Monday, June 03, 2013

How Volatile Bond Markets May Affect the Phisix

Many are good at solving equations but not understanding them; others are good at understanding equations but not solving them ; a few are good at both understanding and solving equations; those left over who are neither good at solving equations nor understanding them, yet insist on doing mathematics, become economists. Nassim Nicolas Taleb

Swooning over to populist politics, Philippine media immediately acclaimed that the recent statistical 7.8% economic growth for the first quarter was “stunning”[1].

Behind the “Stunning” Economic Growth has been a “Shocking” Credit Boom

Let us take the “stunning” growth narrative from the Philippine government’s National Statistical Coordination Board[2]:
The robust growth was boosted by the strong performance of Manufacturing and Construction, backed up by Financial Intermediation and Trade.

On the demand side, increased consumer and government spending shored up by increased investments in Construction and Durable Equipment contributed to the highest quarterly GDP growth since the second quarter of 2010.

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The following table[3] above from the NSCB highlights the areas which supposed delivered such “stunning” growth

One would note that the growth in the household final expenditure, which represents the “demand side” (red ellipses on left table), has been significantly below the booming supply side areas particularly construction, and financial intermediation (red ellipses on right table).

Curiously and ironically, the real estate segment of the economic growth data has risen almost at par with domestic demand even as the construction sector has taken a huge leap in contributing to such statistical growth.

The table below exhibits the rate of growth of bank loans covering these sectors over the same period. 

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The BSP data reveals that bank credit growth for these sectors have been even more “shocking”.

While the banking system’s general loan growth has expanded by 15% in the first quarter year-on-year or more than double the rate of demand, construction and financial intermediation has zoomed by staggering 51.2% and 31.61% correspondingly!!!

Real estate Renting and Business Services, Hotel and Restaurants and Wholesale and Retail trade has likewise been in an astounding expansion mode. During the same period banking loans on these sectors grew by 26.24%, 12.49% and 19.19% respectively!

Earlier I said “ironic” because the 1st quarter statistical growth for the Real estate Renting and Business Services sectors grew by only 6.3% even as bank loans jumped by 26.24%. Where have borrowers from these sectors been channeling the loan proceeds?

Meanwhile the measly 5.9% credit growth in the manufacturing sector reflects on why this sector has not been a bubble.

Nonetheless the credit booming sectors now account for 53.25% of total banking loans.

Given the fantastic rate of credit growth, it would seem a puzzle why the Philippine economy grew by a miserly 7.8%.

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And it is important to realize that even as domestic demand, as measured by household consumption, expanded by 5.1%, such has “partly” been backed by credit growth. I say “partly” because only a scanty number of households have access to bank credit.

Bank loans to domestic households advanced by a “modest” 11.89% during the same period. This has been supported by the expanded use of credit cards 10.62% and a rise in auto loans 13.86%.

I say “modest” because even if household loans grew by more than double the rate household consumption, compared to the scale of bank credit growth in the supply side, the demand side credit surge looks like a cinch compared to the supply side.

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Banking loans for April mostly resonates on the same 1st quarter trend but at a lesser pace of increases.

According to the latest BSP data[4], while general banking loans has moderately slowed, year-on-year credit to the construction sector remained resilient and swelled by 56.14%. The BSP’s press release again glosses over mentioning this data. 

However credit figures seem to have eased for wholesale and retail trade 10.02, financial intermediation 15.89% and real estate related loans at 22.67%.

Meanwhile loans to the hotel and restaurant sector firmed at 23.67%. And bizarrely, the “politically incorrect” mining and quarrying sector posted a surprising 67.26% spike in loan growth.

On the demand side, household loans grew at again a “moderate” rate at 11.5%. This has been backed by “modest” expansions in credit cards (9.01%) and auto loans (16.69%).

The easy money environment has also been evident in domestic money supply conditions.

Domestic liquidity (M3) increased by 13.2% on April (y-o-y) to reach Php 5.2 trillion. As the BSP notes[5],
The growth in money supply was driven largely by the sustained expansion in net domestic assets (NDA). NDA increased by 19.7 percent y-o-y in April from 25.3 percent (revised) in the previous month due largely to the continued increase in credits to the private sector of          14.3 percent, reflecting the robust lending activity of commercial banks. Similarly, claims on the public sector grew by 11.9 percent in April after rising by 15.0 percent (revised) in March, largely a result of the increase in credits to the National Government (NG).
The Philippine government has been actively tapping the credit markets for its expenditures as both revealed in the 1st quarter and in the April 2013 data.

Yet each peso the government spends is a peso not spent by the private sector. And every additional peso the government spends means higher taxes, bigger debt and or more inflation as time goes by.

All these imply that the foundations for such “stunning” statistical growth have principally been due to ballooning credit.

And according to Investopedia.com[6] credit means borrowed money “must be paid back to the lender at some point in the future.”  In other words, such “stunning” pace of economic growth signifies a substantial frontloading of future growth to the present.

Worst, the current credit impelled growth dynamics extrapolates to a sustained massive buildup of imbalances particularly magnifying the risks of the tightly entwined or interdependent oversupply and overleverging.

