Monday, June 10, 2013

Phisix Meltdown: A Reality Check on the Bullish Dogma

Life is not about self-satisfaction but the satisfaction of a sense of duty. It is all or nothing.--Nassim Nicolas Taleb

The Reality Check
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Except for the US, this week had been a gory one for global stock markets.

The Philippine benchmark the Phisix nosedived by 4.56%. Such loss was the second biggest in Asia, after Japan’s Nikkei. Except for Vietnam, Pakistan and Bangladesh, Asian markets hemorrhaged.

In two weeks, the Phisix surrendered 7.96%. From the highest weekly close during May 17th at 7,279.87, year-to-date gains crumbled from 25.2%, nearly a month back, to just 15.3%. 

In almost a snap of finger, confidence evaporated. What seemed as the impregnable and infallible trade has been exposed, in just two weeks, as vulnerable and fragile.

Who would have thought that the conventional wisdom of the “rising star of Asia”, “no property bubble”, or “stunning growth” could produce such a bloody outcome?

What used to be mainstream heresy now represents as a reality check.

Just a few months back, mainstream experts pontificated that the Philippine stock markets have become more resilient from external events. They implied of “decoupling”. These experts cited many reasons such as the alleged low debt levels, huge foreign currency reserves or robust statistical economic growth among many others, mostly cherry picking of data sets.

In what seems as a turnaround, the same experts now attributes today’s market weakness to “global” factors. Such implied admission uncovers the myth of decoupling as consequence to the current meltdown.

Imagine today’s meltdown comes with no debt crisis yet. How much more if a debt crisis becomes a fact?

The susceptibility to exogenous dynamics is just one factor. The more important one is the massive buildup of internal imbalances as a result of quasi permanent boom monetary and fiscal policies. In short, domestic bubbles.

Should the onslaught of the global bond market vigilantes intensify, such imbalances will unravel. This would represent the “periphery-to-the-core” syndrome of the bubble cycle.

Yet most of mainstream experts appear to be in denial. They say that this episode is temporary, represents shopping for bargains and is tradeable.

They could be right. But if they are wrong, yield chasing could metastasize into concerns over return OF capital. Denials will morph into depression.

The context of “tradeablity” depends on two things: market timing, or in specific, the chance of catching a bottom and of the degree of rally.

These are factors nobody can predict with consistent accuracy. Not charts, not statistics. These will largely depend on lady luck.

If bull markets can have extended upside actions, panics extrapolate to a mirror image. This means that if markets continue to fall then what is seen as “bargain hunting” may mutate into “catching of falling knives”. 

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Two examples: Anyone who tried to bargain hunt the mining sector (left window) from the early part of this year would have been thoroughly bludgeoned.

On the other hand, in 2007 the initial selloff on the Phisix produced a tradeable bull trap: Those who bought during the August bottom and sold at the peak of October would have ideally profited from such ideal lady luck guided trade. But for those who bought into the late “false positive” rally, they would have all lost significant amount of money, unless they cut their position.

Let me be clear: For now, I am not saying that the bear market is here. What I am saying is that unless the upheavals in global bond markets stabilize, there is a huge risk of market shock that may push risk assets into bear markets.

Bottom line: Current markets seem as in crossroads; if political actions will be able to soothe the mercurial bond markets, then current conditions represents an interim bottom.

If not, or if the conditions of the bond markets deteriorates further, then the imminence of a bear market on risk assets.

This represents an “if, then” conditionality and not a linear based prediction.

The Return of Bond Vigilantes: “All These Trades Start To Fail Massively”

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The above chart represents the changing dynamics of the risk ON-risk OFF environment.

From 2009 until 2011 (chart is abbreviated from 2010), the risk ON landscape produced a synchronized bull market in every asset class (blue arrows), particularly, the bond market (UST-US 10 year treasury price), the US stock markets (as measured by the SPX or the S&P 500), gold-commodities (Gold) and emerging market equities (MSCI Emerging markets- MSEMF). In other words, the 2009-2011 bull markets exhibited convergence and tight correlations.

