Monday, April 08, 2013

Portugal Considers Using T-Bills to Pay Public Workers and Pensioners

Crisis stricken governments have been finding ways to skirt requirements for them to scale down on their bloated bureaucracies. 

Rumors have circulated that the Portuguese government have contemplated on paying public workers and pensioners in Treasury bills.

In his televised statement, Mr. Passos Coelho said the government would try to revise its budget plan through new spending cuts rather than new tax increases. A person close to the government said it had mulled the idea of paying public employees and pensioners one month of their income in Treasury bills, forcing them, in effect, to lend the Treasury the money the court said it couldn't cut from their paychecks. A government spokeswoman denied that the idea was being considered.
Since the Portuguese government can’t print money as they operate under the ambit of the euro which is managed by the ECB and Eurosystem (central banks of the Eurozone), then they will simply “print” debt papers.

Debt papers will possibly attain traits of “moneyness” or exchangeability. Since T-bills will be used by public employees and pensioners for exchange of goods and services.

One thing leads to another. “One month” of income may become a slippery slope towards perpetuity. This means debt papers may eventually substitute the euro (Gresham’s law).

More debt leads to higher taxes which will pose as a hindrance to productive commercial enterprises.

More sovereign debt issuance can be used as collateral by the Portuguese government to secure loans from the ECB, or that debt may be monetized by the ECB. So the Portuguese government will likely be incentivized to print more debt papers.

With debt papers used as money, this amplifies inflation risks.

More debt also means Portugal will remain stuck in her debt crisis.

And if and when Portugal defaults, then public workers and pensioners and all those other sovereign debt holders will become the “greater fools” (greater fool theory).

Global Equity Markets: Signs of Distribution and Japan’s Capital Flight

Global equity markets appear to showing signs of exhaustion.

Possible Signs of Distribution?

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This week’s pronounced weakness (top window) in major equity benchmarks has essentially pared down year-to-date gains (lower window).

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Even US markets, which has been under the US Federal Reserve’s $85 billion a month steroids since September 2012[1], appear to be exhibiting signs of divergence. 

While the Dow Jones Industrial Averages (INDU) posted only a marginal decline (-.09%) this week, there seems to be a broadening of losses seen across many important indices.

The S&P 500 fell 1.01%, the small cap Russell 2000 ($RUT) plunged 2.97%, the Dow Transports ($TRAN) plummeted 3.5% while 10 year US treasuries rallied, as yields fell. Yields of the 10 year US government bonds broke down from its recent uptrend.

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The weakness in global equity markets have likewise been reflected on the commodity markets (upper window[2]). Stock market benchmarks of major commodity producers such as Brazil (EWZ) Canada (EWC) and Russia (RSX) have wobbled along with struggling commodity prices (top window[3]).

Such narrowing of gains and the broadening of losses can be seen as signs of distribution. They may indicate interim weakness.

So far, most of the ASEAN majors have remained resilient.

Except for Thailand, declines in the Philippine Phisix (-1.76%) and Indonesia’s JCE (-.3%) has been modest relative to their emerging market peers. Year-to-date, returns on the Phisix and the JCE remains at double digits, particularly 15.73% and 14.12% respectively.

Thailand’s SET has been hounded by sharp volatility following the assault on stock market investors by Thai authorities through the tightening of collateral requirements on credit margins. Even with this week’s 4.58% loss in Thailand’s SET, the Thai benchmark remains up 7% year to date.

Meanwhile the region’s laggard, the Malaysian KLSE has almost erased her annual losses with this week’s 1% weekly advance. The Prime Minister of Malaysia dissolved the parliament last April 3[4], which means that a general election will be held soon or no later than June 27 2013[5]. While politics may temporarily influence Malaysia’s markets, it will be the bubble cycle which will remain as the key driver.

The jury is out whether the diffusion of losses in global equity-commodity markets will persist and if these will begin to impact on ASEAN majors and or if developments in Thailand will also have an influence on the region’s performance.

