Thursday, May 24, 2012

Sharp Slowdown in China’s Factory Activity Amplifies the China Uncertainty Factor

A sharp decline in China’s factory indicator last month amplifies the uncertainty over China’s economic (as well as political) conditions. The larger than expected slowdown has coincided with the recent slump of China’s demand for commodities and thus signals an adverse development.

The Reuters reports,

China's factories took a hit in May as export orders fell sharply, a private sector survey showed on Thursday, suggesting surprise weakness in April's hard economic data persists even as policymakers seek to shore up growth.

The HSBC Flash Purchasing Managers Index, the earliest indicator of China's industrial activity, retreated to 48.7 in May from a final reading of 49.3 in April. It marked the seventh consecutive month that the HSBC PMI has been below 50, indicating contraction.

A sub-index measuring output rose to a seven-month high, following a rebound in new orders in April. But other figures in May's figures were less rosy.

The new orders sub-index fell in May, reflecting an even sharper fall in the new export orders sub-index to 47.8 from April's final figure of 50.2 - pushing it back to within a whisker of March's 47.7 - data from Markit Economics Research, which publishes the index, showed.

Unexpectedly weak economic data for April released earlier this month was followed quickly by the central bank's third cut since November in the amount of cash that banks must keep in reserve, to allow more credit to flow into the economy.

This week Beijing has signalled its biggest push since joining the World Trade Organisation to boost private investment into areas previously reserved for the state sector, like rail, hospitals and energy transmission.

It also intends to fast track infrastructure investment to combat the slowdown, state media reported.

So the China’s markets await actions from the Chinese government: one, through liberalization of some formerly restricted sectors (which should be something to cheer about) and from more stimulus (which is likely to offset any gains from liberalization).

The liberalization aspect of reforms accentuates the growing influence of entrepreneurs on China’s politics as earlier discussed.

Yet the slowdown of China’s factory index highlights risks of what the mainstream has been ignoring: an imploding bubble or a financial crisis. Professor Patrick Chovanec of Tsinghua University takes into perspective such risks (hat tip Bob Wenzel) [bold emphasis mine]

In early April, Caixin magazine ran an article titled “Fool’s Gold Behind Beijing Loan Guarantees”, which documented the silent implosion of Zhongdan Investment Credit Guarantee Co. Ltd., based in China’s capital. “What’s a credit guarantee company?” you might ask — and ask you should, because these companies and the risks they potentially pose are one of the least understood aspects of China’s “shadow banking” system. If the risky trust products and wealth funds that Caixin documented last July are China’s equivalent to CDOs, then credit guarantee companies are China’s version of AIG.

As I understand it, credit guarantee companies were originally created to help Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) get access to bank loans. State-run banks are often reluctant to lend to private companies that do not have the hard assets (such as land) or implicit government backing that State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) enjoy. Local governments encouraged the formation of a new kind of financial entity, which would charge prospective borrowers a fee and, in exchange, serve as a guarantor to the bank, pledging to pay for any losses in the event of a default. Having transferred the risk onto someone else’s shoulders, the bank could rest easy and issue the loan (which it otherwise would have been reluctant to make). In effect, the “credit guarantee” company had sold insurance — otherwise known as a credit default swap (CDS) — to the bank for a risky loan, with the borrower forking over the premium.

Now putting aside what happened at Zhongdan for a moment, let’s just consider what this means. Like any insurance scheme, this arrangement only “works” if the risks are not correlated. If you insure 100 people in 100 different towns against a tornado striking, you collect premiums and then, when a tornado strikes one of those towns, you make the payout to one claimant and the premiums from the rest cover it. If you insure 100 people in the same town against a tornado, you collect premiums for a while at no cost — it looks like a fantastic business. But if a tornado finally does strike that one town, you have to pay everybody at once and you’re wiped out. That’s exactly what happened to AIG when it sold credit default swaps on mortgage-backed CDOs. As long as the housing market didn’t collapse, all they did was collect premiums. When it did collapse, they went under. Or rather, they had to be bailed out so that all the banks and other customers who had bought insurance from them — who thought they were insured — wouldn’t go bust when AIG couldn’t pay up.

The concern in China is that — like that tornado — a drop in the local property market, or a decline in exports, could hit all borrowers at once, overwhelming the local credit guarantee company and leaving the banks high and dry. The risk is exacerbated by the fact that many credit guarantee companies were capitalized with loans from the same banks whose other loans they are guaranteeing. In effect, banks are insuring themselves, or each other, and would still end up holding the bag on loan losses that are supposedly insured. (It would be interesting to know how such “guaranteed” loans are treated when regulators perform their much-vaunted stress tests on Chinese banks. I suspect these loans are considered loss-proof, because they are “insured.”)

In laying out plans for action, the Chinese government has only been engaging in “signaling channel'”, viz., talk up the markets, to boost the market’s confidence.

But with the scale of the slowdown becoming more apparent, many are expecting huge moves from the Chinese government. Yet, from the political perspective, this would seem unclear.

This means that until concrete actions will be taken, the China uncertainty factor seems like the proverbial sword of Damocles hanging over the head of the global financial markets. Caveat emptor.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Peter Thiel Pays People to Drop Out of College and Pursue Entrepreneurship

Billionaire entrepreneur and libertarian Peter Thiel pays students to drop out of college to pursue entrepreneurship.

From CBSNews.com

One of the wealthiest, best-educated American entrepreneurs, Peter Thiel, isn't convinced college is worth the cost. With only half of recent U.S. college graduates in full-time jobs, and student loans now at $1 trillion, Thiel has come up with his own small-scale solution: pay a couple dozen of the nation's most promising students $100,000 to walk away from college and pursue their passions.

See the interview below.

Some noteworthy parts of the interview… [bold emphasis mine]

Peter Thiel: We have a bubble in education, like we had a bubble in housing in the last decade. Everybody believed you had to have a house. They'd pay whatever it took. Today, everybody believes that we need to go to college, and people will pay whatever it takes.

Morley Safer: You describe college administrators as subprime mortgage lenders, in other words conmen.

Peter Thiel: Not all of them, but certainly the for-profit schools, the less good colleges are like the subprime mortgage lenders where people are being conned into thinking that this credential is the one thing you need to do better in life. And they're actually not any better off after having gone to college; they typically are worse off because they've amassed all this debt.

