Sunday, May 24, 2015

Phisix 7,800: Bearish Signals Converge; Yield Curve Inversions Incite Interventions!

When we lose our individual independence in the corporateness of a mass movement, we find a new freedom—freedom to hate, bully, lie, torture, murder and betray without shame and remorse. Herein undoubtedly lies part of the attractiveness of mass movement. We find there the “right to dishonour” which according to Dostoyevsky has an irresistible fascination. –Eric Hoffer in the True Believer

In this issue:

Phisix 7,800: Bearish Signals Converge; Yield Curve Inversions Incite Interventions!
-Surging 1 Month Treasury Yield Foments Yield Curve Inversions!
-Flattening Yield Curve: The Widespread Downside Price Pressures in the Philippine Economy!
-Massive Friday Interventions To Steepen the Yield Curve!
-Market Manipulations: Lessons from International Events
-Deepening Bearish Convergence: Fast Eroding Market Internals
-Deepening Bearish Convergence: Shrinking Volume, Skewed Distribution of Trading Activities and Chart Formation
-Financial Market Alerts: IMF on Shrinking Liquidity, IIF on Emerging Market Outflows and Financial Group Calls for Bubble Curbs

Phisix 7,800: Bearish Signals Converge; Yield Curve Inversions Incite Interventions!

Treasury markets exhibit the health of a given system’s credit and economic conditions, as well as, play a lead role in determining the interest rates of the banking system. This is even more critical if monetary policies have become key drivers of economic activities.

Therefore, any signs of strains related to credit conditions will be manifested or vented through the treasury markets first.

Last week, I noted that Philippine treasuries experienced outsized volatility in that the yields of one month bills spiked to a 2012 high.

And it’s not just for the 1 month bill, but the yields of intermediate papers with maturities of 1, 2 and 3 years has likewise soared. The result of which has been to flatten the yield curve. The flattening of the yield curve has intensifying since December 2013 despite increasing incidences of interventions.

Also last week, the Philippine central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, floated the idea or hinted of the assimilation the US Federal Reserve’s bailout tool called TAF as part of liquidity management tool.

I asked[1]
Yet hasn’t it been contradictory if not satirical to hear of discussions of the use of bailout tools (rationalized as macroprudential tools) in the midst of what has been popularly perceived an endless boom?

Will the TAF be followed by other Lending of Last Resort (LOLR) bailout tools that eventually end up with deposit haircuts?

Yes I do expect some heavy interventions in the coming the week.

But if the current volatility has manifested an outlet valve from balance sheet impairments, then the impact from day on day market interventions will be short-lived.

The next measures will be the cutting of rates and more macroprudential (bailout) instruments.
Surging 1 Month Treasury Yield Foments Yield Curve Inversions!

Two very important events this week that has hardly been seen by the public.

First, the yield of 1 month bills continued to climb through Thursday (based on investing.com data). However, Friday’s interventions managed to marginally clip or shave 10 basis points from last week’s high.

Importantly, the surge in 1 month yield caused collapsing spreads and yield curve inversions!



For two days last week, the yield of the 1 month bill slightly surpassed the yield of the 7 year bonds—a yield curve inversion (left)!

And in two weeks, the yield spread between 1 month and 7 year essentially collapsed!

And it’s not just the spread between 1 month and 7 years, but an inversion occurred last week with 5 year treasuries last week (right)!

Even more, over the week the yield spread between 1 month relative to of 5, 7, and 10 year maturities have collapsed (right)! Aside from the sporadic inversions with the 5 and 7 year, 1 month yields has inverted with yields of 1 to 4 year maturities!

Simply awesome! Everything A-OK eh?

Here is the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on the flattening and inversion of the yield curve[2] (bold mine)
Monetary policy can influence the slope of the yield curve. A tightening of monetary policy usually means a rise in short-term interest rates, typically intended to lead to a reduction in inflationary pressures. When those pressures subside, it is expected that a policy easing—lower rates—will follow. Whereas short-term interest rates are relatively high as a result of the tightening, longterm rates tend to reflect longer term expectations and rise by less than short-term rates. The monetary tightening both slows down the economy and flattens (or even inverts) the yield curve.

Changes in investor expectations can also change the slope of the yield curve. Consider that expectations of future shortterm interest rates are related to future real demand for credit and to future inflation. A rise in short-term interest rates induced by monetary policy could be expected to lead to a future slowdown in real economic activity and demand for credit, putting downward pressure on future real interest rates. At the same time, slowing activity may result in lower expected inflation, increasing the likelihood of a future easing in monetary policy. The expected declines in short-term rates would tend to reduce current long-term rates and flatten the yield curve. Clearly, this scenario is consistent with the observed correlation between the yield curve and recessions.
In the perspective of the business cycle, balance sheet imbalances brought about by funding maturity mismatches likewise contributes to changes in the yield curve as previously shown here[3].

So these factors may interweave to forge yield curve cycles.


So the flattening of the yield curve comes with the “reduction in inflationary pressures”, and “future slowdown in demand for credit and real economic activity”. Except for statistical growth, have we not been seeing this today? 

Flattening Yield Curve: The Widespread Downside Price Pressures in the Philippine Economy!

A flattening (and the inversion) of the yield curve has indeed reduced price pressures in the Philippine statistical economy.


It’s really not just on the government’s consumer price inflation (CPI) data which continues to tumble. Government CPI fell by 2.2% this April

There has been a broad based decline in prices at the supply side too.

This month, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported of the downtrend in the growth rate of general retail prices[4] which has been in place since from August 2014 (left window). Month on month March data even CONTRACTED by .1%! And most of the gains have largely been from food! This data is supposed to reflect on the supply side aspect of consumer activities!

Also the broad based decline of manufacturing input prices have led to SIX consecutive months where the growth rates of the PSA’s producer’s prices survey as of March 2015[5] have been CONTRACTING! (see right)


Last week I showed PSA’s growth rate of wholesale price index for select construction materials at the National Capital Region has been DOWN for FIVE consecutive months.

This week, the PSA’s retail prices for selected construction materials[6] for the National Capital Region for the month of April crashed to NEGATIVE (left window)! Year on Year, as well as, month on month retail construction prices fell by .1% apiece! Since January 2015, construction prices have been falling.

So in the construction sector, wholesale activities have now matched with retail activities!

And yet the popular wisdom has been that the Philippines have been enjoying a construction boom! Ironically, price deflation in both wholesale and retail sectors in the face of a credit financed construction boom???!!! How consistent has that logic been?

Yet whatever happened to prices? Have market prices outlived their primary function to coordinate the balance of demand and supply? Or has economics been driven to obsolescence from the establishment’s impetuous devotion to headline numbers?

