Tuesday, April 16, 2013

World Bank: Developing Asia Should Put a Brake on Easing Policies

Interesting call from the World Bank. 

From the Jakarta Globe:
The World Bank is urging developing economies in East Asia and Pacific, including Indonesia, to put a brake on monetary and fiscal policies that boost consumer demand, arguing that such actions would add to inflationary pressures as the global economy gradually recovers.

“Most countries in developing East Asia are well prepared to absorb external shocks, but continued demand-boosting measures may now be counterproductive, as it could add to inflationary pressures,” said World Bank East Asia and Pacific chief economist Bert Hofman in a report on Monday.

“A strong rebound in capital inflows to the region induced by protracted rounds of quantitative easing in the US, EU and Japan, may amplify credit and asset price risks,” he added.
 
Developing East Asia and Pacific include China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia, Laos, Mongolia, Myanmar, East Timor, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and other smaller island economies in the Pacific.
So the World Bank finally admits or acknowledges of the existence of the Asian-ASEAN bubbles which they couch in technical gobbledygook as “demand-boosting measures may now be counterproductive”. 

“Counterproductive” is really about capital consumption from malinvestments that will be unraveled by inflationary pressures. Mainstream terminology for this is "overheating".

This has been a dynamic I have been pointing out since last year.

The World Bank also puts into proper context  the role of capital inflows as “may amplify credit and asset price risks”. Yes this is an acknowledgement of my assertion that all bubbles are inherently domestic.

Glad to hear some forthrightness from a taxpayer funded multilateral agency.

Yet, be careful of what you wish for.

If the boom in ASEAN economies has mainly been derived from counterproductive “demand boosting measures”, then a policy brake (tightening) would translate to a reversal of such speculative, unproductive, wealth consuming activities: particularly such will likely be ventilated through economic recession, crashing markets and possibly a financial/banking crisis.

A “brake” in easing policies, for instance, will essentially expose on the underlying reality behind the supposed Philippine economic miracle labeled as “Aquinomics” along with political façade from other ASEAN nations whose economic growth has been cosmetically boosted by credit expansion.

Thus, will ASEAN politicians acquiesce to a virtual exposé of their pretentious policies that risks undermining their political privileges and of their supposed popular moral standings? 

I doubt so.

Yet more institutions appear to recognize implicitly, slowly but surely, my concerns of a coming crisis from today’s bubble policies.

Video: Why do we Trade or Exchange Things?

Voluntary trading or exchanging are ubiquitous activities for people, unfortunately many don't understand its essence and that's the reason why trading or exchanging has often been subjected to politics. 

In the following video from LearnLiberty.org, Duke University's Professor Mike Munger explains why people trade: (hat tip Professor Don Boudreaux)

How the Korean Peninsula Crisis will be Settled

Historian Eric Margolis at the lewrockwell.com offers the scenario (bold mine)
Now, the US has finally deployed its diplomatic muscle by sending the new Secretary of State John Kerry to Beijing to try to arm-twist China into clamping down on its errant bad boy, North Korea. The result was a joint communiqué calling on the US and China to jointly pursue the de-nuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.

China has long advocated this policy, so nothing new here. But the North American media hailed it as a breakthrough in the crisis. In fact, China is not happy with North Korea’s nuclear program, but Beijing considers an independent, stable North Korea essential for the security of its highly sensitive northeast region of Machuria.

Chinese strategists fear the collapse of the Kim dynasty in North Korea would lead to the US-dominated South Korea absorbing the north and even implanting US bases within range of Manchuria and the maritime approaches to Beijing. In 1950, China responded to the advance of US forces onto its Manchurian border, the Yalu River, by intervening in the Korean War with over 1.5 million soldiers.

The collapse of North Korea would also move South Korean and US military power 200 km closer to Russia’s key Far Eastern population and military complex at Vladivostok.

Accordingly, China’s strategy to date has been to talk moderation and issue occasional blasts at North Korea to appease the outside world and its major American trading partner while quietly ensuring that North Korea remains viable. China supplies all of North Korea’s oil, part of its food, and large amounts of industrial and military spare parts.

