Monday, July 19, 2010

The End of Economic Freedom For Hong Kong?

Hong Kong is a special place for me.

First of all, it’s where my beloved mom has emigrated to decades ago and is now a resident. Next, it’s a short distance very convenient plane ride away from the Philippines (yes I have to admit, plane rides give me ‘flight anxiety’, so I travel infrequently).

Besides, Hong Kong’s a dandy, spunky, fast paced modern lifestyle, emblematic of the prosperity from capitalism. Of course, one can’t miss out the exquisite array of delicacies which also serves as a haven for gastronomes (5 among the world’s best 100 restaurants are in Hong Kong).

Importantly, Hong Kong has been a beacon of economic freedom having earned the title as the freest economy for 15 consecutive years (a title she might be relinquishing soon).

However, I was distressed to learn that with the introduction of minimum wage Hong Kong appears to be in a slippery slope towards a welfare state as this Economist article has revealed.

One paragraph from the lengthy article struck me,

``Underlying them is a shift in officialdom’s view of the economy. In 2008 Mr Tsang announced that he had succeeded in having Hong Kong included within China’s five-year plans. Last year he said that in light of the global financial crisis, “we have to revisit the government’s role in promoting economic development” and special efforts would be made to encourage the growth of six industries.”

My interpretation of this is that China could be in a path towards policy convergence with that of Hong Kong, which means an eventual closure to the One Country, Two Systems platform.

It is unclear what motivates or what prods mainland China’s authorities for this, but one of the factors I’d suspect is the illegal immigration issue.

The other factor could be politics--Chinese official may want to get the heat off internal policy failures by aligning Hong Kong’s economic performance with that of the mainland. Of course this means taking away part of the success formula. There must be more (perhaps gradualism towards an alignment of the currency system?), but ideas elude me for this moment.

Nevertheless, this is one important development to keep vigil on.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Financial Reform Bill And Regime Uncertainty

``But the law is made, generally, by one man, or by one class of men. And as law cannot exist without the sanction and the support of a preponderant force, it must finally place this force in the hands of those who legislate. This inevitable phenomenon, combined with the fatal tendency that, we have said, exists in the heart of man, explains the almost universal perversion of law. It is easy to conceive that, instead of being a check upon injustice, it becomes its most invincible instrument.” Frédéric Bastiat, The Law

Yo-yo Markets And The Financial Reform Bill

Writing in the Wall Street Journal, hedge fund manager and author Andy Kessler seems right; the actions of the US markets, which directly affects other financial markets, will be in a state of a Yo-yo for as long as the US government continually intervenes to suppress market forces from revealing its true conditions.

Mr. Kessler writes[1],

``Call it the yo-yo market—from the top of the wall to the bottom of the pit and back—and you better get used to it. It's hard to tell which market moves are real and based on prospects for better profits, as opposed to moves that are driven by all the extraordinary government measures to prop up the world economy. Until a few things are resolved, you'd better learn the yo-yo sleeper trick—that is, keep spinning at the bottom without going up.”

Mr. Kessler appears to echo what we’ve been saying all along[2]---that politics has and will shape the outcome of the markets.

Mr. Kessler cites the pervasive impact of the Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP), the assorted “crutches” or the guarantees, stimulus packages, and money printing, and importantly, the impact of the changes in the regulatory environment.

Since we had exhaustively discussed on the first two factors, in the light of the passage of the Financial Reform Bill[3], we’d tackle more on the aspects of the regulatory environment.

After having a rather promising start for the week, the US markets fell hard Friday after the ratification Financial Reform Bill. The losses virtually expunged on the early gains made whereby the net weekly result for the US S&P 500 had been a net loss of 1.21% (see figure 1).

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Figure 1: US Global Investors[4]: Sectoral Performance

Nevertheless the degree of losses had been uneven, where some sectors of the S&P 500 have managed to escape the clutches of the selling pressures, such as the Consumer staples and the Technology sector.

True, correlation doesn’t automatically translate to causation. The Financial Reform bill may or may not have directly affected Friday’s performance.

However, given that the largest victim of the selloff had been in the financial sector, which is the target of the slew of new regulations, then I must argue that there could have been a substantial connection in the way the markets perceive how these purported reforms would affect the industry.

In other words, markets may have seen more downside risks to the industry, as a result of the law, and these perceptions have filtered into the other sectors.

Yet it’s simply amazing how some mainstream analysts fail to acknowledge of the vital role played by the regulatory environment in shaping the allocation of resources.

They seem to think that investment is merely consequence of waking up on a particular side of the bed which determines their “animal spirits”, or that, confidence is simplistically established as a function of random temperaments or moods—and largely detached from the coordination of consumers and producers in the marketplace.

Thus, many make specious arguments that new regulations won’t affect the business operations.

Importantly, the same experts fail to take into account that entrepreneurs invest with the aim to profit from providing or servicing the needs or desires of the consumers. Thus, a material change in the regulatory environment may affect the fundamental profit and loss equation. And the ensuing changes could also alter the feasibility of the operations of any enterprises, to the point which could lead to either closures, or impair the business operations. The net effect should be more losses and rising unemployment.

