Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Will the US Foreign Policy of Encirclement Stoke a South China Sea War?

Historian Eric Margolis sees a similar pattern to World War I developing in the Spratlys Dispute

Writes Mr. Margolis (bold emphasis mine)

China is usually very cautious in its foreign affairs. But of late, Beijing has been aggressively asserting maritime claims in the resource-rich South China Sea, a region bordered by Indonesia, Vietnam, Brunei, the Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan and China.

Japan, India, South Korea and the United States also assert strategic interests in this hotly disputed sea, which is believed to contain 100 billion barrels of oil and 700 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

China has repeatedly clashed with Vietnam and the Philippines over the Spratly and Paracel islands and even mere rocks in the China Sea. Tensions are high.

In 2010, the US strongly backed the maritime resource claims by the smaller Asian states, warning off China and reasserting the US Navy’s right to patrol anywhere. Beijing took this as a direct challenge to its regional suzerainty.

Last week, Washington raised the stakes in this power game, announcing it will permanently base 2,500 Marines at the remote northern Australian port of Darwin.

Marine regiment can’t do much in such a vast, remote region, but Washington’s symbolic troop deployment is another strong signal to China to keep its hands off the South China Sea. China and nearby Indonesia reacted with alarm. Memories in Indonesia of 1960’s intervention by CIA mercenaries and British troops remain vivid.

The US is increasingly worried by China’s military modernization and growing naval capabilities. Washington has forged a new, unofficial military alliance with India, and aided Delhi’s nuclear weapons development, a pact clearly aimed at China. China and India are locked in a nuclear and conventional arms race.

US military forces now train in Mongolia. China may deploy a new Fourth Fleet in the South China Sea. Washington expresses concern over China’s new aircraft carrier, anti-ship missiles and submarines, though these alarms coming from the world’s leading naval power seem bit much.

The US is talking about selling advanced arms to Vietnam, an historic foe of China. The US is also modernizing Taiwan’s and Japan’s armed forces.

These moves sharpen China’s growing fears of being encircled by a network of America’s regional allies.

The recent ASEAN summit in Indonesia calling for a US-led "Trans-Pacific Partnership" was seen by Beijing as an effort to create an Asian NATO directed against China.

Rising tensions over the South China Sea disturbingly recall the naval race between Britain and Germany during the dreadnaught era that played a key role in triggering World War I….

US foreign policy has become almost totally militarized; the State Department has been shunted aside. The Pentagon sees Al-Qaida everywhere.

Read the rest here

I’d further add that prevailing economic conditions in developed nations like the US may prompt their politicians to divert the public’s attention by inciting geopolitical tensions. And this also exhibits how the state loves and thrives on war.

Why George Soros Loves Big Government

Because Mr. Soros enormously benefits from them.

From Wynton Hall of Big Government.com (hat tip Bob Wenzel)

Billionaire George Soros gave advice and direction on how President Obama should allocate so-called “stimulus” money in a series of regular private meetings and consultations with White House senior advisers even as Soros was making investments in areas affected by the stimulus program.

It’s just one more revelation featured in the blockbuster new book that continues to rock Washington,Throw Them All Out, authored by Breitbart News editor Peter Schweizer.

Mr. Soros met with Mr. Obama’s top economist on February 25, 2009 and twice more with senior officials in the Old Executive Office Building on March 24th and 25th as the stimulus plan was being crafted. Later, Mr. Soros also participated in discussions on financial reform.

Then, in the first quarter of 2009, Mr. Soros went on a stock buying spree in companies that ultimately benefited from the federal stimulus.

  • Soros doubled his holdings in medical manufacturer Hologic, a company that benefited from stimulus spending on medical systems
  • Soros tripled his holdings in fiber channel and software maker Emulus, a company that wound up scoring a large amount of federal funds going to infrastructure spending
  • Soros bought 210,000 shares in Cisco Systems, which came up big in the stimulus lottery
  • Soros also bought Extreme Networks, which, months later, said it was expanding broadband to rural America “as part of President Obama’s broadband strategy”
  • Soros bought 1.5 million shares in American Electric Power, a company Mr. Obama gave $1 billion to in June 2009
  • Soros bought shares in utility company Ameren, which bagged a $540 million Department of Energy loan
  • Soros bought 250,000 shares of Public Service Enterprise Group, 500,000 shares of NRG Energy, and almost a million shares of Entergy—all companies that came up winners in the Department of Energy taxpayer giveaway that produced the Solyndra debacle
  • Soros bought into BioFuel Energy, a company that benefitted when the EPA announced a regulation on ethanol
  • Soros bought Powerspan in April 2009. Just weeks later, the clean-energy company landed $100 million from the Department of Energy
  • In the second quarter of 2009, Soros bought education technology giant Blackboard, which became a big recipient of education stimulus money
  • Soros also bought Burlington Northern Santa Fe and CSX, both beneficiaries of Mr. Obama’s plans for revitalizing the railroads
  • Soros bought Cognizant Technology Solutions, which scored stimulus funds in education and health care technology
  • Soros also bought 300,000 shares of Constellation Energy Group and 4.6 million shares of Covanta, both of which landed taxpayers’ money through the stimulus, the former of which bagged $200 million