Thus, take away the substance (credit), the form (statistical growth) will be exposed of its cosmetic unsustainable dynamic: Today’s manipulated boom will eventually metastasize into a bust.

Importantly behind the fanfare over such “stunning” statistical growth is the revelation of the dark side of the Philippine political economy. 

Given that the fact that the large segment of the population remains unbanked or has little or no direct access to the banking sector, (the BSP estimates that only 21.5% of households have access to banks) and where 83% of the stock market cap have been held by a few families, such credit inspired asset (property-stock market) boom which has been reflected on statistical growth, embodies of a boom vastly tilted towards political and politically connected economic financial elites.

In short, current policies represent a transfer or a subsidy to these politically privileged classes at the expense of the average Pedro or Juan.

Sad to see how the public fall prey to such disinformation, which has been disguised as economics.

Yet what people cheer for today will redound to tears in the near future.

How Media Rationalizes the Phisix Selloff

The disclosure of the “stunning” economic growth came amidst a one day heavy sell-off in the Phisix.

It was “fascinating” to see a bewildered public agonizing over how such good news could be met by a fury of sellers. Many seemed lost, as seen by comments on different social media platforms.

Beguiled by the conventional wisdom that stock market performance reflects on the real state of the economy, I said “fascinating” because the marketplace has been conditioned to see that there is no way but up, up and away for the Philippine assets.

Last week may have brought back some reality to them

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The Philippine Phisix slumped by 3.81% on Thursday May 30th partly in sympathy with Japan’s nose diving stock markets. Over the week, the Phisix lost 3.4%. Global markets have been mostly lower and such includes our ASEAN peers.

The Phisix meltdown had been rationalized by media as having been a regional phenomenon, from the prospective “tapering” of US Federal Reserve’s easing programs and from “expensive” valuations.

The above shows how current environment has turned from risk ON to risk OFF. Risk OFF extrapolates to a global, not just regional selling pressure.

And funny how the FED has repeatedly been talking about “exit” strategies from the start of the year[7], yet the supposed impact from FED communications would come only last week? Why?

In late April, chatters over “tapering” even changed to “extending bond buying”[8]. So the FED seems much in confusion as with the global markets deeply dependent on them.

The reason why tapering has been much in the news and justified as having influence to stock and bond markets have largely due to surging yields in US treasury paper claims and mortgage rates. US mortgage rates climb to the highest level in 2 years[9].

And as I have been pointing out, “after the fact” or ex post narratives as “expensive” barely explains why and how “expensive” came to be. If markets have been rational, as media and their favored analysts presume, then there would hardly be such word as “expensive” or “cheap”. There hardly will be any incidences of “parallel universes” which contrary to the consensus expectations, have been quite common features of financial markets today.

And more interestingly, reports about the contagion from Japan’s twin stock and bond markets crash had only been mentioned in passing or have been mostly muted.

The best explanation I saw as quoted by media[10] was from a multinational domestic based analyst “At the core is higher risk aversion, as evidenced by a blip in 10-year bond yields overnight”

Higher risk aversion signifies a symptom of the current or past developments. People do not just become risk averse for no reason at all or when they wake up on the wrong side of the bed.

The mainstream seems clueless on what has truly been going on.

The Mania in the Philippine Bond Markets

As I said last week[11],
Japan’s twin market crash for me serves as warning signal to the epoch of easy money.
This remains highly relevant today.
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Domestic 10 year yields did spike last Thursday. Such had been the main force to the stock market selloff as I pointed out here[12]

But it is unclear if the surge in yields is going to be a “blip” or a temporary event.

The odds are against such a claim, why?

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Rising yields have become a global phenomenon.

Since the last week of May, 10 year yields of Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia have all been exhibiting upside actions.

And as likewise pointed out last week, yields in the US, Germany, France and the crisis stricken PIGS have been ascending.

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Such dynamic has been no different to our East Asian counterparts. 10 year yields of Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and Hong Kong have all been increasing since early May.

Does any of the above suggest that higher yields have been a “blip”? And given that global bond yields have been on an upside route, why should the Philippines defy such global trends? Because of the belief in the political “this time is different” nirvana?

Secondly, Asian currencies have been pummeled also from rising yields.

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The JP Morgan Bloomberg Asia Dollar index or the ADXY is a trade weighted spot basket of 10 Asian currencies benchmarked against the US dollar[13]. The ADXY has been declining almost in correspondence with the rising yield of Asia.

Asia’s rising yields have even begun to filter into credit concerns.

As the South China Morning Post reported last week[14]:

Borrowers in Asia are seen as the least creditworthy relative to their global peers in almost a year on signs of faltering growth in China.

The Markit iTraxx Asia index of credit-default swaps traded as much as 20 basis points higher than the average of four others from around the world this month, the biggest premium since June, according to data provider CMA.