In short, business confidence is a function, not of some mood swings, but of property rights. Likewise confidence relative to investment should be predicated not just with the return ON capital, but with the return OF capital.

Regime Uncertainty From Arbitrary Laws

Economist Robert Higgs calls this reduced confidence factor as “regime uncertainty” where he argues[5] (bold emphasis mine)

``To narrow the concept of business confidence, I adopt the interpretation that businesspeople may be more or less “uncertain about the regime,” by which I mean, distressed that investors’ private property rights in their capital and the income it yields will be attenuated further by government action. Such attenuations can arise from many sources, ranging from simple tax-rate increases to the imposition of new kinds of taxes to outright confiscation of private property. Many intermediate threats can arise from various sorts of regulation, for instance, of securities markets, labor markets, and product markets. In any event, the security of private property rights rests not so much on the letter of the law as on the character of the government that enforces, or threatens, presumptive rights.”

Thus, to allege that new regulations will hardly be a factor in the investment environment would redound to utter detachment with reality.

Well, what can we expect from so-called ivory tower “experts” who seem to think that they own the monopoly of knowledge, via mathematical models and aggregates, when their sources of income depends on wages than from wagering on the dynamic trends of the marketplace? (Pardon me for the ad hominem, but perspectives are mostly shaped by interests)

Take the Great Depression (GD) of 1930s, which many prominent bears have anchored their projections as the probable direction of today’s market.

From the monetarist viewpoint, the GD had been all about monetary contraction, whereas from the Keynesian perspective this had been about falling aggregate demand. Both of which has been diagnosed by the incumbent Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke[6] as the major causes from which current policies have been designed to address. Yes—the solution? The printing press!

While both did have a role to play, the oversimplistic account of the GD fails to incorporate the havoc generated by the legion of intrusive laws enacted by the US government’s New Deal program, aimed at keeping prices at status quo ante or from adjusting to the realities of the unsustainable misdirection of capital from the inflation boom induced depression. These policies, which threatened property rights, had greatly exacerbated and prolonged the grim conditions then.

These laws included[7]:

1933 Agricultural Adjustment Act, National Industrial Recovery Act, Emergency Banking Relief Act, Banking Act of 1933 Act, Federal Securities Act, Tennessee Valley Authority Act, Gold Repeal Joint Resolution, Farm Credit Act, Emergency Railroad Transport Act, Emergency Farm Mortgage Act National Housing Act, Home Owners Loan Corporation Act

1934 Securities Exchange Act, Gold Reserve Act, Communications Act, Railway Labor Act

1935 Investment Company Act, Revenue Act of 1940, Bituminous Coal Stabilization Act, Connally (“hot oil”) Act, Revenue Act of 1935, National Labor Relations Act, Social Security Act, Public Utilities Holding Company Act, Banking Act of 1935, Emergency Relief Appropriations Act, Farm Mortgage Moratorium Act

1936 Soil Conservation & Domestic Allotment Act, Federal Anti-Price Discrimination, Revenue Act of 1936

1937 Bituminous Coal Act, Revenue Act of 1937, Act Enabling (Miller-Tydings) Act

1938 Agricultural Adjustment Act, Fair Labor Standards Act, Civil Aeronautics Act, Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act

1939 Administrative Reorganization Act

1940, Second Revenue Act of 1940

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Figure 2: Wikipedia.org[8]: US Income Tax (left window), Higgs: Government Purchases (Current$) and Gross Private Investment (Current$) Relative to Gross Domestic Product (Current$), 1929–1950

For instance, one should also take into account how the surge in taxation (left window) to fund the explosion in government expenditures during the Great Depression (right window) contributed to stymie investments or production (see figure 2)

As Henry Hazlitt aptly described how taxes affect investment or production[9]

``When the total tax burden grows beyond a bearable size, the problem of devising taxes that will not discourage and disrupt production becomes insoluble.”

In other words, when the expectations for profits are reduced, borne out of the expectations of higher taxes or from other regulatory interdictions which places property rights at risks, then investments will obviously follow—and decline.

Therefore the regulatory and tax regime functions as crucial factors to the conditions of confidence in the marketplace.

Paradoxically, one function of the law is the avoidance of this “regime uncertainty”. But when the state is unclear about the direction of policies and regulation, the “means” can contradict the “end”. So, instead of stability, such laws could engender or promote “regime uncertainty”. Yet, these are commonplace feature of many arbitrary laws.

Take the recently enacted Financial Reform Bill, it has been reported to contain 2,319 pages (see figure 2)

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Figure 2: Mark Perry[10]: Major Financial Legislation: Number of Pages

The sheer mountain of pages by itself would make the reformist law seem like a regulatory quagmire and appears appallingly political relative to the enforcement issues.