Remember, the reported 4Q GDP 2014 has been skewed towards government construction activities, which based on their statistics offset weaknesses in many parts of the market economy. Now based on prices, activities in the construction sector seem to have waned, so where will G-R-O-W-T-H come from? 

Well, here is a guess: they will just pop out of statistics!

And how about the current conditions of general wholesale prices? Wholesale activities function as intermediaries for retail activities. These enterprises are likely to be traders for local manufacturers or for importers, or they may be importers themselves. Since wholesalers generally depend on retailers (with the exception of supply shocks), the health of the retail activities should resonate generally with wholesale activities.

So what do we get?

Here is the Philippine Statistical Authority on March 2015 general wholesale prices on a national scale[7]: An annual decrease was still posted in the country’s General Wholesale Price Index (GWPI) at 4.9 percent in March. In February, it was recorded at -5.1 percent and in March 2014, 4.6 percent. This was effected by the annual declines still observed in the indices of crude materials, inedible except fuels at -8.1 percent and mineral fuels, lubricants and related materials, -33.0 percent. In addition, slower annual growths were seen in the heavily-weighted food index at 7.4 percent; chemicals including animal and vegetable oils and fats index, 1.9 percent; machinery and transport equipment index, 2.4 percent; and miscellaneous manufactured articles index, 1.8 percent. However, higher annual rates were noted in the indices of beverages and tobacco and manufactured goods classified chiefly by materials at 8.0 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively

National wholesale prices have been contracting for 5 consecutive months (right) with NCR leading the region!

Curiously, have prices of global oil (WTIC and Brent) and petroleum products not been rebounding from the troughs of January? So why the continued plunge in the prices in fuel and fuel related industries, if these has been mostly about external linkages? And aside from oil and petroleum products, why has price growth rates been slowing for machinery and transport equipment and miscellaneous manufactured articles?


Have crashing wholesale prices been signs of a credit funded aggregate demand based boom? Or instead, has these been signs of a growing slack in demand in the statistical economy? Or could these have been signs of inventory overhang? Or perhaps could it be both? 

The NSCB’s 4Q GDP shows of a divergence between retail and wholesale trading activities (left) with wholesale activities sharply rising as retail activities slump!

Absent a material recovery from consumers, if the NSCB’s data has been anywhere accurate, then the inventory overhang could have most likely been a significant factor in driving price pressures to the downside!

And if it is true that that there has been an excessive buildup of inventories, then this should translate to negative impact on manufacturing and imports today. However, while manufacturing and import data previously affirmed signs of weakness, current numbers have suddenly recovered! Where government data defies economic logic, then this represents either a statistical quirk (anomaly) or another instance of statistical pump.

And even more, inventory buildup means higher financing costs for those enterprises that funded these with credit. This should mean lesser profits or even financial losses. So it is of no doubt to me that increased demand for immediate funding has likely pressured short term rates higher. Of course, funding pressures can originate from many other bubble sectors as property, financial intermediaries and hotel.

And as I have previously shown, the growth rate of banking loans by the trading sector, which constitutes wholesale and retail activities, have been in a seven month downtrend as of March (right window). The 7 month decline has reached November 2013 levels. Although credit growth to the sector have still been growing by over 10%, considering the downside pressures in both retail and wholesale prices, the critical question is—where has the money been flowing to?

If one notices, current price conditions for consumers, construction, retail, manufacturing, hardly reveals of a boom, but rather of a growing slack in the economy. Yet for the establishment it will remain a boom. That’s because for them, G-R-O-W-T-H comes from pulling rabbits out of the statistical hat.

A few examples.

Citing statistics, we have been told by the government that there has been profuse liquidity in the system. On the contrary, some markets and other related statistics point to the opposite direction. Philippine treasuries have been exhibiting a flattening of the yield curve with recent events underscoring an acceleration of this trend. Bank credit growth has been falling, money supply growth collapsing, falling prices have not been limited to consumer prices but to the overall supply side sector. Importantly, pressures on short term yields have become apparent…too apparent perhaps for the BSP to hint of adapting the US Federal Reserve’s Term Auction Facility (TAF)!

Citing statistics, we have been told that consumers have led the boom. Yet based on NSCB data Household Final Consumption Expenditures and retail activities have been plummeting. OFW remittances stagnated from November 2014 to February 2015 with a sudden sharp rebound only last March 2015. Retail and wholesale prices have been on a downtrend, if not in a deflation, for at least 5 months. Retail and wholesale credit growth has been falling since September 2014. Consumer prices have been falling. Consumer credit appears to have peaked (which only a few have access). Jobs grew by a measly 2.5% in 2014 with real wages suffering a loss particularly for NCR jobs which accounts for two fifths of the labor force! And those losses, to my estimates, have been severely understated!

How about Philippine stocks? Same story: booming headline (index) as consequence of market manipulation, but generally about half of the listed firms have been on bear markets!

It’s all showbiz.

Based on the NY Fed’s assessment of the yield curve’s influence, real economic growth for the Philippines, while still positive, must be dramatically distant from consensus expectations of 6-7%.

Expect another statistical government pump next week, Thursday where 1Q 2015 GDP will be announced.

Of course, as pointed above mainstream opinion have manifested signs of either logical fallacies—survivorship bias, recency bias and fallacy of composition, and or, just outright disinformation.

Massive Friday Interventions To Steepen the Yield Curve!

This brings me back to the yield curve inversion.

It may be true that one or two weeks may not a trend make. But the current flattening yield curve has been a long progression, with recent events only amplifying the process.

I have also written last week that interventions have only produced a whack-a-mole effect with interventions in one maturity have led to yield surges in other maturities. And because of the huge move by the 1 month treasuries I expected a massive intervention.

Well, my expectations just came true.

This Friday, interventionists mounted a comprehensive coordinated strike at the Philippine treasury market which has been tightly held by the government and banks.


They intensely pumped 1-4 year treasuries that collapsed yields. Forcefully sold down or increased yields of the 5 year maturity to undo its inversion with 1-4 year treasuries. Partly sold 7 year (which erased the inversion with 1 month bill) and marginally pumped up all the rest (1,3 and 6 months and 10,15, and 25 years). [see left] The result has been to sharply widen the spread (see left)

These interventions have palpably been conducted to reverse the flattening yield spread and douse suspicions of an emerging liquidity crunch. 

Well perhaps these faceless interventionists have been reading me (which flatters me). Perhaps too this may just be a coincidence.

Anyway, such yield spread manipulation aimed at superficially steepening the yield curve will do little if the real causes of the short maturity yield spikes have been from balance sheet problems.

