Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Arts: How Socialism Sapped Creativity and Innovation

From Humanities Professor Camille Paglia on an OpEd on "How Capitalism Can Save Art" at the Wall Street Journal (hat tip Cato's David Boaz)
Capitalism has its weaknesses. But it is capitalism that ended the stranglehold of the hereditary aristocracies, raised the standard of living for most of the world and enabled the emancipation of women. The routine defamation of capitalism by armchair leftists in academe and the mainstream media has cut young artists and thinkers off from the authentic cultural energies of our time.

Over the past century, industrial design has steadily gained on the fine arts and has now surpassed them in cultural impact. In the age of travel and speed that began just before World War I, machines became smaller and sleeker. Streamlining, developed for race cars, trains, airplanes and ocean liners, was extended in the 1920s to appliances like vacuum cleaners and washing machines. The smooth white towers of electric refrigerators (replacing clunky iceboxes) embodied the elegant new minimalism.

"Form ever follows function," said Louis Sullivan, the visionary Chicago architect who was a forefather of the Bauhaus. That maxim was a rubric for the boom in stylish interior décor, office machines and electronics following World War II: Olivetti typewriters, hi-fi amplifiers, portable transistor radios, space-age TVs, baby-blue Princess telephones. With the digital revolution came miniaturization. The Apple desktop computer bore no resemblance to the gigantic mainframes that once took up whole rooms. Hand-held cellphones became pocket-size. 

Young people today are avidly immersed in this hyper-technological environment, where their primary aesthetic experiences are derived from beautifully engineered industrial design. Personalized hand-held devices are their letters, diaries, telephones and newspapers, as well as their round-the-clock conduits for music, videos and movies. But there is no spiritual dimension to an iPhone, as there is to great works of art.

Thus we live in a strange and contradictory culture, where the most talented college students are ideologically indoctrinated with contempt for the economic system that made their freedom, comforts and privileges possible. In the realm of arts and letters, religion is dismissed as reactionary and unhip. The spiritual language even of major abstract artists like Piet Mondrian, Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko is ignored or suppressed.

Thus young artists have been betrayed and stunted by their elders before their careers have even begun. Is it any wonder that our fine arts have become a wasteland?
Bottom line: Economic ideology and policies affect people’s behavior, and thereby all attendant actions. It’s only laissez faire capitalism that brings on the ‘pareto optimal’ on creativity and innovation even in the realm of arts.

Quote of the Day: An Empirical Law Lacks the Guarantee of Absolute Validity a Priori

Among economists the opinion often prevails that the empirical laws, ‘because they are based on experience,’ offer better guarantees of truth than those results of exact research which are obtained, as is assumed, only deductively from a priori axioms …

Testing the exact theory of economy by the full empirical method is simply a methodological absurdity, a failure to recognize the bases and presuppositions of exact research. At the same time it is a failure to recognize the particular aims which the exact sciences serve. To want to test the pure theory of economy by experience in its full reality is a process analogous to that of the mathematician who wants to correct the principles of geometry by measuring real objects. . . .

An empirical law lacks the guarantee of absolute validity a priori, i.e., simply according to its methodological presuppositions …

To want to transfer [the empirical method] to the results of exact research is, however, an absurdity, a failure to recognize the important difference between exact and realistic research. To combat this is the chief task of the preceding investigations.”
This is from founder of Austrian School of Economics Carl Menger, in Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences  whom echoes on Professor Ludwig von Mises’ Methodological Individualism 

Bastiat on the Political Religion of Mercantilism

What I call as political religion is a deeply held or entrenched belief in theory which is in reality signifies as massive self-contradiction, impractical, unrealistic or virtually utopian.

Yet such ideas have been popularly embraced by the vulnerable public primarily because of its “feel good” effects from what seems as “noble sounding” but spurious rhetoric.

Alternatively, what seems plausible—which are principally based on economic ignorance or self-interest from political redistribution or the interests of tax consumers (e.g. beneficiaries from welfare-warfare state,  political agents, captured interest such as private sector funded directly or indirectly by the state and etc…) or personal biases shaped by political ideology—does not square with  economic reality.

The great French classical liberal Frédéric Bastiat explodes on supposed moral high grounds of mercantilism (from Mises Institute) [bold emphasis mine]
The advocates of monopoly maintain that the facts are on their side, and that we have on our side only theory.

They flatter themselves that this long series of public acts, this old experience of Europe, which they invoke, has presented itself as something very formidable to the mind of Mr. Say; and I grant that he has not refuted it with his characteristic sagacity. For my own part, I am not disposed to concede to the monopolists the domain of facts, for they have only in their favor facts that are forced and exceptional; and we oppose to these, facts that are universal, the free and voluntary acts of mankind at large.

What do we say; and what do they say?

We say, "You should buy from others what you cannot make for yourself but at a greater expense."

And they say, "It is better to make things for yourself, although they cost you more than the price at which you could buy them from others."