The short of it is that George Soros, like Warren Buffett, seem to operate as political entrepreneurs in an environment which appears to be evolving towards anti-competition based crony capitalism. For them, political capital and clout today seems a far better investing strategy than the traditional methods.

Euro Debt Crisis: Eurozone Lifeline Depends on the European Central Bank

For the Eurozone, so far, survival seems like an all European Central Bank (ECB) affair now

From Reuters, (bold emphasis mine)

Euro zone banks' demand for central funding surged to a two-year high on Tuesday, and U.S. funds cut their lending to the bloc's banks, tightening a squeeze that looks unlikely to ease this year.

Fast-spreading sovereign debt worries have left lending markets virtually frozen and the European Central Bank as the only available funding option for many banks.

The ECB's weekly, limit-free handout of funding underscored the widespread problems, with 178 banks requesting 247 billion euros, the highest amount since mid-2009.

Just as fears about the financial health of Italy and Spain have stopped banks lending to some their peers, U.S. funds have also continued to retreat from the region, and Italian and Spanish banks have seen corporate deposits flow out to safer havens.

U.S. money market funds, which are key providers of liquidity to banks and have been pulling back from the euro zone since May, cut their exposure to European banks by a further 9 percent in October, according to ratings agency Fitch.

Bankers said there appeared little chance of wholesale funding markets reopening for euro zone banks this year, and the best that can be hoped is for a return to more normal conditions early in 2012.

"The reality is it's hard to see investors get any confidence (before the end of the year), as the sovereign crisis is out of control. Confidence has disappeared from the banks as they are a conduit for the sovereigns," a senior debt market banker said.

There are several warning signs flashing for euro zone banks' liquidity, limiting options and raising borrowing costs, leaving the European Central Bank as the only option for many of them.

Current dynamics exhibits that either the ECB will tolerate the markets to find the necessary (most likely disorderly) adjustments or the ECB will have to unleash a tsunami of money printing.

Of course printing of money just delays the inevitable.

Nevertheless the mainstream continues to prescribe snake oil therapies as more inflationism and more centralization of the EU via a political union.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Video: The Moral Case for Organ (Kidney) Trade



From LearnLiberty.org
Prof. James Stacey Taylor argues that willing rational adults should be allowed to buy and sell kidneys. Instead of providing complex theoretical arguments, one can look at the human stories to see why markets in kidneys should be allowed. Peter Randall, for instance, became famous in 2003 for offering his kidney for sale on eBay. He was offering his kidney for sale to raise money for therapy for his six-year-old daughter, Alice, who was suffering from cerebral palsy.

A market for kidneys would allow people like Peter to sell his kidney legally and safely. Additionally, a market in kidneys enables individuals to purchase a kidney in order to alleviate the suffering caused by dialysis.

Some may accept the arguments above, but feel that the gift of life is too priceless to place a price tag on. However, when kidneys are illegal, as they are now in the United States, everyone in a transplant operation is paid except for the kidney donor. According to Prof. Taylor, this seems wrong. The sale of kidneys should be allowed just as the sale of all other medical products and services. Banning kidney sales means that people like Alice will not receive the therapy they need and also ensure that thousands of people will suffer through crippling dialysis.

Video: The Daily Show's Jon Stewart Hearts Ron Paul

Jon Stewart to Congressman Ron Paul :

"You really are one of our last consistent politician ever seen in this world"

Chart of the Day: Thanksgiving Inflation

The US will be celebrating Thanksgiving Day on Thursday November 23. However, dinner costs led by the traditional Turkey, has been going up.

