Wednesday, April 24, 2013

More Signs of Parallel Universe in Gold: American Eagle Coins Sold Out

More signs of the widening disconnect between bankers-government paper gold versus physical individual real gold
From Bloomberg: (bold mine)
The U.S. Mint ran out of its smallest American Eagle gold coin after demand surged following the biggest drop in futures in three decades.
Sales of the coins weighing a 10th of an ounce were suspended after demand more than doubled in 2013 from a year earlier, the Mint said yesterday in a statement. Total sales of American Eagles in April have almost tripled from a month earlier, according to its website.

Shoppers from India to China and Japan joined consumers in the U.S. and Australia in the rush to buy jewelry and coins after futures slumped 13 percent in two days through April 15. Indian buyers flocked to stores and banks for ornaments, coins and bars as purchases from the Perth Mint in Australia doubled and retail sales across China tripled.
Pressure on inventory means higher premium
A rush by Indian consumers for bracelets and coins is prompting jewelers to offer premiums on imports as traders and banks run out of stockpiles, a trade group said yesterday. Jewelers in big cities are paying as much as 800 rupees ($14.73) per 10 grams (0.02 pounds) while retailers in some remote areas are paying about 1,200 rupees per 10 grams as a premium, according to Haresh Soni, chairman of the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation...
Volumes of gold products sold jumped 150 percent in Hong Kong and Macau during the April 13 weekend compared with the weekend before, according to Dennis Lau, director of sales operations at Chow Sang Sang Holdings International Ltd. (116), last week. Retail sales tripled across China on April 15-16, the China Gold Association reported.
And the Japanese capital flight to gold may have began as anticipated.
Japanese consumers are poised to become net buyers of gold for the first time in eight years as the yen’s decline and looming inflation drive them to seek refuge in bullion, according to Standard Bank Plc.
Funny how the depletion of inventories and higher premiums doesn’t seem to be reflected on paper gold.

Such chasm between physical and paper gold means one thing, gold prices have likely been manipulated.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

French Property Sector Takes a Hit from Hollande’s Taxes

Talk about unintended consequences. The highly repressive tax regime of French President Francois Hollande has not only spurred wealthy residents to flee or scamper out of the country (e.g. actor Gerard Depardieu, and also former President Nicolas Sarkozy was recently exposed as planning to move to UK) which even prompted for the downfall of the ousted Budget Minister for avoiding taxes by moving personal money abroad, but such policies has also prompted for stagnation in the property sector
 
From Bloomberg
At least one in four Paris apartments listed by realtor Agence Etoile can’t be sold, even with mortgage rates at record lows, as buyers and sellers fail to agree on price, the company’s director said.

“I have some inventory that’s too expensive and sellers don’t want to lower prices,” Christine Perrissel said in an interview. “Buyers are just much more selective.”

Across France, an economy that’s stalled for two years, joblessness at a 15-year high, property prices near record highs and new taxes have made households reluctant to borrow to buy homes. While Europe’s debt crisis prompted banks to tighten credit, since the start of this year they’ve offered more attractive terms to lure customers and meet lending targets, after borrowing plunged in 2012.

The average home-loan rate fell 0.8 percentage point from a year ago to a record low 3.34 percent in the first two months of the year. Still, new mortgages granted in the 12 months through February slid 27 percent from a year earlier to 98.4 billion euros ($129 billion), according to the Bank of France.

New home sales plunged 18 percent in 2012 to 77,900. Existing home sales declined 12 percent to 709,000, with the drop worsening to 22 percent in the year to February. The average housing investment funded with loans represented 3.73 years of the buyer’s income in March, the lowest since January 2010, a study by lender Credit Logement SA and polling firm CSA shows

The data reveal that as rates fall, the market still hasn’t fully shaken off the gloom of 2012 when real estate purchases plunged as banks tightened mortgage lending and after former President Nicolas Sarkozy and his successor Francois Hollande, elected in May, added property taxes to trim the country’s deficit.