But such relationship began to diverge in mid-2011 (green arrows). Emerging markets took the initial hit; then this spread to the gold-commodities market and, now to the bond markets. 

This leaves the US equity markets as the only major asset class remaining on the upside as global stock markets have recently been slammed. [Amidst today’s selloffs are booming frontier markets]

US 10 year Treasury Prices appears to have topped exactly the same period last year and has been in a constant decline. Bond prices exhibit opposite relations to the yield[1]

The US Federal Reserve (FED) announced of the expanded unlimited QE 3.0 in September of 2012[2] the objective of which has been to “put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative.”

Ironically, the FED’s QE program appears to be producing the opposite effect: an upward pressure on longer-term interest rates!

As of Friday’s close, US 10 year bonds are at critical support level or that yields are at crucial resistance level. A breakout of such thresholds will likely intensify the pace of the interest rate increases.

In contradiction to mainstream media’s post hoc narratives that the FED has been spooking the US Treasury markets, chart actions shows of a reverse causation: Rising interest rates have been compelling FED officials to make chatters about “tapering”. Or rising rates have prompted FED officials to realign their views with the market actions in order to maintain their so-called credibility.

The failed QE policies appear as being ventilated on the bond markets.

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The returns based Dow Jones Corporate Bonds Index[3] (DJCBP) has recently collapsed as yields have significantly risen. 

Even as the US stock markets have been performing strongly, REIT stocks (real estate investment trusts) represented by the Dow Jones US Mortgage REITs Index has also been plunging[4].

Meanwhile increasing rates has spilled over to the US housing seen via the Mortgage Backed Securities of government sponsored enterprises such as Fannie Mae[5] (FNMAM).

Media has been awash with the adverse ramifications of the rioting bond markets. High yields funds has posted the biggest record outflows[6], US credit default swaps rises to a two month high along with deepening losses from junk-bond exchange-traded funds[7] and carry trades endures from deepening losses.

This is noteworthy quote from the Economic Times[8] depicts of the aura of the current milieu
"Carry works as long as things don't change, and what really changed in our mind a few weeks ago was the message from the Fed," Rajiv Setia, the head of US rates research at Barclays in New York, said in a May 30 phone interview. "Once you start worrying about hikes, all these trades start to fail massively."

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An improvement in the growth outlook induces confidence and henceforth should reflect on improvements on credit standing and credit quality.

But as the chart above shows[9], rising yields and increasing prices of credit default swaps[10] (or insurance premium on debt) have been indicative instead of market concerns over credit quality, or simply put, growing default risks.

Crashing global stock and bond markets, aside from sluggish commodity markets amidst rising interest rates demonstrates that bearish forces has been at margins spreading and outflanking the bulls.

Such likewise suggest of monetary tightening which has been seen through increasing signs of liquidations and deleveraging mainly on the credit markets.
If unlimited QE 3.0 has been putting pressure on interest rates, more QE will likely add to such pressure, and less QE also compounds on the interest rate risks woes.

The FED’s QE, like Abenomics, seems in a trap, where they are in a “damned if you do and damned if you don’t” predicament.

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The very important difference between today’s bubble conditions from the US Lehman bubble days is that in the recent past, the bond markets specifically government bonds benefited from the bubble crash. Thus, governments from crisis stricken nations substantially channelled the rescue of financial institutions and of the political economy via the bond markets, thus the ballooning of government bonds[11] (upper window).

Today, the likely epicenter for a black swan event will be on government bonds first, and also on financial companies[12] exposed to government bonds as well as to asset bubbles. 

This also translates to increasing risks of a bond bubble crash or a debt crisis.
This also signifies as a backlash or the unintended consequences from previous government “bailout” policies.

These factors are hardly bullish for stocks.

As a side note, asset bubbles and statistical improvements in the US hardly suggest of a “goldilocks economy”[13], not too hot or not too cold economy which US media tries to sell.

Instead they signify as the “periphery-to-the-core dynamics” of bubble cycles and the Wile E. Coyote syndrome: inflating asset bubbles on increased leverage amidst rising interest rates—such lethal mix are ingredients for a financial “all these trades start to fail massively” accident.