Now, gentlemen, throwing aside theory, argument, demonstration — all which seem to affect you with nausea — which of these two assertions has on its side the sanction of universal practice? 

Visit your fields, your workshops, your forges, your warehouses; look above, below, and around you; look at what takes place in your own houses; note your own everyday acts; and say what is the principle that guides these laborers, artisans, and merchants; say what is your own personal practice.

Does the farmer make his own clothes? Does the tailor produce the corn he consumes? Does your housekeeper continue to have your bread made at home, after she finds she can buy it cheaper from the baker? Do you resign the pen for the brush to save your paying tribute to the shoeblack? Does the entire economy of society not rest upon the separation of employments, the division of labor — in a word, upon exchange? And what is exchange but a calculation which we make with a view to discontinuing direct production in every case in which we find that possible, and in which indirect acquisition enables us to effect a saving in time and in effort?

It is not you, therefore, who are the men of practice, since you cannot point to a single human being who acts upon your principle.

But you will say, we never intended to make our principle a rule for individual relations. We perfectly understand that this would be to break up the bond of society, and would force men to live like snails, each in his own shell. All that we contend is that our principle regulates de facto the relations that obtain between the different agglomerations of the human family.

Well, I affirm that this principle is still erroneous. The family, the commune, the canton, the department, the province, are so many agglomerations, which all, without any exception, reject practically your principle, and have never dreamt of acting on it. All procure themselves, by means of exchange, those things that it would cost them dearer to procure by means of production. And nations would do the same, did you not hinder them by force.

We, then, are the men of practice and of experience; for we oppose to the restriction you have placed exceptionally on certain international exchanges the practice and experience of all individuals and of all agglomerations of individuals, whose acts are voluntary and can consequently be adduced as evidence. But you begin by constraining, by hindering, and then you lay hold of acts that are forced or prohibited, as warranting you to exclaim, "We have practice and experience on our side!"

You inveigh against our theory, and even against theories in general. But when you lay down a principle in opposition to ours you perhaps imagine you are not proceeding on theory. Clear your heads of that idea. You, in fact, form a theory as we do; but between your theory and ours there is this difference:

Our theory consists merely in observing universal facts, universal opinions, calculations, and ways of proceeding that universally prevail; and in classifying these and rendering them coordinate, with a view to their being more easily understood.

Our theory is so little opposed to practice that it is nothing else but practice explained. We observe men acting as they are moved by the instinct of self-preservation and a desire for progress, and what they thus do freely and voluntarily we denominate political or social economy. We can never help repeating that each individual man is practically an excellent economist, producing or exchanging according as he finds it more to his interest to produce or to exchange. Each, by experience, educates himself in this science; or, rather, the science itself is only this same experience accurately observed and methodically explained.

But on your side you construct a theory in the worst sense of the word. You imagine, you invent, a course of proceeding that is not sanctioned by the practice of any living man under the canopy of heaven; and then you invoke the aid of constraint and prohibition. It is quite necessary that you should have recourse to force, for you desire that men should be made to produce those things that they find it more advantageous to buy; you desire that they should renounce this advantage, and act upon a doctrine that implies a contradiction in terms.

I defy you to take the doctrine, which you acknowledge would be absurd in the relations of individuals, and extend it, even in speculation, to transactions between families, communities, or provinces. By your own admission it is only applicable to international relations.

This is the reason why you are forced to keep repeating, "There are no absolute principles, no inflexible rules. What is good for an individual, a family, a province, is bad for a nation. What is good in detail — namely, to purchase rather than produce, when purchasing is more advantageous than producing — that same is bad in the gross. The political economy of individuals is not that of nations" — and other nonsense of the same kind.

And to what does all this tend? Look at it a little closer. The intention is to prove that we, the consumers, are your property! — that we are yours body and soul! — that you have an exclusive right over our stomachs and our limbs! — that it belongs to you to feed and clothe us on your own terms, whatever be your ignorance, incapacity or rapacity!

No, you are not men of practice; you are men of abstraction — and of extortion.
The path to hell is paved with good intentions. This so applies to the nirvana fallacy based doctrine called mercantilism, which in reality represents an instrument for political and economic repression.

Monday, October 08, 2012

Will the US Military Be Used Against Tea Parties and Americans?

Are “tea parties” and the average Americans target of the coming political repression?

From the Offthegrid.com (source Charleston Voice) [bold original]
A theoretical report about the future use of the military as a police force within the United States is causing a firestorm of controversy. The report, Full Spectrum Operations in the Homeland: A “Vision” of the Future, was written by a retired Army Colonel and describes how future warfare will be conducted on American soil. The report depicts a scenario where the U.S.  Military will have to use its power against the American public. 

The study begins by laying out how the U.S. Army’s Operating Concept 2016-2028 will include military operations throughout the United States. The outrageous report goes on to describe a theoretical situation where the U.S. Army is sent in to a city that has been taken over by Tea Party “insurrectionists”. 