The Philippine Peso seems headed in tandem with the regional peers (Yahoo Finance). Most of the Peso’s decline has almost been in near synchronicity with the Asian currencies. The falling peso seems to have presaged the huge correction in the Phisix (stockcharts.com)

While the Peso has adjusted to reflect on global trends, the domestic bond markets apparently continues to discount or ignore international developments.

Aside from the global backdrop of rising yields, there is an even more compelling argument why low yields may not last in the Philippines.

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The above charts represent the Philippine 10 year[15] and the US 10 year yield[16]. The yield spread between the domestic and the US bonds have in the norm been about 4-5 basis points. Recently such spread has abruptly collapsed over the last month. This comes as the Philippine yield hit a record low (3.04%!! in May) and as US yields has recently surged (see ellipse). Such has been much about the ballyhooed credit rating upgrades.

As of Friday trading close, the Philippines bond yield closed at 3.54% vis-à-vis the US 2.132%, the spread has narrowed substantially to 1.408 bps. 

The Philippines’ 3.54% compares with 10 year yields of our neighbors Thailand’s 3.51%, Malaysia 3.44%, and South Korea 3.1%. This makes the Philippines within their league.

Two factors shaping the collapse of the US-Philippine spread; one frenetic yield chasing dynamic, and the other, the markets see the Philippines as having established a new order.

And unless the financial markets retain such firm conviction or confidence that the Philippine credit profile has reached or attained the standings of our far richer neighbors, then the vastly narrowed Philippine-US spread may or could be an accident waiting to happen via reversion to the mean.

Yes, these are signs of an ongoing mania today in Philippine bonds.

By the way, current Philippines yield suggests that we have significantly economically and financially pulled away from Indonesia whose 10 year yield was last at 6.1% which I am highly doubtful of.

And a risk off environment could be just the apt ingredient for this.

And last week’s yield spike could be a just precursor to the coming mean reversion.

Again a sustained risk OFF environment particularly through higher yields may serve to strengthen or falsify the market’s conviction of the newfound distinction imputed on Philippine bonds—and of the entire spectrum of Philippine assets.

This will also put the recent credit rating upgrades to a crucial test.

Nonetheless a potential bedlam in the local bond markets may hardly signify a conducive environment for the stock market.

The Relationship Between Rising Yields and the Wile E Coyote Moment

The current rise in global yields may mean one of the following or a combination of the following[17]: the receding stimulative effects of easing policies, growing concerns over shortages of capital, there could be implicit concerns over rising inflation, and finally, increasing concerns over credit risks.

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Given that surging yields of major economies seem to have inspired the global bond selloffs I suspect Japan’s crashing bond markets as having been the biggest influence which media consistently tries to suppress.

Rioting JGBs seem to herald the return of the bond vigilantes.

10 year bond yields of Germany (GDBR10 red orange) US (USGG10YR Green) the French (GFRN10 orange) and Japanese (GJGB10 red) appears to have significantly moved higher in conjunction since early May 2013. This was a month after the announced doubling of monetary base, and subsequently, a jump in April’s monetary base affirmed the direction of Bank of Japan’s policies[18].

Rising yield will tend to squeeze out heavily leveraged trades which mean that we should expect heavy volatilities or treacherous market ahead.

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Of course some markets like the US may continue to rise even if interest rates ascend. This occurred during the mania phase of pre Lehman bankruptcy boom.

But as I previously discussed[19], rising markets on greater debt accumulation amidst higher interest rates is a recipe for the Wile E. Coyote[20] moment.

Markets can continue to run until it finally discovers that like Wile E. Coyote they have run past the cliff.

This may apply to any markets including the Philippines Phisix or ASEAN.

Finally given that the torrent of bad news which in the past provoked higher markets or “bad news is good news”, the current setting appears to have failed to incite the same expectations and results.

Such difference probably means that markets don’t see sufficient outcomes from current or prospective set of actions from policymakers.

The coming days or sessions will be very interesting.

However I expect monetary authorities to resort to even bigger actions to arrest rising yields—but the consequence may not necessarily revive the risks ON environment.

Trade with utmost caution as market risks seems very high.


[1] Inquirer.net Economy grows a stunning 7.8% May 31, 2013

[2] NSCB.gov.ph National Accounts of the Philippines - Press Release PHILIPPINE ECONOMY POSTS 7.8 PERCENT GDP GROWTH May 30, 2013

[3] NSCB.gov.ph Key Figures PHILIPPINE ECONOMY POSTS 7.8 PERCENT GDP GROWTH May 30, 2013



[6] Investopedia.com Credit




[10] Inquirer.net PH stocks take a big hit; peso weakens May 31, 2013




[14] South China Morning Post Asian debtors' rising risk May 28, 2013



[17] See What to Expect in 2013 January 7, 2013



[20] Warner Brothers The Fiscal Cliff: America’s Wile E. Coyote Moment, The Fiscal Times October 15, 2012

Abenomics: Will Japan Face a Debt Crisis Soon?

I am in a Japan debt crisis watch. I am very concerned that Japan may fall into a crisis that may drag the world[1] soon. 

That’s if Japan’s bond markets will remain in convulsion which I fear might be sustained.