North Korea’s Kim Jung-un appears to have climbed too far out on a limb by issuing dire threats that include nuclear war. His problem is to climb back without losing too much face or appearing to be forced by the United States.

Prestige is a key factor in dictatorship. An obvious defeat can lead to the dictator’s fall. That’s why Hitler refused to retreat from the deathtrap at Stalingrad, rightly fearing such a loss of prestige and his mystique of military genius would encourage his domestic foes to move against him.

So Kim will likely need Beijing’s help in ending the crisis, and Beijing will be both happy to do so and end up in a position to demand useful concessions from Washington.

Beijing has been claiming that the US whipped up the current Korea crisis to justify deploying new military forces to Asia and emplacing more anti-missile systems in Alaska and a new one in Guam – all part of President Barack Obama’s much heralded "pivot to Asia."
At the end of the day, North Korea will remain as the convenient bogeyman, stooge, prop and supposed “buffer” for the benefit of both China and the US (particularly the military industrial complex and the neocons).

The vaudeville of the geopolitics of blackmail continues.

Abenomics: More Signs of Backfire

Japan’s inflationism will lead to increasing reliance on foreign capital first, and importantly to eventual capital flight, these increases the risks of a debt/currency crisis

Here is what I wrote back then
Worst, a sustained deterioration of current accounts means that Japan will increasingly rely on foreign capital and or draw down from the her pool of savings which has been estimated at $19 trillion and which could also extrapolate to a reduction of assets held overseas or $4 trillion net foreign investment position
There seems to be incipient signs of the above as Japanese companies opens the door to financing from abroad.

From Bloomberg:
Shizuoka Bank Ltd. (8355) joined Japanese national lenders in expanding U.S. dollar finance activity, anticipating monetary easing will crush margins on yen loans.

The nation’s second-biggest regional bank by market value raised $500 million in zero-coupon notes due 2018, the first public sale of dollar-denominated convertible bonds by a Japanese company since 2002. The average interest rate on long- term yen loans from the country’s lenders fell to 0.942 percent in February, compared with 3.348 percent companies worldwide pay on dollar facilities, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. plans to increase energy and utility financing in the U.S., as the Bank of Japan (8301)’s focus on cutting long-term borrowing costs undercuts earnings from yen loans, President Nobuyuki Hirano said. Sumitomo Mitsui (8316) Financial Group Inc. aims to sell a record amount of dollar bonds this year for overseas business, even as the BOJ policy seeks to spur domestic lending to revive the economy.
Abenomics has failed to prompt for the desired domestic spending and credit growth as Japanese firms remains flushed with cash, preferring foreign financing. Again from the same article
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s call to boost fiscal and monetary stimulus hasn’t been enough to spark corporate demand for loans, leaving Japan’s banks with a record amount of excess cash. Customer deposits held by Japanese lenders exceeded loans by 176.3 trillion yen ($1.8 trillion) in March, central bank data show.
Yet concerns over Japan credit ratings have emerged, as seen via Japan’s Credit Default Swaps CDS at near record highs.
The cost to insure Japan’s sovereign notes for five years against nonpayment was at 71 basis points yesterday, after reaching 78 earlier this month, the highest since Jan. 23, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by McGraw-Hill Cos. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the privately negotiated market. A drop in the credit-default swaps signals improving perceptions of creditworthiness.
The adverse impact from Kuroda’s implementation of aggressive Abenomics has reportedly contributed to the gold-commodity rout.

We can see why.
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Yields of the 30 year JGBs has sharply bounced off the lows

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Yields of 2 year JGBs has surpassed the .1% level, which have been standard for about 1 year 

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From the bigger picture or 5 year chart we can see the deviation of 2 year JGB yields from the norm (all charts from Bloomberg)

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All these has coincided with a monster rally in the yen, decline of the Nikkei and a nosediving gold.

Abenomics has simply been doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results. Some people call this insanity. 

The halcyon days of Abenomics appears to be numbered.

