Saturday, August 25, 2012

Video: Peter Schiff takes on Gold Bear Chartist

The following video shows of the typical differences of how market participants operate.

Peter Schiff here staunchly defends the bullish case of gold based on fundamental long term perspective against a gold (short term) bear chartist. (hat tip: Bob Wenzel)

Charts or trend patterns are usually interpreted based on the underlying bias of the technician.

Moreover, the video wonderfully exhibits the stakeholder's dilemma at work-where the incentives to secure knowledge are driven by the degree of stakeholdings.

Such conspicuous nuances can be seen from the perspective of the institutional "analyst" who lack the meticulousness in her analysis of the gold market (because she don't have exposures on them) and of "equity holders" (as represented by Peter Schiff) who has direct stakeholding on gold.

The contrast of incentives frequently leads to the principal-agent problem or ethical dilemma. It is just in this case, the equity holder has been in command of the situation and is aware of the weakness of the analyst. In usual cases, it is the latter that influences the former.












How Inflationism Undermines the Division of Labor

Technology guru and Forbes columnist Josh Wolfe writes, (bold and italics original)

Chief Investment Officer of Guggenheim Partners Scott Minerd has just noted the Faustian bargain the Fed has made with quantitative easing (a term itself in its complexity quickly confuses the masses). He notes simple bond math that shows the real risk to the Fed’s actions and the the strength of our dollar [paraphrased here]:

In 2008 pre-crisis

  • The Fed had $41B in capital and ~$872B in liabilities = debt/equity ratio of 21:1
  • The Fed’s had a portfolio with $480B in Treasuries with duration of ~2.5 years. (a useful rule of thumb is that duration of a bond x the change in interest rate = change in value of the bond)
  • Thus a 1% rise in interest rates would cause a 2.5% drop in its holdings ~$12B

In 2011 post-crisis

  • The Fed’s had portfolio of $2.6 T in liabilities = debt/equity ratio of 51:1 (up from 21:1)
  • Duration = ~8 years.
  • Thus a 1% rise in interest rates would cause an 8% drop in its holdings ~$200B
  • That decline would exceed its capital by about $150bn

From here: as Minerd’s clear logic lays out: if the economy expands, then interest rates rise, then the Fed’s holdings drop, then it might not have enough sellable assets to reduce the money supply and maintain the value of the US dollar. And then if there are doubts about the dollar, the Fed is the buyer (and printer) of last resort, setting the stage for the risk of runaway inflation. So: “To hedge against [a decline] in the dollar’s purchasing power, investors [are migrating to] gold, commercial property, and artwork.”

While these may prove to preserve capital for the individual, for society it may be far better to have these assets invested in productive profit-seeking business and financing innovation and emerging technologies, than sitting in vaults, piling up on dirt or hanging on walls.

Inflationism drives economic imbalances through the pricing system by disrupting the feedback mechanism (profit and loss to reflect on demand and supply), in conjunction with the coordination process of the allocation of resources (through the production system).

As Professor Gary North explains,

Without reliable, predictable pricing, most people would make errors most of the time in estimating what things should cost. This is as true of our decisions as producers as consumers.

Money allows us to make bids in the market for the ownership or use of scarce resources. These bids are our responses as both consumers of goods and suppliers of goods. If prices no longer convey predictable information over time, planning becomes chaotic. Producers and consumers will erroneously forecast the state of supply and demand. Our errors add up over time. We produce losses. We find that we have consumed our capital. We cannot replace what we have consumed at prices we thought would prevail.

Hedging on assets against inflation keeps capital away from productive undertaking.

More the inflationism means greater volatility, instability and most importantly reduced economic activities. Inflationism also rewards political class and their cronies at the expense of society.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Quote of the Day: Self Respect over Reputation

The optimal solution to being independent and upright while remaining a social animal is: to seek first your own self-respect and, secondarily and conditionally, that of others, provided your external image does not conflict with your own self-respect. Most people get it backwards and seek the admiration of the collective and something called "a good reputation" at the expense of self-worth for, alas, the two are in frequent conflict under modernity. Most people resolbe the tension by cherry picking ethical rules, fitting ethics to their actions.

Indeed. This stirring quote is from author and iconoclast Nassim Taleb at Facebook (link here and here).

Bank of England Study: QE Benefited the Elites

The Bank of England study on The Distributional Effects of Asset Purchases notes of the implications of Quantitative Easing (QE) on Savers

By pushing up a range of asset prices, asset purchases have boosted the value of households’ financial wealth held outside pension funds, but holdings are heavily skewed with the top 5% of households holding 40% of these assets.

Inflation is political. Inflation redistributes wealth from society to politically favored groups or the political elites, and thus, promotes wealth inequality.

In this case, inflation through QE has been aimed at supporting asset prices, which essentially accounts for the Bernanke doctrine.

The morality of inflation as the great Henry Hazlitt wrote, (The Inflation Crisis and How to Solve it p.41)

Inflation, to sum up, is the increase in the volume of money and bank credit in relation to the volume of goods. It is harmful because it depreciates the value of the monetary unit, raises everybody's cost of living, imposes what is in effect a tax on the poorest (without exemptions) at as high a rate as the tax on the richest, wipes out the value of past savings, discourages future savings, redistributes wealth and income wantonly, encourages and rewards speculation and gambling at the expense of thrift and work, undermines confidence in the justice of a free enterprise system, and corrupts public and private morals

Video: When I Grow Up, I Want To Be A Crony

Professor Mark Perry at the Carpe Diem quotes the Crony Chronicles,
After all, why be a taxpayer, when you could be a tax spender?

Philippine Informal Gold Mining Industry Booms

More evidence that the Philippine informal gold mining sector has been flourishing at the expense of the government.

From Reuters (bold emphasis mine)

Up to 90 percent of small-scale Philippine gold production is being smuggled out of the Southeast Asian country, according to estimates from officials and traders, much of it to China.