The report starts in an eerie almost prophetic tone and then goes on to demonize tea party members and “immigrant-bashing by right-wing demagogues”… 
“The Great Recession of the early twenty-first century lasts far longer than anyone anticipated.  After a change in control of the White House and Congress in 2012, the governing party cuts off all funding that had been dedicated to boosting the economy or toward relief…” “…. By 2016, the economy shows signs of reawakening, but the middle and lower-middle classes have yet to experience much in the way of job growth or pay raises.  Unemployment continues to hover perilously close to double digits, small businesses cannot meet bankers’ terms to borrow money, and taxes on the middle class remain relatively high.  A high-profile and vocal minority has directed the public’s fear and frustration at nonwhites and immigrants.  After almost ten years of race-baiting and immigrant-bashing by right-wing demagogues, nearly one in five Americans reports being vehemently opposed to immigration, legal or illegal, and even U.S.-born nonwhites have become occasional targets for mobs of angry whites.”
Read the rest here

If the above account is accurate, then this represents signs of paranoia by the political class.

In 1792, Coin Debasement was Punishable by Death

Based on the Coinage Act of 1792 counterfeiting, or coin debasement was punishable by death. [Hat tip Charleston Voice] 
And be it further enacted, That if any of the gold or silver coins which shall be struck or coined at the said mint shall be debased or made worse as to the proportion of the fine gold or fine silver therein contained, or shall be of less weight or value than the same out to be pursuant to the directions of this act, through the default or with the connivance of any of the officers or persons who shall be employed at the said mint, for the purpose of profit or gain, or otherwise with a fraudulent intent, and if any of the said officers or persons shall embezzle any of the metals which shall at any time be committed to their charge for the purpose of being coined, or any of the coins which shall be struck or coined at the said mint, every such officer or person who shall commit any or either of the said offenses, shall be deemed guilty of felony, and shall suffer death
Ironically, today coin debasement's variant—money printing—is seen by the mainstream as a doctrine of economic salvation. 

Possible Complications from Turkey-Syria Clash

Politicians easily indulge in war without understanding the possible complications from their actions.

Turkey’s recent border clashes with Syria risks opening open of the old wounds which could further sow fissures and destabilize the region. The skirmishes could be used as casus belli or a prelude to a broader theater of conflict which includes the US and Israel.

Historian Eric Margolis explains,  
Turkey's neighborly love-fest ended soon after Syria erupted in civil war. For reasons that still remain murky, Erdogan dropped his "love-thy-neighbor"policy and began actively supporting Syria's insurgents.

Until the Syrian uprising, Turkey had enjoyed good trade and political relations with Damascus. Syria had more or less dropped its claims to Turkish-ruled Hatay province, and told its Kurdish minority not to make trouble for the Turks. Hatay, and its strategic port of Iskenderun, were part of historic Syria (as was Lebanon and Palestine), but passed with French help to Turkish rule in the last century. If relations between Ankara and Damascus continue to worsen, this thorny issue may again heat up.

Turkey blundered into Syria's civil war soon after it erupted in March, 2011. Ankara allowed Syrian insurgent groups, funded and armed by Saudi Arabia, France, Britain, the US and Qatar, to operate from its soil. CIA established an important logistics and communications base for the insurgents at the US air base at Incirlik, Turkey. US, British and French special forces based in Turkey discreetly joined in the war to overthrow the Assad regime in Damascus – all part of Washington's undeclared but very real and intensifying multi-dimensional war against Iran, Syria's closest ally.

Each passing day of Syria's brutal civil war raises the risk that Turkey will send its armed forces into Syria, either to create so-called "civilian corridors"or no-fly zones to ground the Assad regime's air force. All-out NATO intervention led by the US could occur after American presidential elections.

Meanwhile, the besieged Assad regime in Damascus has lost control of a northern border region inhabited by 2 million ethnic Kurds who have become autonomous. Ankara, which faces a virtual independent Kurdish state in northern Iraq and its own long-simmering uprising by its Kurdish minority, is deeply alarmed by the specter of Kurdish nationalism.

The war in Syria has accentuated Turkey's serious Kurdish problem. This writer covered the Turkish – Kurdish conflict in eastern Anatolia a decade ago, in which over 40,000 had died by 1992 alone. Turkey thought it had put an end to the Kurdish PKK insurgency by capturing its leader, Abdullah Ocalan, in 1999. The PKK's main base was in Syria.

Ocalan remains in prison. But the Kurdish independence movement has sprung again to life. Syria will very likely resume aiding Kurdish PKK fighters to exact revenge on Turkey for abetting anti-regime guerillas. This is a huge problem for Turkey as Kurds make up 15-20% of its population.

By fueling Syria's civil war, Erdogan has kicked the Kurdish hornet's nest.