Parallel universe in Gold: Physical versus Paper gold

Two interesting outlooks from the two day 14% massacre on gold prices

1. Falling gold prices equals bigger demand for physical gold in India

With gold prices tumbling to a 15-month low today, retailers are witnessing a surge in demand and expect up to 50 per cent spike in sales volume in this marriage season.

They are also expecting prices to fall further to around Rs 25,000 per 10 grams in the immediate short-term.

"Over the weekend, demand has picked up and there is surge in footfalls. As such, demand for jewellery has been up since Holi due to the upcoming wedding season. However, the recent plunge in prices have added to the momentum.

"We are expecting a whopping 50 per cent growth in sales volume during this season over the same period last year," Vice-Chairman of the Mumbai Jewellers Association Kumar Jain told PTI.

Jain, who also owns Umedmal Tilokchand Zaveri retail chain, said jewellers are expecting a good season on the back of expectations that the prices are likely to tumble further to around Rs 25,000 due to global cues.
2. Has the selling of paper gold been far more than the actual inventories?

From Mark Byrne of Goldcore (via Zero Hedge) [bold original]
Gold futures with a value of over 400 tonnes were sold in hours and this is equal to 15% of annual gold mine production. The scale of the selling was massive and again underlines how one or two large banks or hedge funds can completely distort the market by aggressive, concentrated leveraged short positions.

It may again be the case that bullion banks with large concentrated short positions are manipulating the price lower as has long been alleged by the Gold Anti Trust Action Committee (GATA). The motive would be both to profit and also to allow them to close out their significant short positions at more advantageous prices and possibly even go long in anticipation of higher prices in the coming weeks.

Those with concentrated short positions may also have been concerned about the significant decline in COMEX gold inventories.

The plunge in New York Comex’s gold inventories since February is a reflection of increased demand for the physical metal and concerns about counter party risk with some hedge funds and institutions choosing to own gold in less risky allocated accounts.

Comex gold bullion inventories have slumped 17% already in 2013, falling to just 286.6 metric tons of actual metal on April 11, the lowest since September 2009.

This means that futures speculators on Friday sold a significant amount of more paper gold, in an hour or two, then the entire COMEX physical gold bullion inventories.
Sell on banksters and governments! This should give the physical gold market (or the public) more space or opportunities to accumulate.

War on Gold: CME and Shanghai Gold Raises Gold, Silver Margins

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Gold’s has been utterly clobbered for the past two days. Yesterday price of gold got crucified down by 8.71%. Silver had also been razed down 12.48%

Part of that steep dive has been exacerbated by the raising of trading margin requirements from the CME and the Shanghai Gold Exchange.

From the Bloomberg:
CME Group Inc. (CME) increased the margin requirements on gold trading after prices plunged.

The minimum cash deposit for gold futures will rise 19 percent to $7,040 per 100-ounce contract at the close of trading tomorrow, Chicago-based CME said in a statement. For silver, the minimum cash deposit was raised to $12,375 from $10,450.

The CME’s Comex unit is making it more expensive for speculators to trade after gold fell the most in 33 years today, dropping to the lowest since February 2011, after prices entered a bear market last week. Silver, also in a bear market, slumped 11 percent today and extended the year’s loss to 23 percent.
From CityIndex.co.uk (bold original)
The plunge in gold and silver was also accelerated by reports that the Shanghai Gold Exchange may hike margins on gold and silver contracts to 12% and 15%. Margin hikes were carried out in 2011 by Comex in order to stabilize speculation, whereas an increase in Shanghai following violent price plunge may reflect the stability of the Exchange’s clearinghouse.
Intervening supposedly to “stabilize” gold-silver markets apparently backfired.

Yet two exchanges doing the same thing, as if they had been coordinated.

Such actions signify as the proverbial “kick a man when he is down” or may have been meant to ensure that gold-silver’s decline continues.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Murray Rothbard on Tax Day

Murray N. Rothbard at the lewrockwell.com on Tax Day
April 15, that dread Income Tax day, is around again, and gives us a chance to ruminate on the nature of taxes and of the government itself.

The first great lesson to learn about taxation is that taxation is simply robbery. No more and no less. For what is "robbery"? Robbery is the taking of a man’s property by the use of violence or the threat thereof, and therefore without the victim’s consent. And yet what else is taxation?