Heritage’s Conn Carroll explains[11],

``With the single stroke of a pen, President Barack Obama signed the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill that set in motion 243 new formal rule-makings by 11 different federal agencies. Each of the 243 rule-makings will employ hundreds of banking lobbyists as they try to shape what the final actual laws will look like. And when the rules are finally written, thousands of lawyers will bill millions of hours as the richest incumbent financial firms that caused the last crisis figure out how to game the new system.”

The implication is that where financial firms compete, not to please customers, but to gain the favour of regulators, this essentially represents as the hallmarks of corporatism or crony capitalism.

Thus, the financial reform bill is likely to foster political privileges which entrenches the “too big too fail” institutions, who will profit from economic rent.

The litany of adverse effects from such ambiguous bill will be one of expanded corruption, lack of credit access for consumers, reduced consumers protection (in contrast to the purported letter of the law), regulatory capture, regulatory arbitrages, higher risks to taxpayers on greater risk appetite for the politically privileged firms (moral hazard issue), increased red tape via an expanded bureaucracy, higher compliance costs, more government spending and reduced competition which overall translates to broad based economic inefficiencies.

Yet the reformist law is also said not only to be opaque, but gives undue confiscatory power based on the whims of regulators.

Mr. Kessler writes[12], ``What is even more troubling is the prospect of government seizures built into the Dodd-Frank financial bill. This is much like the seizure of property from auto industry bond holders (denounced as speculators) in the bankruptcy of GM and Chrysler.

``Dodd-Frank also provides government leeway to seize firms it considers a systemic risk, without really defining what that systemic risk is. Why anyone would provide debt to large financial institutions (or auto makers) is beyond me, certainly not without demanding a huge premium for the seizure risk. The cost of capital for the U.S. economy is sure to rise, slowing growth.”

This means that Financial Reform bill also entails that the political favoured institutions are likely to become veiled instruments for political agenda of those in power.

And laws of this nature is what Frédéric Bastiat long admonished[13],

``But, generally, the law is made by one man or one class of men. And since law cannot operate without the sanction and support of a dominating force, this force must be entrusted to those who make the laws.

``This fact, combined with the fatal tendency that exists in the heart of man to satisfy his wants with the least possible effort, explains the almost universal perversion of the law. Thus it is easy to understand how law, instead of checking injustice, becomes the invincible weapon of injustice. It is easy. to understand why the law is used by the legislator to destroy in varying degrees among the rest of the people, their personal independence by slavery, their liberty by oppression, and their property by plunder. This is done for the benefit of the person who makes the law, and in proportion to the power that he holds.

In short, arbitrary laws, as the Financial Reform bill, can function as instruments of injustice.

Thus, it is NOT impractical or improbable to argue that in the wake of the enactment of the Financial Reform Bill, the ambiguity and arbitrariness of the law and the increased politicization of the financial industry would likely result to greater perception of risks which may be reflected on the “Yo-yo” actions or a more volatile US markets.

At the end of the day, regulatory obstacles will likely compel capital to look for a capital friendly environment from which to flourish.


[1] Kessler, Andy, The Yo-Yo Market and You, Wall Street Journal, July 16, 2010

[2] See How Political Tea Leaves Will Shape The Investment Landscape

[3] Bloomberg, U.S. Congress Passes Wall Street Regulation Bill, July 15, 2010

[4] US Global Investors, Investor Alert, July 16, 2010

[5] Higgs, Robert Regime Uncertainty, Why the Great Depression Lasted So Long and Why Prosperity Resumed after the War

[6] Bernanke, Ben Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here, Speech Before the National Economists Club, Washington, D.C. November 21, 2002

[7] Higgs, Ibid

[8] Wikipedia.org, Income tax in the United States

[9] Hazlitt, Henry Taxes Discourage Production, Chapter 5 Economics In One Lesson

[10] Perry, Mark ‘I Didn’t Have Time to Write a Short Bill, So I Wrote a Long One Instead,’ Part II The Enterprise Blog July 16

[11] Carroll, Conn Morning Bell: The Lawyers and Lobbyists Full Employment Act, Heritage Blog, July 16, 2010

[12] Kessler, Andy Ibid.

[13] Bastiat, Frédéric The Law

The Window Is Closing For A Double Dip Recession In 2010

``The charm of history and its enigmatic lesson consist in the fact that, from age to age, nothing changes and yet everything is completely different.” -Aldous Huxley

Markets make opinion, as a Wall Street axiom goes. This means that people tend to rationalize or provide, rightly or wrongly, oversimplistic explanations for current market actions.

A good example of this is that during the first half of the year, the prevalent opinion was that the Euro was headed for its early demise and that this likewise entailed the political disintegration of the European Union.

Considering that the Euro has massively rallied and had already touched or is within spitting distance of our yearend target (1.30-1.32)[1], the du jour opinion has now shifted to the prospects of a US led global double dip recession following signs of weaknesses in the global equity markets (see figure 3).

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Figure 3: stockcharts.com: Euro and Global Equity Markets

While equity markets in Europe (STOX50) and the US (SPX) seem lethargic, this has had little effect on Asian markets ex-Japan (DJP2) so far.