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From Timothy Taylor

The top line of this graph shows the nominal price of purchasing the basket of goods for the Classic Thanksgiving Dinner. One could use the underlying data here to calculate an inflation rate: that is, the increase in nominal prices for the same basket of goods was 13% from 2010 to 2011. The lower line on the graph shows the price of the Classic Thanksgiving Dinner adjusted for the overall inflation rate in the economy. The line is relatively flat, which means that inflation in the Classic Thanksgiving Dinner has actually been a pretty good measure of the overall inflation rate in the last 26 years. But in 2011, the rise in the price of the Classic Thanksgiving Dinner, like the rise in food prices generally, has outstripped the overall rise in inflation.

So much for the liquidity trap.

Quote of the Day: Fervent Love of Individual Liberty

In receiving of the Alexis de Tocqueville Award, I excerpt Professor Robert Higgs' speech, (italics original)

For society as a whole, I wish nothing more fervently than I wish that it should be as free as possible. For me, freedom is not simply the highest-ranked value with regard to public affairs; it stands on a level by itself, far above all the others.

I espouse individual liberty in this “extreme” fashion for two reasons, which in my mind complement one another. The first is that freedom is the optimal condition for each individual’s engagement in society. To be driven, bullied, abused, disregarded, treated with contempt and dishonor―these are bad things in themselves, not only for me, but for every human being. We ought to recoil from them, regardless of whether the perpetrator is a local cop or the government in Washington. Yet all too many of us become accustomed to such official cruelties and take them in stride without much conscious thought that they are wrongs and ought to be stopped, regardless of their source.

Individual liberty, however, is also an instrument for the creation of many of the conditions, goods, and services that constitute material abundance and relieve many of the anxieties and pains that once accompanied social life for almost everyone. Virtually everyone favors economic development, especially inasmuch as it reduces or eliminates extreme poverty. Individual liberty is a necessary condition for sustained economic progress. The specific conditions of a free society―private property rights, secure contracts, a reliable rule of law―are prerequisites for the ongoing creation of wealth in the long run. At this late date, after we have witnessed the personal horrors and economic disasters brought about by socialist central planning, it should not be necessary to go on preaching the gospel of private property and the market economy, yet we all know that many people still do not understand these essential matters and often act politically to thwart the operation of a genuinely free society.

Congratulations for a very much well deserved honor, Professor Higgs.

Escalating European Crisis Weighs on Global Financial Markets

I don’t think last night’s selloff at Wall Street was mainly about the stalemate or the failure by the special debt-reduction committee to come into an agreement over budget cuts as portrayed by media.

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Although I’d say that the extant gloomy sentiment may have been partly aggravated by the above events.

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I would further add that the developments at the MF Global Holdings, where shortfall in U.S. segregated customer accounts may exceed $1.2 billion, more than double what was previously expected appears to be more of an influence considering the sharp declines in prices of the commodities.

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Although I would reckon that last night’s semi-crash mostly reflected on European debt crisis, which according to reports, have been spreading to the core

From Reuters,

ECB policymaker Juergen Stark warned on Monday the sovereign debt crisis had spread from the euro zone's periphery to its core economies and was affecting economies outside of Europe.

"These are very challenging times... The sovereign debt crisis has re-intensified and is now spreading over to other countries including so-called core countries. This is a new phenomenon," Stark said in a speech to Ireland's Institute of International and European Affairs in Dublin.

"The sovereign debt crisis is not only concentrated in Europe, most advanced economies are facing serious problems with their public debt."

And growing evidence of the banking stress in Europe has been the fund flows (capital flight) to the US Federal Reserve

From Bloomberg

Foreign bank deposits at the Federal Reserve have more than doubled to $715 billion from $350 billion since the end of 2010 amid Europe’s debt turmoil, buttressing the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency.

Forty-seven non-U.S. banks held balances of more than $1 billion at the New York Fed as of Sept. 30, up from 22 at the end of 2010, according to a survey of 80 financial institutions by ICAP Plc, the world’s largest inter-dealer broker. The dollar has appreciated 7.2 percent since Standard & Poor’s cut the nation’s AAA credit rating Aug. 5, the second-best performance after the yen among developed-nation peers, according to Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Currency Indexes.

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In what appears to be a choice between two seemingly ‘toxic’ assets, investors have been exiting the EU and has flocked to the US, which alternatively means that US dollar has been winning this round so far.

Politically captive financial markets will remain highly volatile.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Spain Votes to Boot Out Socialists

Europe’s debt crisis appears to be forging a new political dimension

From Bloomberg,

People’s Party leader Mariano Rajoy won the biggest parliamentary majority in a Spanish election in 29 years and called on Spaniards to work together to prevent the nation being overwhelmed by the sovereign debt crisis.