The conflict in Syria is pitting its minority Alawites (an offshoot of Shia Islam), who dominate the Assad regime, against the long-repressed Sunni majority. As Syria's Alawites fight for what some believe is their lives, their struggle is reverberating in Lebanon, where Shiites make up the largest religious community. Turkey's long-marginalized Alevis, who are another distant offshoot of Shia Islam and close to Syria's Alawis, and who are looked down on by the Sunni majority as heretics, are also feeling the reverberations of the Syrian conflict. Alevis may make up as much as 15% of Turkey's population of some 74 million.

Recent revelations of a massacre of Alevis in 1938 at the end of the era of Turkish strongman Ataturk has inflamed Alevi emotions in Turkey and deepened their sense of persecution and historic injustice.

So the Syrian conflict is reopening some of the deep fissures in Turkey's body politics just at a time when its zesty economy was enjoying a 7% growth rate – not far from China's – and Turkey had become the Mideast's cock of the walk.

Now, Syria bodes ill for all involved.
Read the rest here.  

If domestic political situation in Turkey deteriorates due to its present belligerent acts against Syria, then it is not that history repeats itself, but rather the impetuous acts by politicians reignites hostile relationships which had been long buried in the past.

As Prof Joseph Salernon points out, 
As a human endeavor like any other, war making is the product of reason, purpose and choice.

Quote of the Day: Spending Isn’t Production

If we take a step back and think about it, it’s obvious that spending per se isn’t the source of economic benefits. It’s easy to spend. If that were really the only thing holding back economies in recession, then one wonders why humans still suffer from recessions, in so many countries and so repeatedly throughout history.

No, the real difficulty in economic life is production, in turning scarce resources into goods and services that the consumers value. This takes judgment on the part of entrepreneurs directing the process, and it takes hard work from their employees.

In addition to inventions as well as commercial innovations in business operations, a major source of economic growth is saving and investment. Even with a fixed amount of technological know-how, people can gradually increase their standard of living over the years if they defer immediate gratification. By saving out of present income—by living below their means—people “free up” scarce resources that no longer need to be used up to make burgers, iPods, and sports cars. Instead, these resources can be redirected into making tractors, drill presses, and microscopes for drug researchers. Rather than making consumer goods for present wants, the economy cranks out capital goods to cater to future wants. This is the physical analog of how the economy as a whole grows, just as an individual household’s bank balance grows with constant saving.

It should be clear that spending per se doesn’t drive economic growth. It’s true, in a modern economy money plays a crucial role in coordinating our activities, and in that sense spending is an integral part of the story. But from this truism it hardly follows that government spending is all we need right now to “boost the economy.” On the contrary, government spending simply siphons real resources away from the private sector and into politically-chosen channels, where they will be used in inefficient ways.

(bold emphasis mine)

This is from Professor Robert P. Murphy at the American Conservative

Phisix-ASEAN Bellwethers at Fresh Record Highs

Prior to my quasi two weeks ago vacation due to my mom’s visit, I wrote[1]
I believe that the interim response from the FED-ECB policies, designed to prop up financial assets, will likely provide strong support to the global stock markets including the Philippine Phisix perhaps until the yearend, at least…

In a world where central bank policies become the dominant factor in establishing price levels, the new normal is to expect dramatic price swings in both directions and of the amplification of risks…

But given the projected substantial infusion of steroids, the current environment strongly favors an upswing. That’s until real problems will resurface such as concerns over the quality of credit, and or price inflation becomes more pronounced and or if politics becomes an obstacle to the central banks inflationism and or a combination of the above.
First I believe that this dynamic will continue to prevail.

Second, so far, two weeks into the US Federal Reserve’s announcement of QE forever, the global markets have largely been mixed.

Bernanke Policies Bolsters ASEAN Markets

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The actions of the US Federal Reserve have thus far benefited mostly ASEAN bourses, led by the Philippine Phisix. The Philippine benchmark acquired most of the two weeks of gains from this week’s phenomenal 1.75% advance (red bar-weekly advance, blue bar-two week performance).

Major emerging markets, however, like Brazil, Russia and China posted the largest losses among major markets during the said two week period. But trading in the Chinese equity markets had been abbreviated due to last week’s weeklong celebration of National Day. India, despite the flash crash on Friday[2] where the Nifty fell by 16% in 8 seconds due to a computer trading glitch, accrued weekly modest gains. 

Meanwhile, the stock markets of developed economies had varied showings too. This week’s advances seen in the US S&P 500 and the German DAX clipped the losses of the other week, while Japan’s Nikkei continued to wobble.

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FED policies have driven ALL major ASEAN bellwethers to a milestone breakout from which three of them, the Philippine Phisix (red orange), Indonesia’s JCI (green) and Malaysia’s FBMKLCI (orange) set FRESH nominal RECORD highs.

Only the Thai’s SET remains below the 1997 highs, still off still by about a hefty 25%[3]. Nevertheless, as of Friday’s close, Thailand’s SET has etched a 15-year landmark.