One important thing that I have learned about dealing with financial markets is not to get emotionally swayed by popular opinions, especially the half-truths espoused and expressed by the highly articulate mainstream experts.

Yet when market opinion seems to grope for explanations to project a deeply-held belief rather than to objectively appraise the current conditions, our inclination is to think in the opposite direction.

While it is true that equity benchmarks in developed markets have been sluggish, they are likely to account for a liquidity driven slowdown more than a double-dip recession.

Yet it would be misguided to look solely at economic variables and assume its independence from political actions because since both politics and economics account for social actions they are all systematically interconnected and interdependent on each other.

As Ludwig von Mises wrote[2], (bold emphasis mine)

``Economics does not allow any breaking up into special branches. It invariably deals with the interconnectedness of all phenomena of acting and economizing. All economic facts mutually condition one another. Each of the various economic problems must be dealt with in the frame of a comprehensive system assigning its due place and weight to every aspect of human wants and desires. All monographs remain fragmentary if not integrated into a systematic treatment of the whole body of social and economic relations.

Hence given the current conditions, combined with the prevailing orientation and dogma espoused by policymakers, we expect any reemergent signs of sustained economic weakness in the US to be met with the reopening and the reactivation of the monetary spigot. This is simply what is known as the “path dependency”.

Working amidst the deepening trends of globalization, the transmission effects of the de facto monetary policies in developed economies will likely impact distinctly emerging economies due to the inherent structural idiosyncrasies.

Thus, as we previously pointed out[3], policy divergences will likely result to diversified market actions, for as long as there won’t be any liquidity seizure similar to 2008 post Lehman syndrome.

More proof of policy divergence?

According to Morgan Stanley’s Manoj Pradhan[4],

``Compared to the early part of 2010 when the roaring recoveries in the AXJ region were accompanied by monetary silence, the normalisation of the monetary policy stance that is well underway now is much more consistent with a sensible exit sequence for monetary policy globally. The beginning of tightening in Latin America initiated by the central bank of Brazil and echoed by the central bank of Peru highlights the game of catch-up that LatAm economies and central banks seem to be playing with their AXJ counterparts. And finally, the G10 economies which house the epicentre of sovereign risks and the CEEMEA economies with their close links to the euro area are at the back of the tightening pack. The AAA liquidity regime in the major economies is thus set to stay in place for longer, with growing risks that an eventual reversal of that regime may need to be stronger.”

In other words, while many in the west are having anxiety over the prospects of double dipping (sounds like ice cream), policymakers in emerging markets and in Asia have already engaged in policy tightening in fear of economic overheating.

Besides, I find it a bizarre reasoning for people to argue for another recession if indeed Asia and emerging markets have been responsible for the recent “cyclical recovery” (see figure 4). My idea is that the flow should depend on the leadership unless any shock would be deep enough to unsettle the current dynamics.

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Figure 4 DBS Bank: Asia Drives Global Demand Growth

As the DBS Economic Research team boldly argues[5],

``So what is driving the global recovery then? Who is putting money on the table? The answer is Asia. Asia is where the world’s new demand is being generated-demand that is the very measure of growth. This is the real bailout of the global economy and it is being financed in Asia.”

While I agree that Asia has been a significant driver of growth, I disagree that the true measure of growth is about demand. Instead real growth is where capital is being accumulated, and where increased demand is merely a symptom of these actions.

Demand growth financed by unproductive debt is no less than a putting lipstick on a pig as evidenced by the recent bubble bust, therefore is not a “genuine measure of growth”.

Nevertheless the DBS Research team lends proof to these demand growth...

``In Asia it is 17% higher. This isn’t government spending on factories and roads. It’s private consumption-household purchases of pots and pans and bread and butter and shoes and rent and gadgets and gas and movies and music and…-and it has grown by 17 percent in Asia since the crisis began. In the G3, on average, consumption hasn’t grown one iota.

``That’s not what people said would happen. Most said that when the US stopped buying, Asia would too. Because Asia didn’t produce any final demand of its own or not “enough” anyway. Asia depended on US demand for its growth. Thankfully-for the US and the EU and Japan as much as for Asia-that turned out not to be true.”

Well the DBS team is correct to say that mainstream expectations have failed to anticipate this rebound since the mainstream’s insights had been weighted towards the sins of aggregatism, which had been mostly deduced from a US centric trade and investment flows to the detrimental exclusion of the other important variables.

While I would also tend to agree that Asia is likely to lead the global economy along with many emerging markets for many reasons such as deepening trend of free trade (or trade integration) in contrast to the west, high savings rate, less systemic leverage, and etc…, I’d say also say that aside from economic matters, my bias tells me that the business cycle could also be shifting from the West to the East.

And that DBS’ optimism could also signify as an endowment effect where “People often demand much more to sell an object than they would be willing to pay to buy it”[6] or what I call as “ownership premium”.