If my suspicions are accurate then this only encourages rollerovers of unserviceable or unviable liabilities that magnify the problem, thus the temporary widening of the yield curve will just buy time and will worsen the credit conditions.

Yet let us see for how long the effects to forcefully steepen the yield curve lasts?

Market Manipulations: Lessons from International Events

Here is a Bloomberg report where US regulators unearthed emails that allegedly proved that British multinational banking, Barclays PLC, had been guilty of the rigging of the interest rate swap market in 2008[8].
It was a simple process, according to the CFTC: Barclays traders told their brokers to buy or sell as many interest-rate swaps as needed just before 11 a.m. New York time to push the benchmark in the desired direction…

“You did well at the 11 o’clock fix, man,” he said to a broker, according to the CFTC complaint. “Sounded like you were actually holding the spreads up with your hands; like, it felt like you were bench pressing them over your head.”

Here’s how a broker described the process to a trader in 2007, according to the CFTC: “If you want to affect it at 11, you tell me which way you want to affect it we’ll, we’ll attempt to affect it that way.”

Another time that year, a Barclays trader told his broker to buy as much as $400 million worth of swaps to move the benchmark, according to the complaint
The manipulation scheme involves a time schedule where market participants conspire to set or fix prices. Rings a bell?

The above interest rate fixing manipulation happened at the humongous derivatives market which comprises about $381 trillion market for interest-rate swaps and the $44 trillion market for options on swaps. The benchmark involved has been the ISDAfix, an interest rate swap benchmark, that helps “pension funds determine their future obligations and lenders decide how much to charge borrowers”.

Last week, six big banks Citicorp, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc and Royal Bank of Scotland Plc pleaded guilty of conspiring to manipulate the price of U.S. dollars and euros from which the said banks have been ordered to pay $5.8 billion in damages. Although the amount looks big via headlines, in reality, the fine represented a slap on the wrist. These banks have basically been beneficiaries of Financial Repression, a hidden subsidy which transfers the public’s resources to the government that are channeled through them. Additionally, these banks have either been bailed out or have accessed bailout money during the last crisis. They are likely to be bailed out again once crisis re-emerge.

It’s not this essay’s intention to talk about their predicament. However, what I wanted to demonstrate are lessons from the above:

One, market manipulation has been happening to almost every financial market.

Two, market size and incumbent regulatory regimes have not served as deterrent.

Three, the above manipulators, whom have been tagged as “the Cartel”, have frequently represented a collusion of the biggest financial firms

Four, market manipulation will continue to exist because of the moral hazard, and perhaps also due to regulatory capture. For instance, cosmetic penalties will hardly change the incentives of manipulators. And perhaps the reason for this is that all the fessing up has been all for show.


Yet how do the above international events apply to the local setting—where end of the day price fixing, which according to a domestic statute are illegitimate, has represented the norm? (wonderful charts courtesy of colfinancials)

This reminds me of why swindles and frauds occur during manias, panics and crashes.

According to historian Charles Kindleberger and Robert Z. Aliber[9] (bold mine)
Some entrepreneurs and managers may skate close to the edge of fraudulent behavior because of an apparent increase in the reward–risk ratio; the potential increase in their wealth from cutting the corners and bending the rules and deceiving the public may seem extremely large relative to the risk of being caught and fined or exposed to public embarrassment. Some may have calculated that they can make a big fortune and keep it if the rule-breaking is undetected; they may still get to keep half of it if they’re caught. The odds on going to jail are low, and the prisons for white-collar crime are like modest country clubs with drab clothing

Crash and panic, with their motto of sauve qui peut, induce many to cheat in the effort to forestall bankruptcy or some other financial disaster. A little cheating today may avert catastrophe tomorrow. When the boom ends and the losses become apparent, there is a tendency to make a big bet in the hope that a successful outcome will enable escape from what otherwise would be a disaster
How relevant they seem today.

Deepening Bearish Convergence: Fast Eroding Market Internals

Here is a follow-up and an update of last week’s essay where I pointed out of the difference between what the index say and what the general market has been saying.

If the current stock market benchmarks were to be reformulated as being an equal weighted index, rather than today’s market cap orientation then the performances of the various indices will vastly be different in the sense that ALL sectoral indices will likely be in bear markets while the Phisix will likely be range bound rather than record highs based on market cap.

Yet current market performances only entrenches the glaring divergences between headlines and market internals. However market  internals have indicated signs of deterioration.

Let us examine market internals.

Market internals are important because they reveal of the general conditions of the stock market. It is a measure of the general sentiment relative to key benchmarks. In other words, market internals may affirm or may diverge from headline developments. Affirmation highlights sustainability of a trend while divergence signals internal conflict.

For instance, when the Phisix hit the record high on April 10, the advance decline spread hardly participated in the landmark ramp. On a weekly basis, advancers led decliners by only 2 issues! 


Essentially, the week that the Phisix hit a historic high, the general market manifested only a neutral balance between the bulls and the bears. Said differently, the broader market hardly participated in the shaping of the monumental event. 

It’s not exactly what bullmarkets are made of.

Recent events reinforce the bearish internal dynamics.

The other week (week ending May 15) the Phisix jumped by a significant 1.53%, however advancers led decliners by a scanty 7 issues only! 

On the other hand, this week (May 22) when the Phisix skidded by .91% (net of marking the close pumps), decliners trumped advancers by a whopping 169 issues!

Over the past two weeks, the prevailing bias has been heavily tilted towards sellers!

Yet actions of the last two weeks have signified a legacy or a carryover from the start of the year!

From the inception of the year 2015 through this trading week, advancers led decliners only in 6 weeks of 20 weeks or just 30%! This is against the 16 of 20 weeks or 70% where declining issues led advancing issues! This means that in terms of sentiment, sellers ruled the broader market (70% to 30%) in 2015 despite the historical April highs!

That’s a sign of divergence—the paucity of participation by general markets.

And notice too that in the context of the 30% or positive market breadth for 2015, only ONCE did advancers lead by more than 100!

This is against 3 weeks where negative market breadth posted 150+ margin in favor of decliners and 1 week where margin for negative breadth was 100+ also in favor of decliners.

So in terms of sentiment depth, negative breadth outpaced positive breadth by a stunning chasm of 4 to 1!

So we have a bull market seen via the index or the headline, but evidently the bull market hasn’t been shared by the overall performance of the entire population of listed issues.

And to understand why bear markets have dominated the general markets it is best to recall of the past—or current actions have signified a legacy or a carryover from the original record of May 2013!