More Peter Thiel quotes:

Peter Thiel: I'm saying that people should think hard about why they're going to college. If your life plan is to be a professor or to be a doctor or some other career where you need a specific credential you should and probably have to go to college. If your plan is to do something very different you should think really hard about it.

Peter Thiel: I did not realize how wrong-- how screwed up the education system is. We now have $1 trillion in student debt in the U.S. That trillion dollars-- wanna describe it cynically? You can say it's paid for $1 trillion of lies about how good education is.

Peter Thiel: We have a society where successful people are encouraged to go to college. But it is a-- it's a mistake to think that that's what makes people successful.

In the interview, Mr. Peter Thiel has been criticized for advocating or pursuing “anti-education” sentiment. But such accusation represents a misplaced understanding of Mr. Thiel’s position: the growing impracticability and irrelevance of the current “screwed up” educational system.

In other words, Mr. Thiel has not been anti-education “where you need a specific credential you should and probably have to go to college”, but rather he points out that the cost benefit tradeoff of higher education has become infeasible, and worse, the quality of education has not been aligned with the “education” necessary for work. And this is evidenced by the decreasing returns of higher education.

Finally Mr. Thiel doesn’t really pay people to drop out of college to become bums. He has instead been preaching entrepreneurship to students.

To quote anew the great Ludwig von Mises on the relationship between education and entrepreneurship,

In order to succeed in business a man does not need a degree from a school of business administration. These schools train the subalterns for routine jobs. They certainly do not train entrepreneurs. An entrepreneur cannot be trained. A man becomes an entrepreneur in seizing an opportunity and filling the gap. No special education is required for such a display of keen judgment, foresight, and energy. The most successful businessmen were often uneducated when measured by the scholastic standards of the teaching profession. But they were equal [p. 315] to their social function of adjusting production to the most urgent demand. Because of these merits the consumers chose them for business leadership.

Once again Peter Thiel

Mark Zuckerberg from Facebook didn't complete Harvard. Steve Jobs dropped out of Reed College. Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard. When you do something entrepreneurial, the credentials are not what really matters. What matters is having the right idea at the right time, the right place.

Peter Thiel has definitely not been out of touch with reality.

The Rise of Mobile Banking

From the Economist

SOME 35% of consumers use a mobile phone for making payments, and 45% use one for banking, according to a recent survey of 14 countries by ACI Worldwide, a payment systems company, and Aite Group, a research firm. A group labelled “smartphonatics”—those who change their shopping, financial and payment behaviour as a result of owning a smartphone—are said to be driving demand for mobile financial services. Smartphonatics are most common in developing countries (India and China), probably because of the lack of access to traditional financial services. In India, where only 35% of adults have an account at a formal financial institution and less than 2% have a credit card, 60% are smartphonatics. In Canada, where nearly everyone has a bank account and most people own a credit card, only 7% are smartphonatics. One of the main reasons people gave for not making payments with their phone was the lack of capability. But in seven of the countries surveyed, over two-thirds of consumers said they would like to replace payment cards with their mobile phone.

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“Lack of access to traditional financial services” have been a common feature for nations with a large share of informal economy, like the Philippines. Much of these has been due to stringent Anti Money Laundering based regulations for opening of an account on traditional financial platforms.

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On the other hand, with a large penetration level of mobile phones, transfers and payments made on the mobile platform seems to be a lot more convenient, and perhaps less regulated yet, and may have contributed to the increasing use of mobile banking.

Notes the McKinsey Quarterly,

In the Philippines, for example, mobile-subscriber penetration is almost 80 percent, but banking penetration is only around 35 percent, leaving 21 million mobile subscribers with no bank account (Exhibit 1). If operators in the Philippines could bring mobile-money penetration rates among the unbanked into line with those achieved by best-practice operators elsewhere, they could acquire four million to five million new customers and add two to three percentage points of growth to their revenues. And these numbers don’t include earnings on loans and deposits, which we conservatively estimate could be a further $60 million to $80 million. Introductory mobile-money services also set the stage for additional cross-selling and up-selling in the future. In addition, eight million unbanked people in the Philippines don’t have mobile phones, and mobile money could make phone subscriptions more attractive to this segment.

I also think that the “lack of capability” in developed economies represents a temporary hurdle which will likely be resolved by the explosion of the use of tablet computers with mobile connectivity features.

Yet with surveys saying that “over two-thirds of consumers said they would like to replace payment cards with their mobile phone”, this should serve as further evidence that mobile banking is a global sunrise industry, which also represents part of the massive lifestyle and commercial changes that is being brought about by the deepening of the information age.

How to Communicate on an Internet Blackout

Should there be an internet blackout (for whatever reasons), here are some ways to reconnect.

From Liberty News Online:

Scenario: Your government is displeased with the communication going on in your location and pulls the plug on your internet access, most likely by telling the major ISPs to turn off service.

This is what happened in Egypt Jan. 25 prompted by citizen protests, with sources estimating that the Egyptian government cut off approximately 88 percent of the country's internet access. What do you do without internet? Step 1: Stop crying in the corner. Then start taking steps to reconnect with your network. Here’s a list of things you can do to keep the communication flowing.

PREVENTIVE MEASURES:

MAKE YOUR NETWORK TANGIBLE

Print out your contact list, so your phone numbers aren’t stuck in the cloud. Some mail services like Gmail allow you to export your online contact list in formats that are more conducive to paper, such as CSV or Vcard, and offer step-by-step guides on how to do this.

BROADCAST ON THE RADIO:

CB Radio: Short for "Citizens Band" radio, these two-way radios allow communication over short distances on 40 channels. You can pick one up for about $20 to $50 at Radio Shack, and no license is required to operate it.

Ham radio: To converse over these radios, also known as "amateur radios," you have to obtain an operator's license from the FCC. Luckily, other Wired How-To contributors have already explained exactly what you need to do to get one and use it like a pro. However, if the President declares a State of Emergency, use of the radio could be extremely restricted or prohibited.

GMRS: The General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) is a licensed land-mobile FM UHF radio service in the United States available for short-distance two-way communication. It is intended for use by an adult individual who possesses a valid GMRS license, as well as his or her immediate family members... They are more expensive than the walkie talkies typically found in discount electronics stores, but are higher quality.

Family Radio Service: The Family Radio Service (FRS) is an improved walkie talkie radio system authorized in the United States since 1996. This personal radio service uses channelized frequencies in the ultra high frequency (UHF) band. It does not suffer the interference effects found on citizens' band (CB) at 27 MHz, or the 49 MHz band also used by cordless phones, toys, and baby monitors.