Foreign Money: the PSE’s 800 Pound Gorilla

I read one so-called expert say that last week’s bloodbath had some signs of what is known as a “sudden stop”.

Sudden stops[14] which represent a slowdown or reversal of private capital flows into emerging market economies usually occur to nations suffering from large current account deficits. Sudden stops are in truth symptoms of the unwinding of internal emerging market bubbles.

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But this hasn’t been the reality with regards to the latest ASEAN selloff yet. While trade deficits have indeed been swelling, ASEAN’s current account balance[15] remains a surplus, albeit in a decline.

In today’s tightly connected global financial markets, contagions can occur even without a bubble bust. The Philippines Phisix suffered a collapse in 2007-8 even when the economy continued to post positive growth, and corporate earnings were just off the record highs[16]. In short, a parallel universe or a huge disconnect emerged between actions in the financial markets and real events.

Yet such developments are hardly accepted by the mainstream intelligentsia who continues to peddle unrealistic conventional methodologies to the unwitting and gullible public.

If bubbles in ASEAN’s real economy continue to inflate, which will get reflected on trade and current account balance, then eventually a “sudden stop” may become a reality.

Last week’s meltdown has basically been foreign driven. Emerging market bond markets and stock markets registered substantial outflows[17] and so with Asia ex-Japan Equity Funds, which according to Livemint[18], were triggered by a further dip in sentiment towards China.

The Philippine Stock Exchange posted a net weekly selling of Php 8.43 billion (US$ 200.65 million) the largest since October 2012.

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It is important to point out the biggest driver of the latest rally in the Philippine financial markets has been foreign money.

Foreign investors according to the BSP[19] were net buyers of P110.0 billion worth of stocks in 2012, more than double the P50.0 billion net purchases recorded in 2011.
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And foreign money has also underpinned the yield chasing rally of ASEAN’s local currency (LCY) denominated government bonds[20].

I found no updated data for the Philippines but I will apply deductive logic instead. Considering the general trend exhibiting significant increases of foreign money on our neighbors’ bond markets plus the recent credit upgrades, these factors should imply at least a similar pace of foreign money placements on Peso denominated bonds.

Yet if bond vigilantes continue to wreak havoc on the financial markets, then current inflows to bond and stock markets may reverse, as this week has shown.

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We understand that an estimated 83% of the market cap held by the politically privileged economic elites.

If foreign money turns sour on emerging markets including the Philippines, it seems wishful thinking to be bullish on the Phisix in the knowledge of the disproportionate or lopsided balance in favor of foreign investors (15-16%) vis-à-vis local participants (about 1%).

Should a significant number of foreigners head for the exit doors, similar to 2008 as shown in the previous BSP chart, such would be enough to push the Phisix into a deep bear market.

We cannot expect local investors to absorb the massive wave of foreign exodus for mainly the same reasons as the low penetration level of household (estimated at 21 out of 100) access to bank accounts, the informal system can hardly migrate to the formal system due to regulatory obstacles such as “Anti Money Laundering Act”, and of the inadequate understanding of finances.
Besides, even those with access to the banking system appear to be risk averse, they are most likely invested in government papers.

Sovereign papers (bills and bonds) accounts for 87% of the Php 4 trillion (US $99 billion) Philippine Peso bond markets, according to the ADB.

But again if bond vigilantes persist to unsettle financial markets, even these sovereign paper holders in the local banking system will endure losses.

And this also will apply to the government. The Philippine government has $40.3 billion of US treasury holdings as of March 2013 according US treasury[21]. This accounts for 42% of the BSP’s total assets[22] or about half 49.6% of the BSP’s Gross International Reserve, as of November 2012. A bear market in US treasuries would shrink the vaunted GIR, as well as, impose losses on the BSP.

It would take the resources of the entrenched families of economic elite to help cushion any decline.

Again this is an “if then” proposition.

The Myth of the Yen Targeting Redux

The mainstream has been fixated with the yen rather than the JGBs from which the Bank of Japan’s policies has been directed to.