For the past two weeks, each time the yield of Japan’s 10 year bond encroaches on the .90% level, Japan’s stock markets tailspins. And the .9% levels seem as the watermark for BoJ’s interventions.

The attempt to generate price inflation while expecting a docile bond market represents a head-on train collision between wishful thinking and economic reality.

I am defying what the IMF sees as “a promising start[2]”.

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From my perspective, there seems no way out for Japanese government and the BoJ. It’s checkmate for them.

If the BoJ desists from current policies, then the earlier boom will regress and cause a recession. This would balloon the widening chasm of fiscal deficits as tax revenues sink amidst growing government expenditures[3]. With a decline in domestic bond buyers, and insufficient foreign demand to cover for such shortfall, the Japanese government will have little choice but to step in or declare default.

If instead the BoJ continues with the current program of doubling of monetary base, the turmoil in the bond markets will likely continue as bond holders seek to preserve their savings from such policies designed to ignite price inflation or to confiscate the purchasing power of yen holders through the “inflation tax”.

As expected, banks were reported to have pared down their JGBs holdings by 10.8% in April[4]

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Given the huge near quadrillion yen (¥909 trillion-see top pane) of JGBs[5], the BoJ will likely run out of ammo to support the bond markets sooner rather than later.

It’s hard to become bullish the Japanese financial markets considering that banks hold 42.7% of JGB outstanding, life and non life insurance 19.2%, public pensions 7.1% and pension funds 3% as of December 2012. These numbers are certainly significantly less now.

Yet these financial institutions are candidates for insolvency once JGBs crashes and burns. And the huge debt burden severely limits the Japanese government from further rescues unless officials would be willing face the risks of hyperinflation.

The Japanese government would mostly call on the US government via the US Federal Reserve to assist or even perhaps to her geopolitical rival China.

Finally if BoJ adds more to the current policy, these may buy sometime. Or maybe not.

A bigger asset purchasing program would lead to greater inflation expectations. This will force more bondholders to scamper for safety. This means a bigger stampede out of JGBs which will likewise translate to inadequate bond market interventions. Thus the feedback loop between inflation expectations and perceived government interventions by the market.

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The Japanese government’s tax revenues have been estimated by the Ministry of Finance at ¥ 43.1 trillion for 2013. National debt service accounts for ¥ 22.241 trillion which accounts for 24% of the general account budget or 51.4% of tax and stamp revenues. This may have been computed using perhaps less than 1%, if based on the yields of 10 year bonds. Thus a spike of interest rates to 2% will most likely wipe out the Japanese government’s ability and capacity to pay her obligations.

A debt crisis in Japan will ripple through the world.

Since the banking sector would likely be the biggest casualty, banks and other financial firms or other entities with yen-JGB exposure from other nations will also get hit.

While the Philippine central bank, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, has record Gross International Reserves (GIR), 84% has reportedly been allotted to foreign (currency) investments, about 10.6% has been yen denominated.

From the BSP’s annual report[6]:
In terms of currency composition, majority or about 79.1 percent of the end-December GIR (excluding gold) were denominated in US dollars. Meanwhile, 10.6 percent of the reserves were in yen, 4.2 percent in euro and the remaining balance of 6.1 percent were in SDR and other currencies.
So whether via yen or yen based JGBs, this just shows how values of reserves can easily be eroded once a crisis sets in. 

And despite their territorial squabbles, the Chinese government also remains as one of the biggest holders of JGBs[7]. So China is also vulnerable to a small haircut on their reserves if Japan defaults (directly and indirectly) 

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And given the constrained options of the Japanese government, I think that they could or most likely resort to the Cyprus bail-in model. They may be targeting part of the ¥1,230 trillion for bank deposits haircuts. Poor households[8] (as of December 2012)

I hope I am wrong about all these. But it pays to take the necessary precaution.

Until the chaos in the JGB markets calms, global financial markets are likely to operate under the umbrage of volatility risks.





[3] Ministry of Finance Japan's Fiscal Condition January 2013


[5] Quarterly Newsletter of the Ministry of Finance, Japan "Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing" of BOJ and trends of JGB Market Ministry of Finance April 2013

[6] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas 2012 Annual Report


Saturday, June 01, 2013

Quote of the Day: Humility—A Disappearing Virtue?

Please note that by humility, I don’t mean self-deprecation. Humility doesn’t mean thinking less of yourself. It means putting yourself in proper perspective. It means you don’t presume to know more than you do. This was the central lesson of the classic essay, “I, Pencil”   by FEE’s esteemed founder Leonard E. Read. If no one person in the world knows how to make a pencil from start to finish, it’s preposterously presumptuous for anyone to think that he can plan an economy or the lives of millions of people.