The potential revenue being lost is considerable: The Philippines, the world's 18th largest gold miner, produced just over 1 million troy ounces of gold in 2011, worth $1.6 billion at current prices. About 56 percent of that came from small-scale miners, data from the Bureau of Mines showed.

Recent tax increases leads to unintended consequences, as small scale mining activities go underground…

More from the same article

A top central bank official told Reuters new taxes on gold sales imposed last year appear to be a key factor in the alarming rise in gold smuggling. But the head of the revenue agency said in an interview the 7 percent tax on gold sales will not be rolled back and suggested better policing of the borders instead.

The Customs Department, however, told Reuters the problem has become so overwhelming it can do little about the smuggling of gold and other minerals out of the archipelago of more than 7,100 islands.

"All the production of small-scale mines, almost all, now goes to the black market, because there is no tax in the black market," said Rex Banggawan, an accountant for a small-scale mining cooperative that buys and sells gold in the mountain city of Baguio in northern Philippines. "After that, smuggling is automatic."…

The amount of gold sold by small-scale miners and traders to the Philippine central bank in the second quarter plunged 98 percent from a year earlier, according to the latest government data. By law, all gold produced by miners such as Mulato in the Philippines should be sold to the central bank at around world market prices.

It has been an accelerating trend over the past year. The data shows central bank gold purchases dropped an annual 4 percent, 76 percent and 88 percent in the second, third, and fourth quarters of 2011, respectively. It fell 92 percent in the first quarter.

Small-scale gold mining output, is the main source of the central bank's gold reserves, which hit a record high of $10.4 billion early this year.

For authorities, it would be better to “police” than to waive taxes. This assumes that smuggling or the informal sector will be curtailed by mere regulatory enforcement, yet the above already demonstrates their helplessness: note the phrase “become so overwhelming it can do little about the smuggling”

Doing the same things over and over but expecting different results has been the entrenched characteristic of politics. The essence of politics is symbolism. The impression to “do something” are actually meant to generate votes.

In reality, the purported political path to “police” gives political authorities a share in the the profits. Possibly to finance coming elections?

The problem extends beyond gold to other minerals, which are being smuggled out of the porous and inadequately policed borders of the archipelago.

The Philippines has one of Asia's richest trove of minerals with reserves of gold, copper, nickel, chromite, manganese, silver and iron worth a total of around $1 trillion.

Foreign investors are circling around one of Asia's hottest emerging markets. The $225 billion economy grew 6.4 percent in the first quarter, second only to China among Asian economies. But mining investment has been held up for various reasons, including a moratorium on new projects until Congress passes long delayed legislation governing the industry.

That has left the field largely to small-scale miners, who fall under local regulations and are often in collusion with the officials governing them.

More politicization of the industry (not limited to gold) via (partial) prohibition (EO 79), regulations and taxes translates to booming black markets, smuggling, criminality (e.g. organized crime, violence, etc...) and corruption, as well as environmental pollution.

As I recently wrote,

Informal economy, corruption, rent seeking and a general deterioration in the quality of governance are symptoms or are products of asphyxiating regulations, bureaucracy, high burdens from taxes and the cost of compliance, insecure property rights and involuntary exchanges or the intense politicization of the industry.

Nevertheless also do expect more massive illegal and wildcat mining in the 78 areas that has been prohibited from mining which should lead to environmental degradation. The people who will undertake the fly by night mining operations will likely be wards of politicians.

In the realm of politics, natural laws of economics simply vanish or will submit to the will of politicians.

Of course all these also goes to show that the public have been hoodwinked to give the incumbent government high approval ratings, when in reality, what has been providing the pivotal lift to the Philippine economy has been the informal sector.

Said differently, what has been seen as political success has really been government failure. After all, politics is all about smoke and mirrors.

China’s Mounting Glut of Unsold Goods

More signs of China’s hard landing or bursting bubble.

From the New York Times,

After three decades of torrid growth, China is encountering an unfamiliar problem with its newly struggling economy: a huge buildup of unsold goods that is cluttering shop floors, clogging car dealerships and filling factory warehouses.

The glut of everything from steel and household appliances to cars and apartments is hampering China’s efforts to emerge from a sharp economic slowdown. It has also produced a series of price wars and has led manufacturers to redouble efforts to export what they cannot sell at home.

clip_image001

The severity of China’s inventory overhang has been carefully masked by the blocking or adjusting of economic data by the Chinese government — all part of an effort to prop up confidence in the economy among business managers and investors.

But the main nongovernment survey of manufacturers in China showed on Thursday that inventories of finished goods rose much faster in August than in any month since the survey began in April 2004. The previous record for rising inventories, according to the HSBC/Markit survey, had been set in June. May and July also showed increases.

“Across the manufacturing industries we look at, people were expecting more sales over the summer, and it just didn’t happen,” said Anne Stevenson-Yang, the research director for J Capital Research, an economic analysis firm in Hong Kong. With inventories extremely high and factories now cutting production, she added, “Things are kind of crawling to a halt.”

This seems an obvious outcome from a politicized economy.

As I previously pointed out:

-Today Chinese economy has been roughly split 50-50 between state owned and privately owned enterprises

-State companies use political means of “higher taxes, stricter regulation, and bureaucratic meddling” to “drive out private competitors”

-State banks discriminate in terms of lending where “only four percent of their loans to private businesses”. Thus, the recourse of private businesses has been through the informal or shadow banking systems. Ironically, transacting with unofficial credit markets “can be a criminal offense punished by long jail terms or worse”

The implication of the above is that much of China’s present day economy remains influenced by political forces. This means we cannot trust statistical figures to show real economic growth as they may likely be manipulated for immediate political goals.