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Some have come to mistakenly believe that the BoJ targets the yen. This is arrant nonsense. Look at the chart of Japan’s Nikkei and the USD-Yen exchange rate[23]. Do you think that the BoJ designed both the boom and the latest collapse of the Nikkei and the USD-yen?

Last Friday, the Nikkei has touched or encroached on the 20% threshold levels which demarcates of a bear market.

While I would say that previous boom of the Nikkei and the weakening of the yen has been a desired outcome by political authorities, they are coincidental. The ongoing reversal hardly represents a policy agenda.

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One of the supposed three arrows of Abenomics is the doubling of monetary base via the BoJ’s asset purchasing program. And since the announcement last April[24], the BoJ directly bought into JGBs (6.58%) and commercial papers (30.86%) and a scanty 1.33% of foreign currency assets as of May 31.

It is important to point out that JGBs account for 77.55% of BoJ’s balance sheets, while commercial paper and foreign currency assets represent 1% and 2.76% share respectively. So a 6.58% increase is substantial for 77% of BoJ’s assets.

Notice that the JGBs have traded rangebound from a high of nearly 1% to a low of .8% (left window).

The BoJ appears to have set an implicit target at .9% and thus the range which comes at the cost of a boom-bust cycle.

Since the announcement of the boldest experiment in modern central banking history, the BoJ’s JGB purchases allowed JGB sellers to use the proceeds to bid up on the asset markets. Along with the explicit inflation target of 2% which provided a boost to inflation expectations, direct interventions increased the monetary base from which the yen responded with a corollary sharp selloff.

The Nikkei and yen became tightly correlated arising from the feedback loop from such dynamics. Unfortunately the Nikkei punters came to realize that this was not sustainable. Ben Bernanke’s tapering talk provided the trigger for the tipping point.

Since, the yen has firmed along with a collapsing Nikkei.

Again boom bust cycles have not been the desired outcome but represents as the unintended consequence from aggressive inflationist policies.

Common sense or basic logic tells us that given the immense interest rate sensitivity from the gargantuan nearly ¥ 1 quadrillion of JGBs the BoJ will prioritize targeting JGBs rather than the yen.

Japan has nearly 250% debt to gdp, and as I pointed out last week[25],
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.
In targeting the yen, this would risks setting loose the bond vigilantes that would devastate on the JGB markets and bring about immediately a debt crisis.

Yen targeting will be like Godzilla running amuck and razing Tokyo.

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Why would the Japanese government target the yen when merchandise trade as % gdp[26] accounts for only 28.59% (left window) in 2011 while exports constitutes[27] just 15.2% of gdp (right window) over the same period?

Such notion that the government will risk a debt crisis in order to pump up exports reeks of rank foolishness and is devoid of common sense.

Nonetheless crashing Japanese stock market has prompted Japan’s PM Shinzo Abe to use political suasion to convince their largest public pension fund, Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), to invest in risk assets as I recently noted. The GPIF has announced that they will comply by selling a fraction of JGBs and shifting 1% to domestic stocks and 3% a piece to foreign stocks and bonds. This announcement lifted the Nikkei from bear market territory to close with marginal losses.

Such a shift may provide a temporary boost or relief to Japan’s oversold stock markets and some of the world’s stock and bond markets which the GPIF will acquire.

But then consequences over the clashing goals of stoking price inflation and of low interest rates remains as the proverbial sword of Damocles which hangs over the head of Japan’s financial markets, and of the potential contagion risks particularly to Asia.

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While JGBs appears to have stabilized at the costs of a volatility surge in the Nikkei and the yen, Japan’s credit default swap has been revealing of increasing stress via rising credit default swaps[28]. The Japanese government appears to be fighting the mythical hydra, where cutting of one of the monster’s many head would grow two more.

Finally the huge rally in Wall Street will likely provide a relief rally in the Nikkei and from the battered world markets. However, rising US markets and falling bond markets will eventually prove incompatible.

The Nikkei is expected to open strong as Nikkei futures suggest of a ‘gap up’ gain of 2.5%. Yet given the fantastic intraday swings during the past week, the question is will this hold?