From the above premises I’d suggest that any signs of weakness should be considered as a buying window for Asian stocks particularly the Phisix and her Asean neighbors.

Some of those prominent experts whom has hollered for “deflation” and or “double dip from the start of the year, seem to be seeing the windows have been gradually close as we have entered the second semester. That’s why some of them have now shifted their time frames to 2011.

Having missed one and a half years is bad record enough. Though eventually they’ll be right that would be tantamount to missing the entire upside cycle. In essence, a broken clock can be right twice a day.


[1] See Three More Reasons Why The Euro Rally Should Continue

[2] Mises, Ludwig von Human Action Scholar’s Edition

[3] See Why The Sell-Offs In Global Markets Are Unlikely Signs Of A Double Dip Recession

[4] Pradhan, Manoj Appetite for Restriction, Morgan Stanley, July 16, 2010

[5] DBS Group Research, Economics Markets Strategy

[6] Wikipedia.org Endowment effect

The Philippine Peso’s Lagging Performance

``The Philippines has a very strong external position. The current account surplus has remained resilient, not least because remittances from Filipinos working abroad have continued at a high level. FX reserves have improved substantially in recent months as the central bank has tried to stem PHP appreciation.”- Danske Bank on the Peso

If there is anything that seems to defy my expectation that would be the market price actions of the Philippine Peso.

The Peso still lingers nearly unchanged from the start of the year even if it had managed to cross into the 44.5 levels in late May, prior to the second round revelation of the Greek Debt Crisis.

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Figure 5: Yahoo Finance: Philippine Peso The ASEAN-4’s ODD Man

The Peso appears to be the sole ASEAN-4 currency that has not appreciated (right lower window). Our key neighbors Thailand baht (upper left window), the Indonesia rupiah (right upper window) and the Malaysian ringgit (left lower window) have all been up. The Malaysian ringgit is up over 5%.

Even if we take a look at the Peso in the lens of the mainstream, remittances was at the highest level last July[1]. Portfolio inflows have been up 245% for the first semester[2] while June recorded the highest level in gross international reserves[3]. Again, there seems hardly any connection between remittances and the Peso.

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Figure 6: DBS Bank: Peso’s External Balance And International Reserve Exchange

So most of these factors appear to offset the surging fiscal deficit emanating from a record Php 1.58 trillion (US $34.7 billion) government spending, last year[4].

Since currency valuation shouldn’t be seen from a single dimension, this implies that the Philippines should be in a much better position relative to the US dollar based on these aspects.

This should even be accentuated if we consider “the relationship between the quantity of, and demand for, money” to quote Professor Mises, where we expect the US to likely engage in Ben Bernanke’s printing press as nostrum against the Great Depression paradigm at heightened signs of economic weakness.

In addition, the rising Euro[5] which implies of less worry over the sovereign issues seen early this year should translate to greater risk appetite which the Phisix and our Asean neighbors has been exhibiting.

Moreover, the currency regime shift to a managed float by the Chinese yuan[6] should equally be positive for the Peso.

So I am quite a bit puzzled by the underperformance of the Peso.

Nevertheless the populist tendencies of the new administration could be a factor to suppress the Peso’s rise for the purposes of promoting certain sectors as the OFWs or exports.

In addition, the populist proclivities can be seen in this article[7], (emphasis added)

``AFTER ditching the previous administration’s balanced-budget goal, the Aquino government plans to give the state a greater role in business by investing the proceeds of asset sales in lucrative industries, the Department of Finance (DOF) said…

``Purisima said that he does not see the urgent need to balance the budget as there are “more important things to look into in order to generate more profit for the government.”

``The new finance chief, said that areas that the government needs to do a lot of frontloading include infrastructure, education, and agriculture.”

Like almost every political leaders, the incentive to spend and conduct short term “photo op” policies is just too compelling.

[1] Bsp.gov.ph OF Remittances in May Reach the Highest Level at US$1.6 Billion, July 15, 2010

[2] Bsp.gov.ph Foreign Portfolio Investments Post Net Inflow For the First Semester of 2010, July 16, 2010

[3] Abs-cbnNEWS.com June forex reserves at new record, July 7, 2010

[4] Philstar.com, Fiscal deficit in May hits nearly $70 million, June 22, 2010

[5] See Buy The Peso And The Phisix On Prospects Of A Euro Rally

[6] See Why China’s Currency Regime Shift Is Bullish For The Peso

[7] Manila Times, Aquino govt mulls new state-owned enterprises, July 2, 2010

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Proof That Gold Is Unlikely A Deflation Hedge

Here is an anecdotal proof showing that gold isn’t a deflation hedge…

``Deflationary forces lie in the push factors that send a steady flow of people there to convert their gold-based valuables into cash, either through collateralized loans or outright sales. They are the victims of a moribund economy whose modest recovery from last year’s recession is failing to produce jobs or small business revenue growth.”

This from an article at the Wall Street Journal’s Blog which takes into the account the booming businesses of ‘New York’s Diamond District on West 47th Street between Fifth and Sixth avenues’ which serves as a battleground between inflation and deflation.

