Street Journal hits the nail on the head,

``At the core of this argument is a basic misunderstanding of monetary policy. There is no free market in currencies, as there is in wheat or bananas. Currencies trade in global markets, but their supply is controlled by a cartel of central banks, which have a monopoly on money creation. The Federal Reserve controls the global supply of dollars and thus has far more influence over the greenback's value than any other single actor.

``A fixed exchange rate is also not some nefarious economic practice rare in human affairs. From the end of World War II through the early 1970s, most global currency rates were fixed under the Bretton-Woods monetary system created by Lord Keynes and Harry Dexter White. That system fell apart with the U.S.-inspired inflation of the 1970s, and much of the world moved to "floating rates."

``But numerous countries continue to peg their currencies to the dollar, and with the establishment of the euro most of Europe decided to move to a fixed-rate system. The reason isn't to get some trade advantage against their neighbors but to gain the economic benefits of stable exchange rates—and in some cases a more stable monetary policy. A stable exchange rate eliminates a major source of uncertainty for investment decisions and trade and capital flows.”[9]

In short, the labelling of manipulation is a matter of political convenience than truth.

The real problem has been China’s non convertibility and capital controls.

Again the Wall street Journal, ``China's real problem isn't its peg to the dollar but the yuan's lack of convertibility to other currencies and capital controls. These controls have blunted the yuan's development as a tradable currency, which means private markets can't recycle the flow of dollars into China from its large trade surplus.” [10]

Finally, as we have long argued US trade deficits are a function of the US dollar standard.

The more the world engages in global trade, the bigger the need for US dollar to finance this trade, since it is the de facto, reserve currency of the world, where transactions are quoted, paid and settled through US dollars.

Hence, until the US dollar is replaced with another alternative it is a fairy tale to believe that a strong yuan would rebalance the global economy. What would occur instead would be more distribution of surpluses around the world, but US deficits will continue to swell as the global economy expands.

Although there are more to discuss including the transition to the information age or China’s internal economic structure we will leave this discussion here.

But for those wishing that April 15th to be the fateful day where the US tags China as currency manipulator, good luck to you. Prediction markets, google trends or market indicators haven’t been pointing to such direction.

The appreciation of the Yuan will allow for cheaper imports and essentially reduce dependence to lend money to the US. This means that China would have more bandwith to employ resources for its own development, depending again on the degree of economic freedom embraced by China. And the impact is likely to be seismic.

Peter Schiff rightly argues, ``Absent Treasury-bond purchases, the value of the Chinese currency would rise sharply, causing goods prices to tumble in China. This long-delayed increase in purchasing power for everyday Chinese will unleash pent-up demand in what is already the largest middle class in the world. Chinese factories would retool in order to produce goods for their own citizens to consume. In RMB terms, commodity prices would plunge, making it easier for China to produce all kinds of stuff, such as automobiles, while also making it cheaper for the Chinese to buy gas. Millions will trade in bikes for cars, and Chinese oil imports will swell.”[11]

This means that there could indeed be temporary uncertainties from expectations of the Yuan appreciation, which will depend on the degree of the allowable strengthening of the Chinese currency.

As a caveat, while the Japanese Yen firmed over the past decades, the Japanese haven’t been transformed into a US consumer type of compulsive shopper or oniomania. Hence, habits or forms of addiction in a society should apply. In short, no society is homogeneous.


Figure 6: Danske Research: Strong Stock Markets And Commodities Post Yuan’s Revaluation

Nevertheless, if history would serve as precedent of the future, then the uncertainty from a revaluation is likely to be short-lived (see figure 6). And the impact from a revitalized yuan has could be tremendously salutary in terms of stocks, Asian currencies and commodities.

Finally another word of caution, every expert I know expects the Yuan to appreciate, while this is the most likely the political outcome, we can’t rule out policy errors. This means that inflation can go berserk, if China refuses to budge, perhaps out of the recalcitrance to bow to political pressure.

A bubble bust or a hyperinflation in China would cause massive outflows and reverse all these expectations [even without protectionism].

For protectionists, I suggest for you to just mind your own business as nature will force the hand of economic imbalances.