Politicization simply means State Owned Enterprises (SOE) have hardly been driven by the discipline of profit and losses, and instead have been focused on attaining goals as dictated by the officialdom. Thus, to pad up on economic statistics, numerous SOEs engaged in production that has led to the glut of unsold goods.

Since statistics have been used as guide for the implementation of policy objectives, the government’s manipulation of statistics has also added to the misallocation of resources.

Lastly, excess supply of goods are also symptoms of the recessionary phase of China’s business cycle. This has been caused by easy money policies from China’s central bank, designed to attain credit driven permanent state of quasi booms, and has been compounded by capital spending binge by the government.

As the great dean of Austrian school of economics wrote,

The inflationary boom thus leads to distortions of the pricing and production system. Prices of labor and raw materials in the capital goods industries had been bid up during the boom too high to be profitable once the consumers reassert their old consumption/investment preferences. The "depression" is then seen as the necessary and healthy phase by which the market economy sloughs off and liquidates the unsound, uneconomic investments of the boom, and reestablishes those proportions between consumption and investment that are truly desired by the consumers. The depression is the painful but necessary process by which the free market sloughs off the excesses and errors of the boom and reestablishes the market economy in its function of efficient service to the mass of consumers. Since prices of factors of production have been bid too high in the boom, this means that prices of labor and goods in these capital goods industries must be allowed to fall until proper market relations are resumed.

Surplus goods along with ghost cities and malls and the huge shadow banking system all adds up to exhibit signs of the unwinding phase of China’s bubble economy.

The inflationary boom may have segued into a financial and economic bust.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Infographic: History of Money (1821-2012)

This wonderful infographic from Goldmoney.com (Thanks to Paul Buitink of Goldmoney)


To know more about the history of money check out Murray Rothbard's What has Government Done to our Money

Quote of the Day: Artificially Constructed Countries to Fall Apart

Syria – like almost all of the countries in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia – is an artificial construct put together, completely arbitrarily, by politicians in the boardrooms of Europe. In the case of Syria, it was assembled from some of the remnants of the Ottoman Empire by the Europeans after World War I. As in neighboring Lebanon and Iraq, it's got at least a dozen major religious/tribal/ethnic groups that are loyal mainly to themselves. The idea of a Syrian nation is a fantasy. It was inevitable that eventually Syria would fall apart – just as it was and is inevitable for most of the other artificially constructed countries to fall apart. This applies to the EU now as well, for similar reasons.

This is from investing guru and philosopher Doug Casey on Syria and US foreign policies.

I think such unfolding political dynamic fits the global trend towards decentralization. Yet the transition process will hardly be smooth considering that many entrenched power blocs benefit from the current order and will resist giving up on these privileges. However, change is not only inevitable but imminent.

Video: Political Economy of US Prison Population

The following video from LearnLiberty.org explains of the political economy of the US prison population, which is the largest in the world (thanks to Learn Liberty's Tim Hedberg)

Here is a snippet from Learnliberty.org,
The United States incarcerates more people than any other country in the world—more even than China or Russia. Prof. Daniel J. D'Amico explains that as of 2010 more than 1.6 million people were serving jail sentences in America. Professor D'Amico suggests that "prisons are not what we think about when we think of America, and they shouldn't have to be." According to D'Amico, a free country should not have 1.6 million people in prison, and a fiscally responsible country cannot afford to. As Prof. D'Amico points out, it is time for Americans to recognize that the U.S. criminal justice system is desperately in need of reform


Yet many of those incarcerated have not committed crimes against humanity but have been convicted out of prohibition laws, particularly the war on drugs.

Let me re quote Econolog's Professor David Henderson
We hear a lot about the top 1%. We don't hear a lot about the bottom 1%. There are about 313 million people in America today. 1% of 313 million is 3,130,000. In our prisons today are 2,200,000 people. So the people in prison are 2/3 of one percent. And their wages are typically about 23 cents an hour. They are, essentially, the bottom 1%.

Many of them are there for violent crimes, theft, fraud, and other such things. But hundreds of thousands of them are there for buying, selling, or producing illegal drugs. The drug war has put them there. And we taxpayers are paying $30,000 a year and more to keep them there.

So let me get this straight: high-income people are paying lots of taxes so that the government can put poor people in prison and keep them poor or put non-poor people in prison and make them poor.
Thus prisoners represent the bottom 1% largely because of "feel-good" self-righteous politics.

China’s Manufacturing Slump Deepens

From the Wall Street Journal,

The preliminary HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index, a gauge of nationwide manufacturing activity, fell to a nine-month low of 47.8 in August, compared with a final reading of 49.3 in July, HSBC Holdings PLC said Thursday.

The fall could stoke market concerns over a sharp slowdown in the world's second-largest economy.

A reading below 50 indicates contraction from the previous month, while one above 50 indicates growth.

The preliminary August reading marks the 10th straight month the index has been in contractionary territory, signaling extended difficulty for manufacturers.

The sustained and deepening slump of China’s manufacturing activities appears to chime with the record amount of cash unleashed by China’s central bank the PBoC a few days back in the economy, and of the recent spate of hot money outflows.

The mainstream’s expectations of a benign slowdown or a soft landing seem to be turning into a hard landing (bubble bust)

imageThe above developments has also been reflected on the financial marketplace as China’s main equity bellwether, the Shanghai index, continues to plumb new lows in slomo fashion.

Yet if conditions continue to deteriorate, where fear eventually dominates, slomo can turn into a stampede. And given the interconnectedness of China's economy and markets to the world, any major downside volatility is likely to enhance the transmission of contagion.

Be careful out there.

Has US Federal Reserve Policies Been Engineered for President Obama’s Re-election?

I have been arguing that Fed policies have been designed for the re-election of Barack Obama.