In 106 weeks through last week (May 15) 66 weeks or 62.3% have been ruled by the bears (decliners) as against 39 by the bulls (advancers) or 36.8%. There was a week (July 4, 2014) where bulls and bears where at a balance or zero.

The total number of bears (decliners) during weeks where they dominated totaled 6,804 as against the aggregate number of bulls’ (advancers) at 2,430. In ratio, this makes decliners thump advancers by 2.83 to 1!

Also over the past 106 weeks, bulls managed to generate a positive breadth of 100+, only 9 times! In contrast, the negative breadth by the grizzlies had been broad. For margins of 100s—24 weeks! For margins of 200s—6 weeks! For margin of 300—1 week (November 22, 2013)! In ratio, 3.44 bears for every 1 bull!

So despite all the headline worship of the bullmarket, the bears had been gnawing at the decaying core!

Is it any wonder why the desperate index pumps?

The above is a fantastic demonstration of how the establishment has pulled the proverbial wool over the public’s eyes.

As a side note, this week should be very interesting. 

The Philippine government’s NSCB will release the 1Q 2015 GDP data on Thursday.

Whatever the numbers that will appear, this will likely serve as fodder for actions at the Phisix.

When the 4Q 2014 GDP was announced in January 29th, the Phisix ended the week higher by .77%. However while the headlines index partied on the data, market breadth posted a fantastic deviation. Over that week, decliners led advancers by a material 52. Again headline benchmarks went up as broader markets sold off!

Deepening Bearish Convergence: Shrinking Volume, Skewed Distribution of Trading Activities and Chart Formation


Interestingly too, record Phisix for 2015 has hardly been accompanied by peso volume. 

When the first record 7,400 was carved in May 15th 2013, the average daily peso volume for that week was then at a considerable Php 14 billion.

Yet peso volumes accompanying succeeding attempts to break the 2013 record of 7,400, and the successful breach this year until April’s 8,127 record, represents a far cry from the original highs established in May 2013

There had been two attempts to traverse past 7,400 in the 2H of 2014, the first and second botched attempts were in September 24th and December 3rd. The average daily peso volume for weeks of these events registered Php 9.6 billion and Php 9.3 billion respectively.

The successful breach of 7,400 in January 9th posted an average daily volume for that week at Php 10.3 billion or only 73.6% of May 2013’s equivalent record high volume. (Then advancers led decliners by a paltry 53)

When PSEi 8,127 had been etched on April 10, the average daily peso volume for that week was only Php 9.036 billion! This represents only 64.54% of May 2013 and 87.8% of January 2015’s breakout volume!

Additionally, peso volume for the week ending May 22, and last week’s May 15, represents the SECOND and THIRD lowest volume for the year at Php 7.6 and Php 8.4 billion correspondingly!

The dearth of volume simply exhibits the lack of participation in the general market which has been highlighted by the dominance of sellers than buyers as revealed in the market breadth.

How can there be volume when a lot of people (mostly retailers) have likely been caught by the bears? Most of them had been mesmerized by media and the industry that the boom has been a one way street. So they bought into the fantasy and got stuck holding losses which continues to bleed them. Now many of them have been reluctant to add more position.

So the present bull market in the stock market index has become dependent on new deposits coming mostly from advertisements, media hypes and or from office promotions.

This brings us to the deeply skewed distribution of activities and valuations of the Phisix basket.


The above represents the Price Earnings Ratio (PER) in blue and Year to date gains in red by each issue comprising the Phisix basket divided into the top 15 (left) and the next 15 (right)

It is quite obvious that both the high bars representing valuations (blue) and returns (red) have been HEAVILY tilted or CONCENTRATED towards the top 15 issues (left).

In perspective, the cumulative market weightings of the top 15 issues as of Friday’s close constitute a staggering 79.67% of the Phisix!

Considering that the Phisix closed this week with a year to date returns of 8.02%, only NINE issues of the 15 or 60% delivered above Phisix gains.

In the context of market weighting, these issues constituted 48% of the basket! And the same issues has an average PER of 29.76 and an average year to date returns of 15.56%!

This tells us that the foundations of Phisix 7,800 has been pillared from ONLY TEN issues wherein NINE issues emanate from the top 15 and only 1 issue (Globe) from the next 15.

Or said differently, record Phisix has signified a product of a rather select number of issues which has delivered outsized returns that has buoyed the index which everyone else glorifies.

Alternatively, the latter half has also evidently played little role in setting of the record headline numbers.

The above goes to show where index pumping operations have been directed to and how the headline numbers have been ‘shaped’ by index managers.

Yet not all has been well for even some of the top 15. There are now three issues in the red for the year. And if to include all negative ytd performances for all Phisix basket; 9 issues or 30% of the index have posted losses. 

This is almost equal to the number of outperformers.

In short, Phisix 7,800 depends on a narrowing number of issues to maintain current levels which looks unsustainable.

It would take a broader scope of participation from Phisix issues for the April highs to be reached again.

But on the other hand, if the baggage from the losers increases or continues to be a drag on the gainers then the correction phase should be expected to deepen.

Finally, the Phisix chart appears to chime and converge with all of the signals above.


The PSEi chart appears to be indicative of a head and shoulder reversal formation with a neckline at around 7,750. 

Should the pattern materialize where the neckline breaks down, then the Phisix will likely fall back below 7,400 and likely test the former resistance of 7,350 which should now become the support level.

But don't worry because index managers will attempt to reshape the chart!

Nonetheless for 2015, sellers have dominated the broader market, this comes in the face of a headline record highs that has comprised by only about TEN issues. 

The divergent forces reveals of a stark conflict between the headline and the general sentiment that will have to be resolved. A healthy trend (on either direction) will depend on its resolution. 

Financial Market Alerts: IMF on Shrinking Liquidity, IIF on Emerging Market Outflows and Financial Group Calls for Bubble Curbs

It’s another week of where both international private and multilateral institutions issued notes of caution on the growing risks of instability in the global financial markets.


At the IMF’s Blog, Mr. José Viñals, Financial Counsellor and Director of the IMF’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department warns that given the sharp rise in the correlations across all major asset classes over the past 5 years (see left window), such has increased the risks of financial contagion from “episodes of decreased market volatility”. 

The IMF cites recent events as the US treasury bonds flash crash last October 15 2014 and the dislocation in the currency markets following the Swiss central bank’s pulling the plug on its euro cap. Although the recent “liquidity crunch episodes have so far not exerted long-lasting adverse impact”, the risk is that “the evaporation of market liquidity today could result in more market stress with potentially adverse knock-on impact on the global economy and financial stability”[10]. The IMF particularly mentions corporate bonds of advanced economies and emerging market bonds as especially vulnerable to the risks of illiquidity.