The People’s Party won 186 of the 350 seats in Congress compared with 110 for the Socialist Party’s candidate Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, based on 97 percent of the vote counted. That’s the worst showing for the Socialists since Spain returned to democracy in 1978.

“Today more than ever our destiny is played out in and with Europe,” Rajoy said in an acceptance speech in Madrid. “We will stop being a problem and become part of the solution again.”

Rajoy, 56, who said on Nov. 18 he hoped Spain wouldn’t need a bailout before he’s sworn in as prime minister in month’s time, has pledged to slash the budget deficit and regain the nation’s AAA credit rating. He inherits a stagnant economy with a 23 percent unemployment rate and borrowing costs back at the levels Spain was paying before it joined the euro.

Governments Falling

The ruling Socialists became the fifth European government to be toppled by fallout from sovereign debt crisis, after Italy and Greece appointed new prime ministers and Irish and Portuguese voters fired their leaders after they sought bailouts. Spaniards gave Rajoy the biggest mandate of the group to respond to the crisis.

Evolving signs of times.

Quote of the Day: Anatomy of Crony Capitalism and Inequality

Increases in government power expand, rather than shrink, producer-groups’ access to unwarranted privileges – privileges that are unavailable in competitive markets. As the economist and historian Deirdre McCloskey notes on page 35 of her 2006 book The Bourgeois Virtues: “When American steel producers get tariffs or when sugar beet growers get import quotas it is not because of their market power but because of their political power, their access to an all-powerful state.”

That’s from Professor Donald J. Boudreaux. Said differently, worshippers of the state implicitly endorse crony capitalism and social inequality.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Investing in the PSE: Will Negative Real Rates Generate Positive Real Returns?

Easy money also helps the fiscal position of the government. Lower borrowing costs mean lower deficits. In effect, negative real interest rates are indirect debt monetization. Allowing borrowers including the government to get addicted to unsustainably low rates creates enormous solvency risks when rates eventually rise. I believe that the Japanese government has already reached the point where a normalization of rates would create a fiscal crisis. David Einhorn

We are living in interesting times.

Negative Real Interest Rate as Stock Market Driver

In the Philippines, interest rates have considerably been below inflation rates.

Banks like the BPI[1], offers yields anywhere 2-2.75% for 364 days on their regular time deposit account, depending on the size of the account (as of November 15 to 21), whereas statistical Consumer Price Inflation rate has reached 5.2% last October[2].

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Most people don’t realize that real money returns for the Peso has been negative or that savers have been losing money in terms of reduced purchasing power.

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Curiously, inflation rates are even higher than the yields of domestic government bonds, from 1 to 10 years in maturity. This implies that bondholders of 10 years maturity and below are also getting squeezed from the current negative real interest rate regime (chart from Asian Bonds Online[3]).

Aside, the steep yield curve likewise induces borrow-short lend-long activities or maturity transformation which implies of higher future CPI rates as banks are incentivized to expand lending.

And since the yield curve has been steep even from last year, we are seeing credit activities ramping up.

From the BSP[4], (bold emphasis mine)

Growth in outstanding loans of commercial banks, net of banks’ reverse repurchase (RRP) placements with the BSP, accelerated in September to 21.7 percent from the previous month’s expansion of 19.8 percent. Meanwhile, the growth of bank lending inclusive of RRPs slowed down to 18.9 percent from 24.8 percent in August. Commercial banks’ loans have been growing steadily at double-digit growth rates since January 2011. On a month-on-month seasonally-adjusted basis, commercial banks’ lending in September grew by 1.0 percent for loans net of RRPs, while loans inclusive of RRPs fell by 2.0 percent.

Loans for production activities—which comprised 84.2 percent of commercial banks’ total loan portfolio—grew steadily by 22.9 percent in September from 21.5 percent a month earlier. Growth in consumer loans likewise accelerated to 17.9 percent from 13.4 percent in August, reflecting the rapid growth in lending across all types of household loans.

The expansion in production loans continued to be driven largely by higher lending to electricity, gas and water (which grew by 56.3 percent); manufacturing (24.2 percent); real estate, renting and business services (26.1 percent); wholesale and retail trade (29.8 percent); financial intermediation (32.8 percent); transportation, storage and communication (19.3 percent); and construction (17.6 percent). Moreover, with strong global demand driving growth in the mining and quarrying industry, loans to mining and quarrying more than tripled in September from a year ago, sustaining the three-digit growth rate since May 2011. Meanwhile, contractions were posted in lending to three production sectors, namely, health and social work (-4.9 percent), education (-10.0 percent), and agriculture, hunting and forestry (-3.5 percent).