To reiterate the lessons which I mentioned two weeks ago, the Thai’s experience simply exhibits how the bursting of bubbles takes extended period to replace capital consumed from the unwinding of malinivestments.
Misallocated capital cannot be seen as “benefits” since at the end of the cycle, misdirected capital will be exposed as wasted or consumed capital through a bubble bust or a financial crisis. In short, boom bust cycles destroy capital, lowers society’s standard of living or impoverishes people.
The ASEAN outperformance, as I have also been pointing out in the past, has largely been due to the relatively fewer fiscal baggage, as consequence to the market clearing process endured by them during the post-Asian Crisis of 1997, along with the gradualist embrace of globalization. 

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In addition, my prognostications of a blossoming homegrown property bubble seem to be progressing. I pointed out last August[4]
One of the big factors that has, so far, worked in favor of domestic stock market, as I have repeatedly been pointing out, has been the negative real rates which has impelled for a domestic version of yield chasing dynamic.

This yield chasing dynamic in the domestic financial market and the economy has been supported by a steep yield curve, which is likely to accelerate a credit driven boom. The Philippines has the steepest yield curve in Asia
The above is an updated chart from the ADB[5] continues to exhibit that the Philippines have still the steepest yield curve in Asia.

Such steep yield curve incentivizes banks to take advantage of asset-liability mismatches or maturity transformation[6] where banks borrow short and lend long or a credit boom. 

Proof of the bubble process or a credit boom in motion?

Real estate loan exposures by the domestic banking sector; particularly the universal, commercial and thrift banks, according to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) or the local central bank has “reached its highest level yet”[7]. Property loans grew by 19% annualized and 4.4% from last quarter. 

Although, the BSP adds that the real estate segment of the total loan portfolio remains at 14-15%, such only implies that there has been sizeable expansion of systemic debt that matches the growth of real estate loans, and or, that loans to the property sector may have been channeled through other avenues (e.g. misdeclaration of loans use, off balance sheets and etc…)

Additional evidence of systemic debt expansion can also be seen in the vigorous expansion of Foreign Currency Deposit Unit (FCDU) mostly to the private sector which grew by 7.3% quarter-on-quarter and 23% year-on-year[8]

Thus, artificially suppressed interest rates that have brought about a domestic negative real rates regime, as well as, foreign capital flow movements influenced by external credit easing policies (negative real rates and Quantitative Easing), are likely to further inflate bubble dynamics in the country and in the region, far more than their developed economy and BRIC counterparts.

Yet such credit driven boom will be interpreted by the mainstream as “economic growth” when in reality they represent a bubble cycle or systemic misallocation of capital in progression.

One must be reminded that bubbles come in stages. So far the Philippines seem to be at a benign phase of the bubble cycle.

Again bubbles will principally be manifested on capital intensive sectors (like real estate, mining, manufacturing) and possibly, but not necessarily, through the stock markets.

This means that for as long as the US does not fall into a recession or a crisis, ASEAN outperformance, fueled by a banking credit boom and foreign fund flows operating on a carry trade dynamic or interest rate and currency arbitrages (capital flight I might add), should be expected to continue.

And again I will maintain that ASEAN’s record breaking streak may be sustained at least until the end of the year 2012.

Yet such streak will strictly be conditional to the political-economic developments abroad, as well as, on the monetary engagements by major central banks.

Price inflation will play a significant role of the sustainability of the bubble cycle and will also influence on the direction of domestic financial asset price movements where any signs of mounting price inflation will likely compel regional central banks, including the BSP, to initially tighten which will likely put pressure on the bullish momentum of the markets.

Sustained price inflation will likely usher in a stagflationary environment which represents an Achilles heels for emerging Asia.

As I recently wrote[9]
High commodity prices are likely to influence emerging markets consumer price inflation more. Food makes up a large segment of consumption basket for emerging Asia including the Philippines. This would prompt for their respective central banks to reluctantly tighten. Monetary tightening will put pressure on the stock market.

Stagflation, thus, also represents both a contagion and internal (political and market) risk for the Philippines and for emerging Asia
ASEAN’s interest rate swap markets have already been signaling growing inflation risks[10] from supposed overheating or “expanding at a faster rate”—euphemism for a credit boom. 

Thus stagflation or an acceleration of the region’s bubble cycle (if price inflation remains contained) will become big influences for 2013-2014.

Nonetheless, when pushed to the wall, central bankers will likely resort to fighting price inflation with even more attempts to ease credit or through executive-legislative actions of price controls. Abolition of interest rates has become an entrenched part of the central banking doctrine.

For investors, once stagflation—elevated price inflation and stagnant growth—should emerge and become a dominant variable, I expect to see a shift in the market leadership in the equities.

Sell on News, Asset Inflation is the Main Central Bank Goal 

As for the lagging performance of major bourses, my guess is that this has mainly been due to the “buy the rumor sell the news” dynamic.