Thailand’s equity markets will have to undergo the process of resolving the psychological conflict inflicted by Thai’s authorities.

As I wrote a few weeks back[6],
Market participants will then assess if SET officials will continue to foist uncertainty through more ‘tightening’ interventions, or if the authorities will allow markets to function. If the former, then Thai’s equity markets would have more downside bias going forward. If the latter, then Thai’s mania may catch a second wind.
If Thailand’s authorities will continue to intervene and prevent the mania phase from taking hold in the stock markets, then sentiment will only shift to the more fragmented, more loosely controlled and localized property markets

Capital Flight Will Help Inflate Asset Bubbles

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The recent weakness in US equities may have been a function of 1st quarter diminishment of US money supply aggregate M2[7] (red ellipse left window). Actions of the US equity markets have been tightly linked to, or rather, caused by the Fed’s monetary expansion[8]. The recent reacceleration of M2 may suggest that any weakness may be temporary.

In addition, the inaugural action of newly installed chief of the Bank of Japan (BoJ) Haruhiko Kuroda has been to advance Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s aggressive “Abenomics” policies. Mr. Kuroda’s mimics his European counterpart, Mario Draghi, to “do whatever it takes” to allegedly stop deflation for Japan.

Mr. Kuroda’s “shock and awe” opening salvo will be channeled through a grand experiment of doubling of the monetary base in 2 years[9] by aggressive asset purchases by the Bank of Japan mostly through bonds[10]. Such aggressive policy is likely to stoke a massive yen carry trade, or a euphemism for capital flight.

The initial impact of a vastly lower yen has been an asset boom; surging stock markets (The Nikkei was up 3.51% for the week, 23.46% for the year), and soaring bonds.

Rising bonds or lower yields or interest rates will induce more borrowing for the Japanese government. This will in the near term, fuel more asset bubbles.

However rapid diminution of the yen (-3.51% w-o-w, 11.11% y-t-d) will also mean that aside from asset bubbles, resident Japanese will likely seek shelter through foreign currencies in order to preserve their savings, thus, such policies entails greater risks of capital flight.

So instead of promoting investments and economic competitiveness, currency devaluation will lead to distortions in economic calculation, increased uncertainty, lesser investments and a lower standard of living.

I have been anticipating this move from the BoJ. A year ago, I said that ASEAN and the Philippines will likely become beneficiaries of BoJ’s inflationism[11]
The foremost reason why many Japanese may invest in the Philippines under the cover of “the least problematic” technically represents euphemism for capital fleeing Japan because of devaluation policies—capital flight!
Capital flight will be masqueraded with technical terminologies of portfolio flows and Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs)

Now even the billionaire trader-investor George Soros shares my view. In a recent TV interview, the Bloomberg quotes Mr. Soros warning of a potential stampede out of the yen[12],
“What Japan is doing is actually quite dangerous because they’re doing it after 25 years of just simply accumulating deficits and not getting the economy going,” Soros said in an interview with CNBC in Hong Kong today. “If the yen starts to fall, which it has done, and people in Japan realize that it’s liable to continue and want to put their money abroad, then the fall may become like an avalanche.”
And it appears that incipient signs of ‘capital flight’ may have emerged.

The perspicacious analyst and fund manager Doug Noland writing at the Credit Bubble Bulletin may have spotted what seems as incipient adverse reactions from the yen’s devaluation[13].
And Japan’s move to follow the Fed down the path of 24/7 monetary inflation is a key facet of the “global government finance Bubble” more generally. Japanese institutions were said to be major buyers of European bonds this week. French 10-year yields dropped 24 bps Thursday and Friday to a record low 1.75%. French yields were down about 50 bps in five weeks. Spain’s 10-year yields were down 32 bps points this week to 4.73%, and Italian yields sank 39 bps to 4.37%. Ten-year Treasury yields were down 12 bps in two sessions to end the week 14 bps lower at 1.71%. No Bubble?
One has to realize that every crises dynamics begins from the periphery to the core. If the Japan’s capital flight dynamics will intensify overtime, then a debt or currency crisis will befall on Japan, sooner rather than later. Such a crisis will slam the region hard.