Those who claim that taxation is, in some mystical sense, really "voluntary" should then have no qualms about getting rid of that vital feature of the law which says that failure to pay one’s taxes is criminal and subject to appropriate penalty. But does anyone seriously believe that if the payment of taxation were really made voluntary, say in the sense of contributing to the American Cancer Society, that any appreciable revenue would find itself into the coffers of government? Then why don’t we try it as an experiment for a few years, or a few decades, and find out?

But if taxation is robbery, then it follows as the night the day that those people who engage in, and live off, robbery are a gang of thieves. Hence the government is a group of thieves, and deserves, morally, aesthetically, and philosophically, to be treated exactly as a group of less socially respectable ruffians would be treated.

This issue of The Libertarian is dedicated to that growing legion of Americans who are engaging in various forms of that one weapon, that one act of the public which our rulers fear the most: tax rebellion, the cutting off the funds by which the host public is sapped to maintain the parasitic ruling classes. Here is a burning issue which could appeal to everyone, young and old, poor and wealthy, "working class" and middle class, regardless of race, color, or creed. Here is an issue which everyone understands, only too well. Taxation.

Tanking Gold and Commodities Prices and the Theology of Deflation

One of the bizarre and outrageously foolish or patently absurd commentary I have read has been to allude to the current commodity selloffs to what I call as the theology of deflation, particularly the cultish belief that money printing does not create inflation. 

Yet if we go by such logic, then hyperinflation should have never existed.

Doug Noland of the Credit Bubble Bulletin debunks such ridiculousness:
With global central bankers “printing” desperately, the collapse in gold stocks and sinking commodities prices were not supposed to happen. Is it evidence of imminent deflation? How could that be, with the Fed and Bank of Japan combining for about $170bn of monthly “money printing.” Are they not doing enough? How is deflation possible with China’s “total social financing” expanding an incredible $1 Trillion during the first quarter? How is deflation a serious risk in the face of ultra-loose financial conditions in the U.S. and basically near-free “money” available round the globe?

Well, deflation is not really the issue. Instead, so-called “deflation” can be viewed as the typical consequence of bursting asset and Credit Bubbles. And going all the way back to the early nineties, the Fed has misunderstood and misdiagnosed the problem. It is a popular pastime to criticize the Germans for their inflation fixation. Well, history will identify a much more dangerous fixation on deflation that spread from the U.S. to much of the world.

I see sinking commodities prices as one more data point supporting the view of failed central bank policy doctrine. For one, it confirms that unprecedented monetary stimulus is largely bypassing real economies on its way to Bubbling global securities markets. I also see faltering commodities markets as confirmation of my “crowded trade” thesis. For too many years (going back to the 90’s) the Fed and global central bank policies have incentivized leveraged speculation. This has fostered a massive inflation in this global pool of speculative finance that has ensured too much market-based liquidity (“money”) has been chasing a limited amount of risk assets. Speculative excess today encompasses all markets, including gold and the commodities. Over recent months, these Bubbles have become increasingly unwieldy and unstable. Commodities are the first to crack.
In the theology of deflation espoused by monetary cranks, financial markets and the economy operates like spatial black holes, they are supposedly sucked into a ‘liquidity trap’ premised on the ‘dearth of aggregate demand’ and on interventionists creed of "pushing on a string" or of the failure of monetary policies to induce spending. Thus the need for government intervention to inflate the system (inflationism) to encourge spending.

Further money cranks tells us there has been no link between inflation and deflation.  Or that there are hardly any relationship of how falling markets could have been a result of prior inflation. 

Bubbles are essentially nonexistent for them. Inflationism has been seen as operating in a vacuum with barely any adverse consequences because these represent the immaculate acts of hallowed governments. Whereas deflation has been projected as “market failure”.

Yet we see plummeting commodity prices, contradictory to such obtuse view, as representing many factors. 

Global financial markets (stocks and bonds) have been seen as having implicit government support (e.g. the Bernanke Put or Bernanke doctrine), thus the safe haven status may have temporarily gravitated towards government backed papers rather than commodities.