More clues from LVMI President Douglas French at the Laissez Faire Books,

In their paper “Social Mood, Stock Market Performance and U.S. Presidential Elections: A Socionomic Perspective on Voting Results,” researchers at the Socionomic Institute studied the results of every presidential election, since 1792. According to the paper, stock market performance is the best predictor of election results: better than unemployment, GDP or inflation.

It turns out, the higher the DJIA, the better the chance of re-election. Voters give incumbents a pass for their first year in office, figuring it was, in this case, George W. Bush’s fault. So the Dow 30 stood at 9,712.73 on Oct. 30, 2009, when Obama started his second year. That’s the point of no return. It will take a 25% market meltdown, from over 13,000 on the Dow to below 9,712, for Ann Romney to start thinking about rearranging the furniture at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.: That is if the social mood folks have it right.

So while the Fed’s money policy hasn’t produced more jobs (and won’t), the ground-hugging interest rates have levitated the securities markets and may just get Obama elected to four more years.

Job One in Washington is to be re-elected. How Lord Keynes’ methods get it done doesn’t matter.

This only goes to show how inflationary policies benefits the political class and their allies.

The Enemy from Within: Afghan Forces Turning Against Their U.S. Trainers

Wars spawn their own monsters.

Aside from growing numbers of suicides within the US Army, in the Afghan war, Afghan forces have reportedly been turning against their US benefactors.

Writes the pro-war conservative Heritage Foundation,

American troops in Afghanistan face an increased threat from “insider” attacks in which the Afghan forces they are there to help and train are turning their guns on their American partners, raising serious questions about the viability of the U.S. mission in Afghanistan.

The attacks, which have killed 40 U.S. and NATO troops so far this year, are also referred to as “green-on-blue attacks,” because the military refers to local forces as “green” and allied forces as “blue.”*

Who are the Afghan security forces? While the Afghan Army leaders are professional and committed to working with their American counterparts, the recruits are mostly rural, illiterate men who can become disgruntled by cultural differences with their American trainers or susceptible to insurgent bribes or intimidation. U.S. military officials attribute only about 10 percent of the insider attacks to Taliban infiltration, despite Taliban claims of responsibility for most of the attacks.

There are about 350,000 Afghan security forces, including the police and army. As of October 1, there will be 68,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan. The U.S. strategy in Afghanistan is centered on being able to train the Afghan forces so they can eventually face down the insurgent threat on their own. If the number of insider attacks does not abate, it will be increasingly difficult to justify a large-scale U.S. troop presence in the nation.

The backlash from US Imperial policies has been intensifying.

As a side note, here is an interesting social media video of US troops in Afghanistan doing a “call me maybe”. (hat tip from cbsnews.com)

Well this is just one of the explosive “call me maybe” videos, you can see more here.

Ironically, the New York Times decries such viral effects of social media as “the music industry itself, has been upended by social media”. This logic has it backwards, the Carly Rae Jepsen “call me maybe” phenomenon became a "viral" hit because of social media. I wouldn’t be listening to her music if not for these amazing videos. [My daughter and her classmates even made one]

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Infographic: Scientific Evidence for Popular Health Supplements

Visual.ly has an interesting infographic on the supposed variable tangible benefits of popular health supplements.

[Note I am posting this to share the interesting perspective and should not be reckoned or interpreted as an endorsement].



Snake Oil?


Learn about infographic design.




Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: China and Vietnam to Expand Trade Via Road Network

More signs of China’s love-hate relationship with ASEAN.

Vietnam one of the claimants in the territorial dispute in the South China Sea has forged a “historic” agreement with China to expand trade through a major road network

From ADB, (bold added)

For the first time, buses and trucks will be able to cross overland between the rugged southern regions of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and the remote northern regions of Viet Nam using a 1,300 kilometer route spanning from Ha Noi to Shenzhen made possible through a road transport agreement between the two countries.

“The new transport agreement will have a profound impact not only on bilateral trade and tourism, but also on Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) transport facilitation," said Yushu Feng, Principal Economist, Regional Cooperation, at the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which facilitated the bilateral road transport agreement in line with GMS transport facilitation initiatives. “This is a key milestone for regional cooperation.”

The new agreement will ease restrictions on trucks and buses travelling between major economic zones in PRC’s Yunnan province, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, Guangdong province and six provinces in Viet Nam, including Lang Son and Quang Ninh provinces, and the cities of Ha Noi and Hai Phong.

Previously, transport operators were only allowed to travel up to 20 kilometers into each other’s territories. Starting August 2012, each country will be able to issue up to 15,100 permits for trucks and buses that travel within the border province area, and each will be able to issue up to 500 permits for trucks and buses than can go to inland provincial areas.

Another significant route, connecting Kunming to Ha Noi and Hai Phong and governed by the same agreement, was inaugurated in Kunming on 16 August 2012.

In 2011, road transport volume between PRC and Viet Nam through the Yuyi-Friendship border gate was as much as 1 million tons for goods and around 726,000 passengers traveled overland between both countries. Transport volume is expected to increase with the newly-implemented road transport agreement. To accommodate market demand, the permit quota for 2013 will be increased, accordingly.

The controversial disputes make it to the headlines and thus fire up emotions that arouse aggression via obtuse (feel good) nationalism.

But these trade agreements which signifies “key milestone for regional cooperation” will be relegated to the business or back pages.Yes the growing trade volume between ASEAN-China are for real.

Overall, China’s seeming antagonistic foreign policies or the gunboat diplomacy has hardly been consistent with her economic policies.

This makes me suspect that one of the two contradicting policies signify as no more than false signals (if not a false flag) aimed at the promotion of concealed political goals.

Global Warming in the Perspective of Social Science

Politics has mainly been about arousing emotions. In the debate over global warming, arguments have essentially been reduced to either black and white, or either “you are for are against us” (False choice).

Never mind if previous predictions has always failed due to misdiagnosis arising from blind spot-illusory superiority cognitive biases or the overestimation of one's assumptions (knowledge problem).