Inflationistas are hoping that George Soros’ repositioning on Japan’s stock markets[29] would provide support to their cause.

In my view, if interest rates as expressed via the bond markets continue to rise across the world, any relief rally would be short-lived.

Everything now seems to depend on whether bond vigilantes will remain on a blitzkrieg or will be contained by forthcoming political actions.

Since we are at crossroads, where risks are extraordinarily high, do trade with extreme caution.



[2] CNN Money Federal Reserve launches QE3 September 13, 2012

[3] S&P Dow Jones Indices Dow Jones Equal Weight U.S. Issued Corporate Bond Index The Dow Jones Equal Weight U.S. Issued Corporate Bond Index is an equally weighted basket of 96 recently issued investment-grade corporate bonds with laddered maturities. The index intends to measure the return of readily tradable, high-grade U.S. corporate bonds. It is priced daily.

[4] S&P Dow Jones Indices Dow Jones U.S. Mortgage REITs Index The proprietary classification system described at www.djindexes.com defines the Mortgage REITs Subsector as real estate investment trusts or corporations (REITs) or listed property trusts (LPTs) that are directly involved in lending money to real estate owner

[5] Wikipedia.org Fannie Mae






[11] BBC News Is UK government debt really that high? December 22, 2009

[12] Branimir Gruić Philip Wooldridge Enhancements to the BIS debt securities statistics Bank of International Settlements December 2012

[13] Investopedia.com Goldilocks Economy

[14] Wikipedia.org Sudden Stop





[19] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas 2012 Annual Report



[22] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Economic and Financial Statistics

[23] Danske Bank Europe delivers the good news Weekly Focus, June 7, 2013



[26] World Bank Merchandise trade as % of gdp Google public data


[28] Tokyo Stock Exchange Credit Risk (CDS Indices)

Sunday, June 09, 2013

Warren Buffett’s Declining Popularity; Fund Raising Charity Lunch Crashes by 71%

Perhaps, like me, many may have come to realize that a shift of investing paradigm from “value” to “rent seeking” cronyism requires little financial acumen. 

And a political route towards investing means partisanship that leads to polarization and ethical erosion. Thus Warren Buffet may have been losing lots of fans as measured by the latest charity fund raising lunch.

Writes the Zero Hedge (bold original)
Demand for Warren Buffett, the investor, peaked in 2012 when an anonymous donor bid $3,456,789 for the annual Glide Foundation's eBay lunch with the Octogenarian of Omaha. Demand for Warren Buffett, 82, the Obama tax and fairness advisor, however, is a mere fraction as the stunned Glide Foundation found out last night when the final bid for the "Power Lunch for 8 with Warren Buffett to Benefit GLIDE Foundation" auction closed at the lowest possible 6 digit increment, or an embarrassing $1,000,100. This was the lowest demand to have lunch with Buffett since 2007.This is a stunning result considering that with every passing year, for obvious reasons, the likelihood of many more such "power lunches" drops exponentially. We hope Buffett-demand is not a proxy leading indicator for the stock market or else a 71% plunge is coming.
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Poetic justice?

Saturday, June 08, 2013

Video: Ron Paul: NSA Seizing Phone Records Symptom of Failure of The State

Former Congressman Ron Paul interviewed by Fox's Neil Cavuto on the intensifying spying by the US government on her constituencies.



Austrian economist Gary North on the public's backlash from the fast expanding Orwellian Big Brother state (hat tip Bob Wenzel) (bold original)
This will in no way reverse the process. The cost of monitoring everyone continues to fall. Economics teaches that when the price of anything falls, more is demanded.

Only one thing can reverse this: budget cuts for the offending agencies. Congress never imposes budget cuts, especially on the NSA (No Such Agency).

Most voters know that this invasion of their privacy is illegitimate. They also know that Congress will do nothing about it. It will hold hearings — maybe even closed-door hearings. But nothing will change.

Nevertheless, headlines like these are always positive. They help lower the public’s assessment of the federal government’s legitimacy. Ultimately, civil government is about power, but legitimacy increases voluntary compliance by the public. Every time the government loses a little legitimacy, it’s positive.