Hollande, the first Socialist president in France since 1995, has called on those “with the most to show patriotism” in tough times. He’s raised income taxes, those on capital gains from property, as well as wealth and inheritance levies. That prompted Gerard Depardieu, who played Obelix in films about one of France’s most beloved fictional characters, to move to Belgium.

“We’ve had a catastrophic start of the year in January and February with the tax squeeze,” said Marc Julien, founder and chief executive officer of Pierre Invest, a broker specializing in new properties for the Paris region, referring to the property taxes.
French tax policies signifies as another ticking time bomb to a full blown debt crisis brought about by the nation's unsustainable welfare state.

Quote of the Day: Capitalism Day (instead of Earth Day)

Of the estimated 1 billion people who will observe Earth Day worldwide this year, few will know about the progress that has been made. Fewer still will know how it was made. The media, uninterested in looking at the real story, will simply credit the environmental movement for the improvements.

We won't discount the movement's contribution. Four decades ago, it helped show the world the value of global stewardship. But that movement is no longer interested in a cleaner world.

Filled with extremists and anti-capitalist crusaders, its primary goals have changed. Topping the agenda of today's environmentalist groups is the pulling down of market economies, the raising up of central planning for egalitarian goals, forced lifestyle changes and the vilification — in hopes of the elimination — of signs of wealth.

None of these advance the planet's environmental health. But capitalism has. Through wealth generated by the free market, we have enough resources to move beyond the subsistence economies that damage the environment, enough disposable income to fund clean-up programs, enough wealth to scrub and polish industry.

Only in advanced economies can the technology needed to recycle hazardous waste or to replace dirty coal-fired power plants with cleaner gas or nuclear plants be developed. That technology cannot be produced in centrally planned economies where the profit motive is squelched and lives are marshalled by the state.

There's nothing wrong with setting aside a day to honor the Earth. In fairness, though, it should be complemented by Capitalism Day. It's important that the world be reminded of what has driven the environmental improvements since Earth Day began in 1970.
This is from 2009 Editorial of the Investor’s Business Daily (hat tip Professor Mark Perry)

War on Terror: The Imperialist Roots of the Russia-Chechen Conflict

Media likes to portray the “war on terror” such as the Boston bombing incident as either individual (psychological) aberrations or sectarian (religious) problems. They hardly consider the geopolitical or even internal political angles from which may have inspired on such heinous actions. 


Understanding the Russia-Chechen conflict may give us a clue to the recent events.

From historian Eric Margolis at the lewrockwell.com in 2010
There is an old saying about the fierce Chechen tribes who inhabit southern Russia's Caucasus mountains: "Chechen cannot ever be defeated. They can only be killed."

Chechen are Russia's nemesis. Even the notoriously brutal Russian mafia fears the ferocious Chechen, and for good reason.

Last year, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin proudly proclaimed that resistance to Russian rule in the North Caucasus had been eliminated. The region was pacified.

Confounding Putin's claim, Chechen suicide bombers hit Moscow's subway last week, killing 39 and injuring over 70. Chechen suicide bombers in Dagestan killed twelve, mostly policemen. There were further attacks in neighboring Dagestan. The North Caucasus was again at a boil.

The attacks seriously rattled Russians and left the Kremlin deeply embarrassed and enraged.

Two "black widows" – wives or daughters of Chechen independence fighters killed or raped by the Russians (Russians call them "Islamic terrorists" and "bandits") – took their revenge last week, as so often in recent years.

The latest Chechen leader, Doku Umarov – all his predecessors were liquidated by Russia – claimed from his hideout in the Caucasus mountains that the subway attacks were reprisal for the recent killing of Chechen civilians by Russian security forces.

He warned Moscow, "we will make you feel what we feel."

In recent years, Chechen "black widows" have brought down two civilian airliners. Other Chechen hijacked an entire Moscow theater, and derailed the "Alexander Nevsky" Express that runs from Moscow to St. Petersburg.

Chechen are a tiny but fierce North Caucasian mountain people of Indo-European origin. They, and other Muslim Caucasian tribes, such as Dagestanis and Cherkass (Circasians), have battled Russian imperial rule for the past 300 years.