Microbroadcasting: Microbroadcasting is the process of broadcasting a message to a relatively small audience. This is not to be confused with low-power broadcasting. In radio terms, it is the use of low-power transmitters to broadcast a radio signal over the space of a neighborhood or small town. Similarly to pirate radio, microbroadcasters generally operate without a license from the local regulation body, but sacrifice range in favor of using legal power limits.

Packet Radio Back to the '90s: There do exist shortwave packet-radio modems. These are also excruciatingly slow, but may get your e-mail out. Like ham radio above it requires a ham radio license because they operate on ham radio frequencies.

TELEPHONE:

Set up a phone tree: According to the American Association of University Women, a phone tree is "a prearranged, pyramid-shaped system for activating a group of people by telephone" that can "spread a brief message quickly and efficiently to a large number of people." Dig out that contact list you printed out to spread the message down your pyramid of contacts.

Enable Twitter via SMS: Though the thought of unleashing the Twitter fire hose in your text message inbox may seem horrifying, it would be better than not being able to connect to the outside world at all. The Twitter website has full instructions on how to redirect tweets to your phone.

Call to Tweet: A small team of engineers from Twitter, Google and SayNow, a company Google acquired recently, made this idea a reality. It’s already live and anyone can tweet by simply leaving a voicemail on one of these international phone numbers (+16504194196 or +390662207294 or +97316199855) and the service will instantly tweet the message using the hashtag #egypt. No Internet connection is required. People can listen to the messages by dialing the same phone numbers or going to the Twitter account, speak2tweet.

Alex Jones and infowars.com have a telephone number for people to listen to his radio show by phone, in case the internet goes down, or if you don't have internet. The phone in listen line is 512-646-5000.

FAX:

If you need to quickly send and receive documents with lengthy or complex instructions, phone conversations may result in misunderstandings, and delivering the doc by foot would take forever. Brush the dust off that bulky old machine, establish a connection by phone first with the recipient to make sure his machine is hooked up, then fax away.

You may not need a fax machine to send or receive faxes if your computer has a dial-up fax application.

NON-VIRTUAL BULLETIN BOARD

Sometimes we get so wrapped up in the virtual world that we forget about resources available in the real world. Physical bulletin boards have been used for centuries to disseminate information and don't require electricity to function. If you are fortunate enough to be getting information from some other source why not share it with your friends and neighbors with your own bulletin board? Cork, magnetic and marker bulletin boards are as close as your nearest dime store and can be mounted just about anywhere. And if push comes to shove you can easily make your own with scrap wood lying around the house.

Getting back online While it might be relatively easy for a government to cut connections by leveraging the major ISPs, there are some places they wouldn't get to so readily, like privately-owned networks and independent ISPs.

The Liberty Online lists more:

FIND THE PRIVATELY RUN ISPs

RETURN TO DIAL-UP

AD-HOC NETWORKING

BUILD LARGE BRIDGED WIRELESS NETWORK

NINTENDO DS

INTRANET

BECOME UNTRACEABLE

GET SATELLITE ACCESS

Check them out here

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

China’s Demand for Commodities Plummets as Buyers Default

I have been repeatedly cautioning that developments in China, which the financial markets and media seem to be ignoring, could pose as the today’s black swan (low probability, high impact) event

From Reuters:

Chinese buyers are deferring or have defaulted on coal and iron ore deliveries following a drop in prices, traders said, providing more evidence that a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy is hitting its appetite for commodities.

China is the world's biggest consumer of iron ore, coal and other base metals, but recent data has shown the economy cooling more quickly than expected, with industrial output growth slowing sharply in April and fixed asset investment, a key driver of the economy, hitting its lowest in nearly a decade.

Coal and iron ore prices could fall further before recovering towards the tail end of the second quarter, traders say, sparking more defaults or deferred deliveries.

"There are a few distressed cargoes but no one is gung-ho enough to take them. Chinese utilities aren't buying because they have a lot of coal and traders are also afraid of getting burnt. It's very bearish now," said a trader.

The defaults come on the heels of a slump in global thermal coal benchmark prices to two-year lows and increases the prospect of an even steeper fall unless China revives buying to absorb the global coal surplus as exporters ramp up production.

True, China’s equity markets over the past two days have markedly rebounded, which media attributes to pledges by Premier Wen Jiabao for a pro-growth policy (read: stimulus) but it would seem that the recent bounce may likely signify the typical oversold bounce rather than a key reversal.

China’s Shanghai index has also mirrored actions in the world equity markets. And like the Western peers, Chinese investors seem to be addicted to ‘stimulus’ and are behaving much like the classical conditioning experiment popularly known as Pavlov’s Dogs

The above account only gives additional empirical evidence of China’s steepening economic decline, although it has not yet been established if this accounts for a cyclical slowdown or signs of a deflating bubble.

While the Chinese government is expected to intervene, we need to know exactly the measures they will undertake and how the markets respond to them. And for this reason, current conditions warrant a wait and see.

US Spent $72 Billion for Climate Change Since 2008

Writes Professor Gary North at the LewRockwell.com,

Remember when global warming was called global warming? You know: back in 2001, before a decade elapsed in which there was no measurable global warming.

It’s not called global warming any longer. That was just too embarrassing, because there hasn’t any global warming for a decade. This stable temperature has taken place, despite the fact that worldwide emissions of carbon dioxide are higher.

“In light of the 2010 data, global carbon dioxide emissions have risen by fully a third since the year 2001, yet global temperatureshave not risen during the past decade. Global warming activists argue that carbon dioxide emissions are the sole or primary factor in global temperature changes, yet global temperatures show no change despite a 33% increase in global carbon dioxide emissions.”

So, the anti-warmers changed tactics. They invented a new threat: climate change.

Mankind is responsible for climate change, we are told. Therefore, the U.S. government is required to spend money to combat it, all over the world. It has no jurisdiction outside the United States, but that has not dimmed the hopes and plans of warmers

The U.S. government has spent over $72 billion to combat climate change since 2008.

This has failed. The climate keeps changing. Sometimes it’s warmer. Sometimes it’s cooler. It it refuses to cease changing.

This means that taxpayers must still be compelled by the government to do their fair share.