Yet this doesn’t entail that endless money printing will not or never generate price inflation. Again such logic anchored on free lunch, simply wishes away the laws of economics.

Second, falling commodity prices doesn’t mean the absence of price inflation but rather monetary inflation has been manifested via price inflation in assets or asset bubbles so far. 

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The “don’t fight the central banks” mantra has led the marketplace to go for yield hunting by materially racking up credit growth.


Both markets suggests that government policies has heavily influenced market actions to chase yields by absorbing or accruing more unsustainable debt.

China’s massive money growth backed by financial expansion have masked the marked deterioration in her economy.  This perhaps supports the essence of the broad based gold led commodity panic.

And as Mr. Noland points out, cracking commodity prices may be portentous of the periphery to the core symptom of a coming crisis.

Falling commodity prices will initially hurt the emerging markets and could likely spread through the world. 

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Commodity exports plays a substantial role in emerging economies (IMF)

This means that global growth will be jeopardized thereby increasing the risks of bubble busts from the periphery (emerging markets and frontier markets)

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Emerging markets are supposed to comprise nearly 50% of global growth this year. (chart from the Daily Bell)

I also earlier pointed out that Indonesia's boom has been popularly attributed to commodity exports, even when latest developments suggests more of a property bubble. The Financial Times warns of an ASEAN bubble and notes of an unwieldy boom in Indonesia's luxury real estate projects.
Ciputra Development, which builds luxury condominiums, said that while prices in central Jakarta, the capital, had been growing at a rapid clip – about 30-40 per cent a year – a new trend had emerged.
If woes from Indonesia's commodity exports will spread through the property sector, then the Indonesian economy will become highly vulnerable. This makes the region including the Philippines susceptible too.

Boom will segue into a bust.
 

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Yet the recourse to eternal money printing will one day set another path. (chart from Zero hedge).

Inflationism comes in stages. Thus every stage commands a different outcome.  We are still operating on bubble cycles from which the current gold-commodity pressures signify as the typical the denial stage from inflation risks provoked by Fed policies.

As the great Ludwig von Mises predicted. (bold mine)
This first stage of the inflationary process may last for many years. While it lasts, the prices of many goods and services are not yet adjusted to the altered money relation. There are still people in the country who have not yet become aware of the fact that they are confronted with a price revolution which will finally result in a considerable rise of all prices, although the extent of this rise will not be the same in the various commodities and services.

These people still believe that prices one day will drop. Waiting for this day, they restrict their purchases and concomitantly increase their cash holdings. As long as such ideas are still held by public opinion, it is not yet too late for the government to abandon its inflationary policy.

But then, finally, the masses wake up. They become suddenly aware of the fact that inflation is a deliberate policy and will go on endlessly. A breakdown occurs. The crack-up boom appears. Everybody is anxious to swap his money against "real" goods, no matter whether he needs them or not, no matter how much money he has to pay for them.
In short we are in a stage where people have yet to become aware of a price revolution ahead even when policies have been directed towards them.

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We have seen such setting before.

Gold prices surged from $35 in 1971, which began during the Nixon Shock or after the closing of gold window based on the Bretton Woods gold exchange standard, to about $190 in 1975 or 4.4x the 1971 level. Following the peak, gold prices plunged by about 45% to around $105 in 1976. (chart from chartrus.com)

The returns from Gold’s recent boom from $ 300 to $ 1,900 has been about 5.3x before today’s dive. So there may be some parallel.

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Then, the interim collapse has served as springboard for gold’s resurgence. Gold prices evenutally hit $850 in the early 80s. (chart from chartrus.com)

Of course, the stagflation days of 1970-80s has vastly been different than today.

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Debt levels of advanced economies has already surpassed the World War II highs. (from US Global Investors) This is why advanced economies has resorted to derring-do or bravado policies of unprecedented inflationism from central banks.

Most of which has been meant to finance fiscal deficits, increasing the likelihood of the risks of price inflation and debt default over time. Such has been the typical outcome based on EIGHT centuries of crises according to non-Austrian Harvard economist Carmen Reinhart (along with Harvard contemporary Kenneth Rogoff).