UK’s Blossoming Libertarian Movement?; The Clash of Generations

The libertarian movement seems to be blossoming among English youths.

Polls show that the young are more relaxed than others about drugs, sex, alcohol, euthanasia and non-traditional family structures. They dislike immigration, but not as strongly as do their elders. And they are becoming ever more liberal. The BSA has tracked attitudes for three decades. It shows that the young are now far more tolerant of homosexuality, for example, than were previous generations at the same age.

Experimenters with new technologies, fashions and ideas, young people in Britain and elsewhere have long tweaked established social institutions. But their iconoclasm goes further than this. Young Britons are classical liberals: as well as prizing social freedom, they believe in low taxes, limited welfare and personal responsibility. In America they would be called libertarians.
Here is where it gets interesting:
More than two-thirds of people born before 1939 consider the welfare state “one of Britain’s proudest achievements”. Less than one-third of those born after 1979 say the same. According to the BSA, members of Generation Y are not just half as likely as older people to consider it the state’s responsibility to cover the costs of residential care in old age. They are also more likely to take such a hard-hearted view than were members of the famously jaded Generation X (born between 1966 and 1979) at the same stage of life.
The above shows of the intensifying generational conflict brought about by the welfare state.

People “born before 1939” have been the primary beneficiaries of UK’s welfare programs which originated during the 1906-1914 Liberal Welfare Reforms era.  In a Ponzi scheme, they represent the initial investors whose "return" “are “paid out of the investments of new entrants”.  

The new entrants in today’s Ponzi-welfare programs are the young generation, who plays the role of funding the entitlements of the Liberal Welfare generation, which has been intermediated by UK’s welfare state. 

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The fragile state of UK’s fiscal conditions reveals that welfare expenditures account for the 25.9% of GDP according to the Wikipedia.org.  This has substantially contributed to the UK’s deteriorating debt conditions now at 90% of GDP. The above chart reveals of the breakdown of UK’s government spending budget
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Given the increasing burden from entitlements which has been shouldered by today’s youths, welfare programs are getting to be less appreciated. The wider the generation gap, the more likely resistance on welfare policies.

Add to this globalization and the deepening of the information age,  the rise of UK classical liberals would seem like a natural outgrowth

Yet should libertarian politics deepen, this will likely worsen generational conflict at the risks of triggering social upheaval. Parasites will struggle to resist from losing their hosts.

Nonetheless UK classical liberal-libertarians seem as gaining significant grounds in terms of politics. 

The UK’s Independence Party (UKIP) said to be a democratic libertarian party headed by Nigel Farage may win next year’s European Parliament elections.

From Daily Mail
David Cameron expects the UK Independence Party to win next year’s European Parliament elections despite his pledge to hold an in/out referendum on Europe.

A senior Conservative source said it was now taken as a ‘reasonable assumption’ in Downing Street that UKIP would top the poll next May – sparking a fresh round of Tory bloodletting on Europe just 12 months before the General Election.
The UKIP also performed strongly in the latest local elections.

Nigel Farage, the party’s leader, was jubilant after it emerged that one in four voters supported Ukip in the elections in 35 councils in England and Wales.

The rise of the party cost the Conservatives three local authorities, although Ukip did not win control of any councils.
So the rising politics of decentralization or the renaissance of classical liberalism likewise chimes with the deepening of the information age.

Incidentally, in the latest protest against the Turkish government, this headline seem to herald the spreading of classical liberal-libertarian movement across the world (hat tip Cato’s David Boaz)
Protesters are young, libertarian and furious at Turkish PM, says survey

Education Bubble: 20 Laughable College Courses

The deterioration of state of politically distorted educational system can be seen from the following "innovative" lobotomizing courses

Would you like to know what America's young people are actually learning while they are away at college?  It isn't pretty.  Yes, there are some very highly technical fields where students are being taught some very important skills, but for the most part U.S. college students are learning very little that they will actually use out in the real world when they graduate.  Some of the college courses listed below are funny, others are truly bizarre, others are just plain outrageous, but all of them are a waste of money.  If we are going to continue to have a system where we insist that our young people invest several years of their lives and tens of thousands of dollars getting a "college education", they might as well be learning some useful skills in the process.  This is especially true considering how much student loan debt many of our young people are piling up.  Sadly, the truth is that right now college education in the United States is a total joke.  I know - I spent eight years in the system.  Most college courses are so easy that they could be passed by the family dog, and many of these courses "study" some of the most absurd things imaginable.