[1] Smith, Adam Wealth of Nations, Book IV, Chapter 1 wikisource.org

[2] Murphy, Robert; Trade Deficits and Fiat Currencies, Mises.org

[3] Ibid

[4] Mises, Ludwig von; Stabilization of the Monetary Unit

[5] Smith, Adam Wealth of Nations, Book IV, Chapter 1 wikisource.org

[6] See The Delusion Of The Mercantilist Miracle

[7] Mises, Ludwig von Human Action, The Conflicts of Our Age, Human Action, oil.lbertyfund.org

[8] Pieter Bottelier Uri Dadush The Myths About China's Currency

[9] Wall Street Journal, The Yuan Scapegoat

[10] Ibid

[11] Schiff, Peter Paul Krugman Versus Reality


Friday, March 19, 2010

The Delusion Of The Mercantilist Miracle

Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman in his blog wrote, (hat tip: William Anderson)

“As I’ve written many times in various contexts since the crisis began, being in a liquidity trap reverses many of the usual rules of economic policy. Virtue becomes vice: attempts to save more actually make us poorer, in both the short and the long run. Prudence becomes folly: a stern determination to balance budgets and avoid any risk of inflation is the road to disaster. Mercantilism works: countries that subsidize exports and restrict imports actually do gain at their trading partners’ expense. For the moment — or more likely for the next several years — we’re living in a world in which none of what you learned in Econ 101 applies." (bold emphasis mine)

Well the Pope of Keynesianism believes [and prescribes policies] that by slapping protectionist measures on China, US jobs will return and the US economy will boom.

Even if such absurdity is deemed as a calculated gambit to 'coerce' China to reform her policies, Mr. Krugman apparently is playing the game of chicken or brinkmanship.

Mr. Krugman and his ilk forgets that once these fulminations become real, where actions will lead to counteractions, then protectionism is likely to spread outside the US-China sphere.

Now one can't help but notice that the US is presently heavily dependent on oil imports to sustain her economy.

chart from the Heritage Foundation

According to wikipedia.org, ``American dependence on oil imports grew from 24% in 1970 to 65% by the end of 2005. At the current rate of unchecked import growth, the US would be 70% to 75% reliant on foreign oil by the middle of the next decade. Transportation has the highest consumption rates, accounting for approximately 68.9% of the oil used in the United States in 2006, and 55% of oil use worldwide as documented in the Hirsch report." (bold highlight mine)

This only means that the unforeseen consequences of a fallout from protectionism is so massive that it would defeat whatever "noble" goals (but ludicrous), it is set to accomplish. This also implies that the US is terribly dependent on global trade as to even harbor the notion of "protectionism" (which would be tantamount to national suicide)

One may argue that the US may resort to invading nations that refuses to provide her with oil, but that in essence would validate Frederic Bastiat who once said that "When goods don't cross borders, armies will" .

Since protectionism translates to a closing of borders to trade, finance, investments and possibly even migration, this also means the imposition of capital controls too.

Hence the US is likely to default on her debts while engaging massive inflation to fund her war interests.

Does this lead to anywhere to near an economic boom? Hardly. Instead, it points to a reverse: a global depression plagued by war, needless deaths and poverty, courtesy of deceitful mercantilists fanatics.

So we agree with Stephen Roach, who just harshly rebuked Mr. Krugman, as quoted in Bloomberg,

“We should take out the baseball bat on Paul Krugman -- I mean I think that the advice is completely wrong,” Roach said in an Bloomberg Television interview in Beijing when asked about Krugman’s call, characterized as akin to taking a baseball bat to China. “We’re lashing out at China rather than tending to our own business,” which is raising U.S. savings, Roach said."

Or perhaps, by taking on such seemingly reckless policy prescriptions, could Mr. Krugman be unwittingly be helping advance Osama Bin Ladin's cause of bankrupting America?

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Natural Gas: Alternative Energy Of The Future

The Economist has this nice article about natural gas.

The article goes to show that the world isn't running out of energy. It's just a matter of markets aided by technology, adapting to the current conditions.

Here's an excerpt, (all bold highlights mine)

``The source of America’s transformation lies in the Barnett Shale, an underground geological structure near Fort Worth, Texas. It was there that a small firm of wildcat drillers, Mitchell Energy, pioneered the application of two oilfield techniques, hydraulic fracturing (“fracing”, pronounced “fracking”) and horizontal drilling, to release natural gas trapped in hardy shale-rock formations. Fracing involves blasting a cocktail of chemicals and other materials into the rock to shatter it into thousands of pieces, creating cracks that allow the gas to seep to the well for extraction. A “proppant”, such as sand, stops the gas from escaping. Horizontal drilling allows the drill bit to penetrate the earth vertically before moving sideways for hundreds or thousands of metres.

``These techniques have unlocked vast tracts of gas-bearing shale in America. Geologists had always known of it, and Mitchell had been working on exploiting it since the early 1990s. But only as prices surged in recent years did such drilling become commercially viable. Since then, economies of scale and improvements in techniques have halved the production costs of shale gas, making it cheaper even than some conventional sources.
More from the Economist,

``The Barnett Shale alone accounts for 7% of American gas supplies. Shale and other reservoirs once considered unexploitable (coal-bed methane and “tight gas”) now meet half the country’s demand. New shale prospects are sprinkled across North America, from Texas to British Columbia. One authority says supplies will last 100 years; many think that is conservative. In 2008 Russia was the world’s biggest gas producer; last year, with output of more than 600 billion cubic metres, America probably overhauled it. North American gas prices have slumped from more than $13 per million British thermal units in mid-2008 to less than $5. The “unconventional”—tricky and expensive, in the language of the oil industry—has become conventional.