And if the account where Japanese institutions have been major buyers of Euro bonds have indeed been accurate, then this would seem like the proverbial jump from the frying pan into the fire…a sign of desperation.

Seeking refuge via euro debts represents a dicey proposition.

I recently showed how the Spanish government has essentially employed Ponzi finance to survive their welfare state[14]. Aside from raiding of pension accounts, which signifies as a key source of the people’s savings, profits from trading arbitrages by the Spain’s government have become a key source of funding welfare obligations. Thus, central bank policies are likely to concentrate on propping up asset prices in order to sustain these political objectives or risks bankrupting the welfare state.

And any sign of trouble that would undermine asset markets will prompt for central banks to intervene.

The extended economic stagnation or recessions in the Eurozone as evidenced by record high unemployment[15] has prompted the markets to speculate that ECB’s Mario Draghi may consider further lowering of interest rates[16].

The growing desperation by governments to seize private sector savings directly—via unsecured deposits in Cyprus[17]—or indirectly—via Kuroda’s ‘Abenomics’ or aggressive inflationism extrapolates that faith on the current fiat based money and banking system will erode overtime.

Financial repression will only hasten the structural economic entropy borne out of the incumbent political system.

The Japanese government has been using the same Keynesian snake oil over and over again and yet has been expecting different results.

They aggressively cut interest rates between 1991-1995 and pursued zero bound rates ever since. They implemented 10 fiscal stimulus packages costing more than 100 trillion yen in taxpayer money, none of which have lifted Japan’s economy from the rut. Japan’s government switched to quantitative easing in 2001.

In August 2008, Japan’s government made another 11.5 trillion in stimulus, which consisted nearly of 1.8 trillion of spending and 10 trillion of loans and credit guarantees. In 2009 the BoJ embarked on new asset purchase program covering corporate bonds, commercial paper, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), and real estate investment trusts (REITs). From December 2008 through August 2011, the BoJ’s 134.8 trillion yen purchases of government and corporate securities failed to impact “inflation expectations” according to an IMF paper authored by Raphael Lam.

And thus, according to former Mises Institute President and now Senior Editor of Laissez Faire Books[18],
For more than two decades, the Japanese central bank and government have emptied the Keynesian tool chest looking for anything that would slay the deflation dragon. Reading the hysterics of the financial press and Japanese central bankers, one would think prices are plunging. Or that borrowers cannot repay loans and the economy is not just at a standstill, but in a tailspin. Tokyo must be one big soup line.
So what the mainstream reads as a coming miracle will lead to the opposite.

Yet the pressing problem for the marketplace today is that all these cumulative disruptive actions will translate to distressing intensification of market volatilities that will be manifested through capital flight and through yield chasing dynamics.

While price inflation has substantially been offset by productive activities of globalization and innovation, boom bust cycles will reduce productivity, increase systemic fragility to crises and promote social upheaval through revolutions or wars. In addition loss of productivity means greater sensitivity to price inflation.

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Exploding prices of the “virtual or digital currency”, the bitcoin looks like a testament to the growing capital flight-yield chasing phenomenon at work[19].

Yet more predatory financial repression policies will mean more capital flight and yield chasing.

Unless external shocks—possibly such as the potential deterioration of geopolitical US-North Korea standoff into a full-scale military engagement—any slowdown for the Phisix will likely be limited and shallow, as the manic phase or the credit fuelled yield chasing process induced by domestic policies (artificially low interest rates and policy rates on special deposit accounts[20]) will likely be compounded by capital flight from developed nations as Japan. 