In 1877, Imperial Russia killed 40% of the Chechen population of about 220,000. Four hundred thousand Cherkass were expelled.

Stalin, from neighboring Georgia, hated Chechen. He divided Chechnya, creating the republic of Ingushetia. Then, in July 1937, his secret police, NKVD, shot 14,000 Chechen.

In 1944, Stalin ordered the entire Chechen people rounded up and shipped in cattle cars to his Siberian concentration camps or dumped to perish into icy fields. Other Muslims followed: Ingush, Tatars, Karachai, Balkars.

Neither bullets nor gas chambers were needed in Stalin's death camps. A third of the prisoners died each year from cold, starvation or disease in the concentration camps. In all, some 2.5 million Soviet Muslims were murdered by Stalin, "the Breaker of Nations," among them half of the Chechen people.

In my new book, American Raj, I entitle the section on the Chechen, "Genocide in the Caucasus."

Gulag survivors filtered back to Chechnya. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Chechen demanded independence like the Soviet republics.

Instead, Boris Yeltsin's government invaded Chechnya, killing some 100,000 Chechen civilians through massive carpet bombing and shelling. Chechen leader Dzhokar Dudayev was assassinated, reportedly thanks to telephone homing equipment supplied to Moscow by the US National Security Agency. President Bill Clinton actually lauded Boris Yeltsin as "Russia's Abraham Lincoln."

Incredibly, Chechen fighters managed to defeat Russia's army and won de facto independence.

As one would note, imperialism typically engenders retributions via acts of “terror” or terrorism.

Paper ‘Wall Street’ Gold versus Physical ‘Real’ Gold

Casey Research economist Bud Conrad suggests that the recent flash crash in gold may have been engineered.
Can markets really be influenced by big players? Well, was the LIBOR rate accurately reported by huge banks? Have players ever tried to corner markets? The answer to all the above, unfortunately, is yes.

There's an even bigger problem with the legal structure of the futures market: even the segregated funds on deposit can be pilfered by the broker for the brokerage's other obligations. That is what happened to MF Global customers under Mr. Corzine. (I had an account with a predecessor company called Man Financial – the "MF" in the name. I also had an account with Refco, which is now defunct. Fortunately, the daggers did not hit my account, since I was not a holder when the catastrophes occurred.) My take: the futures market is dangerous, and not a place for beginners.

One last note: after the Bankruptcy Act of 2005, the regulations support the brokers, not the investors, when there are questions of legality about losses in individual investment accounts.
The recent actions in the gold markets reveals of the stark difference between paper gold and physical gold markets.

Paper gold markets have essentially been influenced by Wall Street, who in turn are influenced by policymakers such as the FED and central bank cartel, as well as, the governments via regulations and mandates.

In contrast, the physical gold represents real demand and supply which involves the consuming and investing public and real inventories around the world.

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So when gold prices suffered a quasi price crash, instead of triggering a wave of selling spree, retail participants rose to the occasion and used such opportunity to accumulate with such ferocity. 

Of course it would be a mistake to view retail buying as non-investments or as non-investors as media commonly portrays. 

Said differently panic selling in Wall Street extrapolated to the inverse scenario—panic buying in the global physical market as shown by the chart from US Global Investors.

In short, the gold flash crash demonstrated the contrasting actions between politically backed financial institutions and of non political influenced individuals.

There has been more accounts of rapid depletion of gold inventories as a result of the flash crash. Premium on physical gold continues to rise, particularly in Asia as of this writing, as a result to supply constraints

Even prior to the flash crash, physical markets kept showing signs of vigorous demand, so the crash shouldn’t have happened, but it did.

This tell us that the parallel universe or patent disparity between gold’s paper markets and the physical markets implies of the anomalous nature with the current pricing dynamics of gold. 

Thus logic supports the idea that there has been an ongoing suppression-manipulation scheme against gold prices or an undeclared war on gold.

And it would also signify a mistake to assert otherwise.  

We don’t really need conspiracy theories, for the simple reason that manipulation of the marketplace has been legitimated and a principal tool used for implementing social policies.