From a mainstream economic viewpoint this will be seen as a good sign.

Theoretically low interest rate should reflect on the time preferences of individuals, where the preference to consume goods later rather than now (lower time preference) means that there should be an abundance of savings available for investments.

According to Mises.wiki[5]

The act of saving is a means through which man can achieve his ultimate goal, which is bettering his situation. Saving implies giving up some benefits at present - this is the price paid for the attainment of the end sought. The value of the price paid is called cost, and costs are equal to the value of the satisfaction which one must forego to attain the end aimed at.

The return on savings must be in excess of the cost of savings. If the costs are too high - if savings can’t better an individual’s life and well being - then saving will not be undertaken.

Consequently, the return on savings must be above the premium for man to agree to save. A positive time preference (i.e., the existence of a premium) precludes the natural emergence of a zero interest rate. Should a zero interest rate be imposed, this will abort all savings and lead to the destruction of the production structure. The premium of having goods now versus having them in the future is getting smaller with the increase in their stock. This, in turn, means that the required return on savings will be lower. An increase in the pool of funding sets the platform for lower interest rates.

Apart from time preferences, the purchasing power of money and business risk are important elements in the formation of interest. However, their importance is assessed in reference to the fundamental factor, which is time preference.

However as pointed out above a policy induced boom from manipulated interest rates distorts the production structure which will be misdirected towards investments in capital goods (higher stages of production) that leads to a bubble cycle (Austrian Business Cycle Theory—ABCT).

As I wrote last week[6],

Although I am not sure which sector should give the best returns over the short term, I am predisposed towards what Austrian economics calls as the higher order stages of production or the capital goods industries, which are likely the beneficiaries of the business cycle, specifically, mining, property-construction and energy, as well as financials whom are likely to serve as funding intermediaries for these projects.

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Interestingly, even the relative performances by different sectors in the PSE seem to coincide or reflect on the distribution of credit growth as noted by the BSP.

For this week, except for Financial-Banking sector, the best gainers have been the mining index, followed by the industrial (mostly weighted on energy and utility companies) and the property sector. Here I am comparing apples to oranges because of the variances of time considerations between the PSE sectoral activities and loan portfolio growth in the real economy.

Yet the outperformance of the mining sector in the PSE can likewise be accounted for in the tripling of loans to the mining and quarrying industry.

Overall, the point is that the accelerating credit growth in capital good industries such as in mining, real estate and construction, power and financial intermediation appears to corroborate the boom bust process.

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Another fascinating observation is that negative real interest rates may have altered the composition of trading activities seen during the current cycle in the Philippine Stock Exchange (PSE).

In the 2003-2007 boom cycle, foreign investors had largely been the dominant force in the daily trading activities at the PSE. Today, local participants appear to have wrested that role.

And the ascendancy of local investors seems to have provided resiliency to the Phisix during the recent shakeout.

The implication is that negative real interest rates may have driven many savers to speculate on the stock market to eke out positive real returns.

Yet if holding cash and near term bonds generates negative real returns then where to put one’s resources?

Every investment competes for your money. There will always be a tradeoff for any choices we make. Investments would mean a trade-off in terms of risk-reward and on relative assets.

Market Risk: Debating The Role of the ECB

There is no such thing as a risk free investment as inculcated to us by media, the academe or by mainstream institutions.

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The concept of “risk-free” has been impressed upon us to justify the institutional rechanneling of private savings via the banking system into funding pet programs of politicians. And part of the process has been enabled by banking regulations such as the Basel Accord.

Yet such masquerade is presently being exposed by the markets. The bond spread of Italy and France (relative to the German Bund) has soared to record highs[7] as shown in the above chart (chartoftheday.com).

To add, the cost to insure liabilities of AAA credit rating France is now higher than the Philippines or compared to ASEAN-4[8]. This means that the credit standings applied by the government licensed or accredited credit rating agency cartel does not accurately reflect on the credit risks by developed economies plagued by the unsustainable welfare state.

And because financial markets have been defying whatever the EU governments has been imposing such as credit margin hikes[9] on Italian bonds and ban on short selling of Italian stocks[10], credit rating agencies appear as being pressured to downgrade the AAA credit rating of France[11].