Pastor Timothy Keller of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City makes this keen observation: “Until the 20th century, most cultures held that having too high an opinion of oneself was the root of most of the world’s troubles. Misbehavior from drug addiction to wars resulted from pride that needed to be deterred or disciplined. The idea that you were bigger or better, or more self-righteous, or somehow immune from the rules that govern others—the absence of humility, in other words, gave you license to do unto others what you would never allow them to do unto you.”…

“In our midst are people who think that if only they had government power on their side, they could pick tomorrow’s winners and losers in the marketplace, set prices or rents where they ought to be, decide which forms of energy should power our homes and cars, and choose which industries should survive and which should die. They make grandiose promises they can’t possibly keep without bankrupting all of us. They should stop for a few moments and learn a little humility.”
This is from the Foundation for Economic Education president Lawrence Reed at their website, the Fee.org

The opposite side of humility is what the great Austrian F. A. Hayek calls as the “Fatal Conceit

Monsanto’s Genetically Modified Wheat Scare

A discovery of an unapproved GM wheat strain in the US triggers a backlash on global wheat markets.
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Charts from the Washington Post

The details from Quartz (bold original)
The discovery
Last month an Oregon farmer sprayed one of his fields with Roundup weed killer, only to find that several wheat plants survived the cull. When the US Department of Agriculture investigated, it found out why: the plants were an unapproved genetically modified strain made by the biotech giant Monsanto. So-called “Roundup Ready” modifications allow farmers to apply much higher levels of pesticides without harming crops, and are common in soy and corn—but those crops are mostly used for animal feed. No GM wheat is currently approved for sale or production in the US, or anywhere else in the world. 

Monsanto was authorized to test their GM wheat from 1998 to 2005 in 16 US states. It did, but decided to scrap the variety because there wasn’t much of a market. The crop never received final approval. 

The problem 

The wheat is not probably not harmful to humans—although since testing was never completed, we can’t be sure.  Nevertheless, most of Asia (not to mention Europe and a certain portion of the United States) is firmly opposed to GM crops made for human consumption. Asia consumers around 40 million tonnes of wheat a year—about a third of the global total—and much of it comes from the US, the world’s biggest exporter. 

The reality of GM testing a product in open fields is that it’s quite easy for cross-contamination. It’s like the dinosaurs in “Jurassic Park”—no matter how well-designed the safeguards, life always finds a way to jump the fence. Doug Gurian-Sherman, a scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists in Washington, told Bloomberg Businessweek he “wouldn’t be at all surprised if there are a number of experimental genes that have contaminated and are happily being passed along at low levels in the food supplies of various crops already, but nobody’s testing. It’s really a ‘don’t look, don’t tell’ situation. We just really don’t know.”
The fallout
Japan has already cancelled its imports of some types of US wheat including white grains and animal feed. China, South Korea and the Philippines have all said that they are monitoring the ongoing US investigation, and the European Union said it was stepping up testing. China, which is expected to need much more imported wheat in the coming years, is expected to import 3.5 million tonnes in the year to June 2014. The Philippines imports around 4 million tonnes each year, according to Reuters

But the damage to US exports is only likely to go so far. As the biggest exporter of wheat (around a fifth of global supplies), the US is indispensable for wheat importers, particularly in Asia where the climate is not particularly well-suited to the crop.
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The hullaballoo over GM wheat has prompted US wheat futures to close at a three week high

My impression is that this could just be a short term scare. For today's financial markets, which have been bereft of price discovery from sustained interventions, sensational developments like this tends to magnify the emotions of greed or fear.

Fed Officials Uttered Words of Taboo: Breakout of Inflation and Unsustainable Bubbles

At the recent convention “Meeting of the Federal Advisory Council and the Board of Governors”, Fed officials spoke of words that have been considered taboo by their standards (bold mine)
There are potential risks associated with current policy. The Fed’s securities purchases have reduced mortgage yields and, to a lesser extent, Treasury yields. Current low bond yields are disruptive to management of fixed-income portfolios, retirement funds, consumer savings, and retirement planning. They may encourage unsophisticated investors to take on undue risk to achieve better returns. MBS purchases account for over 70% of gross issuance, causing price distortion and volatility in the MBS market. Fixed-income investors worry that attractive mortgage-backed securities are in very tight supply. Higher premium coupons carry too much exposure to prepayments, potentially led by new government support programs for housing. Many are concerned about the Fed’s significant presence in the market. They have underweighted MBS in favor of corporate, municipal, and emerging-market bonds. There is also concern about the possibility of a breakout of inflation, although current inflation risk is not considered unmanageable, and of an unsustainable bubble in equity and fixed-income markets given current prices.
Fed officials finally admits to the growing risks of price inflation “the possibility of a breakout of inflation” and bubbles “unsustainable bubble in equity and fixed-income markets given current prices”.

But will they act? Or will the markets force them via the comeback of the bond vigilantes?

Now on the Fed’s prospective exit program:
Uncertainty exists about how markets will reestablish normal valuations when the Fed withdraws from the market. It will likely be difficult to unwind policy accommodation, and the end of monetary easing may be painful for consumers and businesses. Given the Fed’s balance sheet increase of approximately $2.5 trillion since 2008, the Fed may now be perceived as integral to the housing finance system
In short the Fed impliedly admits that a withdrawal of the easing environment would mean that the current boom will turn into a “painful for consumer and business” bust.

As the Zero Hedge quips “Uhm... wow.”