Proof? From Ben Bernanke’s 2010 speech: (bold mine)
Notably, since December 2008, the FOMC has held its target for the federal funds rate in a range of 0 to 25 basis points. Moreover, since March 2009, the Committee has consistently stated its expectation that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low policy rates for an extended period. Partially in response to FOMC communications, futures markets quotes suggest that investors are not anticipating significant policy tightening by the Federal Reserve for quite some time. Market expectations for continued accommodative policy have in turn helped reduce interest rates on a range of short- and medium-term financial instruments to quite low levels, indeed not far above the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates in many cases.

The FOMC has also acted to improve market functioning and to push longer-term interest rates lower through its large-scale purchases of agency debt, agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), and longer-term Treasury securities, of which the Federal Reserve currently holds more than $2 trillion.
Or from a recent speech
The expected path of short-term real interest rates is, of course, influenced by monetary policy, both the current stance of policy and market participants' expectations of how policy will evolve. The stance of monetary policy at any given time, in turn, is driven largely by the economic outlook, the risks surrounding that outlook, and at times other factors, such as whether the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates is binding
The above speeches showcases how the FED works to influence the interest rate markets and thereby financial and economic forces. They are direct manipulations on the bond markets and indirect manipulations on other financial instruments.
 
Market manipulation has also been acknowledged by authorities. The New York Fed bragged about how FED policies has boosted US stock markets.  Japan’s finance minister recently said that they have a target for their stock markets.

Governments have also been engaged in banning short sales in both the stock markets and the bond markets to influence prices. Have this not been manipulation?

Here is a recent one.

From the Financial Times
It’s called the law of unintended consequences. Last November, European regulators were fed up with hedge funds using the derivatives market to bet against sovereigns so they imposed a ban on outright speculation.

But fund managers, not being ones to roll over and play nice for regulators, have found other ways to express the same view – this time in a way that analysts warn could increase borrowing costs for the banking sector.

Six months on from the ban on buying naked sovereign CDS protection – where the investor does not own the underlying government bond – it is clear that negative bets against large financials have emerged as a partial replacement.

A CDS, or credit default swap, protects the buyer against the risk of a company or government going into default. The instrument is worth more if the risks of default is perceived to be higher.

Investors are buying protection on European banks on the basis that banks and sovereigns are so intimately linked that any increased risk of a sovereign default will increase the value of a bank CDS in a similar way to a sovereign CDS.
Using organized force or governments to prevent markets from clearing or from revealing their real conditions are manipulations. Government's actions,  thereby, signify as the ultimate perpetrators of insider trading and of picking winners and losers.

So if the stocks and bond markets have been subjected to interventions, or may I say manipulations, directly or indirectly, then why should the gold-commodity markets be any different?

As I recently wrote,
A famous politician once said, You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.

The pushback from the gold bear raid as seen in the physical gold market implies that the governments and their apologists cannot fool all the people all the time.

Chinese Woman Sues the US Federal Reserve over Devalued US Dollars

The Fed’s inflationism has began to upset even the average person from other nation. 

A Chinese woman found the value of her US dollar savings eroded and has opted to sue the US government.

From the South China Morning Post (hat tip Zero Hedge)
A woman in Kunming, Yunnan province, is trying to sue the United States central bank after discovering that the real value of the US$250 she put in an account in 2006 had shrunk by 30 per cent.

She claims it was a result of the Federal Reserve issuing too much money.

Her attorney, her son Li Zhen , called the lawsuit "litigation for the public good" which aimed to stop the Fed from continuing its quantitive easing policy and promote people's awareness of their rights.

He filed the lawsuit alleging "the abuse of monopoly in issuing currency" last month at the Kunming Intermediate People's Court on behalf of his mother, Liu Hua , but the court has yet to decide whether to officially place the case on file.

Since the global financial crisis, the Fed has been pumping more money into the economy via several rounds of so-called quantitative easing to try to boost consumer spending and revive economic growth.

The judges were "greatly surprised" to see the indictment, said the 36-year-old lawyer, adding he was the first mainlander to have filed a lawsuit against a foreign country's central bank.
The above article reminds me of quote attributed to the late industrialist Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company
It is well enough that people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system, for if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.
Well, we should expect more of this.