This means $72 billion down the sinkhole (wasted productive capital), $72 billion added burden for US taxpayers, and $72 billion subsidies for the benefit of Obama’s green energy cronies.

Abetted by the constant barrage of propaganda by mainstream media aimed at convincing the median voter, vested interest groups, who benefit from political privileges, have been screaming for more.

The Link between Austrian Business Cycle and the Black Swan Theory

In a white paper published at Zero Hedge, Mark Spitznagel, CIO of Universa Investments LP has an insightful exposition of the critical linkage between the Austrian Business Cycle Theory (ABCT) and Nassim Taleb’s Black Swan theory.

Here is Mr. Mark Spitznagel at the Zero Hedge… (bold emphasis original)

Birds of a Different Feather

On Induction: If it looks like a swan, swims like a swan…

By now, everyone knows what a tail is. The concept has become rather ubiquitous, even to many for whom tails were considered inconsequential just over a few years ago. But do we really know one when we see one?

To review, a tail event—or, as it has come to be known, a black swan event—is an extreme event that happens with extreme infrequency (or, better yet, has never yet happened at all). The word “tail” refers to the outermost and relatively thin tail-like appendage of a frequency distribution (or probability density function). Stock market returns offer perhaps the best example:

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Over the past century-plus there have clearly been sizeable annual losses (of let’s say 20% or more) in the aggregate U.S. stock market, and they have occurred with exceedingly low frequency (in fact only a couple of times). So, by definition, we should be able to call such extreme stock market losses “tail events.”

But can we say this, just because of their visible depiction in an unconditional historical return distribution? Here is a twist on the induction problem (a.k.a. the black swan problem): one of vantage point, which Bertrand Russell famously described exactly one-hundred years ago with his wonderful parable (of yet another bird):

The man who has fed the chicken every day throughout its life at last wrings its neck instead, showing that more refined views as to the uniformity of nature would have been useful to the chicken…The mere fact that something has happened a certain number of times causes animals and men to expect that it will happen again.

Bertrand Russell, The Problems of Philosophy (1912)

My friend and colleague Nassim Taleb incorporates Russell’s chicken parable as the “turkey problem” very nicely in his important book The Black Swan. The other side of the coin, which Nassim also significantly points out, is that we tend to explain away black swans a posteriori, and our task in this paper is to avoid both sides of that coin The common epistemological problem is failing to account for a tail until we see it. But the problem at hand is something of the reverse: We account for visible tails unconditionally, and thus fail to account for when such a tail is not even a tail at all. Sometimes, like from the chicken’s less “refined views as to the uniformity of nature,” what is unexpected to us was, in fact, to be expected.

II. Not Just Bad Luck: The Austrian Case

Perhaps more refined views would be useful to us, as well.

This notion of a “uniform nature” is reminiscent of the neoclassical general equilibrium concept of economics, a static conception of the world devoid of capital and entrepreneurial competition. As also with theories of market efficiency, there is a definite cachet and envy of science and mathematics within economics and finance. The profound failure of this approach—of neoclassical economics in general and Keynesianism in particular—should need no argument here. But perhaps this methodology is also the very source of perceiving stock market tails as just “bad luck.”

Despite the tremendous uncertainty in stock returns, they are most certainly not randomly-generated numbers. Tails would be tricky matters even if they were, as we know from the small sample bias, made worse by the very non-Gaussian distributions which replicate historical return distributions so well. But stock markets are so much richer, grittier, and more complex than that.

The Austrian School of economics gave and still gives us the chief counterpoint to this naïve vew. This is the school of economic thought so-named for the Austrians who first created its principles3, starting with Carl Menger in the late 19th century and most fully developed by Ludwig von Mises in the early 20th century, whose students Friedrich von Hayek and Murray Rothbard continued to make great strides for the school.

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To Mises, “What distinguishes the Austrian School and will lend it immortal fame is precisely the fact that it created a theory of economic action and not of economic equilibrium or non-action.” The Austrian approach to the market process is just that: “The market is a process.” Moreover, the epistemological and methodological foundations of the Austrians are based on a priori, logic-based postulates about this process. Economics loses its position as a positivist, experimental science, as “economic statistics is a method of economic history, and not a method from which theoretical insight can be won.” Economic is distinct from noneconomic action—“here there are no constant relationships between quantities.” This approach of course cannot necessarily provide for precise predictions, but rather gives us a universal logical structure with which to understand the market process. Inductive knowledge takes a back seat to deductive knowledge, where general principles lead to specific conclusions (as opposed to specific instances leading to general principles), which are logically ensured by the validity of the principles. What matters most is distinguishing systematic propensities in the entrepreneurial-competitive market process, a structure which would be difficult to impossible to discern by a statistician or historian.

To the Austrians, the process is decidedly non-random, but operates (though in a non-deterministic way, of course) under the incentives of entrepreneurial “error-correction” in the economy. In a never ending series of steps, entrepreneurs homeostatically correct natural market “maladjustments” (as well as distinctly unnatural ones) back to what the Austrians call the evenly rotating economy (henceforth the ERE). This is the same idea as equilibrium, but, importantly, it is never considered reality, but rather merely an imaginary gedanken experiment through which we can understand the market process; it is actually a static point within the process itself, a state that we will never really see. Entrepreneurs continuously move the markets back to the ERE—though it never gets (or at least stays) there. Rothbard called the ERE “a static situation, outside of time,” and “the goal toward which the market moves. But the point at issue is that it is not observable, or real, as are actual market prices.”

Moreover, “a firm earns entrepreneurial profits when its return is more than interest, suffers entrepreneurial losses when its return is less…there are no entrepreneurial profits or losses in the ERE.” So “there is always competitive pressure, then, driving toward a uniform rate of interest in the economy.” Rents, as they are called, are driven by output prices and are capitalized in the price of capital—enforcing a tendency toward a mere interest return on invested capital. We must keep in mind that capitalists purchase capital goods in exchange for expected future goods, “the capital goods for which he pays are way stations on the route to the final product—the consumers’ good.” From initial investment to completion, production (including of higher order factors) requires time.

By about one hundred years ago, the Austrians gave us an a priori script for the process of boom and bust that would repeatedly follow from repeated inflationary credit expansions. Without this artificial credit, entrepreneurial profit and loss (“errors”) would remain a natural part of the process, except that, for the most part, they would naturally happen quite independently of one-another.