Meanwhile, the global association or trade group of financial institutions, the Institute of International Finance also issued an alert from their latest early warning system on emerging markets[11]. The IIF observed that the latest bond tantrums have instigated “a sharp decline in portfolio inflows” which “began on May 1”, that have been “broad-based across Ems” and has affected EM Asian countries most” (see right window). The IIF’s early warning system has been designed to detect “turning points in capital flows to emerging markets”

Also, concerned that ultra-low interest rates have increased the risks of financial instability, a group of financial executives representing various financial institutions including Douglas Flint, HSBC chairman, Anshu Jain, Deutsche Bank co-chief executive, Michel Liès, head of Swiss Re, and Larry Fink, chairman and chief executive of BlackRock will issue a joint statement next week, which will be coordinated by the World Economic Forum, to urge authorities to boost their crisis-busting arsenals via macroprudential tools

The Financial Times reported[12] that the group warned that should rules be narrowly applied, then “this could push risks into the more thinly regulated realm of shadow banks.” So instead of “reducing the need for authorities to raise interest rates to rein in investor exuberance”, the group has pushed for regulatory curbs on overvalued property assets that “need to be deployed across the financial system” and “not just on companies such as commercial banks that fall within the traditional regulatory perimeter”.

The high profile group has apparently been alarmed by the heightened financial instability risks from ultra-low interest rates for them to lobby authorities to increase regulations on the financial system. Yet instead of treating the disease (ultra-low interest rates), they call for therapies directed at the symptoms (overvalued assets). And just how will authorities establish objectively which assets are overvalued and which are not? The lobbying group will do advising on authorities? So they get to frontrun the marketplace?

And has ultra-low interest rates not been a part of authorities’ crisis-busting arsenal which has been abused and now transformed into the principal source of their concerns? Can’t get off the addiction?

Moreover, to what extent will regulations prevent the transferring of risks to shadow banks or for institutions to just game the system, capture regulators and keep the bubble inflating?

Or perhaps have such an appeal signified as tacit positioning for politically based access to credit when the calamity arrives?




[2] Arturo Estrella and Mary R. Trubin The Yield Curve as a Leading Indicator: Some Practical Issues Volume 12, Number 5 July/August 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW YORK www.newyorkfed.org/research/current_issues



[5] Philippine Statistics Authority Producer Price Survey: March 2015 May 4, 2015

[6] Philippine Statistics Authority Retail Price Index of Selected Construction Materials in the National Capital Region (2000=100) : April 2015 May 15, 2015

[7] Philippine Statistics Authority General Wholesale Price Index (1998=100) : March 2015 May 15, 2015


[9] Charles Kindleberger and Robert Z. Aliber, chapter 9 Frauds, Swindles, and the Credit Cycle, Manias, Panics, and Crashes A History of Financial Crises Fifth Edition p. 168 Nowandfutures.com

[10] José Viñals, Flash Crashes and Swiss Francs: Market Liquidity Takes a Holiday, iMF Direct Blog May 20, 2015

[11] Institute of International Finance, IIF Flows Alert: Bond Tantrum Takes Toll on EM Flows May 19, 2015 IIF.com; Institute of International Finance Weekly Insight: Disruption Watch May 21, 2015 IIF.com

[12] Financial Times Finance chiefs urge action on bubble fear FT.com May 18, 2015

Friday, May 22, 2015

Illusions of Paper Wealth: The Boom Bust Cycles of Two Hong Kong Billionaires

Paper wealth can be characterized as “easy come, easy go.”

The Chinese government’s stock market pump managed to produce many paper wealth billionaires.

By paper wealth, this entails of the net worth of individuals who owns the majority shares of a listed firm, whose fortunes have been dependent on the direction of share prices.

So a stock market pump inflates the owner’s worth and vice versa.

‘Easy come, easy go’ it has been for two of Hong Kong’s paper billionaires.

image

Piggybacking on the Chinese government’s stock market pump, Mr. Li Hejun, who at one time was considered China’s richest man based on the value of his majority stake in the Chinese solar company, Hanergy Thin Film Power Group Ltd. (Bloomberg HK: 566), according to Wall Street Journal, saw his holdings suffer when his firm’s share prices almost halved last Wednesday.

Trading was reportedly halted for the firm.

Interestingly, media seem to impute Mr. Li’s skipping his company’s annual meeting to the crash.

Yet prior to crash, according to the same Wall Street Journal, Hanergy’s shares “were up more than 42% since the beginning of the year and are more than triple their level of one year”.

Triple++ in about than a year!

Yet a day after the terrifying Hanergy episode, the fortunes a little-known electronics and property tycoon, Mr. Pan Sutong endured the same fate.

Stocks of Mr. Pan Sutong, the Goldin Financial Holdings Ltd. (Bloomberg HK:530) and Goldin Properties Holdings Ltd (Bloomberg HK: 283), which previously skyrocketed by about 350%, likewise collapsed!

According to the same report, "Goldin fell 43%, wiping $12 billion off its market value. A smaller company with the same owner, property developer Goldin Properties, fell by 41%, reducing its market capitalization by $4.6 billion"

Why shouldn’t a crash happen when prices have totally detached from valuations?

Here is a Bloomberg ex-post analysis: Goldin Financial’s revenue in the six months ending December was $34 million and more than 99 percent of its $181 million profit came from marking up the value of a 27-story office building in Hong Kong that’s still under construction. At its height on May 15, the company traded at a price-to-book ratio of nearly 25 times, compared with an average of about 1.5 times for stocks in the Hang Seng Index. (bold mine)

$22 billion worth of market cap for $34 billion of revenues at PBV of 25 times!

Back to the Wall Street Journal article, regulators have already warned of the excesses in Goldin Financials and likewise reported a connection between the two:
Filings with the Hong Kong exchange show Hanergy and Goldin Financial have previously worked together, although it was unclear whether the relationship contributed to Goldin’s fall. Hanergy said in a February disclosure it had appointed Goldin as an independent adviser for a supply agreement under which Hong Kong-listed Hanergy Thin Film would sell solar panels to its parent company.