Friday, May 31, 2013

JGB Watch: JGB and the Nikkei Rallies, Nikkei Futures looks Bloody

Back to my JGB-Japan debt crisis watch.

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JGBs made significant headway today, where yields materially fell across the curve. This has been most likely due to today’s interventions by the BoJ.

Today's recovery should serve as a breathing space in favor of the Japan’s financial markets.
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Yesterday’s drubbing of Japan’s stock market had been partially recovered. The Nikkei closed higher by 1.37%


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Asian markets have been trading mixed today. Some are still open.

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The Philippine Phisix which slumped by 3.81% yesterday also recovered by .99%. 

The bulk of the gains had been due to the Financial sector.

Nonetheless rallying JGBs should provide ample room for the Nikkei to recover.

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But this simply hasn’t been happening.

Nikkei futures, as of this writing, has expunged today’s gains and is much lower than the close from Thursday crash. This could be due to the ongoing weakness in the Eurozone.

More on the Nikkei and the Phisix on the weekend.

How the Welfare State Promotes Violence: The Swedish Edition

One of the least expected places for social upheavals to occur is Sweden.

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Image from the Guardian

Why is this happening? 

The prolific Simon Black of the Sovereign Man eloquently explains (bold mine)
Anytime a free market guy rails against central planning and socialism, there is always someone who stands up and says “what about Sweden?” 
Ah, Sweden… a socialist’s paradise… a place where taxes are among the highest in the world, few people are wealthy, and the government is involved in people’s lives from cradle to grave.

And in all of these government surveys on ‘happiness’, places like Sweden, Norway, and Denmark consistently rank among the happiest countries in the world.

Well… the veneer is cracking.

Though the coverage has been limited, there’s been rioting in Sweden over the past week, specifically in the immigrant-dense suburbs around Stockholm where 80% of the population are first or second-generation immigrants.

Dan West, my right hand man at Sovereign Man, is actually Swedish and on the ground right now in the country. He recently sent me a note describing the situation:

“Hundreds of cars are burning. Schools were set on fire. Police stations were set on fire. Businesses were vandalized. Rioters clashed with police. Hundreds of masked rioters ran wild in the streets.

Seeing photos and video of this you’d think it was a war zone in some unstable part of the world, not Stockholm.

Allegedly it started last week because the police fatally shot a 69-year-old man who wielded a machete in public. Now people are angry and destroying things.

Swedish politicians say the root causes of these riots are inequality of the immigrant minorities.

Bear in mind, this is a place so obsessed with equality that the words “him” and “her” have been blended into “hem”… and taxpayers fork over 70% of their income to ensure that everyone can live to an equal level.

But to those of us living outside of this statist bubble, the real problem is obvious: however well-intentioned they may be, welfare states almost always attract people who want to be taken care of at the expense of others.

And ultimately this engenders serious conflict… between those who are on the receiving end, and those on the paying end.

Occasionally this conflict becomes violent. And that’s exactly what’s been playing out.

The government has all sorts of propaganda to influence the way Swedes view the welfare state and convince us that we should pay huge taxes to support others.

In other words, we should not be economically free so that others can live for free. This is the definition of a welfare state.

And in addition to such ‘thought controls’, the Swedish government also rules with capital controls, people controls, and media controls.

The government here tries to churn citizens out as if we’re widgets coming off a factory line, influencing everything from what we think to how we spend our time.

Yet despite such a finely-tuned system, the capital suburbs practically turned into a war zones over the past week.

The politicians here claim it can all be fixed with more redistribution of wealth. It’s not enough that the average working Swede pays ~70% in taxes; if only they could extract 80% or 90% in taxes, they could solve everything!

If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

People have the wrong idea of this place. It is not a well-functioning welfare state. Any system based on giving people something for nothing, and sticking hard-working, productive citizens with the bill, is doomed to fail. Sweden is no exception.

People in North America who are rapidly being dragged into a welfare state should pay very close attention… because this is the future that awaits.”
The Zero Hedge adds more to the Swedish Welfare dilemma:
The recent riots in Stockholm may highlight widening divisions within Swedish society generated by rising inequality, cuts in welfare spending and a failure to integrate immigrants. Inequality has increased the most in Sweden of any OECD member country over the past 25 years.

Inequality
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Inequality has increased by one-third since 1985, according to the OECD. Sweden has dropped to 10th place from first in 1995 in the OECD’s ranking of income distribution after the nation’s Gini coefficient rose to 0.27 from 0.21.The average income of the top 10 percent of income earners was more than six times that of the bottom 10 percent in 2008. That compares with a ratio of about four to one during the 1990s.

Immigration
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The incidence of child poverty is more than five times as common to people whose parents were born outside Sweden, a report from Save the Children Sweden shows. Those born outside the country account for 14.3 percent of the population of 9.1 million. Sweden ranked fourth in terms of the total number of asylum seekers and second in terms of the number of asylum seekers relative to the population, according to UN data comparing 44 countries.