The economics of the marketplace has been reasserting her ascendancy against welfare based politics.

Yet political impasse over the role of the European Central Bank as the “lender of last resort” has proven to be a seething issue that continues to unsettled financial markets.

While some key officials such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel[12], ECB’s Mario Draghi[13] and IMF’s John Lipsky[14] were allegedly against the carte blanche backstop role for the ECB, there has been a growing clarion clamor for the ECB to aggressively support the bond markets from France and from political personalities such as former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder[15], Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva[16] and many more.

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One popular analyst have even called the ECB’s role as either to “Print or Perish” for the Euro, which resonates with the popular call to inflate. Little do these inflation advocates realize that historical accounts of currency destruction have hardly been about the “deflationary spiral” but more about serial episodes of hyperinflations and or wars[17].

For the ECB to rapidly and intensify inflationism would be to “Print and Perish”.

Nonetheless, print and perish has been the name of the game for global central bankers.

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But the supposed political stalemate over the ECB’s role appears as “smoke and mirrors” for me.

That’s because in reality, the ECB along with rest of major Central Banks except the US Federal Reserve has been scaling up their asset purchases as shown by the above chart[18].

Since 2008, major central banks have been ramping up asset purchases which makes today’s developments as unprecedented or entirely unique in modern history. So there hardly can be merit to claims that we are bound for “deflationary spiral” for as long as central banks continue to inundate the world with the liquidity approach to contain what truly are insolvency issues.

The ECB has reportedly an undeclared €20 billion weekly limit of bond purchases[19]. I would conjecture that rules, laws, regulations, policies or self-imposed limits change according to the convenience and the interests of politicians.

And recent reports suggest that European banks have been unloading heaps of sovereign debt issues.

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So EU banks have been taking the opportunity to transfer their supposed “risk free” securities to the ECB in order to rehabilitate their balance sheets.

And the desire for the ECB to take on a more aggressive role can be seen through the implied missives from this New York Times article[20],

The dynamic of falling bond prices also undermines the capital position of the banks, since they are among the biggest holders of government bonds in many countries. As those assets plunge in value, banks cut back on lending and hoard capital, increasing the likelihood of a recession.

All these money printing won’t be sucked into a financial black hole, as they will have to flow somewhere.

Yet despite the current turbulence, I think that the current volatility may be ignoring such dynamic.

As a final note, if events in the Eurozone should turn out for the worst, the local and ASEAN economies may not be immune from such disruption, which may affect the region’s stock markets.

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As Gerald Hwang of the Matthews Asian Fund writes[21],

Asian fixed income markets can have heavy foreign participation in both bonds and bank loans. The amount of participation from European banks is noteworthy in light of their exposure to European debt and the probability of shrinking balance sheets in the near future. European bank lending into Asia is greater than U.S. bank lending in the region; therefore, weakness in European bank balance sheets may tighten the financing environment for Asia’s borrowers more so than similar weakness in U.S. banks.

While European banks do have material exposure on Asia, I wouldn’t call less than 25% as substantial enough to possibly rock the boat. But again this depends on general market sentiment. Also, any tightening of credit conditions by Euro banks may be used as an opportunity by non-European banks to expand their market share.

Market Risk: US ‘Sequester’ Spending Cuts Will Be a Nonevent

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The Philippine Stock Exchange’s Phisix has been up 2.41% on a year-to-date basis and has outperformed the majors and other Emerging Market contemporaries. But it is important to point out that such outperformance has still been dependent on the ebbs and flows of global markets, particularly the US (SPX).

Over the past weeks, we seem to be seeing renewed weakness in Europe (STOX50), China (SSEC) and US S&P 500 (SPX).

So far the stock markets of the Eurozone has, I think, already priced in an economic recession given the current bear market status. The Stoxx50 is still 19% down from the February 2011 high. Yet should the ECB intensify the asset purchases or inflationism we should see European stocks pick up.

Further, I think that US stock markets will likely steer the global markets rather than that of the EU. This means that an ascendant US markets should likely bolster the bullish case of the Phisix and of the ASEAN-4 and vice versa.

Yet another worry being promoted by some of the bears is the brewing gridlock by Congressional super committee over spending cuts that would result to sequester rules or automatic spending cut.

The Wall Street Journal editorial says that such concerns are exaggerated[22],

Under the sequester rules, roughly half of the spending cuts would come from defense and homeland security, and the other half from domestic programs such as roads, education, energy and housing. An automatic cut from every federal agency is far from an ideal way to write a budget, because it sets no priorities and largely exempts the major entitlements like Medicare and Medicaid.