The Securities and Futures Commission, Hong Kong’s market regulator, warned investors to exercise “extreme caution” with Goldin Financial in March, noting that just 20 shareholders—including its chairman who owns a 70% stake—held nearly 99% of the company. The company said at the time that there was little it could do because the SFC didn’t disclose who those shareholders were. Both Goldin Financial and Goldin Properties issued filings Thursday to the Hong Kong market saying they are not “aware of any reasons” for the movement of the stocks. The companies didn’t respond to requests for comment.
More interestingly, Goldin’s shareholders have represented big time institutions like Norway’s sovereign wealth fund. From the Wall Street Journal report: (bold mine)
Goldin Properties is building a 117-story skyscraper in Tianjin, a city in northeastern China, that will be ringed by China’s largest polo complex. Illustrating Goldin Properties’ size, it will join the MSCI China Index, an index followed by global investors, at the end of this month. The property company had already garnered big investors. At the end of last year, Norway’s government pension fund was the biggest institutional shareholder, with a stake valued at $30 million. The $926 billion fund has been holding the stock since at least 2008, though it has trimmed the position in recent years, according to its annual reports. Norges Bank Investment Management, which manages the fund, declined to comment. Goldin Financial provides a form ofshort-term corporate financing known as factoring. It owns wineries in France and California and wine-storage facilities in China and invests in property.
As I have recently pointed out, governments (mostly via sovereign wealth funds) and central banks have at least $29 trillion of exposure on global stock markets. And stock market losses would extrapolate to eventual ‘deficits’ that would be shouldered by taxpayers. Fortunately yet, Norway's pension fund has been one of the early buyers.

And individual boom bust chapters have not just been in a Hong Kong event. 

A Frankfurt listed German sanitary fitting firm Joyou AG (JY8: XETRA) which operates and has its headquarters in China recently saw its boom then nearly went to ZERO!

image

That’s because of this surprise announcement (Bloomberg): Joyou AG, which mainly operates in China, yesterday announced it will write down more than half of its capital and possibly file for insolvency. Losses of which according to Reuters has been due to “extraordinary writedown on shareholding in Hong Kong Zhongyu Sanitary Technology Ltd”

Nonetheless, the above reports represent the ex-post explanations.

But it is sad thing for the shareholders of these companies whose participation on the above issues would translate to staggering losses.

Crashing individual stocks have yet been a minority. Yet what happens when they become the majority?

Bottom line: Paper wealth are illusions. The obverse side of every mania is a crash.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Wow. Indonesian Government Sunk 41 Illegal Fishing Ships (including 11 from the Philippines and 1 from China)

This is incredible. 

The Indonesian government just sunk 41 (allegedly illegal fishing) ships!
image

From Today Online: (bold mine)
Indonesia yesterday sank a large Chinese vessel as well as 40 other foreign boats that had been caught fishing illegally in the country’s waters, a move likely to spark a strong reaction from Beijing and other regional capitals.

The 300 gross tonne Chinese vessel was destroyed with a low-explosive device on its hull in West Kalimantan, said Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti.

“This is not a show of force. This is just merely (us) enforcing our laws,” Ms Susi was quoted as saying by The Jakarta Post.

The Gui Xei Yu 12661 is the first Chinese boat to be sunk since Indonesian President Joko Widodo declared war on illegal foreign fishing boats last December.

The Indonesian Navy detained Gui Xei Yu in 2009 after it was caught fishing near the South China Sea, a hotly disputed area involving China and South-east Asian nations such as Malaysia and Vietnam.

Besides the Chinese ship, the authorities also destroyed 40 other vessels in different places across the country. They included five boats from Vietnam, two boats from Thailand and 11 from the Philippines, The Post reported.

Shortly after assuming office last October, Mr Widodo launched a campaign to protect Indonesia’s maritime resources and domestic fishing industry, which loses billions of dollars in revenues to illegal fishing each year. He has also pledged to transform Indonesia into a maritime power and, in December last year, orchestrated a much-publicised sinking of three empty Vietnamese vessels.

Dozens of foreign vessels from Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and the Philippines have been sunk in recent months.
Wow.

Media will play up the China-Indonesia card as part of the escalation of territorial dispute. 

But most of the brunt of the Indonesian government measures to “protect Indonesia’s maritime resources” has been her neighbors, particularly the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand. 

Some questions

What if ALL of ASEAN resort to or copy the Indonesian government’s paradigm of blasting ships of intruders coming from their neighbors under the justification of protecting maritime resources? 

What if the sinking of alleged illegal fishing ships expands more than just to protect maritime resources but uses such rational nevertheless? 

What if there will be mistaken identity/ies from such actions?

So what stops ASEAN from degenerating into a battlefield or a hotbed for military skirmishes? A battlefield not necessarily with the Chinese government as participant.

And what if the Chinese government will be provoked to conduct the same exercise? 

Will South China Sea serve as the cassus belli for a regional war or even World War III?

Whatever happens to ASEAN economic integration if territorial provocations becomes a key issue? 

Or has the Indonesian government been diverting the public’s attention from her economic woes?

Mario Draghi’s ECB Inflates 5 Eurozone Bubbles

When central banks drench the system with money—with the supposed aim to stimulate the economy and or to ignite headline inflation—the money stream flows to only some of the sectors. 

(Of course, that's the headline justification which shields the real reason: subsidy to debt strained government and politically privileged industries)

And those sectors that experience the initial “pump” will then draw in a bandwagon (performance chasing) effect from the marketplace. 

The misallocation of resources from political intervention of money represents THE bubble. Bubbles signify as “something for nothing” phenomenon or from the religious belief of expectations elixirs (free lunches) from money creation.

So when ECB Draghi declared that the region’s central bank would “do whatever it takes” to save the EU, the ramifications of her policies, like everywhere else has been to blow bubbles.


Marketwatch’s Matthew Lynn identifies 5 bubble areas where ECB balance sheet inflation has diffused to: (bold mine)
Here are five markets that are already benefitting from the tidal wave of money Draghi has created.

First, take a look at Spanish construction. Only a couple of years ago, we were reading about how Spain was littered with empty housing estates and airports with one flight a day, the forlorn legacy of the building boom that was raging all through the middle of the last decade. You might think there was nothing left to build — but, as it turns out, you’d be wrong. The cranes are back in action again. Construction output in Spain is currently growing at 12% year-on-year, by far the fastest sector of the economy. Cement consumption is up by 8% this year. The property market is humming again.

Second, Dublin housing. There were few hotter markets at the height of the last boom than Irish housing — nor many crashes that were quite so bad. Now, the froth is back again, and anyone who snapped up a bargain as the country was bailed out and its banks went into intensive care will be feeling smug by now. Irish houses prices are up by 16% year-on-year, and by 22% in the capital, Dublin. The emerald tiger is catching another wave of hot money, and starting to boom again. Don’t be surprised if prices keep going even higher.