[1] US Federal Reserve Press Release September 13, 2012

[2] Danske Bank Weekly Focus ECB to dig further in the toolbox, April 5, 2013

[3] John Murphy Weak Commodities Hurt Producers stockcharts.com Blog April 6, 2013

[4] Guardian.co.uk Malaysia heads for general election April 3, 2013



[7] St. Louis Federal Reserve U.S. Financial Data M2

[8] Center for Financial Stability FED POLICY DRIVES EQUITIES: CFS MONEY SUPPLY STATISTICS March 20, 2013





[13] Doug Noland Kuroda Leapfrogs Bernanke Credit Bubble Bulletin April 5, PrudentBear.com





[18] Douglas French Japan’s Bold Move of Nothing April 6, 2013 Laissez Faire Club

[19] Bitcoin charts

The Phisix Amidst the Korean Peninsula Stand-Off

Domestic headlines continue to banner on the verbal showdown and belligerent artifice between the US and North Korea.

DPRK’s Declaration of War and War Posturing

While I think that this seems more a vaudeville than of a real threat, geopolitical brinkmanship can always deteriorate into a real thing. Inflated egos of political leaders may impulsively react on events that could push posturing into a full scale war. All that is needed is an event that may serve as the Casus Belli[1].

North Korea or Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has already declared a “state of war”[2] with its wealthier kin, South Korea or Republic of Korea (ROK) last March 30, 2013. But through the week, all that has occurred have been the mobilization or a show of force from contending parties. 

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Yesterday North Korea reported to have moved its two medium range missiles, the Musudan missiles, which has a range of 1,865 miles and has the capability to strike at South Korea, Japan and US bases in the Pacific, supposedly for a missile test[3]. 

Yet despite all the North Korean rhetoric and propaganda about launching a nuclear war with the US, her nuclear missiles hardly have the range and capability to reach the US[4].

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On the other hand, the US has transferred anti-ballistic missile defence system to Guam[5] along with several B-1 ("Bone") Lancer strategic long-range bombers.

The US has also “secretly” deployed the E-6 Mercury “Doomsday plane” which has been reportedly “tasked with "providing command and control of U.S. nuclear forces should ground-based control become inoperable" and whose core functions include conveying instructions from the National Command Authority to fleet ballistic missile submarines and also to further command post capabilities and control of land-based missiles and nuclear-armed bombers”, according to the Zero Hedge[6].

In other words, should there be a full scale war, such may include the use of nuclear weapons. The outcome, hence, is likely to be devastating and cannot be compared to any previous conventional wars.

Thus any comparisons with modern wars as the 1982 Falklands War between the UK and Argentina[7], the 1991 US-Iraq Gulf War[8], the 1999 Kargil war between India and Pakistan over the Kashmir region[9], the 2003 US Invasion of Iraq[10], the Afghanistan War[11] or the 5 day South Ossetia war between Russia and Georgia[12] represents apples-to-oranges.

South Korea and the US will have to deal with North Korea’s 12-27 nuclear weapons with a TNT yield of 6-40 kilotons[13]. The atomic bombs that leveled Hiroshima “Little Boy” gravity bomb and Nagasaki “Fat Man” gravity bomb had TNT yields of 13-18 kilotons and 20-22 kilotons respectively[14].

Why is War Unlikely; North Korea’s Geopolitics of BlackMail

In 2010 I expressed doubts that a war in the Korean Peninsula will take place. I still maintain such skepticism.

Why?

North Korea is an impoverished state whose weapons are mostly dilapidated and obsolete, and whose vaunted millions of soldiers are likely to be starving, ill equipped and poorly trained[15].
And in spite of the North Korea’s vaunted war machinery, wherein much of the misallocation of the nation’s resources had been directed, the North Korean army is in a state of dilapidation and obsolescence: they seem ostensibly good for parades and for taunting, but not for real combat…

Thus, based on socio- political-economic and military calculations, the North Koreans are unlikely to pursue a path of war, because the odds are greatly against them. And their political leadership is aware of this.
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And as I previously pointed out, North Korea is the embodiment of the environmental politics of known as “Earth hour”[16]. Except for the North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang, satellite photos reveal that at night, the entire country has mostly been dark or without light, which is in stark contrast to South Korea (left window).