But the sequester does have the virtue of imposing reductions in spending that Congress rarely agrees to on its own. The Congressional Budget Office estimates domestic programs would take a 7.8% cut, while defense programs would get sliced by 10%. Medicare spending, mostly payments to providers, would fall by 2%. This would yield $68 billion in savings in 2013, and more savings in future years by ratcheting down the baseline level of spending.

Given the spending increases of recent years, those cuts are hardly excessive. Domestic programs received a nearly $300 billion windfall under the 2009 stimulus, so a sequester would take back a little more than one-fifth in 2013. Total domestic discretionary spending doubled to $614 billion in 2010 from $298 billion in 2000. Even if there were a 10-year $1.2 trillion "cut," total discretionary spending would still rise by $83 billion by 2021 because those cuts are calculated from inflated "current services" projections.

Essentially, the $1.2 trillion sequester spending cuts will be spread over 10 years, and as mentioned above will be apportioned mostly towards defense, homeland security and domestic programs which hardly tackles on welfare entitlement programs.

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The sequester or automatic spending cuts extrapolates to a cut on the rate of growth spending rather than real or actual cuts as shown above[23].

This only means that risks from the supposed political gridlock won’t be anywhere as disastrous as portrayed by political fanatics.

For the US markets, the reaccelerating growth of money supply should filter into and continue to provide support to her stock markets and the economy.

This week, the US economy posted strong growth which apparently surprised the mainstream[24]. Of course we understand this to be inflation boosted growth.

Barring any unforeseen events, I think this momentum should continue.

A Short Note On Commodities

Commodity markets experienced intensified downside volatility last week which many blamed on the Euro crisis.

While the Euro crisis may have aggravated sentiment, my guess is that these have been largely related to the liquidation process being undertaken by the trustee committee handling bankruptcy of MF Global Holdings who incidentally filed papers to set up the required accelerated filing of claims a day before the selloff[25].

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Gold oil and copper simultaneously fell the following day.

I earlier noted that this should be expected[26] last week but apparently has been deferred until this week.

And I think that once the proceedings culminate, the upside trend for the commodity markets should resume.

Bottom line: Negative real interest rates and expanding balance sheets of major global central banks will impact asset prices differently. Nevertheless such dynamic will continue to provide support to the Phisix-ASEAN equity markets and the commodity markets.

On the other hand, unless a massive collapse occurs, political developments particularly in the Eurozone should spice up market actions.

So my guess is that the current domestic environment of negative real interest rates should bode well for investors of the PSE.


[1] BPI Expressonline Regular Time Deposit (Peso) November 15 to November 21, 2011

[2] Tradingeconomics.com Philippine Inflation rate

[3] AsianBondsOnline Philippine Government Bond Yields

[4] bsp.gov.ph Bank Lending Growth Expands Further in September, November 11, 2011

[5] Wiki.mises.org Saving and the Interest rate

[6] See Phisix-ASEAN Equities: Awaiting for the Confirmation of the Bullmarket, November 13, 2011

[7] Telegraph.co.uk Spread between French and German bonds hits record, November 9, 2011

[8] See Chart of the Day: France ‘Riskier’ than the Philippines, ASEAN, November 17, 2011

[9] Reuters.com MONEY MARKETS-Italian banks risk becoming dependent on ECB, November 10, 2011

[10] Reuters.com Italy to ban naked short-selling on stocks, November 11, 2011

[11] Guardian.co.uk Debts in France threaten top credit rating, November 15, 2011

[12] Bloomberg.com Merkel Rejects ECB as Crisis Backstop in Clash With France, November 17, 2011

[13] Washington Post, ECB leader Mario Draghi rebuffs calls for greater central bank role, November 19, 2011

[14] CNBC.com IMF’s Lipsky Backs Merkel Over ECB Powers November 18, 2011

[15] Reuters.com German ex-chancellor sees ECB steps in "last resort", November 18, 2011

[16] Bloomberg.com ECB as Lender of Last Resort Will Resolve Debt Crisis for Portugal’s Silva, November 12, 2011

[17] Hewitt Mike The Fate of Paper Money, January 5, 2009 DollarDaze.org

[18] Danske Bank, Bank of Japan on hold, still sees substantial downside risks November 16, 2011

[19] Reuters.com ECB has secret 20 billion euro bond-buying limit: report November 18, 2011