Third, German wages. For a decade, despite having supposedly the strongest economy in Europe, German wages had hardly risen. Now that is starting to change.The metalworkers union just secured a 3.4% rise, a decent hike in a country where deflation is still a threat, and prices are not likely to rise. Other workers want a better deal as well. This week, the train drivers are on strike, for the ninth time in the last year, as they push for a 5% pay rise and a shorter working week (who says the trains in Germany run on time). Already in 2015 Germany has lost twice as many days to industrial action as it did during the whole of 2014, according to the German Economic Institute. By the end of the year, wages in Germany are likely to be racing ahead at record levels.

Fourth, Maltese assets: The tiny Mediterranean island is expected to record the fastest growth in the European Union this year, at 3.6%. Prices are not rising quite as fast as they are in Dublin, but property is up by 10% year-on-year, the second fastest rate in the eurozone. Some of the local banks are reporting that their balance sheets are expanding by 40% a year or more. Has the Maltese economy suddenly had a surge of competitiveness? It seems unlikely. In fact, it is emerging as the new Cyprus — an offshore haven for all the hot money within the eurozone to find a temporary home.


Five, Portuguese stocks: It is hard to think of anything very good to say about the Portuguese economy four years after the country had to be bailed out. The economy is only expected to expand by 1.6% this year, only marginally better than the 0.9% it managed last year. Unemployment is still running at more than 13% and shows little sign of falling significantly. But, hey, you never guess that from the stock market. Lisbon’s PSI Index  is up by 25% this year already, making it one of the strongest markets in the world.

In reality, central banks can print money when they want to . But they can’t control where it washes up. Some of the rising markets might be useful — higher wages in Germany, for example, might help to rebalance that country’s massive trade surplus.

But in the main Draghi’s tidal wave of euros is most likely to simply to blow up another series of asset bubbles. Indeed, in many cases they are exactly the same bubbles that blew up last time around, such as Spanish construction and Dublin property. That may be great for investors who get in on those markets on the way up. But it won’t do much to fix the eurozone economy — and it will inevitably be very painful when they finally pop.
The ECB tsunami money has designed to ease interest rates or debt servicing costs. 

So the crucial question will always be: how will bubbles be funded?

The answer gives us a clue to the mother of all of Europe’s bubbles: DEBT!

The previous bubble implosion resulted to an explosion of Europe government’s debt levels as a result of collapsed tax revenues, as government spending ballooned accentuated by bailouts.


That’s European government’s skyrocketing debt as of 2013 according to ECB data. Hockeystick debt!

This is expected change in government debt as % of GDP based on McKinsey Global estimates

Expect mainstream expectations to be conservative once the bubble pops.



In spite of the reemergence of bubbles (which has and may temporarily spruce up statistical G-R-O-W-T-H) government debt for European nations particularly the crisis affected ones, namely, Portugal, Spain and Italy, has increased! (with the exception of Iceland and Ireland). Yet the decrease in Ireland’s debt has been marginal.


The above red box represents Europe’s staggering combined private and public sector debt in % of GDP as per McKinsey approximations. 

Those new bubbles are likely to inflate more systemic leverage (most likely centered at non financial corporates).


Finally early this year, a big symptom of the debt bubble has been negative yields.

Negative yields have mainly been a product of a massive stampede to frontrun the ECB (asset buying) by the banking financial industry (the other major beneficiary of the ECB stimulus). 

Negative yields then meant that borrowers were even being paid (rewarded) to borrow!


But recently treasury markets like yields of 5 year German bunds have seen a forceful pushback.

Whether this has been temporary or has accounted for growing cracks in the bond bubble remains to be seen.

Yet the next bubble implosion will not just apply to asset bubbles but to the entire debt portfolio of the region (and elsewhere). 

The most likely outcome will be a horrific deflation (chain of debt defaults), or if the ECB fights it with money printing, possibly hyperinflation.

Bankrupt governments depend on sustained access on the credit markets for them to survive. This makes them highly sensitive to market confidence. And such has been the real thrust of all the cumulative easing policies implemented by the ECB (and by governments). 

Once market confidence dissipates, the whole bubble edifice crumbles.
 
Greece may likely be the first casualty.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Video: Special Interest Groups and Not Voters Influence Political Landscape in America

The following video, originally entitled “Corruption is Legal in America” by represent.us, trenchantly describes not only how corruption is legal in the US, but more importantly, how corruption has endemically been embedded into the system from which corruption became legal.

It is also interesting to see how the popular concept of representative government (seen from academic theory) works in complete departure from reality where voters have little influence on the legal landscape. Instead, the current political economic environment has been dominated by special interest groups via public choice, regulatory capture and revolving door politics.

Because of the enormous windfalls or colossal return of investments when political mandates have been enacted on their favor, many corporations resort to them.

The lesson here shouldn’t be seen only in the frame of US politics but also applies to other representative governments as the Philippines.


Tuesday, May 19, 2015

So Who’s the Biggest Winner from China’s Stock Market Bubble? Answer: The Government!

I have been pointing out here that the Chinese government has engineered the inflation of a massive stock market bubble as part of “C-O-N-F-I-D-E-N-C-E” building measures, and importantly, as alternative option to secure corporate financing
The Chinese government seems to be hoping that the stock market boom may provide the economy an alternative of finance. They must be hoping that equity may replace credit as a source of financing for credit trouble firms, thus the stock market frantic pump matched by an avalanche of IPOs.

In addition, rising stocks could have been seen by the Chinese government as having the “wealth effect” enough to ameliorate the downturn in the property sector, spur consumer spending and create the impression that the Chinese economy has been recovering.

Little have they learned from their recent experience that the same credit bubble on the property sector has only incited for a huge imbalances. Huge imbalances that has to be paid for, which has been the reason for the recent downturn in the economy.


Well, the Wall Street Journal reveals that the Chinese government has indeed been the major beneficiary from their own bubble blowing policies.  (bold mine)
China’s stock market has risen by nearly a third this year, one of the best performances in the world. But the largest beneficiaries of this spectacular rally aren’t the investors who wagered on the country’s corporations or the companies on the Shanghai exchange.

The biggest winner has been the Chinese government, which has made billions in paper profits on its stakes in hundreds of listed state-owned corporations. Now Beijing hopes the stock gains will ripple through the economy, helping the authorities to improve the financial health of debt-laden state companies.

The challenge for Beijing is how to carefully manage the market’s momentum, given that Chinese stocks are no longer cheap. The Shanghai Stock Market, trading at a price/earnings ratio of around 19 times, is at its most expensive in five years. ChiNext, the board for startup companies on the smaller Shenzhen Stock Exchange, now boasts a triple-digit P/E ratio, roughly five times that of the Nasdaq Composite Index.