To rephrase, the battle is actually between market forces and government interventionism.

Achieving Peace Via Free Trade

Many people incessantly babble about “compassion” as means of attaining peace and prosperity.

Ironically, most of them align such advocacy towards organized violence or forced redistribution (government), which produces the opposite outcome, instead of voluntary exchange.

Dr. Tom Palmer of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, in this video “Bridges of Peace”, shows how free trade accomplishes peace.



Incidentally, representatives of Atlas Economic Foundation led by Dr. Palmer, will be in the Philippines and will hold an assembly tonight, which I will be attending. I hope it will be fruitful experience.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Validated On The Goldman Sachs-SEC Episode

I had repeatedly argued here that the Goldman-SEC row had been nothing but a slick political publicity stunt, some excerpts:

“Moreover, it also seems ridiculous to perceive of a sustained path of attack, considering that Goldman Sachs has been more than a political ally to the Democratic Party. In fact the company has constantly played the role of key financier of the Democratic Party”

See Why The US SEC-Goldman Sachs Hoopla Is Likely A Charade

“We have long known that the global financial system have been "gamed" by the elite in cahoots with politicians. And part of the game is the borrow and spend policies, that actually benefits the banking cartel.

“As we earlier said, it won't take long for this political masquerade to be unraveled...

“What I have been saying is that this has been a political ruse meant to either shore up somebody's electoral image or an attempt to control the gold markets.”

See SEC-Goldman Sachs: Hindsight Bias, Staged For Political Advantage

“And this gives even more motivation for the ruling political class to use the Goldman caper as a likely prop as the "fall guy" role for political ends.

“We just don't oversimplistically regulate cartels out of existence, not when the cartel itself is lead by the government via the Federal Reserve.”

See: SEC-Goldman Sachs Row: The Rising Populist Tide Against Big Governments

“Moreover, there have been pressures for Goldman to amicably settle with the SEC even if “they’re right on the merits of the case”.

“And surprisingly, President Obama despite earlier reports to verbally assail Wall Street turned up with a conciliatory voice at a recent speech ``Ultimately, there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street,” Obama said in his speech at Cooper Union, about two miles from the financial district. “We will rise or we will fall together as one nation.”

See: Markets Ignore US SEC-Goldman Sachs Tiff, More Political Dirty Dancing

It appears that this has been the case, as the Goldman-SEC row has officially been settled.

This from Bloomberg/Businessweek,

``Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s $550 million settlement with U.S. regulators yesterday will benefit the firm by ending three months of uncertainty at an affordable price. Now the rest of Wall Street begins calculating the cost.

``Investors welcomed the deal with the Securities and Exchange Commission, saying the company won key points: The cost was below some analysts’ estimates of at least $1 billion; no management changes were required; and Goldman Sachs said the SEC indicated it doesn’t plan claims related to other mortgage- linked securities it examined. The stock’s late surge on anticipation of a settlement yesterday added more than $3 billion to the company’s market value, and it climbed further after New York trading closed.

“You’d have to look at it as a victory for Goldman,” said Peter Sorrentino, senior portfolio manager at Huntington Asset Advisors in Cincinnati, which manages $13.3 billion including Goldman Sachs shares. “This takes a cloud off the stock.”

``In the settlement, unveiled less than two hours after the Senate passed legislation to reform the financial system and avert future crises, Goldman Sachs acknowledged that marketing materials for the 2007 deal at the center of the case contained “incomplete information.” In its April 16 suit, the SEC accused the firm of defrauding investors in a mortgage-backed collateralized debt obligation by failing to tell them that hedge fund Paulson & Co., which was planning to bet against the deal, had helped to design it.” (bold emphasis added)

Quid pro quo?

Oil Drilling Activities Shift To Asia

This should be an interesting development in the oil frontier.

The BP oil spill and the attendant political squabble over the drilling moratorium sanctioned by the Obama administration but contravened by the Federal Courts have prompted oil rigs and or drilling activities to shift to Asia.

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According to Bloomberg’s chart of the day,

The CHART OF THE DAY shows monthly totals in the Middle East and Asia Pacific, with the 271 rigs deployed on and and sea in Asia, the most since December 1991, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from Baker Hughes Inc. The lower panel tracks China’s crude imports since December 2003.

“Asia is looking more and more attractive because of a rush for natural gas,” said Tony Regan, a consultant in Singapore with Tri-Zen International Ltd. “Oil companies are wary about the Gulf of Mexico after the drilling ban, and the Atlantic basin doesn’t look good because of lower gas prices.”

Explorers deployed 14 percent more rigs in Asia in June, compared with January last year as China, India, Australia and Indonesia opened up areas. China and India are seeking fuel for economies growing at more than 8 percent a year. The almost doubling of crude prices since January 2009 has also spurred the quest for oil and gas, said Regan, a former executive at Royal Dutch Shell Plc.