Moreover, North Korea has recently been plagued by hyperinflation[17]

Since July 2010, price inflation as measured by rice prices has pole-vaulted by 5x. So we can’t discount that such war histrionics may have been meant to divert public’s attention from internal economic woes, and instead, like typical politicians North Korean leaders have used foreigners as scapegoats for policy failures.

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Except for nuclear weapons, North Korea isn’t likely to win a conventional war against South Korea, even without US support.

South Korea can afford to defend herself with a modern well equipped well trained army given the wide difference of her economic growth[18], capital surpluses and wealth disparities. But the problem is that she may have substantially relied or delegated to the US much of the home or national defense duties.

Given such reality, political leaders of North Korea have long used nuclear weapons as bargaining chips to indulge on the geopolitics of blackmail. 

So unless North Korea’s Kim Jong-un has gone rogue and suicidal, the odds are that North Korea’s Kim will unlikely take on this war path. 

Besides, Kim’s wife Ri-Sol-ju has reportedly given birth to their first baby in secret[19]. A war would mean sacrificing both their political privileges and their lives. And they know this.

Yet a conventional war may perhaps open the gateway for ordinary North Koreans to make a mad dash out of their highly repressive country. 

And it isn’t also far fetch to think that a war may inspire many of North Korea’s military to immediately surrender or pledge allegiance to the South or mount a mutiny, given the horrors of the North Korean dictatorship. Just recently a North Korean official was executed by mortal shell for infringing on the rules covering the 100 day mourning period for the late King Jong il[20].

Of course such faceoff hasn’t been all about North Korea’s fault.

Aside from the sanctions imposed by the UN due to DPRK’s third missile tests, North Korean leaders may have been traumatized by recent US military air exercise involving heavy bombers[21].

Notes the historian Eric Margolis[22],
During the 1950-53 Korean War, US B-29 heavy bombers literally flattened North Korea. That’s why North Korea reacted so furiously when US B-52 heavy bombers and B-2 Stealth bombers skirted its borders late last month, triggering off this latest crisis. The B-2 can deliver the fearsome ‘MOAB’ 30,000 lb bomb called "the Mother of All Bombs" designed to destroy deep underground command HQ’s (read Kim Jong-un’s bunker) and underground nuclear facilities.
The real threat from a realization of a full scale war really hasn’t really been just about North Korea’s nuclear missiles but about the possible involvement of other nations as China, whom has long been North Korea’s key ally, and of Russia whom has had on and off relationship with the DPRK[23]. Although recently China’s leaders have expressed concern over the bellicose rhetoric of North Korea’s leaders[24], events may turn out differently once the shooting war begins. 

Remember the Casus Belli of World War I had been the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria[25], which invoked the assembly of opposing alliances that lead to the outbreak of war[26]. The opposing alliances then consisted of the Allies (based on the Triple Entente of the United Kingdom, France and Russia) on one side. And the Central Powers (originally the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy; but, as Austria–Hungary had taken the offensive against the agreement, Italy did not enter into the war), on the other side.

The US Military Industrial Complex and Stock Market Scenarios

Lastly the US seems to have been itching for a war either with Iran or with North Korea. Yet North Korea has long served as a useful public bogeyman which benefited of the US military industrial complex and the neoconservative politicians who support them.