So far, Beijing has repeatedly cheered on the rally, to the delight of the small investors who dominate trading. That has helped more than double the market value of the almost 1,000 listed firms—in which the central and local governments own stakes—to 20.19 trillion yuan ($3.26 trillion) over the past year.
So how should the inflation of a gigantic stock market bubble “improve the financial health of debt-laden state companies”????
Analysts said one of Beijing’s biggest hopes is that the booming share market will help companies deal with the vast pile of debt on their balance sheets. Higher stock prices can ease a company’s debt burden by increasing the relative value of a firm’s assets and, in the case of companies that subsequently sell shares, by giving the company funds to pay down debt.

As of now, state-owned enterprises, or SOEs, are among the biggest debtors; their liabilities have risen to 65% of their total assets, from 58% in 2007, when the stock market peaked, according to CEIC, a data provider…

As their stocks have risen, a few state-run companies have taken advantage of their increased valuations by selling stakes or issuing new shares, using the cash to pay down their substantial borrowings.

As companies pay down their debt and raise capital, they are more easily able to go ahead with the mergers and acquisitions that Beijing hopes will make them more competitive. The government is seeking to restructure the country’s sprawling array of more than 100,000 state-owned enterprises.
Accounting magic, that's how. Blowing stock market bubbles reduce accounting debt ratios through inflated asset valuations of state owned firms

Of course, that's aside from increased access to equity financing as alternative to debt. And C-O-N-F-I-D-E-N-C-E.

Essentially by inflating a bubble—via policy easing (or force feeding credit into a credit strained system) and from IPO manipulation—the government transfers resources and risks to the public in order to save the skin of these political enterprises.

But there is no free lunch. Not even for bubbles.

The major cost of inflating a bubble extrapolates to more amassment of debt.

According to a Bloomberg report which covered today’s 3.1% surge in Chinese stocks. (bold mine)
Margin traders increased holdings of shares purchased with borrowed money for a sixth day on Monday, with the outstanding balance of margin debt in Shanghai climbing to an all-time high of 1.28 trillion yuan.

Mutual funds managed a record 6.2 trillion yuan in assets at the end of April, the Securities Times reported Tuesday, citing data from the Asset Management Association of China.


And China’s margin debt, according a study from Macquarie “could already be the highest level of margins vs free float in market history…” (FT Alphaville). Wow!

The above only exhibits more signs of how the Chinese government have been a state of panic. They have been desperately working to survive a political economy deeply dependent on PONZI financing.  So they have been doing everything to cut down the cost of servicing debt (so as to extend the DEBT IN-DEBT OUT operations, where lately they have introduced debt for bond swap), as well as, has increasingly relied on asset sales (previously property and now stocks) for financing.

Yet  when the both bubble bursts the government and the citizenry will be a lot poorer. 

Thanks to the misplaced belief on policies that turns stones into bread.  

As American journalist aptly described of the 1929 stock market crash (The Bubble that Broke the World p.38) [bold mine]
Then the invisible pyramids—what are they? 

A delirious stock-exchange speculation such as the one that went crash in 1929 is a pyramid of that character. Its stones are avarice, mass-delusion and mania; its tokens are bits of printed paper representing fragments and fictions of title to things both real and unreal, including title to profits that have not yet been earned and never will be. All imponderable. An ephemeral, whirling, upside-down pyramid, doomed in its own velocity. Yet it devours credit in an uncontrollable manner, more and more to the very end; credit feeds its velocity 
How relevant this has been today! (not only for China)

Monday, May 18, 2015

Example of How Government Uses the “War on Cash” to Confiscate Property

Governments desperate for financing have used various repressive edicts to seize private property. And part of this campaign has been to wage a war on cash. The war on cash has been publicly sold as campaigns against money laundering, war on drugs and other vices or even to weed out the informal economy.

The reality is that such measures has been about expanding political power, channeled through financial repression again intended to seize private property.

Austrian economist Joe Salerno accounts for how such political avarice has made a mess of an entrepreneur’s life, via Mises Blog
Lyndon McClellan is a small entrepreneur who owns and operates L & M Convenience Mart in Fairmont, North Carolina.  L & M comprises a gas station, convenience store, and a small restaurant serving hot dogs, hamburgers, and catfish sandwiches.  One day last July, more than a dozen federal, state and local law enforcement agents swarmed Mr. McClellan's business, including agents from the FBI and the North Carolina Alcohol and Law Enforcement agency---and they were "asking" for him.  When Mr. McClellan arrived, he was escorted by two federal agents into his stock room for a private chat.  The agents showed him paperwork indicating that he had made two cash deposits totaling $11,400 within a 24-hour period in his bank account at the Lumbee Guarantee Bank.  They informed him that the papers also indicated that he had a history of "consistent cash deposits" of less than  $10,000, which was a violation of the the Federal law against "structuring."  They also informed him that the IRS had seized all of the $107,702.66 in L & M's bank account.

What Mr McClellan did not know was that it was against the law to make cash deposits of less than $10,000.  Banks are legally obligated to report any deposit of more than $10,000 to the U.S. Treasury Department.  But if an individual makes several cash deposits of less than $10,000 over an unspecified period of time that total more than $10,000, then he is presumed to be a money launderer or drug trafficker who is committing the dastardly crime of structuring, that is, seeking to circumvent the bank's reporting requirement and maintaining the privacy of his financial affairs Thus banks are also required to file "suspicious activity reports" on cash deposits of less than $10,000.   Based on these reports, if one is merely suspected--not convicted--of structuring, his bank account is seized by the IRS under "civil asset forfeiture" laws, which permits seizures of money or other property suspected of being related to a crime. 

Government agencies have a financial incentive to invoke civil asset forfeiture laws because the law permits the seizing agency to keep the assets and use them to expand  their activities without an appropriation from Congress.  In its insatiable hunger for funds, the IRS even  "deputizes"  state and local law enforcement agencies to go through "suspicious activities reports" in exchange for a cut of the loot subsequently seized by the IRS.  This is probably how a small entrepreneur like Mr. McClellan living peacefully in a sleepy hamlet was targeted for destruction in the War on Cash. 

Months after the seizure of his bank account, the federal government offered Mr. McClellan 50 percent of his money back if he agreed to a settlement.  He heroically refused and intends to pursue the matter in court.  Unfortunately, under the oppressive and despotic "civil asset forfeiture" laws, he bears the burden of proving his innocence.  But as he puts it:
It’s not fair to the American people who work for a living that one day they can knock on the door, walk in their businesses, and say, ‘We just took your money' … I always thought your money was safe in the bank, but I wouldn’t say that now.
Neither would I!