On the Boston Bombing and the US Police State

Mainstream media has been projecting that the Boston bombing incident has been a triumph of government over terrorism.

But there has been more than meets the eye. Many of things has been occurring beyond the surface.

There was supposedly a police drill that happened “complete with bomb squads and rooftop snipers” at the start of the race. A mere coincidence?

Suspected terrorists have reportedly been “manipulated and harassed” by US authorities for years even before the atrocious act.

Here is Daniel McAdams at the Lew Rockwell Blog:
As Infowars reports, the Boston Bomber the Younger had been manipulated and harassed by the FBI for years. How many of the post-9/11 wannabe terrorists have been actually developed, nurtured, and supported by the FBI and other US intelligence agencies? All of them? These guys too? Will no one but LRC and Alex Jones ask the question?

Hemingway was a paranoid who killed himself over his delusions that he was being followed and manipulated by the US intelligence agencies. What a kook! Until it came out that he was in fact being followed and manipulated by US intelligence agencies.

How much more power and money do they have now, sixty years and many convenient terrorist attacks later? How many of these terrorists are the creation of the FBI and homeland security and the shadow government? Sure, it's kooky to even ask the question. But evidence shows this is a very kooky time. Maybe we can ask the Black and Tans what they think about it... Whoa, I sound like a kook.

UPDATE: In answer to my questions above, it turns out even the establishment New York Times reports that "Of the 22 most frightening plans for attacks since 9/11 on American soil, 14 were developed in sting operations." In other words, two-thirds of the planned terrorist attacks against us were hatched by our own government!
TV personality Glenn Beck points to a supposed cover up by the White House on an alleged involvement of a Saudi national. Conspiracy theory?

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The manhunt against 2 bombers turned part of Boston into a virtual police state. People homes had been raided even without search warrants. More photos here. And such martial law tactics used to happen only in banana republics. Not anymore. 

Yet the martial law in Boston didn’t lead to the arrest of the second suspect, the community did.

From Boston.com (hat tip Professor David Henderson)
By 6 p.m., frustrated officials relaxed the rule and allowed residents to leave their homes. The people of Watertown began to venture outside.

But within an hour, the crack of gunshots again blasted through the neighborhood. ­Sirens blared, and officers on foot scrambled down Franklin Street.

Police found Dzhokhar ­Tsarnaev hiding on a boat stored in a backyard on ­Franklin Street. Police ­exchanged gunfire with him before capturing him alive. Spontaneous celebrations erupted across the region, from the ­Boston Common to the Back Bay streets near the bombing.

The boat’s owners, a couple, spent Friday hunkered down under the stay-at-home order. When it was lifted early in the evening, they ventured outside for some fresh air and the man noticed the tarp on his boat blowing in the wind, according to their his son, Robert Duffy.

The cords securing it had been cut and there was blood near the straps. Duffy’s father called police, who swarmed the yard and had the couple evacuated, Duffy said.

Residents, who had barricaded themselves in their homes for nearly 20 hours, were still deeply shaken.
Shaken by whom, the terrorists or by police action?
 
And in spite of the community lockdown, authorities “requested” or "chose" Dunkin Donuts to remain open, from another Boston.com article
On block after block of the Boston’s Financial District and Downtown Crossing, Starbucks shops went dark as the city locked down, spurred by a manhunt for the second marathon bombing suspect. Dunkin’ Donuts stayed open.

Law enforcement asked the chain to keep some restaurants open in locked-down communities to provide hot coffee and food to police and other emergency workers, including in Watertown, the focus of the search for the bombing suspect. Dunkin’ is providing its products to them for free.
Cronyism amidst the police state? Think of free lunches for authorities. No wonder the allure of the police state. 

Meanwhile while media blares about the virtues of capturing suspects of the Boston bombing, the US Senate passed a Cyber 'privacy-infringement' law without much ado from the public.