As I pointed out last June[11] 
if markets may be temporarily satisfied with REAL actions of central banks (e.g. $1 trillion bailout) then we should see a minor or a slight “sell on news”. But this should be seen as opportunities to RE-ENTER the markets incrementally.

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Remember, much of the world’s bourses have been ascending out of expectations of central banking steroids in spite of an ongoing slowdown in the real economy. I even called such events as “bad news is good news”, “detachment from reality” or even “parallel universe”.

Thus, given the confirmation of expectations from the FED-ECB actions, natural profit taking could be at work.

As proof, with the exception of China, Japan and Brazil, all other major bellwethers has registered substantial year to date gains as of Friday’s close. This means that the declines during the past two weeks hardly scratched on the surface of the extensive year to date gains.

Of course I can be wrong and global markets can go lower.

But it is very important to understand the fundamental position for the FED’s actions, which has mainly been about the promotion of the “wealth effect” through the portfolio balance channel.

To emphasize on this, I will re-quote FED chair Ben Bernanke’s statement in a TV conference, post QE Forever announcement[12] 
The tools we have involve affecting financial asset prices. Those are the tools of monetary policy. There are a number of different channels. Mortgage rates, other rates, I mentioned corporate bond rates. Also the prices of various assets. For example, the prices of homes. To the extent that the prices of homes begin to rise, consumers will feel wealthier, they’ll begin to feel more disposed to spend. If home prices are rising they may feel more may be more willing to buy home because they think they’ll make a better return on that purchase. So house prices is one vehicle. Stock prices – many people own stocks directly or indirectly. The issue here is whether improving asset prices will make people more willing to spend. One of the main concerns that firms have is that there is not enough demand…if people feel their financial position is better they’ll be more likely to spend….
In the assumption that Mr. Bernanke has been forthright about the objectives of the Federal Reserves, any idea which puts into Ben Bernanke’s mouth that the FED’s policies has been about Keynesian “devaluation” to deal with “sticky wages” has been outrageously out of touch with reality or simply delirious.

Last week, Mr. Bernanke defended his policies anchored on the strong US dollar policy, as excerpted from Reuters[13]:
He also downplayed fears that the central bank's policies would damage the long-run value of the dollar, saying the stronger growth that Fed officials are trying to engender would actually support the currency.

I don't see any inconsistency with our policy and maintaining a strong dollar," he said.
While it is true that FED policies will naturally lead to a weaker dollar if taken on their own, the fact is that the entire world has basically mimicked the FED, and where the difference lies on the degree of balance sheet expansions.

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Even the Philippines and her major ASEAN peers have been massively growing their balance sheets over the past decade[14].

A recent paper from the Bank of International Settlements notes that currency interventions have had similar effects to central bank’s Large Scale Asset (bond) Purchases (LSAP) in lowering long term interest rates in a wide range of countries including Japan. This according to the authors[15] was triggered by the investment of the intervention proceeds in US bonds and that a global portfolio balance effect spread the resulting decline in US yields to other bond markets, thus easing global monetary conditions.

Essentially Ben Bernanke’s principles have been assimilated as the de rigueur central banker’s policy dogma.

And it is further a ludicrous claim by some to suggest that the FED’s actions represent “beggar thy neighbor” policies which has been designed to undermine the world by transmitting inflation where such policies would eventually allow for a repricing of US wages. 

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Such mechanistic-mercantilistic perspective with a singular focus or obsession on the levels of wages fails to account of the reality where central bankers have standardized the “beggar thy neighbor” approach to deal with present crisis.

Devalue against whom (see chart[16] above)? Everyone has been racing to devalue.

Proposals for further financial repression would only nurture domestic bubble cycles and or price inflation. Compounded by the arbitrary imposition of restrictive regulations, centralization or dilution of market forces and confiscatory taxes, all these extrapolate to the weakening of the productive capacities of the world economies which undermines capital formation. .

Inflating of supposed “sticky” and “overvalued” wages will not solve the issue of productivity obstacles from the politicization of the business environment.

But this has not even been the issue for the FED. Proof?

Writing at the Wall Street Journal Senior fellows of the Stanford Univesity’s Hoover Institution[17] Professors George P. Shultz, Michael J. Boskin, John F. Cogan, Allan H. Meltzer and John B. Taylor aptly warns of the conditions established by the FED,
The Fed has effectively replaced the entire interbank money market and large segments of other markets with itself. It determines the interest rate by declaring what it will pay on reserve balances at the Fed without regard for the supply and demand of money. By replacing large decentralized markets with centralized control by a few government officials, the Fed is distorting incentives and interfering with price discovery with unintended economic consequences.

Did you know that the Federal Reserve is now giving money to banks, effectively circumventing the appropriations process? To pay for quantitative easing—the purchase of government debt, mortgage-backed securities, etc.—the Fed credits banks with electronic deposits that are reserve balances at the Federal Reserve. These reserve balances have exploded to $1.5 trillion from $8 billion in September 2008.
With the FED centralizing control of the financial markets, these not only leads to the distortion of the markets (price signals, coordination process and the allocation of resources) but likewise increases systemic fragility.