[20] New York Times Europe Fears a Credit Squeeze as Investors Sell Bond Holdings, November 18, 2011

[21] Hwang Gerald Capital Flows: Asia's Quiet Revolution Asia Insight November 2011 Matthews International Capital Management, LLC

[22] Wall Street Journal Editorial The Sequester Option, November 18, 2011

[23] Mitchell Daniel What Matters More to Republicans, Defending Taxpayers or Expanding Government?, November 18, 2011

[24] See Strong Performance of the US Economy Surprises the Mainstream November 19, 2011

[25] See MF Global Holding’s Liquidations and the November 17th Commodity Prices Rout, November 19, 2011

[26] See Client Accounts Transfer from MF Global Holdings may trigger Market Volatility Next Week, November 5, 2011

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Will Gold Backed Bonds Play a Role in the Euro Debt Crisis?

From the Guardian.co.uk

A solution to the eurozone crisis is staring European leaders in the face. Remarkably, they have failed to consider gold as the asset of last resort. Eurozone member nations and the European financial stability facility (EFSF), the bailout fund, could use gold to back new bond issues.

The security of gold-backed bonds would encourage investors. Indeed, central banks purchased 4.8m ounces of gold worth $8bn (£5bn) in the third quarter. The application of gold backing would allow stricken nations such as Greece, Portugal, Spain and Ireland to depart from the restrictive eurozone and the accompanying depressive austerity policies, if they wished. The bonds would give them time to devalue, adjust and grow again, and also isolate the crisis from other European nations.

As at the end of October, eurozone nation central banks owned 347m ounces of gold worth $604bn. This compares with 400.5m ounces, then worth only $110.5bn, in the first quarter of 2000. The gold reserves fell because European central banks subsequently sold gold at knockdown prices of $250 to $350 an ounce after the 11 September terror attacks. Since then the lemming instinct of European finance ministers and central banks has once again prevailed and their gold sales have dried up, despite recent record prices of $1,800-1,900 an ounce.

Fortunately for eurozone leaders and their advisers, there is still a lot of gold left in the kitty. The current market value of the eurozone's 347m ounces has surged to $604bn, or €447bn – more than the current capital of the EFSF…

Eurozone leaders have devised several complicated partial loss guarantee schemes to persuade China and other potential investors to invest in EFSF bonds. Hardly surprising that the response has been: "Thanks, but no thanks." On the other hand, if EFSF bond issues had the backing of gold plus interest, it would be surprising if European and international investors didn't snap them up. Depending on demand, gold backing could be 25% to 50% of the total value of an Italian bond, for example.

Gold backed bonds have worked before. Take some precedents. In 1981 and 1982, South Africa, which was then the world's largest gold producer, swapped nearly 5m ounces of gold collateral in return for foreign exchange. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, indebted nations such as Brazil, Uruguay and Portugal either swapped or sold their gold to raise funds. In 1973, France issued 'Giscard' bonds, indexed to the price of gold.

While I think bonds collateralized by gold could indeed be tapped, I don’t think this would work like a magical wand that could wish away the debt crisis, where crisis afflicted EU governments can just “depart from the restrictive Eurozone”, elude “depressive austerity policies”, or “to devalue”. That would be oversimplistic and naïve.

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Growth of Social Transfers (From Faz community) [hat tip Prof. Antony Mueller]

The Eurozone has been blighted by insolvency issues, mostly emanating from an overextended welfare and heavily regulated state which has been compounded by a debt overdosed dysfunctional banking system.

EU’s gold holdings would signify only a fraction of EU’s debts.

The US and Japan has not been immune to the same crisis, except that the EU has been the first to feel the crunch from an unsustainable political economic system.

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Growth of government debt (From Faz community)

Gold backed bonds does nothing to change this dynamic, except to possibly gain access to funding in the marketplace which may help the EU to mitigate current conditions as reform programs are undertaken.

Nevertheless, the good news is that the urgency to address the current dire situation from the fiat money based debt mess has been prompting mainstream media to reconsider gold as part of the possible solution. Such is the gradual transformation of gold from an ignored “barbaric metal” to eventually “money”.

Ron Paul in 1981: 5 Myths About the Gold Standard

In February 1981, Congressman Ron Paul introduced the Gold coin standard bill H.R. 7874 along with Congressman Larry McDonald at the House of Representatives.

Ron Paul then and today has been very much consistent with his views.

(source Charleston Voice 1st, 2nd and 3rd pages)

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