Central to the process is the “price of time": the interest rate market. This market conveys tremendous information to entrepreneurs due to the aggregate time preference (or the degree to which people prefer present versus future satisfaction) which determines it and is reflected in it. Interest rates are indeed the coordinating mechanism for capital investment in factors of production.

Non-Austrian economists typically depict capital as homogeneous, as opposed to the Austrians’ temporally heterogeneous and complex view of the capital structure. We see this in the impact of interest rate changes. Low rates entice entrepreneurs to engage in otherwise insufficiently profitable longer production periods, as consumers’ lower time preference means they prefer to wait for later consumption in the future, and thus their additional savings are what move rates lower; high rates tell entrepreneurs that consumers want to consume more now, and the dearth of savings and accompanying higher rates make longer-term production projects unattractive and should be ignored in order to attend to the consumers’ current wants. The present value of marginal higher order (longer production) goods is disproportionately impacted by changes in their discount rates, as more of their present value is due to their value further in the future.

Variability in time preferences changes interest and capital formation. If lower time preference and higher savings and lower interest rates created higher valuations in earlier-stage capital (factors of production) which initiates a capital investment boom, this newfound excess profitability would be neutralized by lower demand for present consumption goods and lower valuations in that later-stage capital. (John Maynard Keynes’ favored paradox of thrift is completely wrong, as it ignores the effect on capital investment of increased savings, and resulting productivity—and ignores the destructiveness of inflation, as well.)

But there is an enormous difference between changes in aggregate time preference and central bank interest rate manipulation. Where this is all heading: The Austrian theory of capital and interest leads to the logical explication of the boom and bust cycle. To the logic of the Austrians, extreme stock market loss, or busts—correlated entrepreneurial errors, as we say—are not a feature of natural free markets. Rather, it is entirely a result of central bank intervention. When a central bank lowers interest rates, what essentially happens is a dislocation in the market’s ability to coordinate production. The lower rates make otherwise marginal capital (having marginal return on capital) suddenly profitable, resulting in net capital investment in higher-order capital goods, and persistent market maladjustments.

Despite the signals given off by the lower interest rates, the balance between consumption and savings hasn’t changed, and the result is an across-the-board expansion—rather than just capital goods at the expense of consumption goods. What the new owners of capital will find is that savings are unavailable later in the production process. These economic cross currents—more hunger for investment by entrepreneurs seizing perceived capital investment opportunities, and consumers not feeding that hunger with savings, but rather actually consuming more—creates a situation of extreme unsustainable malinvestment that ultimately must be liquidated.

The only way out of the misallocated, malinvestment of capital, is a buildup of actual resources (wealth) in the economy in order to support it. This could result from lower time preferences (but as we know compressed interest rates actually inhibit savings)—or of course by accumulated reinvested profits over time (but of course time will not be on the side of marginal malinvested capital earning economic losses).

Credit expansion raises capital investment in the short run, only to see the broad inevitable collapse of the capital structure. Eventually the economic profit from capital investment and the lengthening of the production structure are disrupted, as the low interest rates that made such otherwise unprofitable, longer term investment attractive disappear. As reality sets in, and as time preferences dominate the interest rates again (even central banks cannot keep asset valuations rising forever), projects become untenable and must be abandoned. Despite the illusory signs from the interest rate market, the economy cannot support all of the central bank-distorted capital structure, and the boom becomes visibly unsustainable.

“In short,” wrote Rothbard, “and this is a highly important point to grasp, the depression is the ‘recovery’ process, and the end of the depression heralds the return to normal, and to optimum efficiency. The depression, then, far from being an evil scourge, is the necessary and beneficial return of the economy to normal after the distortions imposed by the boom. The boom, then, requires a ‘bust.’”

Aggregate, correlated economic loss—the correlated entrepreneurial errors in the eyes of the Austrians—is not a random event, not bad luck, and not a tail. Rather, it is the result of distortions and imbalances in the aggregate capital structure which are untenable. When it comes to an end, by necessity, it does so ferociously due to the surprise by entrepreneurs across the economy as they discover that they have all committed investment errors. Rather than serving their homeostatic function of correcting market maladjustments back to the ERE, the market adjusts itself abruptly when they all liquidate.

What follows—to those who see only the “uniformity of nature”—is a dreaded tail event.

Read the rest below

Universa Spitznagel 5.21

I haven’t read the entire paper but the black swan-ABCT perspective has generally represented my analytical approach to the market.

And the complementarity of both theories is probably why Nassim Taleb endorsed Ron Paul, whose principles essentially represents the Austrian persuasion, for President.

Chart of the Day: Decreasing Returns of Higher Education

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From the Investor’s Business Daily

For the first time in history, the number of jobless workers age 25 and up who have attended some college now exceeds the ranks of those who settled for a high school diploma or less.

Read the article here

Politicization of any social activities eventually lead to the law of decreasing returns, higher education in the US notwithstanding.

This applies to the Philippines as well.

The information age will accelerate the deflation of this education bubble.

The Implications of China’s Direct Access to the US Treasury

Here is more proof that the Scarborough Shoal issue has been a sham

From Reuters

China can now bypass Wall Street when buying U.S. government debt and go straight to the U.S. Treasury, in what is the Treasury's first-ever direct relationship with a foreign government, according to documents viewed by Reuters.

The relationship means the People's Bank of China buys U.S. debt using a different method than any other central bank in the world.

The other central banks, including the Bank of Japan, which has a large appetite for Treasuries, place orders for U.S. debt with major Wall Street banks designated by the government as primary dealers. Those dealers then bid on their behalf at Treasury auctions.

China, which holds $1.17 trillion in U.S. Treasuries, still buys some Treasuries through primary dealers, but since June 2011, that route hasn't been necessary.

The documents viewed by Reuters show the U.S. Treasury Department has given the People's Bank of China a direct computer link to its auction system, which the Chinese first used to buy two-year notes in late June 2011.

China can now participate in auctions without placing bids through primary dealers. If it wants to sell, however, it still has to go through the market.

This only reveals how the US is in such dire financial straits to grant China's government a privileged DIRECT access to the US Treasury. This is tantamount to BILATERAL financing which now eludes the crony Wall Street “too big to fail” firms.

Cutting the middle man means Wall Street will earn less and will have less info on China-US financing deals.

On the other hand China is likely to be given special deals which won’t be known by the public.

This also exhibits the dimension of relationship between China and the US, which implies of deepening interdependencies on economic, financial and geopolitical aspects.