Professor Steve Horwitz puts the global warming-climate change issue into perspective with 8 highly relevant questions (from thefreemanonline.org) [Italics bold original]

1. Is the planet getting warmer?

2. If it’s getting warmer, is that warming caused by humans? Obviously this is a big question because if warming is not human-caused, then it’s not clear how much we can do to reduce it. What we might do about the consequences, however, remains an open question.

3. If it’s getting warmer, by what magnitude? If the magnitude is large, then there’s one set of implications. But if it’s small, then, as we’ll see, it might not be worth responding to. This is a good example of a scientific question with large implications for policy.

Matters of Science

All these questions are presumably matters of science. In principle we ought to be able to answer them using the tools of science, even if they are complex issues that involve competing interpretations and methods. Let’s assume the planet is in fact warming and that humans are the reason.

4. What are the costs of global warming? This question is frequently asked and answered.

5. What are the benefits of global warming? This question needs to be asked as well, as global warming might bring currently arctic areas into a more temperate climate that would enable them to become sources of food. Plus, a warmer planet might decrease the demand for fossil fuels for heating homes and businesses in those formerly colder places.

6. Do the benefits outweigh the costs or do the costs outweigh the benefits? This is also not frequently asked. Obviously, if the benefits outweigh the costs, then we shouldn’t be worrying about global warming. Two other points are worth considering. First, the benefits and costs are not questions of scientific fact because how we do the accounting depends on all kinds of value-laden questions. But that doesn’t mean the cost-benefit comparison isn’t important. Second, this question might depend greatly on the answers to the scientific questions above. In other words: All questions of public policy are ones that require both facts and values to answer. One cannot go directly from science to policy without asking the kinds of questions I’ve raised here.

7. If the costs outweigh the benefits, what sorts of policies are appropriate? There are many too many questions here to deal with in detail, but it should be noted that disagreements over what sorts of policies would best deal with the net costs of global warming are, again, matters of both fact and value, or science and social science.

8. What are the costs of the policies designed to reduce the costs of global warming? This question is not asked nearly enough. Even if we design policies on the blackboard that seem to mitigate the effects of global warming, we have to consider, first, whether those policies are even likely to be passed by politicians as we know them, and second, whether the policies might have associated costs that outweigh their benefits with respect to global warming. So if in our attempt to reduce the effects of global warming we slow economic growth so far as to impoverish more people, or we give powers to governments that are likely to be used in ways having little to do with global warming, we have to consider those results in the total costs and benefits of using policy to combat global warming. This is a question of social science that is no less important than the scientific questions I began with.

I could add more, but this is sufficient to make my key points.

Professor Horwitz’s striking conclusions:

First, it is perfectly possible to accept the science of global warming but reject the policies most often put forward to combat it. One can think humans are causing the planet to warm but logically and humanely conclude that we should do nothing about it.

Second, people who take that position and back it up with good arguments should not be called “deniers.” They are not denying the science; they are questioning its implications. In fact, those who think they can go directly from science to policy are, as it turns out, engaged in denial – denial of the relevance of social science.

Global warming-climate change is as much about economics or social sciences than just an issue of environmental science. Don’t be misled.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Why Not to Pay Heed to the Prophets of Ecological Apocalypse

Emotions based issues sell because people are emotional animals. Yet among all the emotions it is fear which is most powerful. That’s why horror movies sell, stock market crashes occur [where fear is a symptom and an accelerator of the market process], and that’s why many fall prey easily to "fear" based politics (e.g. climate change, peak resources and etc…).

Doomsayers sell or are popular also because of many people’s attachment to the Pessimism bias or the bias which exaggerates the likelihood of a negative outcome.

The profound Matthew Ridley writing at the Wired.com chronicles a list of prediction failures made by prophets of the apocalypse or Armageddon.

Ironically, despite the string of utter prediction failures; fear based issues remain in high demand. These have been evident in four fronts of social affairs, particularly in chemicals, diseases, people and resources. Mr. Ridley calls them the four horsemen of the apocalyptic promises

Here is an excerpt from the article.

Religious zealots hardly have a monopoly on apocalyptic thinking. Consider some of the environmental cataclysms that so many experts promised were inevitable. Best-selling economist Robert Heilbroner in 1974: “The outlook for man, I believe, is painful, difficult, perhaps desperate, and the hope that can be held out for his future prospects seem to be very slim indeed.” Or best-selling ecologist Paul Ehrlich in 1968: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s ["and 1980s" was added in a later edition] the world will undergo famines—hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked on now … nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate.” Or Jimmy Carter in a televised speech in 1977: “We could use up all of the proven reserves of oil in the entire world by the end of the next decade.”

Predictions of global famine and the end of oil in the 1970s proved just as wrong as end-of-the-world forecasts from millennialist priests. Yet there is no sign that experts are becoming more cautious about apocalyptic promises. If anything, the rhetoric has ramped up in recent years. Echoing the Mayan calendar folk, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moved its Doomsday Clock one minute closer to midnight at the start of 2012, commenting: “The global community may be near a point of no return in efforts to prevent catastrophe from changes in Earth’s atmosphere.”

Over the five decades since the success of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring in 1962 and the four decades since the success of the Club of Rome’s The Limits to Growth in 1972, prophecies of doom on a colossal scale have become routine. Indeed, we seem to crave ever-more-frightening predictions—we are now, in writer Gary Alexander’s word, apocaholic. The past half century has brought us warnings of population explosions, global famines, plagues, water wars, oil exhaustion, mineral shortages, falling sperm counts, thinning ozone, acidifying rain, nuclear winters, Y2K bugs, mad cow epidemics, killer bees, sex-change fish, cell-phone-induced brain-cancer epidemics, and climate catastrophes.