Listed below are 20 completely ridiculous college courses being offered at U.S. universities.  The description following each course title either comes directly from the official course description or from a news story about the course...

1. "What If Harry Potter Is Real?" (Appalachian State University) - This course will engage students with questions about the very nature of history. Who decides what history is? Who decides how it is used or mis-used? How does this use or misuse affect us? How can the historical imagination inform literature and fantasy? How can fantasy reshape how we look at history? The Harry Potter novels and films are fertile ground for exploring all of these deeper questions. By looking at the actual geography of the novels, real and imagined historical events portrayed in the novels, the reactions of scholars in all the social sciences to the novels, and the world-wide frenzy inspired by them, students will examine issues of race, class, gender, time, place, the uses of space and movement, the role of multiculturalism in history as well as how to read a novel and how to read scholarly essays to get the most out of them.

2. "God, Sex, Chocolate: Desire and the Spiritual Path" (UC San Diego) - Who shapes our desire? Who suffers for it? Do we control our desire or does desire control us? When we yield to desire, do we become more fully ourselves or must we deny it to find an authentic identity beneath? How have religious & philosophical approaches dealt with the problem of desire?

3. "GaGa for Gaga: Sex, Gender, and Identity" (The University Of Virginia) - In Graduate Arts & Sciences student Christa Romanosky's ongoing ENWR 1510 class, "GaGa for Gaga: Sex, Gender, and Identity," students analyze how the musician pushes social boundaries with her work. For this introductory course to argumentative essay writing, Romanosky chose the Lady Gaga theme to establish an engaging framework for critical analysis.

4. "Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame" (The University Of South Carolina) - Lady Gaga may not have much class but now there is a class on her. The University of South Carolina is offering a class called Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame.  Mathieu Deflem, the professor teaching the course describes it as aiming to “unravel some of the sociologically relevant dimensions of the fame of Lady Gaga with respect to her music, videos, fashion, and other artistic endeavours.”

5. "Philosophy And Star Trek" (Georgetown) - Star Trek is very philosophical. What better way, then, to learn philosophy, than to watch Star Trek, read philosophy, and hash it all out in class? That's the plan. This course is basically an introduction to certain topics in metaphysics and epistemology philosophy, centered around major philosophical questions that come up again and again in Star Trek. In conjunction with watching Star Trek, we will read excerpts from the writings of great philosophers, extract key concepts and arguments and then analyze those arguments.

6. "Invented Languages: Klingon and Beyond" (The University Of Texas) - Why would anyone want to learn Klingon? Who really speaks Esperanto, anyway? Could there ever be a language based entirely on musical scales? Using constructed/invented languages as a vehicle, we will try to answer these questions as we discuss current ideas about linguistic theory, especially ideas surrounding the interaction of language and society. For example, what is it about the structure of Klingon that makes it look so "alien"? What was it about early 20th century Europe that spawned so many so-called "universal" languages? Can a language be inherently sexist? We will consider constructed/invented languages from a variety of viewpoints, such as languages created as fictional plot-devices, for philosophical debates, to serve an international function, and languages created for private fun. We wont be learning any one language specifically, but we will be learning about the art, ideas, and goals behind invented languages using diverse sources from literature, the internet, films, video games, and other aspects of popular culture.

7. "The Science Of Superheroes" (UC Irvine) - Have you ever wondered if Superman could really bend steel bars? Would a “gamma ray” accident turn you into the Hulk? What is a “spidey-sense”? And just who did think of all these superheroes and their powers? In this seminar, we discuss the science (or lack of science) behind many of the most famous superheroes. Even more amazing, we will discuss what kind of superheroes might be imagined using our current scientific understanding.