Former Texas Congressman Ron Paul writes,
While it did not receive nearly as much attention as the debate on gun control, the House of Representatives passed legislation with significant implications for individual liberty: the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA). CISPA proponents claim that the legislation is necessary to protect Americans from foreign “cyber terrorists,” but the real effect of this bill will be to further erode Americans’ online privacy.
Boston bombing as a diversion tactic?

And the Boston incident had also been used as justification for a clampdown on people’s civil liberties. More from Mr. Paul
Sadly, I expect this week’s tragic attacks in Boston to be used to justify new restrictions on liberty. Within 48 hours of the attack in Boston, at least one Congressman was calling for increased use of surveillance cameras to expand the government’s ability to monitor our actions, while another Senator called for a federal law mandating background checks before Americans can buy “explosive powder.”
If there is any clue which the unfortunate Boston Incident tell us, it is that the US seems headed towards a police state.

For instance, 1.6 billion rounds of ammo have been recently purchased by the Department of Homeland Security.

From the Forbes.com
The Denver Post, on February 15th, ran an Associated Press article entitled Homeland Security aims to buy 1.6b rounds of ammo, so far to little notice.  It confirmed that the Department of Homeland Security has issued an open purchase order for 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition.  As reported elsewhere, some of this purchase order is for hollow-point rounds, forbidden by international law for use in war, along with a frightening amount specialized for snipers. Also reported elsewhere, at the height of the Iraq War the Army was expending less than 6 million rounds a month.  Therefore 1.6 billion rounds would be enough to sustain a hot war for 20+ years.  In America.
For what? Has the DHS been preparing for foreign invasion or the Red dawn? Or alien invasion?

The Boston incident adds to many more signs of America’s transition towards a police state or the "Road to serfdom".

Meanwhile a suicide bombing in Iraq claimed 32 lives and wounded 65 more. Yet such incident hardly gets into the headlines. Why?

Also a US Senator estimates death toll from US drones at 4,700 which included civilians. The senator says because of war, collateral damage is legit. Notice the self-contradiction?  In war, any American civilian fatalities are considered immoral, but foreign civilian deaths are justified. Could such kind of cavalier thinking and actions prompted for the growth of terrorism?

Yet along with the fast expanding police state is the widening dragnet of financial repression via QE, negative interest rates, more taxes, more regulations, FACTA and etc..

Americans seem to have forgotten the admonitions of Benjamin Franklin on sacrificing liberty for safety 
They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Booming Phisix-ASEAN Equities Amidst More Signs of Global Distribution

I talked about swelling signs of distribution before my dsl connection cut me off.

In spite of this week’s majestic breakaway run by the Phisix and a robust performance by ASEAN peers, there seems to be more evidence of global distribution in motion. Some would call this divergence or disconnect.

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So far, ASEAN has been on the positive end and converging.

As of Friday’s close, the Philippine Phisix (Orange line) continues to provide leadership in the region up by .95% over the week or 19.69% nominal currency gains year-to-date.

Such remarkable advance accounts for an average monthly return of about 5.6%. At the current rate of gains, the Phisix 10,000 in 2013 is still very much in play. Of course that’s unless some exogenous event, such as the growing risks of a crisis in Japan, may prove to be an obstacle to the current manic phase.

Our regional counterparts have also been showing signs of buoyancy. Indonesia’s JCI (yellow) has been a distant second to the Phisix after this week’s 1.24% advance which accrues to a 15.79% return year-to-date. Thailand’s SET (red orange) has recaptured double digit gains up 1.19 for the week or 11.3% returns for 2013. Thailand’s SET, which earlier had been neck to neck with the Phisix, has been derailed by interventions from regulators who recently raised collateral requirements for margin trades. Malaysia’s KLCI (green) has officially popped to the positive side (charts from Bloomberg)

The Philippine Mania in Motion

In the Philippines, the manic phase seems in full motion.

The manic phase as aptly described by Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff in chronicle of their 8 centuries of financial, banking and economic crises in This Time is Different[1]:
The essence of this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crises are things that happen to other people in other countries at other times; crises do not happen to us here and now. We are doing things better, we are smarter, we have learned from our past mistakes. The old rules of valuation no longer apply. The current boom, unlike the many booms that preceded catastrophic collapses in the past (even in our country), is built on fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and good policy. Or so the story goes
A good example is the embarrassing gaffe by one of the leading broadsheets for publishing in the headlines a bogus or spoof pictorial of Time magazine featuring the Philippine President[2]. While the Philippine president did land in the Time’s list of 100 most influential people, he failed to grace the magazine’s cover. 