The existence of a “bellicose” and “provocateur” DPRK has justified US military power build up in Asia. Jack A. Smith writing at Anti-War.com[27] 
Washington wants to get rid of the communist regime before allowing peace to prevail on the peninsula. No “one state, two systems” for Uncle Sam, by jingo! He wants one state that pledges allegiance to — guess who? In the interim, the existence of a “bellicose” North Korea justifies Washington’s surrounding the north with a veritable ring of firepower. A “dangerous” DPRK is also useful in keeping Tokyo well within the U.S. orbit and in providing another excuse for once-pacifist Japan to boost its already formidable arsenal.
Not only “war is the health of the state”[28], war signifies as good business for the politically anointed since defense industry benefits from subsidies or wealth transfer from taxpayers to politicians and military industrial complex.

So how the Korean Peninsula standoffs affect the domestic and the regional stock markets?

I see four potential scenarios with different outcomes. 1. No war. 2. Limited conventional war. 3. Limited war but with use of nuclear weapons. 4. World War III.

The stock markets will hardly be affected given the first two situations: no war or a limited conventional war. I lean towards the first scenario.

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Nonetheless if the second condition occur, central banks are likely to inflate more. US monetary base surged during World War II, and also climbed during the Vietnam War.

If nuclear weapons will be used, the stock markets may be affected. But this will largely depend on the location and the extent of the damages.

Remember if DPRK’s Kim will go berserk and become suicidal then he may wish for retribution or make a statement against the West. Thus we should not dismiss the possibility that the DPRK may target nations with the least anti-ballistic defence or nations who are most vulnerable to their missiles. This puts Southeast Asia on such a list.

In this nuclear age, World War III means that we can kiss the stock markets goodbye and pray that we survive the nuclear holocaust.

Ignoring all these would signify as “denigration of history” or the false assumption that one is immune from misfortunes or disasters.

[1] Wikipedia.org Casus belli






[7] Wikipedia.org Falklands War

[8] Wikipedia.org Gulf War

[9] Wikipedia.org Kargil War


[11] Wikipedia.org Afghanistan War

[12] Wikipedia.org Russia-Georgia War


[14] Wikipedia.org Nuclear Weapon Yield



[17] Steve H. Hanke, North Korea’s Hyperinflation Legacy, Part II Cato.org December 7, 2012

[18] Washington Post Kim Jong Il’s economic legacy, in one chart December 19, 2011




[22] Eric Margolis War in Korea April 6, 2013




[26] Wikipedia.org World War I

[27] Jack A. Smith, Behind the US-North Korean Bluster Anti-war.com April 4, 2013

[28] Randolph Bourne War is the Health of the State Bureau of Public Secrets

Saturday, April 06, 2013

Bank of England: Rising Equity Markets Don’t Reflect the Underlying Economic Situation

The Bank of England (BoE) says what I have been saying all along: markets have functioned in departure from reality or what I call as "parallel universe".

From the Bloomberg
The Bank of England said rising equity markets don’t reflect the underlying economic situation and warned that investors may be underestimating risks in the financial system.

Gains by equities since mid-2012 “in part reflected exceptionally accommodative monetary policies by many central banks,” the BOE’s Financial Policy Committee said today in London in the minutes of its March 19 meeting. “It was also consistent with a perception among some contacts that the most significant downside risks had attenuated. But market sentiment may be taking too rosy a view of the underlying stresses.”
UK’s highly fragile banking system has been amplified by current yield chasing parallel universe. More from the same article:
At the meeting, the FPC recommended that U.K. lenders raise 25 billion pounds ($38 billion) of additional capital to cover bigger potential losses, possible fines for mis-selling and stricter risk models. While banks have strengthened their resilience in recent years, the FPC said today that not all of them may be able to withstand unexpected shocks and maintain lending to companies and households.

The FPC discussed potential threats from the crisis in Cyprus, which agreed on an international bailout last month. While at the time of the March 19 meeting there were “minimal signs” of spillovers to other financial systems, there was “a risk that this situation could change,” the committee said….

In their discussion, the FPC members noted the potential threats to the financial system from increased risk appetite among investors.