Of course the inference from the above statement is that the Scarborough Shoal controversy has been mostly a false flag. What you see isn't really what has been. Politicians and media has taken the public for a ride at the circus.

EU Debt Crisis: Why Eurobonds Won’t Work

A new bailout mechanism has been proposed for the Eurozone.

From the Associated Press,

Germany has again made clear its opposition to French proposals for jointly-issued bonds from the 17-nation eurozone as a way to create economic growth and ease the region's financial crisis.

At Saturday's G-8 summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel — under urging from U.S. President Barack Obama and French President Francois Hollande — signed up to a statement that called for mixing painful cutbacks with growth-promoting measures to deal with a crisis that threatens the global economy.

The leaders warned that budget deficits have to come down. But they also acknowledged that an approach that's based mostly on austerity and longer-term reforms can't help countries out of recessions this year or next.

How exactly to encourage growth has become a controversial topic among European leaders, who will meet Wednesday in Brussels to try to find common ground.

France's Hollande has pushed for issuing debt backed by financially strong countries like Germany to finance growth in weaker countries like Greece or Portugal as one solution to the problem. Germany, however, has long and firmly resisted the idea of introducing eurobonds, arguing they would lessen pressure for heavily indebted countries to get their finances in order. They would also likely raise borrowing costs for countries in better shape, such as Germany.

Eurobonds would be "a prescription at the wrong time with the wrong side-effects," Steffen Kampeter, a deputy finance minister, told Deutschlandfunk radio.

"We have always said that as a first step we need solidity in European finances, and that is the fiscal compact," a budget-discipline pact that Merkel championed and Hollande has criticized, he said.

Germany's tough stance against the idea of eurobonds came as France's new finance minister met his German counterpart for the first time on Monday.

The talk about “growth-promoting measures” is patently silly. Such political rhetoric represents newspeak, meant to delude the public from reality.

This crisis exists because the EU governments has commandeered significant share of their resources to political activities (welfare state, bailouts, transfers, bureaucracy and etc.) which represents consumption.

Since governments thrive on taxes, whom are like parasites living off from a host, government activities have NOT been established for production, which means they DO NOT promote growth.

It is COMMERCE that gives the productive economic growth.

Yet these governments are hesitant to make the required reforms to make resources available for productive commercial activities through entrepreneurship, and to make their economies competitive (e.g. labor reforms).

The reality is that each and every government expenditure comes at the expense of private commercial activities. Consumption comes at the expense of production. So there is no general economic growth. There will be growth only for crony industries and companies and on the budgets of these political masters.

The proposed Eurobond is another example of the prevailing bailout mentality. This represents another redistribution of resources from Germans and other productive EU nations to the spendthrift crisis plagued PIGS. So bad behavior will be rewarded, which is likely to encourage more bad behavior.

And that’s why there has been vocal resistance on the overtures for a bailout through a common bond by Germany, whom will bear most of the burden.

Analyst Michael Sedacca at the Minyanville nicely explains the why the mechanism won’t work…

One of the biggest reasons why a eurobond will never work is Germany. It is by far the largest guarantor for anything jointly issued in the eurozone. For the European Financial Stability Facility (or EFSF), they currently guarantee 29.06% (on a GDP weighted basis), which is by far the biggest majority. If, for example, Spain were to “step out” because they needed to take money from the facility, their share jumps to 34%.

Next, the on-the-run 10-year note from the EFSF (rated AA+) carries a coupon of 3.5% and implied yield-to-maturity (or YTM) of 2.86%. For the German 10-year note, it is 1.75% and implied YTM of 1.44% -- essentially, double what they have to pay for their own debt by being tied to the rest of the eurozone. However, they aren't directly affected by these payments because Germany and the other eurozone countries are paying with capital to backstop the new issues and make the interest payments. So there's no direct change of money flow at the German Treasury; there is just a faster depletion of whatever capital is at the EFSF.

In theory, if a eurobond were to go through, Germany would be on the hook for a hefty chunk of this base interest rate change. It gets even worse if you shorten the maturity; the current two-year German bond has a coupon of 0.25% (YTM of 0.05%) and the EFSF note is at 1%. Assuming these bonds would be weighted by GDP, on interest payments alone, Germany would be paying four times what they have to pay for their own debt.

And as I pointed out before, political redistributions through centralization of the EU will intensify political frictions

Mr Sedacca adds,

The biggest change, however, is the ceding of sovereignty. If all of the countries agree to tie themselves to the mast of the euro, the fighting and mudslinging will get even worse than it already is. As it is, when signing up for the bailout of Greece, Finland required additional collateral in order to cover their potential losses. They knew they could potentially be lending into a hole.

Of course all talk about Eurobond may actually be a cover for what is truly intended: massive money printing by the ECB

Mr. Sedacca seem to share my outlook

All of that being said, I think we will see the European Central Bank lending directly to the European Stability Mechanism to buy bad assets directly off banks' balance sheets before we see a eurobond. That will likely be met with a positive reception from the market.

At the end of the day all these kicking of the proverbial can down the road means the worsening of the crisis which is likely to set stage for massive inflation and of the ballooning prospects of the disintegration of the European Union.

Quote of the Day: Wherever there is Liberty, there is Commerce

Another gem from Jeffrey A. Tucker at the Laissez Faire Books

there is more to the task of liberty than hating and decrying the state. The other side of the coin is developing a genuine love of liberty, which implies a love of its most spectacular, people-serving feature: commerce.

Commerce keeps the world orderly and rational and free. It gives us drive and ratifies our efforts. It sparks imagination and defines its boundaries. It feeds the world, sustains and builds civilization, and unleashes the best in the human spirit. It keeps us materially connected and linked to our brothers and sisters across the globe. It makes possible, in our own time, beautiful worlds we could never dream up on our own.

Wherever there is liberty, there is commerce. And this commerce breaks down the barriers that the state erects between people. Commerce ignores borders, draws people together whom the state would like to see separated. It always tends toward the service of human needs rather than civic priorities.

Without some liberty, however restricted it might be, and the commerce it sustains society would die in a matter of weeks. The state alone sustains nothing.

Monday, May 21, 2012

How Empires Die and the End of Centralization

Professor Gary North has a splendid article on the coming end of the empire states and of the centralized form of governments…

Death of the Empire

Empires disintegrate. This is a social law. There are no exceptions.