But the booboo shows exactly how media has functioned as mouthpieces for the government. 

More than that, mainstream media has been quick to hype on the supposed economic boom from alleged “good policies”.

Yet local media hardly covered World Bank’s latest implicit admission of emerging Asia’s bubble in progress, where the World Bank supposedly warned of “demand-boosting measures may now be counterproductive” (euphemism for asset bubbles) and that capital flows “may amplify credit and asset price risks”. Thus the World Bank prescribes that emerging Asia should put a break on easing policies[3].

In addition, local central bank chief also got accolades for taking the Philippine economy to the “stars”. 

The Wall Street Journal Blog reports[4]
Philippine’s central bank chief Amando Tetangco has taken to star gazing, of a kind, to guide the nation’s economy and so far he likes what he sees.

“The star of strong GDP growth and the star of low inflation,” Mr. Tetangco says in an upbeat interview during the Spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund. “This alignment of the stars is further strengthened by a healthy balance of payments surplus,” he said.

But it’s not all about the cosmic. The central bank boss also likes to draw on physics to explain how the quick growing South East Asian economy is faring between surging inward capital flows and risks posed by a sluggish global economy.

“I am not an astrologer but sometimes it is better to describe things like this,’ he says. Physics tell it best.
Amazing hubris.

Mr. Tetangco didn’t say it explicitly but his implication is that “healthy balance of payments surplus” serves as shield against a crisis. 

Mr. Tetangco does not distinguish between the various types of crises. While it is true that most crises has had the character of balance of payments deficits functioning as triggers to imbalances earlier accumulated that led to balance of payment or currency or exchange rate crises[5], there are other forms of crises.

They fall under the categories of debt crises, banking crises and serial defaults[6] (Reinhart, Rogoff 2011).

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The above are examples of non-balance of payment crises. Particularly they are examples of two banking crises and a sovereign debt crisis.

Japan’s domestic asset bubbles[7] in the 1980s had been forged amidst current account surpluses. The 1990 bust led to a banking and economic crisis that still lingers 3 decades after…today.

UK’s secondary banking crisis of 1974-1975 also emanated from a prior property boom or the “last hurrah of the post war property boom” as noted by Wikipedia[8], which likewise has had a current account surplus going into the crisis.

Russia’s 1998 debt crisis[9] from unwieldy fiscal deficits that led to a massive government debt build-up was exacerbated by crashing commodity prices that led to a sovereign debt default. Going into the crisis, Russia posted current account surpluses from oil and commodity export receipts.

False assumptions and illusions brought about by a credit boom will eventually be unmasked. 

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Such basking in narcissistic self-attribution glory reminds me of the Bank of Cyprus[10], one of the largest financial institutions of the recently stricken Cyprus.

In the mistaken perception that Cyprus successfully eluded the Euro crisis, and that they had become “immune” or has “decoupled” from the Eurozone, the Bank of Cyprus became a recipient of as many as 9 prestigious awards from February 2011 until September 2012[11]. As the Cyprus crisis emerged in March of 2013 or 5 months after the last award, depositors of the Bank of Cyprus may lose up to 60% of their savings[12] to bail-in the banks. Yes this is an example of a bizarre twist of fate.

I may add that for the mainstream, bubbles are after the fact knowledge.

As author Philip Coggan, and Economist contributor under the pen name of Buttonwood notes[13],
Ireland and Spain looked OK on government debt-to-GDP before the crisis but then they didn't.
And one of the haughtiest allusions has been to attribute policy success as “physics”. Such are patent symptoms of bubble mentality.

Positivist policies shaped by mathematical models will hardly extrapolate to “good policy”.