Reliance Industries Ltd. discovered India’s biggest gas field in 2002, and LNG projects in Australia valued at more than A$80 billion ($71 billion) are scheduled for final investment decisions in 2010, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in February. The A$43 billion Gorgon LNG project was approved last year by partners Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and Shell.

Asia’s oil-demand growth has risen 27 percent since 1999, compared with a 2 percent decline for North America and Europe, according to data from BP. Oil-product demand in Asia’s emerging-market nations will rise by about 3.8 percent a year on average to 23 million barrels a day in 2015, the International Energy Agency said in a report. The number of rigs in the Gulf of Mexico plunged to the lowest level in 16 years last week, Baker Hughes, a Houston-based oilfield-services firm, said last month.

Some thoughts:

This is an example where the cost of interventionism means a redirection of the use of resources to where it is more “valued”.

Nevertheless what has been “lost” for the US should translate to “gains” for Asia.

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From BBC

Although Asia isn’t much of a big player in terms of oil and conventional gas reserves, Asia is the largest in terms of unconventional gas as previously discussed.

The other implication is that more drilling activities should bring life to the stocks of Asian oil-gas exploration companies.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Chinese Credit Agency Downgrades Western Nations

A leading Chinese credit rating agency has downgraded the credit ratings of major Western economies.

Telegraph’s Ambrose Evans Pritchard writes

``Dagong Global Credit Rating Co used its first foray into sovereign debt to paint a revolutionary picture of creditworthiness around the world, giving much greater weight to "wealth creating capacity" and foreign reserves than Fitch, Standard & Poor's, or Moody's.

``The US falls to AA, while Britain and France slither down to AA-. Belgium, Spain, Italy are ranked at A- along with Malaysia.

``Meanwhile, China rises to AA+ with Germany, the Netherlands and Canada, reflecting its €2.4 trillion (£2 trillion) reserves and a blistering growth rate of 8pc to 10pc a year.

Reason for the downgrade? (bold highlights mine)

``Chinese president Hu Jintao said in April that the world needs "an objective, fair, and reasonable standard" for rating sovereign debt. Dagong appears to have stepped into the role, saying its objective was to assess countries using methods that would "not be affected by ideology".

"The reason for the global financial crisis and debt crisis in Europe is that the current international credit rating system does not correctly reveal the debtor's repayment ability," said Guan Jianzhong, Dagong's chairman.

``The agency, known in China for rating companies, said its goal is to "correct the defects" of the existing system and offer a counter-weight to Western agencies.

``Dagong appears to base growth potential on past performance but this can be misleading, especially in states enjoying technology catch-up. Japan was a high-flyer in 1970s and 1980s before stalling when the Nikkei bubble burst. It has been trapped in near perma-slump ever since.”

Some thoughts

China is possibly signaling to the West of a seismic change in the way things are being done or a structural transformation in the economic and political sphere.

Perhaps this will begin with a reduction in US treasury purchases, as China would possibly use her surpluses to fund more (ex-US) overseas acquisition or hedge them on real assets.

China may also use this to finance her integration with Asia and or as leverage to deepen her relationship with key emerging markets.

All these should put pressure to the du jour US dollar standard system.

This action seems representative of China's flaunting of her newfound economic might which should also filter into geopolitics.

If the US dollar should lose her international currency status, then this also should translate to an erosion of the US geopolitical hegemony.

Maybe this is just one of the the indications to what some has called as the Asian Century.

President Aquino’s Cabinet Appointments: The More Things Change, The More They Remain The Same

As the Aquino Administration matures, current developments seem to be confirming my predictions that there will hardly be any change in the administration’s political direction.

This from the Philippine Inquirer, (bold emphasis mine)

“President Benigno Aquino lll’s decision to pick executives from big business for key Cabinet posts has placed his administration in potential conflict-of-interest situations, particularly in state-regulated enterprises, such as power, water, telecommunications and toll roads, lawmakers noted Tuesday.

They said the big business appointments were a growing public concern because they were identified with four of the most influential business conglomerates in the country – the Ayala, Lopez, Aboitiz and Metro Pacific groups – to positions with powers to make or unmake business empires.”

Some thoughts

1. It’s payback time. Election campaign bills come due.

2. Conflicts of interests depend on the definition. Every person sitting on a regulatory agency or bureaucracy has an interest which will always come in conflict of the interest of the regulated. (Yes, I mean personal interest. Political leaders and bureaucrats are not gods nor are they supposed to embody our perception of interest)

In the above, what is clearly being defined as conflict of interests is regulatory capture or as defined by Wikipedia.org as “when a state regulatory agency created to act in the public interest instead acts in favor of the commercial or special interests that dominate in the industry or sector it is charged with regulating. Regulatory capture is a form of government failure, as it can act as an encouragement for large firms to produce negative externalities. The agencies are called Captured Agencies.”

In other words, regulatory agencies function to advance the interest of select or favoured groups at the expense of the rest of society.