Monetary cranks essentially tells us that “this time is different”. They believe that they are immune from the rules of nature. They denigrate history.

Moreover there has been a global pandemic of bubbles, which simply means that the path dependency for governments policies will be directed towards sustaining them.

Authorities will resort to bailouts, rescues and further inflationism in fear of  bubble busts in order to maintain the status quo.

This will not be limited to advanced economies but will apply to emerging markets including the Philippines as well.

Another difference is that, then, US monetary policies had been severely tightened which caused a spike in interest rates and two recessions. US Federal Reserve’s Paul Volcker had been credited to have stopped the inflationary side of stagflation or the “disinflationary scenario”, according to the Wikipedia.org

Today, there has been a rabid fear of recessions

Globalization too, from the opening of China, India and many emerging markets, led to increased productivity which essentially offset inflation levels. A 2005 study from the Federal Reserve of Kansas City notes that
Rogoff also credits the “increased level of competition—in both product and labor markets—that has resulted from the interplay of increased globalization, deregulation, and a decreased role for governments in many countries” as contributing to the reduction in global inflation.
Today with almost every economy indulging in bubble policies and therefore serially blowing bubbles, capital consumption leads to decreased productivity, heightening the risks of price inflation.

The Royal Bank of Scotland recently pointed out that Asia’s credit bubble has been accompanied by decreasing labor productivity. When the public’s activities having been directed towards financial market speculation than production, then evidently labor productivity has to decline.

Of course, direct confiscation of people’s savings via the banking system ala Cyprus will also become a key factor for the prospective search for monetary refuge.

Third, in the world of financial globalization, speculative bubbles translates to immensely intertwined markets, such that volatility in global markets, particularly in JGBs may have prompted for massive reallocation or a shift in incentives towards government backed securities.

This Reuters article gives us a clue:
"The scale of the decline has been absolutely breathtaking. We tried to rally and that just didn't get anywhere ... there hasn't been any downside support, it's like a knife through butter," Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar said.
The pace of the sell-off appeared tied to volatility in the price of Japanese government bonds, which has forced certain holders to sell other assets to meet the risk modeling of their investment portfolios.
Fourth is that such selloffs has deliberately been engineered by Wall Street most possibly to project support on Fed policies for more inflationism. Wall Street, thus peddles the inflation bogeyman to spur political authorities to maintain or deepen inflationism which benefits them most

In my edited response to a friend on the recent record levels of US markets, I explain the redistribution of Fed Policies to Wall Street to the latter's benefits

Given the relative impact (Cantillon Effects) from the Fed’s money printing, those who get the money first, particularly Wall Street, e.g. primary dealers and bondholders who sell bonds to the FED via QE, the 2008 bailout money (TARP), proceeds from the Fed’s Interest Rate on Excess Reserves and etc, may have used such to speculate on the stock markets and the credit markets (e.g. junk bonds, revival of CDOs) rather than to lend to main street. Thus the parallel universe: economic growth has been tepid, but financial market booms.

There has also been the interlocking relationship between bond and stock markets as I earlier pointed out here

Since December the politically connected Goldman Sachs has called for the selling of gold which has been followed by a coterie of Wall Street allies

From the Star Online:
Several renowned global financial institutions such as Credit Suisse Group AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Nomura Holdings Inc, Deutsche Bank AG, UBS Ag, and Socit Gnrale SA (SocGen) have already turned bearish on gold in recent weeks, and cut their gold-price forecast for 2013 and 2014.
So current selloff cannot be dismissed as having been a purely market dynamic and not having been influenced by a grand design to promote further inflationism.

Lastly, as I noted during the start of the year, gold’s 12 year consecutive rise has been ripe for profit taking.
Although, so far, with the exception of gold, no trend has moved in a straight line, so it would be natural for gold to undergo a year of negative returns.
Expect this selloff in gold-commodity sphere to increase risks towards a transition to a global crisis, and for central banks to engage in more aggressive inflationism. 

Such transition will eventually bring about the risks of stagflation.