The presumption that natural science as equivalent to social science is a mistake. This has been based on faith or dogma and ego rather than reality. One cannot build on policies based on simplistic assumptions and mathematical aggregates when the fact is that the world is highly complex and where knowledge is distinct, diffused and fragmented. And because of such complexity, econometrics and statistical equations cannot model individual preferences, knowledge, emotions and value scales, since there is nothing constant in human action, especially with people’s interaction with each other or with the environment. 

Statistics are historical artifacts, relying on them means to wrongly assume the same circumstances will take hold in the future. Statistics and math alone cannot precisely foretell of the future. And policies based on statistics and math will be met with unintended consequences.

As the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises explained[14]
The natural sciences too deal with past events. Every experience is an experience of something passed away; there is no experience of future happenings. But the experience to which the natural sciences owe all their success is the experience of the experiment in which the individual elements of change can be observed in isolation. The facts amassed in this way can be used for induction, a peculiar procedure of inference which has given pragmatic evidence of its expediency, although its satisfactory epistemological characterization is still an unsolved problem.

The experience with which the sciences of human action have to deal is always an experience of complex phenomena. No laboratory experiments can be performed with regard to human action. We are never in a position to observe the change in one element only, all other conditions of the event remaining unchanged. Historical experience as an experience of complex phenomena does not provide us with facts in the sense in which the natural sciences employ this term to signify isolated events tested in experiments. The information conveyed by historical experience cannot be used as building material for the construction of theories and the prediction of future events. Every historical experience is open to various interpretations, and is in fact interpreted in different ways.

The postulates of positivism and kindred schools of metaphysics are therefore illusory. It is impossible to reform the sciences of human action according to the pattern of physics and the other natural sciences. There is no means to establish an a posteriori theory of human conduct and social events. History can neither prove nor disprove any general statement in the manner in which the natural sciences accept or reject a hypothesis on the ground of laboratory experiments. Neither experimental verification nor experimental falsification of a general proposition is possible in its field.
Growing Distribution or Divergences

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Finally signs are pointing to a growing dynamic of divergence dynamic among global asset markets.

Among major equities, US and Japan continues to post gains even as much of the world appears to turning over. Of course this is with the exception of ASEAN. 

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Despite the material year to date 9.1% gains by the S&P 500, internally the sectoral performance has diverged. Health Care, Consumer staples, utilities cyclicals and financials have boosted the S&P while materials, technology energy and industrials have weighed on the index. Perfchart from stockcharts.com

While I believe that much of the world will likely endure more pangs from growing signs of financial market weakness, it is unclear whether this will also impact the ASEAN markets whose mania phase has been running in full throttle.

This is of course unless there would be a major external financial smash up that could trigger a domino effect.

Nonetheless as market weaknesses becomes more pronounced, we should expect global authorities to jettison their “exit” meme that was really never meant to be and shift their tones to “dovish” or advocate on more inflationism. 

The recent quasi crash of gold-commodities which has been used by the mainstream as pretext to clamor for more central bank inflationism partly validates my earlier views[15].


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And in contrast to the common reaction where crashes would lead to a loss of confidence and a ripple effect or a panic contagion, the quasi crash in paper gold at Wall Street, prompted for a near simultaneous frenzied or panic buying of gold in the physical markets[16] across the globe which also attained a milestone. For instance one day sales of US gold mint reached a landmark high[17]

In short, gold-commodity markets have also been diverging.

Yet this is hardly about “deflation” under the context of “aggregate demand”, and “liquidity traps” but about the dynamics of bubble cycles.

Navigating today’s treacherous market requires prudence, as incessant interventions has rendered markets highly susceptible to magnified volatility and whose state of fragility raises the risks of bubble busts, whose trigger may emanate from anywhere.




[1] Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff This Time is Different p.15 Princeton Press 2009




[5] Wikipedia.org Currency crisis

[6] Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff From Financial Crash to Debt Crisis, Harvard University August 2011




[10] Wikipedia.org Bank of Cyprus



[13] Philip Coggan Buttonwood Rotation schmotation April 18, 2013 Economist.com




[17] Frank Holmes Gold Buyers Get Physical As Coin and Jewelry Sales Surge US Global Investors April 19, 2013