To add, burdens from policy uncertainty, overregulations and compliance costs—which all boils down to an assault on private property through regime uncertainty—the same experts write,
Did you know that funding for federal regulatory agencies and their employment levels are at all-time highs? In 2010, the number of Federal Register pages devoted to proposed new rules broke its previous all-time record for the second consecutive year. It's up by 25% compared to 2008. These regulations alone will impose large costs and create heightened uncertainty for business and especially small business.
Oversimplifying the nature of economic problems leads to misdiagnosis and to wrong prescriptions. Labor reforms could start with the emancipation from regulations and welfare statutes such as minimum wage law and unemployment insurances and other laws that unilaterally protects labor unionism at the expense of non-union labor and the consumer.

In reality, all these collective central bank measures basically signify as price controls or price manipulations designed to curtail short selling (liquidity injections leads to the burning of short sellers) and or to avoid price discovery which would expose on massive insolvencies of public and politically connected private institutions. Hence, relative devaluation represents a side-effect rather than a principal objective for them.

And this is why gold for instance is at either record highs or near record highs against ALL major currencies[18] which is why it would be misleading for political dogmatists to allege that there has been “no visible sign of inflation”, when even the OECD admits to emergent price inflation pressures[19].

Common sense tells us that if central banks will admit to the threat of price inflation then this essentially eliminates all justifications to inflate the system. Like a philandering spouse caught red handed in tryst with a paramour, the intuitive reaction by the guilty spouse has been to deny the existence of an illicit relationship.

The bottom line is that financial asset inflation signifies as the true objective of du jour central bank policies.

And as indicated two weeks back, both the FED and ECB through QE forever will likely be expanding their combined balance sheets by $2 trillion or more, from last month until sometime 2015.

QE forever means that based on political objectives, central banks can be expected to simply add to the quantity of asset purchases.

This also suggests that any foregoing weaknesses in asset prices will prompt the FED, the ECB and other central banks to increase the amount of steroid dosages.

Since central banks have been “all in” with their chips, the next prudent step is to observe how all these tsunami of new money would diffuse into the asset markets and eventually into the real economy.

Finally the view where the destruction of the world economy via inflation, as having to benefit the US, is not only irrational but represents a miasmic mentality contaminated by brain deadening politics.

If economic isolation represents as the elixir to prosperity, then North Korea and Cuba would be one of the world’s wealthiest nations, and perhaps only next to the Stalinist USSR and China’s Mao’s “Cultural revolution” which would still have been in existence. Incidentally, North Korea suffered hyperinflation in 2009-2011 according to Cato’s Steve Hanke[20]. This should even make North Korea prosperous based on the inflationists doctrine.

Besides, how moral can it be to wish and pray for the misery of others?

A race to devalue would not bring about economic wealth. To the contrary this will hasten the collapse of the incumbent currency system that would not only create domestic social instability but likewise heightens the risks of World War III.

Will the Mining Index Recapture Leadership in 2013? 

Perhaps one day, people will learn to see the mining sector as blessing than a populist political curse. That’s probably just around the corner or when people awaken to Voltaire’s rule—“Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value — zero.”

These will likely become a reality if the belief in the salvation from money printing becomes a self-fulfilling political dynamic where the unexpected effect, a crack-up boom, would mean a general stampede towards commodities and perhaps to mining issues.

Lately some commodities of late have been under selling pressure. 

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Take oil, despite ongoing geopolitical turmoil at Middle East which should give oil a higher premium, over the past two weeks oil prices plunged from nearly $100 a barrel to $89.98.

The dramatic decline may have been due to crowded trade where a huge volume of large speculators have piled up massive positions[21] or to the “buy the rumor sell the news”, or some unexpected downside developments on the global economy.

Over the interim lower oil prices may have been drag to other commodities, such as gold.

Yet if central banks aim to manage asset prices by throwing into the pot over $2 trillion over the next year or so, then some of these monies will likely find their way into the commodity markets. And this is why I don’t believe any selling pressure will last. Although given the massive distortions in the marketplace, sharply volatile environment should be the norm.

Usually an inflationary boom means a rising tide lifts all boats. But this hasn’t been the case today in the Philippines. The boom in the general markets has yet to filter into the domestic mining index.

Yet I think that mainstream’s fascination with chasing prices leaves a great opportunity to position for the mining renaissance.

I have plotted again[22] the annual returns of each sector since 2007.

The following will show the alternating leadership by the mining sector.

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In 2007, mining issues returned by a lopsided 80% relative to other sectors while the great recession of 2008 prompted the sector to fall most by about 60%. 

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The mining index spearheaded the recovery post great recession with a monster 234% return. In 2010, the resource based sector lagged anew but closed on the positive.

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Last year, the mines proved to be a runaway winner with a 68.52% return leaving all other sectors biting the dust. 