China’s M2 Surge and the Stealth Stimulus

The explosive surge of China’s M2

Data released by the People's Bank of China reveals that China's broad money supply grew by 15.7% in March, boosting the outstanding M2 to 103 trillion yuan (US$16.5 billion).

Analysts are worried that the rapid surge in M2 is unhealthy for the economy and that the authorities should check the money supply and cut down the ratio of currency to GDP, according to the state newswire Xinhua.

M2 is a measure of money supply that includes coins, currency, checking account balances, savings and short-value time deposits. With more than 100 trillion yuan (US$16 trillion) circulating in the market, analysts believe it is fueling inflation.

M2 climbed from 13 trillion yuan (US$2 trillion) in 2000 to nearly 50 trillion yuan (US$8 trillion) in 2008, and to 97.4 trillion yuan (US$15.6 trillion) or 190% of the nation's GDP in 2012, the central bank data showed.
 New regime, more intrepid interventions
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In perspective, the article says that China’s M2 has grown an average of 53.25% or 17.26% CAGR since 2000 and 21% or 15.55% CAGR since 2008. This can partly be seen from the 1 year year-on-year change of China’s M2. (Chart from Bloomberg)  

The CAGR growth rate represents almost double the rate of China’s economic growth. 

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Such pick up in the pace of M2 simply means that Chinese authorities have been using the printing press to camouflage on the liquidation pressures from her bubble plagued economy. 

Yet this also shows how Chinese authorities have already engaged in stealth or publicly undeclared ‘bold’ stimulus, most of which I suspect have been channeled through State Owned Enterprises (SoE).

From the Bloomberg
New local-currency lending in March was 1.06 trillion yuan ($171 billion), the People’s Bank of China said today in Beijing. That compares with the 900 billion yuan median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 34 economists and 620 billion yuan in February…

China’s foreign exchange reserves rose to a record $3.44 trillion at the end of March from $3.31 trillion in December. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey was for $3.36 trillion.

For the first quarter, aggregate financing surged about 58 percent from a year earlier to 6.16 trillion yuan, according to central bank data. New local-currency loans in the first three months were 2.76 trillion yuan, the most for a first quarter since the global financial crisis, and 12 percent higher than the same period last year.
Note of the diminishing returns from China’s printing press: statistical economic growth has been in a decline despite the increasingly aggressive use of monetary tools. (chart from tradingeconomics.com


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The surge in M2 via record financing has marginally impacted price inflation rates. This comes in the face of China’s attempt to curtail property bubbles via piecemeal approach through regulations (e.g. 20% tax on new homes regulations)

So while authorities have been pumping money briskly on one hand, they are trying to suppress bubbles on the other hand. Such conflict in policies signifies as the proverbial left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.

Again this demonstrates of the ongoing stresses or frictions from bubble liquidations within the economy running in conflict with China’s bold recourse towards inflationism as shield to an economic meltdown (chart from Danske)

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The Shanghai index, China’s major equity benchmark continues to exhibit pressures from the downdraft of bubble liquidation pressures in spite of the stealth stimulus.

Perhaps the China story may have partly contributed to the recent rout in commodities. But I guess this should be short lived as all major governments will embark to drastically shore up statistical economy via the printing press.
We are either going to see a bubble bust (crisis) or stagflation or combination perhaps sooner than later.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

DSL Down, No Stock Market Commentary

What used to be infrequent interruptions has become frequent. Now my dsl has totally stopped functioning. From the periphery to the core; my version. So I am doing this advisory from a neighborhood internet cafe.  

Yet my dsl provider has been giving me superficial patches even during the sporadic phase of disruption. When companies are protected from competition by law (legal franchise), they hardly provide the services to meet consumer satisfaction. Yes competition technically exists, but the choice seem to be limited between bad or bad.

I don't think I will be provided with the remedial service required this weekend. So I will have to wait until regular working days for them to do another patchwork.

Thank you for your patronage. Have a nice weekend.

In Liberty

Benson

Quote of the Day: Income Tax: Its unpopularity will grow with its life

POPULARITY OF THE INCOME TAX.