Employment Gap
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Sweden has one of the largest employment gaps between natives and foreign-born residents of any OECD country. Employment rates between local and immigrant workers differ by more than 30 percentage points in some areas, according to Statistics Sweden. The unemployment rate among immigrants from countries outside the EU was 16.5 percent in 2011, compared with 5.7 percent for native Swedes, Statistics Sweden says.

Redistribution
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Sweden’s welfare state has been squeezed by about 140 billion kronor of tax cuts since 2006, Eurostat data show. That has contributed to tax revenue as a share of GDP falling to 44.3 percent, below Denmark’s figure of 47.7 percent in 2011. Income taxes and cash benefits play a greater role in redistributing income in Sweden, reducing inequality by about 30 percent, compared with an OECD average of 25 percent.
A society that depends heavily on welfare state produces both political and income inequality as revealed by the brewing frictions between natives and foreign born residents in Sweden.
Yet the welfare state has been enabled and facilitated by debt and inflation which are the pillars of the paper money system.

As the great Ludwig von Mises wrote in Liberty and Property:
The welfare state with its methods of easy money, credit expansion and undisguised inflation continually takes bites out of all claims payable in units of the nation’s legal tender. The self-styled champions of the common man are still guided by the obsolete idea that a policy that favors the debtors at the expense of the creditors is very beneficial to the majority of the people. Their inability to comprehend the essential characteristics of the market economy manifests itself also in their failure to see the obvious fact that those whom they feign to aid are creditors in their capacity as savers, policy holders, and owners of bonds.
Today’s global polices have clearly been designed to favor the debtors over creditors. Such been primarily meant to boost the insolvent welfare states, their clients, patrons (political agents, banking system) and other related interests (cronies).

Nonetheless when parasites dominate the hosts, as revealed by the immense and unsustainable accretion of government debts and by the intensifying use of financial repression (negative interest rates, QE) that ”bites out of all claims payable in units of the nation’s legal tender”, such are signs of desperation that exposes the growing fragility and vulnerability of the welfare state which has painted itself to a corner. 

The Santa Claus principle is in a self-liquidates mode

Events in Sweden is a harbinger of things to come.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

JGB Watch: Nikkei Dives by 5.15%, Yields Ease, Phisix Commiserates

Back to my JGB-Japan debt crisis watch. 

I pointed out yesterday that JGB yields reentered crash territory. At that time, Nikkei futures seem to have discounted this: The Japanese bellwether barely moved. But this was not to last.

By evening, Nikkei futures tumbled along with European markets.

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The Intraday chart shows the Nikkei in a gap down during the opening bell. Losses mounted until the close. The Nikkei closed at 13,589.03 down 5.15%

The dominant explanation by media of falling stocks has been due to the  Federal Reserve’s supposed “tapering”. If true, should the FED scale down, yields should rise further.

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But this has hardly been the issue last night. US 10 (TNX) and 30 (TYX) year treasuries eased as US stocks tumbled. UST 5 year (FVX) was marginally higher.

Such “tapering” has been unlikely the driver of the second bout of crashing Japanese stocks. The real force has been climbing JGB yields or Japan's crashing bond markets

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As of this writing JGB 10 year yields has been pushed back to .88%, that’s below the .92-.94 range yesterday. Yields of 5 year and 30 year bonds have also retraced.

If I am not mistaken the BoJ has set the .9% as the line in the sand for interventions.

The BoJ did intervene today. But I think that the scale of interventions has been more than what has been declared.

Importantly responding to the request of Japan’s Wall Street “to increase the frequency of its debt purchases”, the BoJ released its QE schedule for June.
1. Amount to be Purchased

Approximately 7+ trillion yen per month in principle. The Bank takes account of market conditions and conducts purchases in a flexible manner in order to ensure that the effects of monetary policy permeate the economy.

2. Bonds to be Purchased

Japanese government bonds with coupons (2-year bonds, 5-year bonds, 10-year  bonds, 20-year bonds, 30-year bonds, 40-year bonds, floating-rate bonds, and inflation-indexed bonds).
It is unclear if the BoJ will be able to cap their interventions, given the repeated attempt by the 10 year JGBs to break the 1% threshold.

I believe that the BoJ will be using up much of their programmed asset purchases just to stabilize the bond markets, which won’t be enough to cover her deficits.

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Nonetheless, Asian  markets seem to have empathized with the second series of Japan’s stock market crash. But their losses had been modest. 

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One surprising consoler of today's Japan’s crash has been the Philippine Phisix. (technistock.com)
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Many have been surprised at such selling violence despite the announcement that the Philippines posted the "best" economic growth in almost 3 years.

The mainstream overlooked that today's Phisix sympathy crash coincides with today’s spike in the yields of the Philippine 10 year bonds

This serves as an example of how interest sensitive stock markets are whether the Nikkei or the Phisix. 

And this also serves as warning to "best" economic growth underpinned by massive credit growth.


More Signs of the End of Easy Money? Brazil Raises Rates amidst Stagflation

Could Brazil’s actions of raising interest rates signify as another precursor (aside from Japan) to the culmination of the era of easy money?  