By the use of the regulatory body as legal barrier, competition is therefore restrained, and thus, economic opportunities are allotted based on political concessions via the arbitrary application of regulations or what is known as economic rent.

3. Insider versus outsider game. Insiders are those who comprise the economic-political elite class. Outsiders are those in the periphery who are made to believe that genuine change is in the offing. And outsiders are the majority and wielded by the insiders for election purposes.

The Aquino appointments clearly demonstrate this deeply rooted Insider based relationship in the context of the Philippine political economy.

Hence, the only thing that has changed are the personalities involved in manning the bureaucracy, and not the anti market political patronage system. The net effect is a status quo.

And as we previously predicted, ``The rule of the entrenched political class means 'the more things change the more they remain the same'.”

We also anticipated the kingmaker role of the personalities involved in the Meralco takeover in the recently concluded elections, which apparently has emerged in the appointments.

Elections are, therefore, a vehicle which grants a mantle of legitimacy to the immoral alliances of vested interest group and the political class.

As H.L. Mencken rightly labeled, “[Democracy] has become simply a battle of charlatans for the votes of idiots."

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Blogging Hiatus Due To Typhoon Caused Brownout

Typhoon Basyang buffetted Luzon last night and unexpectedly caused widespread brownout in Meralco franchise areas (Metro Manila and many parts of Luzon). Newswires say that it could take 2-3 days for power to normalize. So my blogging will resume until then. Thanks.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

The Free Market Evolution of 'Chinese Food'

The amazing video below is an account by Jennifer 8 Lee of how popular Chinese Food evolved. (hat tip: Jeffrey Tucker Mises Blog)




Jennifer 8 Lee concludes with...

``So, the thing is, our historical lore because of the way we like narratives are full of vast characters, such as, you know of Howard Schultz of Starbucks, and Ray Kroc with McDonalds and ASA Chandler with Coca-Cola. But you know, it’s very easy to overlook the smaller character-oops- for example like Lem Sen, who introduced chop suey, Chef Peng, who introduced General Tso Chicken, and all the Japanese Bakers, who introduced fortune cookies. So the point of my presentation is to make you think twice, that those whose names are forgotten in history can often have had as much, if not more impact on what we eat today."

Here is Friedrich von Hayek on spontaneous order...

``Many of the greatest things man has achieved are not the result of consciously directed thought, and still less the product of a deliberately coordinated effort of many individuals, but of a process in which the individual plays a part which he can never fully understand."

Unfortunately as Jennifer 8 Lee laments, such wonderful accomplishments has hardly been appreciated.


Monday, July 12, 2010

Wage Convergence: Myths And Facts

Dr. John Hussman, in this excellent weekly article, dispels the myth of cheap labor to argue for convergence of wages between the US and developing nations.

Dr. Hussman writes,

(bold emphasis mine)

“Why do workers in developing nations earn a fraction of the wages American workers earn?

``While protective and regulatory factors such as trade barriers, unionization, and differences in labor laws have some effect, the main reason is fairly simple. U.S. workers are, on average, more productive than their counterparts in developing countries. While the gap between U.S. and foreign wages can make open trade seem very risky, it is simply not true that opening trade with developing nations must result in a convergence of wages. The large difference in relative wages is in fact a competitive outcome when there are large differences in worker productivity across countries.

From Korean Times

``The main source of this difference in productivity is that U.S. workers have a substantially larger stock of productive capital per worker, as well as generally higher levels of educational attainment, which is a form of human capital. This relative abundance of physical and educational capital has been a driver of U.S. prosperity for generations. Neither advantage in capital, however, is intrinsic to American workers, and it will be impossible to prevent a long-term convergence of U.S. wages toward those of developing countries unless the U.S. efficiently allocates its resources to productive investment and educational quality. This is where our policy makers are failing us.”

image The Top Ten Most Competitive Countries According to the World Economic Forum

So how then will the prospects of wage convergence occur?

By massive interventionism and inflationism.

Again Dr. Hussman

``If we as a nation fail to allow market discipline, to create incentives for research and development, to discourage speculative bubbles, to accumulate productive capital, and to maintain adequate educational achievement and human capital, the real wages of U.S. workers will slide toward those of developing economies. The real income of a nation is identical its real output - one cannot grow independent of the other.”

Dr. Hussman’s observation has important parallels to the prescient work of Dr. Ludwig von Mises who once wrote,

``What elevates the wage rates paid to the American workers above the rates paid in foreign countries is the fact that the investment of capital per worker is higher in this country than abroad. Saving, the accumulation of capital, has created and preserved up to now the high standard of living of the average American employee.

``All the methods by which the federal government and the governments of the states, the political parties, and the unions are trying to improve the conditions of people anxious to earn wages and salaries are not only vain but directly pernicious. There is only one kind of policy that can effectively benefit the employees, namely, a policy that refrains from putting any obstacles in the way of further saving and accumulation of capital.”

Hence, we learn of three indispensable variables as key to higher real wages: savings, capital invested per worker and productivity. Interventionism only achieves the opposite. Everything else is footnote.