The first well-known social theorist to articulate this law was the prophet Daniel. He announced it to King Nebuchadnezzar. You can read his analysis in Daniel 2. Verses 44 and 45 are the key to understanding the law of empires.

The Roman Empire is the model. But there is a serious problem here. There are at least 210 theories of why it fell. There are so many that even my 1976 Ron Paul office colleague Bruce Bartlett gets credit for one of them – on Wikipedia, no less. He has made the big time!

In any case, Rome did not collapse. It wasted away over several centuries, wasting the treasure of its citizens along with it.

I suppose there were highly educated people who came to the voters in the late Roman republic and said something like this: "Unless decisive action is taken now, Rome will go bankrupt." If so, they were right. But it took a lot longer than they thought.

These days, it does not take nearly so long.

An empire grows at first almost unconsciously. No one goes to the powers that be and says, "Hey! Why don't we create an empire?" It is more like the person who says this: "I'm not greedy. All I want is to control the land contiguous to mine."

In military affairs, there are economies of scale. An army of warriors makes conquest cost-effective. There are also taxation advantages. An army of tax collectors makes tax collection cost-effective. "Hand over your money" is more effective. Pretty soon, you've got an empire.

But there is a law of bureaucracy that applies to empire. At some point, it costs more to administer the bureaucracy than the bureaucracy can generate through coercion. Then the empire begins to crack. It cannot enforce its claims.

So, the growth of empire has economics at its center: economies of scale. The fall of empire also has economics at its center: economies of scale.

I think this process is an application of the law of increasing returns. In the initial phase of the process, adding more of one factor increases total output. But, as more of it is added, another law takes over: the law of decreasing returns.

Example: water and land. Add some water to a desert, and you can grow more food. Add more water, and you can grow a lot more food. There is an accelerating rate of returns. The joint output is of greater value than the cost of adding water. But if you keep adding water, you will get a swamp. The law of decelerating returns takes over. Add more water, and the land is underwater. You might as well have a desert.

This law applies to power. Add power, and you generate more income. But if you keep adding power, expenses of the bureaucracy will begin to eat up revenues. Resistance will also increase: internal and external. The system either implodes or withers away.

With only one exception in history – the Soviet Union in 1991 – empires have not gone out of business without bloodshed.

In the case of the Soviet Union, the senior politicians privatized the whole system in December 1991. They handed over the assets to what immediately became the ultimate system of crony capitalism. They divvied up the Communist Party's money and deposited it in individual Swiss bank accounts. The suicide of the USSR was "Vladimir Lenin meets David Copperfield." Now you see it; now you don't. In the history of Marxism, no event better illustrates Marx's principle of the cash nexus. It seduced Lenin's vanguard of the proletariat.

Notice the pattern of empire. It begins slowly, building over centuries: the Roman Empire, the Russian Empire, the French Empire. Then the empire either erodes or else it is captured by revolutionaries, as was the case in France (1789-94) and Russia (1917). But this only delays the reversal. It does not overcome it.

Death of the Modern Centralized States

Economies of scale shaped the development of the modern nation-state. In 1450, the governments of Western Europe were small. They controlled little territory. They were remnants of the medieval world, which had been far more decentralized.

By 1550, this had begun to change. The beginnings of the modern nation-state were visible.

Tax revenues flowed into the centralizing kingships. Trade was growing. Revenues were increasing. Weaponry was advancing. All of this had been going on for half a millennium. But, like an exponential curve, the line began to move upward visibly around 1500.

Maritime empires grew: Spain, Portugal, England. They challenged each other on the seas. Then came the Netherlands and France. The fusion of naval power and trade monopolies lured nations into competition for trade zones. The idea of free trade was centuries away, except in the academic enclave of the school of Salamanca.

The law of increasing returns was evident in this process. It paid rulers to tax more and extend the jurisdiction of the nation-state at the expense of local governments internally and foreign governments externally. The benefits accrued mostly to the political hierarchy and its system of connected families.

Economies of scale drove the process. The division of labor favored centralization. Local units of civil government could not compete.

Let me give an example from the field of historiography. The historian of colonial America can write about lots of topics: immigration, technology, family structure, town planting, economic development, intellectual trends, and so forth. He writes about the issues of life that affected people's daily lives. He cannot write about national politics until after May of 1754: the "battle" of Jumonville Glen.

The Battle of Jumonville Glen is unknown to all historians except specialists in colonial America. This is a pity, because that battle was the most important military event in the history of the modern world. It literally launched the modern world. It led to (1) the French & Indian War (Seven Years' War), (2) the Stamp Act crisis, (3) the American Revolution, (4) the French Revolution, (5) Napoleon, (6) nationalism, (7) modern revolutionism, (8) Communism, (9) Fascism, and (10) the American Empire. It was started by Virginia militia Major George Washington, age 22.

Before the ratification of the U.S. Constitution, it is both possible and wise to write about America without tying the narrative to politics. After 1788, every textbook writer is drawn like a moth to the flame: Presidential elections. He cannot narrate the text without hinging everything on the outcome in the four-year system of national covenant renewal-ratification.

We are fast approaching a day of judgment. It has to do with economies of scale. It has to do with the law of decreasing returns.

The best account of this process is a book by Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld: The Rise and Decline of the State (Cambridge University Press, 1999). He traces the history of the Western nation-state from the late Renaissance until the late twentieth century. He argues that there will be a break-up of nation states and a return of decentralization.

Read the rest here.

The transition from the decaying centralized social structures out of the law of decreasing returns is presently being compounded by the widespread adaption of massive advances from technology.

People will need ideological justifications for such transition. Remember, the world does not operate on a vacuum.

And with the democratization of knowledge through the web or the cyberspace, people’s perception, mentality and attitudes will likely adapt to favor decentralized social orders.

Futurist Alvin Toffler calls this the Third Wave. From his 1980 book,

The Third Wave thus begins a truly new era--the age of the de-massified media. A new info-sphere is emerging along-side the new techno-sphere. And this will have a far-reaching impact on the most important sphere of all, the one inside our skulls. For taken together, these changes revolutionize our images of the world and our ability to make sense of it

The Arab Spring revolts of 2011 has partly been manifestations of the combination of the law of decreasing returns on centralized social orders and of technology facilitated knowledge revolution in process.

Several welfare states in the Eurozone are in the process of a monumental collapse from a debt trap.

This will deepen overtime.