Brazil’s central bank on Wednesday confronted an increasingly acute policy dilemma with firm hand and clear voice, seeming to throw its customary caution to the wind.

In its fourth monetary policy meeting of 2013, the central bank voted unanimously to raise its Selic base interest rate by a half point to 8%. In a brief statement, the central bank said the change was “continuing with” an adjustment in interest rates that would help put inflation on a downward path.

Most analysts had expected a more modest quarter-point increase in the face of soft economic growth.

“They finally woke up,” said Paulo Faria-Tavares, managing partner of Sao Paulo’s PTX Lending consultants. “But they need to stay awake or it won’t work.”

The central bank’s policy dilemma became unexpectedly acute earlier Wednesday, when the government’s IBGE statistics bureau released first quarter economic growth figures. The data showed disappointing first quarter growth of only 0.6%. Most analysts had predicted 0.9% growth.

But slower growth is coming at the same time as rising inflation. Brazil’s 12-month inflation rate is currently running at 6.46%, up from 5.84% at the end of 2012. The current rate is skating dangerously close to the 6.5% ceiling of Brazil’s inflation targeting range, which is 2.5%-to-6.5%.

Under Brazil’s 1999 inflation-targeting law, the central bank is obliged to take action whenever inflation bursts through the top of the range. That could happen at any time
Mainstream media seems to be confused about the causal relationship between growth, zero bound rates, and price inflation.

Let’s see what has been driving Brazil’s “inflation”

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Loans to the private sector has essentially more than tripled since 2004!!!


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Seen from a different perspective or as ratio to the GDP, domestic credit has been on a sharp upside trend since 2007.


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The same holds true for domestic credit provided for the banking sector.

And where has all such immense growth in credit been flowing to?

The lackluster general growth of the Brazilian economy seems hardly a manifestation of an evenly distributed credit boom

Instead, booming credit as consequence from easy money policies have channeled to titles representing capital goods, particularly stock market and the real estate.

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Brazil’s stock market as seen from the Bovespa appears to have been an early recipient as shown by the booms of 2002-2007 and 2008-2010, but not today.

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The chart above reveals of the broadening mismatch between credit and income growth. Such mismatch represents a symptom of the property bubble in progress.

The rate of Brazil’s sizzling property boom makes it one of hottest in the world.

According to an article from Forbes
When it comes to rising housing prices, no country in the world beats Brazil.

According to Knight Frank’s Global Real Estate Index, released this month, Brazil ranks No. 3 in the world and No. 1 in the Americas for rising home prices. Only ridiculously expensive Hong Kong and Dubai, which are not countries, have seen prices rise more. So in fact, no single country has seen its housing prices rise as much as Brazil.

Brazil housing prices rose 13.7% from the fourth quarter of 2011 to Dec. 31, 2012. By comparison, U.S. housing prices rose 7.3% in the same period, putting it at No. 12 in a list of 55 countries ranked by Knight Frank.

The only other country in the hemisphere to make it into the top 20 was Colombia, with real estate prices rising 8.3% in 2012.

Brazil stands out. And one reason is the low cost of financing. Or at least low by Brazilian standards. Mortgage rates are at least 1.3% a month, and loan payments are generally for just 15 years. It used to be that Brazilians bought homes in cash, but not anymore. They are financing purchases with down payments. Since 2009, when Brazilians starting buying homes on debt, mortgage lending has risen five fold, by 550% between then and 2012.

According to Brazil’s Institute for Economic Research, or FIPE, housing prices rolled into the end of 2012 in seven capital cities on a high note. Prices in all seven cities — from São Paulo to Rio de Janeiro — rose well above the inflation rate of 5%. At the start of the fourth quarter last year, at the end of September, Brazilian housing prices had already risen by 15% while inflation was not even half that.

Looking back at September, FIPE said São Paulo real estate rose 1.5%, three times higher than the national inflation average for the month.
So Brazil’s property bubbles may end soon.

But this has not been solely a private sector affair
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Even as Brazil’s government have been posting surpluses, government spending has zoomed by almost 5 times in 11 years from 2002.  Part of such spending growth has been financed by the explosion of Brazil’s external debt.

In other words, tight competition for scarce resources from the sector’s underpinning the property bubble which has been compounded by the burgeoning growth of government spending—all of which has been financed by credit expansion—has led to higher price inflation amidst stagnant growth.

In essence, Brazil endures from both stagflation and asset bubbles.

Yet the actions of Brazil’s authorities if sustained will put enormous strains on these wealth consuming activities over the near term. This will come with nasty repercussions

Every boom eventually turns into a bust, as the great Ludwig von Mises warned:
But the boom cannot continue indefinitely. There are two alternatives. Either the banks continue the credit expansion without restriction and thus cause constantly mounting price increases and an ever-growing orgy of speculation, which, as in all other cases of unlimited inflation, ends in a “crack-up boom” and in a collapse of the money and credit system. Or the banks stop before this point is reached, voluntarily renounce further credit expansion and thus bring about the crisis. The depression follows in both instances
Such applies to Brazil’s boom bust cycle.