8. "Learning From YouTube" (Pitzer College) - About 35 students meet in a classroom but work mostly online, where they view YouTube content and post their comments.  Class lessons also are posted and students are encouraged to post videos. One class member, for instance, posted a 1:36-minute video of himself juggling.
Read the rest here

No wonder the high unemployment rates.

Friday, June 07, 2013

JGB Watch: Nikkei Enters Bear Market, the Myth of Yen Targeting

Back to my Japan debt crisis watch.

The spectacular rollercoaster ride in Japan financial markets continues.

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Falling yields from yesterday, apparently had been carried over to the early session (red line marks the boundary from yesterday) where Japanese 10 year yields fell to .8%.

As of this writing, the 10 year spiked anew to .85-.86%.

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This is in contrast to the 30 year bonds which traded largely rangebound today

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On the other hand, the Nikkei began today’s session plumbing to bear market lows. 

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Near the close of the session, the Nikkei made a fantastic 500 points or 3.9% swing to the positive area and closed only marginally lower from yesterday.

The huge late day recovery apparently was prompted by reports that Japan’s biggest pension fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), announced compliance with Japan PM Shinzo Abe’s recent urging for the public pension fund company to rebalance their portfolio holdings to increase exposure on risk assets.

From Reuters:
Japan's public pension fund, the world's largest with more than $1 trillion in assets, said on Friday it would lift its weighting in stocks and cut its allocation target for Japanese government bonds(JGB) in a bid to seek higher returns.

The Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) said it would now allocate 12 percent of its portfolio to Japanese stocks, up from 11 percent previously, while lowering its JGB weighting to 60 percent from 67 percent.

The revisions are the most significant for GPIF in years and are likely to have big implications for Japanese financial markets, which have gyrated in recent weeks over the prospect of change to the fund's investment strategy.
Unfortunately, while the GPIF will indeed reduce JGBs which may have led to the current surge in yields, a shift to Japan’s equity markets as noted above will only be by a meager 1%. Thus the likely effect is short term.

So Abenomics desperately attempts to provide a boost to their stock markets by political suasion. Notice the timing to prevent the realization of a bear market?

And the bad news is that the GPIF rebalancing will be tilted towards foreign assets. From the same article:
GPIF said it would increase its weighting in foreign stocks to 12 percent from 9 percent and lift its allocation of foreign bonds to 11 percent from 8 percent.
So Japan’s biggest pension fund will essentially support foreign stocks and bonds.

Yet buying of foreign assets also discreetly implies of capital flight.

If public pension funds will seek safety overseas to preserve the purchasing power of savers, so will the private sector. Hence, the direction of fund flows from Abenomics will be towards seeking shelter abroad. A stream of capital exodus will hardly be a boost to the Japanese economy.

On the alleged targeting of the Japanese yen

Some have the impression that the BoJ’s policies have been directed towards targeting the yen.

Based on official communications this hasn’t been true (yet). I say “yet” because current policies may evolve.

From another Reuters article:
Economy minister Akira Amari on Friday repeated Tokyo's mantra that it had no intention to manipulate currency levels.

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Yen targeting also has not been the case in terms of technical actions.

The BoJ’s interventions reveal that the thrust of asset purchases has been mainly on JGBs and commercial debt papers which expanded 6.58% and 30.68% from April to May respectively.

Foreign currency reserves grew by a pithy 1.33% 

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Given that JGBs constitute the largest segment 77.55% of BoJ’s assets, a 6.58% growth can be considered as substantial whereas commercial paper and foreign currency assets account for 1% and 2.76% share.

This means that BoJ’s the 2% inflation target through the doubling of monetary base in 2 years has been directed principally towards JGBs and barely the yen (yet). 


In other words, the actions of the yen signify as symptoms, where the yen only responds to the BoJ’s direct interventions on the JGB markets (aside from the market forces)

Until the BoJ pursues direct forex interventions, it is misguided to see BoJ’s policies as targeting the yen.

Notice that I hardly include the yen in my JGB watch