While 2012 hasn’t ended, the resource based sector has struggled anew, but unlike before, the mines has posted substantial losses of more than 10%.

Much of the current sluggishness in the industry has been traced to Philex Mining’s tailing leakage controversy[23], as well as, to the surrounding controversies on the supposed ambiguities of Executive Order 79. The latter have been revised by the Philippine president to partially accommodate the pleadings of the industry[24].

The 32% year to date decline of Philex Mining has practically reduced the gold mining company’s weightings on the sector’s index where the free float market cap now accounts for just 15.02% of the index as of Friday’s close.

I would add that outside the popular explanations which for me has been more of an aggravating circumstance than of the real cause, the alternating annual leadership of the mining sector are driven by  three factors: one rotational process, two Wall Street’s axiom “no trend moves in a straight line”, and or lastly, the reversion to the mean. 

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In terms of charting, the mining index may be signaling a bullish falling wedge which could imply of a rebound soon. But again chart patterns are subordinate to the real drivers—human action.

While I am also not a fan of seasonal performances, I believe that the mining alternating annual leadership pattern fits, what I see as the fundamental drivers of the big picture, to a tee.

Moreover, the political and legal hurdles, faced by the industry which are based on technicalities, will likely be overturned not only due to the political interests of the incumbent government[25] to see statistical growth (among other political reasons), but most importantly, by the unfolding developments in the global monetary and financial sphere.

So why chase prices lofty prices when opportunity presents a great potential from an industry largely ignored and dumped by the public?

Disclosure: I have been gradually accumulating on the sector.





[3] Chartsrus.com Thailand SET


[5] Asian Development Bank Asia Bond Monitor September 2012

[6] Wikipedia.org Economic functions, Banks

[7] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Exposure to Real Estate of U/KBs and TBs Continues to Grow September 28, 2012

[8] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas FCDU Loans Sustain Growth in the Second Quarter of 2012 September 28, 2012




[12] Pragmatic Capitalism A Disturbing Look Inside the Mind of Ben Bernanke, September 13, 2012


[14] Andrew Filardo and James Yetman Key facts on central bank balance sheets in Asia and the Pacific, p.11 Bank of International Settlements, September 2012

[15] Petra Gerlach-Kristen, Robert N McCauley and Kazuo Ueda Currency intervention and the global portfolio balance effect: Japanese lessons October 2012 Bank of International Settlements 

[16] Zero Hedge Who Is Winning The Race To Debase? October 5, 2012 

[17] George P. Shultz, Michael J. Boskin, John F. Cogan, Allan H. Meltzer and John B. Taylor The Magnitude of the Mess We're In, September 16, 2012



[20] See Hyperinflation in Iran October 4, 2012

[21] Ed Yardeni Wicked, September 25, 2012 Dr. Ed’s Blog


[23] GMAnetwork.com Philex Mining may lose ECC on tailings leak October 2, 2012

[24] Abs-cbnnews.com Aquino OKs revised mining-policy rules October 5, 2012 

Sunday, October 07, 2012

Quote of the Day: Passing a Point of NO Return

We cannot count on problems elsewhere in the world to make Treasury securities a safe haven forever. We risk eventually losing the privilege and great benefit of lower interest rates from the dollar's role as the global reserve currency. In short, we risk passing an economic, fiscal and financial point of no return.

Suppose you were offered the job of Treasury secretary a few months from now. Would you accept? You would confront problems that are so daunting even Alexander Hamilton would have trouble preserving the full faith and credit of the United States. Our first Treasury secretary famously argued that one of a nation's greatest assets is its ability to issue debt, especially in a crisis. We needed to honor our Revolutionary War debt, he said, because the debt "foreign and domestic, was the price of liberty."

History has reconfirmed Hamilton's wisdom. As historian John Steele Gordon has written, our nation's ability to issue debt helped preserve the Union in the 1860s and defeat totalitarian governments in the 1940s. Today, government officials are issuing debt to finance pet projects and payoffs to interest groups, not some vital, let alone existential, national purpose.

The problems are close to being unmanageable now. If we stay on the current path, they will wind up being completely unmanageable, culminating in an unwelcome explosion and crisis.

The fixes are blindingly obvious. Economic theory, empirical studies and historical experience teach that the solutions are the lowest possible tax rates on the broadest base, sufficient to fund the necessary functions of government on balance over the business cycle; sound monetary policy; trade liberalization; spending control and entitlement reform; and regulatory, litigation and education reform. The need is clear. Why wait for disaster? The future is now.
(bold emphasis added) 

This admonition, published at the Wall Street Journal, on America’s fiscal and political conditions have jointly been authored by Professors George P. Shultz, Michael J. Boskin, John F. Cogan, Allan H. Meltzer and John B. Taylor, all senor fellows of Standard University’s Hoover Institution (hat tip Bob Murphy)

Just to add that those who think that ASEAN markets and economies would be immune from any crisis that emerges out of the US will be proven devastatingly wrong.