So far all of these specters have turned out to be exaggerated. True, we have encountered obstacles, public-health emergencies, and even mass tragedies. But the promised Armageddons—the thresholds that cannot be uncrossed, the tipping points that cannot be untipped, the existential threats to Life as We Know It—have consistently failed to materialize. To see the full depth of our apocaholism, and to understand why we keep getting it so wrong, we need to consult the past 50 years of history.

The classic apocalypse has four horsemen, and our modern version follows that pattern, with the four riders being chemicals (DDT, CFCs, acid rain), diseases (bird flu, swine flu, SARS, AIDS, Ebola, mad cow disease), people (population, famine), and resources (oil, metals). Let’s visit them each in turn.

Read the rest here

China’s Central Bank Floods System with Record Cash

China’s central bank flushes her financial system with record cash

From Businessweek/Bloomberg,

China’s interest-rate swaps fell from a three-month high as the central bank injected record funds into the financial system to ease a cash crunch.

The six-month contract, the fixed cost to receive the seven-day repurchase rate, fell five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 3.25 percent as of 10:27 a.m. in Shanghai, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It reached 3.31 percent yesterday, the highest since May 11. The seven-day repo rate, a gauge of interbank funding availability, increased 10 basis points to 3.72 percent, a weighted average shows.

The People’s Bank of China conducted 220 billion yuan ($34.6 billion) of reverse-repurchase operations, the most in a single day, according to a trader at a primary dealer required to bid at the auctions. The government may introduce new policies to boost consumers’ borrowing and spending this year, the Economic Information Daily reported today, citing an unidentified person.

“This unusually large volume points to the central bank’s concern about the elevated level of money-market rates,” Dariusz Kowalczyk, a strategist at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong, wrote in a note to clients today. “We still expect a reserve-requirement cut, but the impact of this large open- market operation should be lower interest-rate swaps at the short end.”

The central bank last lowered banks’ reserve requirements in May and cut benchmark interest rates in June and July to support the economy. Gross domestic product increased 7.6 percent from a year earlier in the second quarter, the least since the first quarter of 2009, official figures show. Economic growth will slow to a 13-year low of 8.2 percent in 2012, based on the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

By the way the PBOC acted, China’s economy has been suffering more than just a slowdown. Yet this, perhaps, may be a precursor to bigger interventions.

The Shanghai index closed modestly higher today. Gold prices has so far responded positively.

Quote of the Day: Neoconservatism Represents Big Government

Neoconservatism is not the philosophy of free markets and a wise foreign policy. Instead, it represents big-government welfare at home and a program of using our military might to spread their version of American values throughout the world. Since neoconservatives dominate the way the U.S. government now operates, it behooves us all to understand their beliefs and goals.

This is from congressman Ron Paul on Neo-conservatism

Monday, August 20, 2012

Phisix: Choosing The Ideology behind Profitable Actions

We have been trained to look for godliness, virtue, direction, and truth outside ourselves, in some agency external to ourselves. Such beliefs have been generated largely by those who have either a religion or a political system to fasten upon the necks of their fellow beings. It is through such thinking that some have been able to control the thoughts and actions of others by attacking their victims' sense of self-capacity and worthiness to function in the world.-Butler Shaffer

There will be only 3 trading sessions in the coming week because of the extended holidays (on Monday Eidul Fitar and Tuesday Ninoy Aquino Day).

This means that the public will likely be in a vacation mode. So unless some externally driven event will incite unusual volatility that may trigger a local response, I expect the market’s mood to be largely lackadaisical. So whatever direction the Phisix closes the week, the average trading volume will likely be weaker.

Since momentum in the global markets appear sprightly; the odds for a shock seem unlikely.

But given the fragility of current conditions, no one can really tell.

Update on Holiday Economics

As a side note, the string of political holidays only depletes productivity from the economy. The mainstream will argue that “holiday economics” promotes tourism and tourism related industries from which should support the economy. But again, costs are not benefits.

While holidays indeed promote tourism and allied industries, such thinking ignores the unseen costs borne by such political holiday statutes.

As I previously wrote[1],

local policies are counterproductive, privileges one sector (4% direct 10% indirect) over the entire economy, raises cost of doing business, reduces output, promotes idleness, hedonism and wrong virtues (spending instead of saving) and importantly the "elitist" tendencies of the powers that be.

For an update, according to World Travel & Tourism Council[2], the direct contribution of Travel & Tourism to GDP was PHP194.7bn (2.0% of total GDP) in 2011, the total contribution of Travel & Tourism (meaning tourism related industries) to GDP was PHP830.8bn (8.5% of GDP) in 2011. In terms of employment, direct employment from the industry accounted for 778,000 jobs or 2.1% of total employment and the total contribution of the industry to employment, including jobs indirectly was 9.6% of total employment (3,547,500 jobs).

Back of the napkin calculation tells us that ‘Holiday economics’ means supporting 8.5% (of GDP) against the 91.5% of the economy, and in terms of employment, 9.6% as against 90.4% of the labor force.

Holiday economics has been premised on promoting the interests of the elite at the expense of the underprivileged or the ‘poor’.

Market Internals Suggests of Healthy Correction Phase

In the Philippine equity markets, part of what I expected occurred last week.

The recent selloff in the mining sector seems to have percolated into the broader markets.

clip_image002

The Phisix languished, down 1.07% this week, weighed by all major sectoral indices except for the mining and oil which defied the broad market correction

As I wrote last week[3],

I lean on condition (B) or where the bear market of the mining sector will likely percolate into the general market, due to growing risks of contagion.

However everything really depends on how and what future policies will be conducted, especially in the US, as previously discussed.

So the correction phase appears to be another rotational process which essentially shifts the flow of sentiment from the mining sector to the general market and vice versa.