“This was evident in the re-emergence of some elements of behavior in financial markets not seen since before the financial crisis, including a relaxation in some U.S. credit markets of non-price terms and increased issuance of synthetic products,” the committee said. “At this stage, they did not appear indicative of widespread exuberance in markets. But developments would need to be monitored closely.”

The FPC also said that banks’ leverage ratios, a measure of their debt to equity level, would remain “very high” even after the new recommendations were met. It said there would be “little margin for error against a backdrop of low growth in the advanced economies.”
As noted in the above, central bank authorities either fail to comprehend on the distortive consequences of their inflationist policies or that they are in deep denial.

Because money is never neutral, central bank’s monetary expansion means “money from thin air” flows into the financial and economic system asymmetrically.

Such polices trigger what is called as the “business cycle”.

As the great dean of Austrian economics explained
The fundamental insight of the "Austrian," or Misesian, theory of the business cycle is that monetary inflation via loans to business causes over-investment in capital goods, especially in such areas as construction, long-term investments, machine tools, and industrial commodities. On the other hand, there is a relative underinvestment in consumer goods industries. And since stock prices and real-estate prices are titles to capital goods, there tends as well to be an excessive boom in the stock and real-estate markets.
(bold mine) 
So England’s property bubble and elevated equity prices signify as a classic example of the business cycle in motion.

And given the increasingly hostile environment where productive (commercial) activities are being punished via higher taxes, financial repression and by increased regulations and mandates, such string of political actions compounds on the skewing of people’s incentives towards yield chasing activities.

Add to this the distorting effects of inflationism on economic calculation, again professor Rothbard: (bold mine)
By creating illusory profits and distorting economic calculation, inflation will suspend the free market's penalizing of inefficient, and rewarding of efficient, firms. Almost all firms will seemingly prosper. The general atmosphere of a "sellers' market" will lead to a decline in the quality of goods and of service to consumers, since consumers often resist price increases less when they occur in the form of downgrading of quality. The quality of work will decline in an inflation for a more subtle reason: people become enamored of "get-rich-quick" schemes, seemingly within their grasp in an era of ever-rising prices, and often scorn sober effort. Inflation also penalizes thrift and encourages debt, for any sum of money loaned will be repaid in dollars of lower purchasing power than when originally received. The incentive, then, is to borrow and repay later rather than save and lend. Inflation, therefore, lowers the general standard of living in the very course of creating a tinsel atmosphere of "prosperity."
Besides, like Spain, central banks have supported asset markets in order to finance unwieldy government spending or their highly tenuous welfare state via Ponzi financing.

In short, lofty equity prices are symptoms of monetary disorder. Another reality is that such policies have been designed to preserve on the unsustainable incumbent political economic cartel of the debt and inflation based crony banking-welfare/warfare state-central banking system through asset bubbles.

Yet if central banks desist from pursuing further monetary expansion that blows today's asset bubbles, the system falls asunder. 

Eventually when a critical state have been reached from these cumulative unsustainable political actions, markets will also unravel.

Central bankers, in essence, have been caught between the proverbial devil and the deep blue sea.

The above also shows why conventional treatment of financial markets will be highly sensitive to significant analytical errors and losses. As hedge fund manager Kyle Bass recently noted, today's markets are largely Potemkin Villages.

Quote of the Day: Credit Allocation Determined by World’s Bank Regulators

The financial crisis served to differentiate two types of investments–the ones that get bailed out and the ones that don’t. Investors naturally have a preference for the former. That means big banks can get cheap credit. And what does Basel tell them they can do with their cheap credit? Buy government bonds.

So what we have had over the past ten years is a massive exercise in credit allocation by the world’s bank regulators. They offer explicit and implicit guarantees to banks that invest in assets officially designated as low risk, and now they are shocked, shocked to find capital pouring into exactly those assets.
This is from economist, author and professor Arnold Kling on his blog.

Video: Some People's Amazing Feat

A short video on incredible acts that some people can do. (hat tip AEI's Mark Perry)