The Chamber of Commerce has directed an inquiry into the administrative feature of the income tax after a debate in which it was said that the tax would not affect 99 per cent. of the citizenship. It was suggested that this deprived the bill of general interest, and that it was sure to be unpopular on account of the narrowness of its application.

[...]

The case is worse than this. It will tax the honest and allow the dishonest to escape. The administrative features which the Chamber is to investigate are so complicated that those who understand them will make their taxes light at the cost of those less well informed about the law. The income tax law may be considered good nevertheless by some, but even those who approve the tax despite its faults cannot contend that the same sums could not have been raised more certainly, more equitably, and with less trouble to both payers and collectors by a stamp tax.

The experience with the tariff shows how hard it is to reduce or remove a tax once laid. It always seems better and easier to devise ways to spend the money than to repeal the tax. This fact will be better appreciated as the years pass, and particularly when the time shall come when this extraordinary tax–as it ought to be–shall be needed for an emergency. Then it will appear that this resource has been utilized and that the tax must be doubled instead of imposed initially. The tax was most popular before it was laid. Its unpopularity will grow with its life.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Chart of the Day: How Americans Feel About Paying Income Taxes

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From a study by Pew Research:
As April 15 approaches, a majority of Americans (56%) have a negative reaction to doing their income taxes, with 26% saying they hate doing them. However, about a third (34%) say they either like (29%) or love (5%) doing their taxes.
I wonder how many of those who say they like doing taxes are being honest on themselves, and how many may have been simply social signaling.

I wonder too how these "like-love" camps will feel with a slew of new or higher taxes, especially from Obamacare.
 
Here is a noteworthy quote from former Commissioner of Internal Revenue T. Coleman Andrews.
I don't like the income tax. Every time we talk about these taxes we get around to the idea of 'from each according to his capacity and to each according to his needs'. That's socialism. It's written into the Communist Manifesto. Maybe we ought to see that every person who gets a tax return receives a copy of the Communist Manifesto with it so he can see what's happening to him.

On the US Federal Reserve’s Information Leak

If the Fed had entirely been a private company, they will likely be charged with "insider trading", which based on Wikipedia’s definition, is "trading of a corporation's stock or other securities (such as bonds or stock options) by individuals with access to non-public information about the company."

From Bloomberg:
Citigroup Inc. (C), Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. were among at least 15 financial companies that received potentially market-moving Federal Reserve information 19 hours before the public in a release the central bank called a mistake.

Brian Gross, a member of the Fed’s congressional liaison staff, distributed the March 19-20 minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee meeting at 2 p.m. Washington time on April 9, according to an e-mail obtained by Bloomberg News. The list also included congressional staff members and trade groups. Gross referred questions to Fed spokeswoman Michelle Smith.

FOMC minutes, which include comments on the committee’s discussions about the direction of monetary policy and its outlook for the economy, are among the most closely scrutinized Fed documents as the panel debates when to stop its third round of bond purchases. The inadvertent release raised questions about the central bank’s internal controls among attorneys and disclosure experts.
The US Federal Reserve has partly been owned by the private sector or by “US member banks”, although Fed isn’t a publicly listed central bank, unlike the Bank of Japan (Jasdaq 8301). 

Importantly unlike private companies, the Fed functioning as a central bank, operates as a mandated monopoly which “derives its authority from the Congress of the United States” In other words, Fed policies, which are politically determined, greatly influence the markets, the domestic economy, as well as international economies (given the US dollar standard). 

Such distinction magnifies the importance between privileged access to information via firms operating in a market environment and firms benefiting from political institutions such as the FED.

While I don’t believe in market based “insider trading”, privileged access on political institutions serves as “picking winners and losers”. In short, access to badges and guns serves as a moat against competition.

Thus, special insider access to the FED tilts the balance of market resource allocation (both in financial markets and the market economy) towards those whom the political gods favor, particularly in today’s highly volatile conditions caused by financial repression. This represents the ultimate insider trading.

This also demonstrates of the insider-outsider, cartelized and crony relationships operating within the corridors of the US Federal Reserves.