Quote of the Day: The Volcker Rule is a Bad Idea

what the Volcker Rule does is drive banking from the private sector and toward the government sector. Thus, this rule, rather than limiting credit, simply pushes banks to use funds to invest in and provide more liquidity for the government sector.

If credit is to be created by the Fed, I would rather have those funds directed to the private sector, or see banks blow themselves up with synthetic instruments, than have the funds directed toward more investments in the government sector, which will do nothing but allow the state to grow. Thus, the Volcker Rule is a bad idea.

That’s from Austrian economist Bob Wenzel.

Like the Basel regulations, banks are being directed by statute to channel private sector savings to finance the government than to the private sector.

This legislation seems to be a component of the unholy grand scheme of financial repression—the plunder of private sector’s resources for the use of politicians through the banking system. [yeah and politicians and their sycophants have the effrontery to call out on “inequality” when much of the private sector resources have already been absorbed by them.]

And this is why banks end up in cohabitation with governments, as well as, why central banks have been there to provide a backstop on them when private sector resources have been squeezed dry.

Corruption is indeed rooted on arbitrary and repressive laws.

Navigating Today’s Market Volatility: A Bird at Hand is Worth Two in the Bush

Current developments appear to have validated my projections. While I really don’t do short term predictions, I must admit to be lucky on this call.

I will be working from my outlook and recommendations of last week

Here is what I wrote[1],

And any further weakness in commodity prices will likely filter into the asset markets…

For the Phisix, the current resiliency by the heavy caps has been a noteworthy auspicious development. Yet we should not discount the likelihood of a contagion from any adverse exogenous events.

My inclination is that based on the above evidences and in the understanding that NO TREND GOES IN A STRAIGHT LINE, the Phisix will likely undergo a correction or profit taking phase.

This retrenchment, perhaps 5-10% from the peak or a low of 4,800, should be seen as healthy and normal. Should this be realized then the local benchmark will likely drift rangebound.

Of course external developments will play a big role in either confirming or falsifying this.

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The retrenchment turned out exactly as described last week, albeit too fast and too soon.

The accelerating decline of the broad based commodity market, as measured by the CRB (behind), apparently dragged the Phisix substantially lower (candle).

The local benchmark slumped by a ghastly 5.4% in just one week! And the Phisix has lost about 8% from the peak and is just over 1.6% away from the 4,800 level. Year to date the Phisix is still up 11.61% as of Friday’s close.

It must be noted that the CRB has been on a downtrend since May of 2010. But following the temporary rebound which peaked this March, the rate of the recent decline has somewhat paralleled the intensity of the selloff in September-October 2011, in scale but not in timeframe.

The commodity rout then coincided with the short term massacre of global equities.

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The seeming effect of today’s commodity slump appears to resonate with that of 2011, global stock markets have been clobbered.

It should be noted that factors driving the volatility of 2011 and today’s market stress has been different. And a further question is how long would this thrashing last?

In perspective, the decline of the Phisix signifies a worldwide dynamic that covers developed markets, the BRIC and the emerging markets.

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Last week’s carnage has been no different with our ASEAN contemporaries.

Aside from the Phisix which posted the largest loss for the week, Indonesia’s JCI (green), Thailand’s SET (yellow) and Malaysia’s FBMKLSI (red) likewise hemorrhaged down by over 3% this week.

More from last week’s letter

Yet I am LESS inclined to believe that a new high for the Phisix will be reached soon. Such should be until major central bankers will have announced their renewed support for the markets or if there have been conspicuous signs that they have been operating behind the curtains…

So far, the fact is, that the damage seen in the market internals will have to be remedied first…

The good part is that the much of the selloff has been locally driven which unfortunately has affected many momentum participants. Yet foreign buying remains net positive in spite of the carnage and may have provided cushion to the heavyweights…

Finally in the expectation of the possibility of the non-participation of central banks until June or after, this means greater volatility ahead in both directions.

In fact, the damage to the general market seems to have intensified.

Previously, the concentration of the losses had mainly been in mid-tier and peripheral issues. Last week, seller’s wrath encompassed the Phisix major heavyweights.

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Volatility has indeed been seen in both directions.

Except for Thursday bounce which reduced the overall impairment of this week’s market breadth as shown above, the broad corrosion of internal market activities over the past 2 weeks has practically chimed with the ferocity of losses endured by the major benchmark the Phisix.

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Despite the drubbing, sectoral rotation seems to have been evident last week as the distribution of losses rotated.

The major loser from last week’s funk, the Mining index was this week’s least injured.

On the other hand, last week’s second outperformer the Holding index, suffered most.

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Foreign sentiment seemed to have also soured.

This week, foreign activities showed modest NET selling, which may have likewise been reflected on the local currency the peso, which lost 1.6% this week.

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For almost every instance where the Phisix (red) encounters major downturn, the Peso fumbles along with it (green oval).

Yet this should not been as isolated to the local currency, but seen as a REGIONAL dynamic.

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The year to date chart of the Bloomberg JP Morgan Asian dollar index[2] has exhibited the same degree of pressure as the peso

On the other hand, the US dollar has once again served as the lightning rod during market shocks.

My concluding statement of last week…

Investors may raise their cash balance during rallies and buy on every episodes of panic. And in the event that any one of the major central banks declares the next steroid (the size should matter), then our strategy shifts to buy high, sell higher.

All the evidences provided above suggest that for any material recovery to occur, market internals would have to settle or immensely improve from the current conditions.

Also while there will surely be intermittent rallies emanating from vastly oversold conditions, the path of least resistance for local equities, for the moment, seems tilted to the downside until proven otherwise. I am not sure if the 4,800 level will hold.

From this point of view, to improve on what I earlier wrote, while investors may raise cash balance during rallies, buying should be done lightly on select episodes of panic.

Again such position should be maintained until we see stability in the actions of the Phisix, which must be accompanied by an improvement of market internals.

Of course, since the Phisix has been externally influenced, any improvements must be compatible with developments abroad.

And since investments are about managing economic opportunities, then there would be time for profit, and there would also be time for wealth preservation.

Until we see marked progress in price trends, market internals and actions in overseas markets, for now, a bird at hand seems better than two in the bush.

Said differently, an overweight on cash position seems to be the most prudent option in negotiating with today’s tumultuous road.


[1] See Phisix: The Correction Phase Cometh, May 14, 2012

[2] Bloomberg.com Bloomberg JP Morgan Asia Dollar Index Chart