I seriously doubt that the domestic mining sector as having reached an inflection point or has “bottomed” out. I would like to be convinced based on evidences from internal and external forces. Instead I suspect that this week’s rally has been more of a dead cat’s bounce, from a vastly oversold position, than from a recovery.

clip_image003

The correction phase can be seen in the modest deterioration of the market breadth. The rotational process, as well as, the modest decline of the general market should be seen as a healthy profit taking process.

The continuity of the benign conditions, as I have repeatedly been pointing out, will depend on external developments.

Superstitious Beliefs versus Rigorous Analysis

Many have assigned the current weakness in the local equity market as having been influenced by the Chinese tradition of the “Ghost Month” (August 17 to September 15, 2012)[4]

The tradition suggests that many activities such as evening strolls, traveling, moving house, or starting a new business or even swimming can bring about bad luck, thus believers refrain from doing them.

clip_image004

People’s beliefs are acquired mostly through three ways[5], through tradition (handed down through generations), through persons of authority (whose opinions people take as truth and accept or assimilate them, e.g. parents, teachers, religious leaders, politicos, experts and etc…) and or from reason and evidence.

Based on reason, there has been little empirical evidence to support such claims.

While I don’t have the exact figures for the said periods, I used the annual % monthly returns of August (left window) and September (right window) of the Phisix since 1985 to see its validity.

As one would note that in the above chart, from both August and September windows, negative returns have not been a predominant feature. Instead we see sporadic fluctuations between positive and negative zones.

Examining further, one would note that the direction of returns have largely been driven by the dominant trend of the marketplace: Returns have either been negative or marginally positive during cyclical bear market periods, while in bull markets, returns have mostly been positive.

One interesting aspect is that sharp market volatilities has characterized September returns, where gains and losses have been magnified.

image

I think this seem to square with the seasonal activities in the US where September tends to be the worst month for stocks as exhibited by the Average Monthly gain by the Dow Jones Industrials since 1950[6].

And the sharp volatility compounded by negative returns could have been due to the simultaneous large liquidations of savings, which includes sales of stocks, to fund major consumption expenses by US households, particularly spending for new school clothes for children, winter clothes and other weather related consumption activities. Fueled by tight monetary conditions, the massive outlays for consumption may have served as catalyst for the notorious September-October window which has been seasonally prone to market crashes[7]

The lesson that can be gleaned from the above is that beliefs based on superstitions and or the tendency of many to employ the availability heuristics—mental shortcuts based on what we can remember rather than from complete data[8]—are hardly useful substitutes for thorough investigation and rigorous analysis of the marketplace from which to project the future or even explain markets on an ex-post basis.

On the contrary, I would say that the recent weakness of the Phisix can be traced to a single axiom: NO Trend Moves in a Straight Line.

clip_image007

Given that the Philippine Phisix, which has outperformed most of the world’s equity benchmarks on a year to date basis, has shown signs of being overbought and overextended, then a salutary reprieve should be a natural state.

In short, profit taking is an inherent process of the financial markets.

Year-to-date, Thailand seems to have successfully passed the Philippines (19.37 versus 19.1% respectively) to take the region’s leadership. Yet both managed to keep some distance from last year’s leader Indonesia, as well as, Malaysia who remains the laggard among the ASEAN majors.

Meanwhile Malaysia’s year-to-date returns largely understates the real action—Malaysia has been the only bourse in the region (if not the world) trading at record highs.

I think that in as much as rotations occur within the domestic market, the same dynamic will likely influence activities of the region’s equity bourses.

As I previously noted[9],

given the rotational dynamics, we might see some “catch up” play or the narrowing of the recent wide variance between the laggards and leaders overtime. But this doesn’t intuitively mean that such gaps will close.

So far, only the Phisix has backtracked while Thailand’s SET has still been in high Octane. On the other hand, Indonesia has slightly narrowed the gap with the Phisix.

Risk ON Stands on Perpetual Promises of Rescues

clip_image008

The reason why the world’s bourses have turned conspicuously positive has been due to the recent return of the RISK ON environment.

The following represents mainstream media’s attribution of the strong performance of global equity markets for the week.

European stocks, from Businessweek/Bloomberg[10]

European stocks rose to the highest level since July 2011, extending gains for an 11th week, as investors anticipated policy makers will stimulate the euro-area economy and German growth retreated less than forecast.

Asian stocks, from another Businessweek/Bloomberg[11]

Asian stocks rose this week, with the benchmark index posting its longest weekly winning streak since March, after China’s Premier Wen Jiabao said there’s more room to adjust monetary policy and U.S. economic reports signaled strength in the world’s largest economy.

In spite of indefatigable pledges by Chinese authorities, China’s bellwether, the Shanghai index remains in doldrums seemingly unaffected by the global RISK ON landscape.

clip_image009

In fact, China’s authorities have admitted to recent signs of outflows of hot money[12] as domestic banks became net sellers of foreign exchange or 3.8 billion yuan ($597 million), which for me could be worrying signs of a popping bubble.

Meanwhile US stock markets according to the Reuters[13]

The S&P 500 held near a four-year high on Friday, and the market's key gauge of anxiety sank to its lowest since 2007, suggesting a belief that the problems stressing investors might be closer to a resolution…

The S&P 500 made a solid move above the closely watched 1,400 level in the last session, posting its biggest gain in two weeks. But trading volume remained low…

The S&P 500 has risen 2.8 percent in August and about 11 percent since a year low in June as traders eye some encouraging U.S. jobs data and highly anticipated policy meetings at the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve in September.

In essence, the gist of today’s rally in the global stock markets has been galvanized around intensifying expectations that global central banks and governments will effectively rescue the markets.

And tidbits of good news are seen as signs of selective confirmation of a recovery. On the other hand, bad news have been interpreted as having to add pressure on governments to intervene, the result of which is to supposedly deliver good news—a recovery.