``The availability of abundant reserves in North America contrasts with the narrowing of Western firms’ oil opportunities elsewhere in recent years. Politics was largely to blame, as surging commodity prices emboldened resource-rich countries such as Russia and Venezuela to restrict foreign access to their hydrocarbons. “Everyone would like to find more oil,” says Richard Herbert, an executive at Talisman Energy, a Canadian firm using a conventional North Sea oil business to finance heavy investment in North American shale. “The problem is, where do you go? It’s either in deep water or in countries that aren’t accessible.” This is forcing big oil companies to get gassier."

Read the rest here

My comments:

As we have repeatedly said, politics has been the fundamental reason for the elevated prices in oil, caused mainly by geological restrictions or limited access (mentioned by the article) combined with artificial demand from inflationism and or policies, such as subsidies (not mentioned in the article).

Nevertheless, because people adjust to the circumstances they are faced with, such as the pain of higher prices and political constrains, the perpetual desire to satisfy human needs makes possible for ingenuity to pave way for innovative technology which would allow for more access to supplies or substitution.

In the case of natural gas, since there is a recognition, out of the existing technologies, of the abundance of reserves, higher oil prices will likely compel producers to compete to convert erstwhile uneconomical resources into utilizable reserves, ergo "forcing big oil companies to get gassier" as the article mentioned.

And if successful, which I am optimistic of, this will have a spillover effect to the midstream (processing, storage, marketing and transportation) and the downstream (retail outlets, derivative products, etc...). In other words, part of the transformation would likely see global transportation evolve to natural gas as default fuel.

So in the future, we should expect natural gas to also play a big role in the transition to diversify energy sources.

The following chart caught my eye. If the technology to access shale oil becomes universally commercial, guess where the bulk of reserves are?

In Asia Pacific!

Funds Rotating Back To The US Equities A Long Term Trend?

We appreciate the wonderful charts of Bespoke Invest, which we frequently feature here.

Although in some instances, they'd seem a bit bias (especially against China). From Bespoke, ``One of the easy ways to see how a country is performing relative to other countries is to look at its market cap as a percentage of world market cap. In the early stages of the global rebound off of the March lows, the US rose significantly, but other countries were gaining even more. In recent months, however, the tide has turned, and the US is now outperforming the rest of the world. As shown, US stock market cap as a percentage of world market cap has been steadily rising since last November. During the 2003-2007 bull market, emerging markets and other countries really outperformed the US. If this bull market continues and the US continues to gain share, it will represent a very big trend change that will make a huge impact on portfolio performance depending on an investor's domestic versus international equity allocation." Nevertheless, this observation is true for today, according to Livemint,

``Funds are being rotated to the US—a fact corroborated by EPFR Global’s report that flows into US equity funds have been positive for four straight weeks, their longest winning streak since the third quarter of 2008. The paring of overweight positions not only protects against the risk of a sharp pullback, but also leaves the door open for positive surprises."

The reason China has been down is that she has been deliberately attempting to fight her "inner" devils (a.k.a bubbles).

In contrast, the US still is in an "inflationary" mode.

To add, last year saw emerging markets including China massively outperform the US, which is the reason why the US share of global market cap declined materially.

The recent outperformance of the US relative to emerging markets seems more of hiatus than of a "longer trend".

The axiom, "no trend moves in a straight line" for emerging markets should apply here.

Besides, it is also observable that the outperformance of the US has been in sync with the strength of the US dollar index (perhaps to reflect on the fund flows).

As the US equity markets regained their share of the global market cap beginning last November, the US dollar firmed as well.

But this can be interpreted differently, the vitality of the US dollar index isn't because the USD has been technically or economically "strong", but in the instance where both the US dollar and the euro (which weighs 57.6% in the US dollar index basket) have been weak, the euro has been relatively weaker than the US, ergo the strength of the US dollar. And this is why commodities have remained resilient even in the face of a strong US dollar (where is the US dollar carry?).

This also implies that the current trends isn't likely to last because of the problems that continues to ail the US. The relative strength especially applies to Asian and emerging market currencies.

This will be amplified if the oversold euro will see a sharp bounce. And this should also be reflected on the rest of the global equity markets.

Hence, in contrast to the projection that fund flows to the US will be a long term trend that would extend US equity outperformance, we see this as a short term phenomenon. Enjoy them as it last.