In other words, today’s global equity markets investors seem to have been strongly conditioned to carry expectations that markets can only move in one direction: UP. It can be said that the circularity of this logic entails a “heads I win, tails you lose” market environment from political guarantees. Such is the confirmation bias which intensely embodies the mainstream view.

Such has also been the reason why markets everywhere have increasingly been politicized as participants have been oriented to see rising markets as a form of political entitlement.

Divergences Aplenty

It has been interesting to note that, yes corporate fundamentals may have posted some positive signs but again everything depends on the reference points.

clip_image010

From the big picture, the positive signs emitted by the S&P 500 have not been convincing.

Aside from low volume, the divergences I previously mentioned, such as earnings, global economy, industrial and non-industrial activities[14], market internals, divergent signs on sub-sectors such as Transportation (Dow Theory)[15] or even the Russell 2000, have shown marginal and not substantial improvements, in spite of the near four year highs by the S&P 500.

A good example is the current divergence in the % of companies beating earnings and revenue estimates. While the above has shown positive results, it seems that US markets have been cheering what seems like diminishing returns or a decline in positive developments. (chart above from Bespoke Invest[16])

clip_image011

chart from Bespoke Invest

Again recent highs of the US markets have been accompanied by narrowing market breadth.

This means the drivers responsible for lifting the equity benchmarks have mainly been big cap issues. Yet the accounts of publicly listed companies at 52-week highs have also been diminishing. If such trend should continue then this entails limited upside for the S&P[17].

Finally the current rally in the US markets seems to have departed from the previous trend relative to gold.

clip_image012

In the past, rallying US markets (represented by the S&P 500) came at the heels of a more powerful run in gold (see lower window) and in other major commodities. So even as the S&P rose, gold climbed faster, thus the declining ratio between the S&P and gold.

The implication is that the RISK ON environment then had been broader which also meant that the rally had a firmer footing.

Today’s RISK ON environment seems to be concentrated on the equity markets and the junk bond markets where Gold and commodities has vastly underperformed, thus, the rising ratio between S&P and gold.

Junk bonds have been posting record issuance. Companies have been taking advantage of zero bound rates and strong demand which has brought down yields of speculative bonds to a few points away from the record lows reached during May of 2011[18]. Such yield chasing phenomenon exhibits the nature of today’s yield chasing rampant punting and speculations.

This means that gold’s modest rise has not been consistent with a strong RISK ON landscape.

The selective risk appetite and the apparent narrowing of asset selections mean that the markets could be highly susceptible to sudden changes of expectations or to mood swings: thus elevating the current risk profile of would be buyers.

Current Conditions Remain Highly Fragile

I have long been making this point: For as long as the US won’t fall into a recession or won’t suffer from a financial shock that could lead to a global recession, the recent decline in the Phisix extrapolates to a healthy profit taking process.

That said, a five to ten percent decline from the peak or the range at 4,825-5,080 could prove to be a spring board for the next record high. This is all conditional on the unfolding events abroad, and should not be read as one-size-fits all analysis.

Given the nature from which the recent global rally has been anchored, i.e. expectations from promises of rescues, I still remain highly apprehensive, or I will not write off the risks of possible sharp changes in expectations that may precipitate the current moderate RISK ON conditions to a swift and dramatic RISK OFF environment.

The contagion risks are real, which means current conditions remain highly fragile. Rising markets have not smoothened out all the underlying stresses.

Given the enormous distortions of the markets from repeated interventions, the best is to watch the interplay of stimulus-response between markets and policymakers.

To close, let us not forget our beliefs essentially drive our actions, rightly or wrongly. As the great Ludwig von Mises wrote[19],

In acting man is directed by ideologies. He chooses ends and means under the influence of ideologies. The might of an ideology is either direct or indirect. It is direct when the actor is convinced that the content of the ideology is correct and that he serves his own interests directly in complying with it. It is indirect when the actor rejects the content of the ideology as false, but is under the necessity of adjusting his actions to the fact that this ideology is endorsed by other people. The mores of their social environment are a power which people are forced to consider. Those recognizing the spuriousness of the generally accepted opinions and habits must in each instance choose between the advantages to be derived from resorting to a more efficient mode of acting and the disadvantages resulting from the contempt of popular prejudices, superstitions, and folkways.


[1] See The Economics of Holidays, October 22, 2009

[2] World Travel & Tourism Council Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2012 Philippines

[3] See Philippine Mining Index: Will The Divergences Last?, August 13, 2012

[4] Mandarin Language Ghost Month and Ghost Festival About.com

[5] Green Alexander, The Noblest Expression of the Human Spirit, Early To Rise, October 6, 2010

[6] Chart of the Day Dow-Average Monthly Gains

[7] See Austrian Business Cycle and September Market Crashes, June 27, 2012

[8] Changingofminds.org Availability Heuristic

[9] See Phisix and ASEAN Equities in the Shadow of Contagion Risks July 22, 2012

[10] Businessweek/Bloomberg, European Stocks Rise for 11th Week on Stimulus Bets, GDP August 17, 2012

[11] Businessweek/Bloomberg, Asia Stocks Rise for a Third Week on Wen Comments, U.S. Economy August 17, 2012

[12] Wall Street Journal Investors Shift Money Out of China August 14, 2012

[13] Reuters.com US STOCKS-S&P 500 up for 6th week; fear index hits 5 yr low, August 18, 2012

[14] See Why Current Market Conditions Warrants a Defensive Stance, July 9, 2012

[15] See Phisix: Managing Through Volatile Times, August 6, 2012

[16] Bespoke Invest Final Earnings and Revenue Beat Rates August 17, 2012

[17] Bespoke Invest Wanted: More New Highs August 17, 2012

[18] Bloomberg.com Junk-Bond Sales Soar To Record In August: Credit Markets, August 17, 2012

[19] Mises, Ludwig von 2. The Role of Power XXIII. THE DATA OF THE MARKET Human Action, Mises.org