Saturday, October 24, 2015

Thanks to the ECB’s Mario Draghi, Spanish billionaire Amancio Ortega Topples Bill Gates as Richest Man of the World

Bill Gates is out (for now).

Spanish Billionaire Zara owner Amancio Ortega has been crowned as Forbes’ richest man, writes the Business Insider:clip_image001

It's Spanish clothing magnate Amancio Ortega, who has overtaken Microsoft founder Bill Gates for the first time ever.

According to Forbes' real-time tracker, the elusive multibillionaire founder of European clothing retailer Zara just smashed past Bill Gates to become the wealthiest person on the planet, with a fortune of $79.8 billion (€71.83 billion or £51.84 billion). 

The elusive Ortega isn't as much of a household name as Gates, but he's quietly ascended the wealth rankings in recent years, as his company continues to perform well and expand.

Unlike many of the richest people in the world, Ortega has a fascinating rags-to-riches story. Born in 1936 during the Spanish Civil War, Ortega's father earned 300 pesetas a month, a meager salary. 

Ortega's biographer described his memories of a childhood during which his family could not always afford enough food. He left school in his early teens, working his way up from the absolute bottom rung as a messenger boy in a shop.

It wasn't until he was 40 years old that Ortega got around to setting up Zara, the fast-fashion retailer that has gone from strength to strength — first growing in Spain, then neighbouring Portugal and France, then London. Now it's all over the globe.

According to Forbes, Ortega's wealth rose by 5.3%, another $4 billion, over the last 24 hours. That's partly down to a surge in Inditex shares, the parent company that owns Zara.

clip_image003
In the last 10 years, the market value of Inditex has risen by about 570%, the main driver of Ortega's climb up the ranks.


The punchline:
In an odd turn of events, Ortega has Mario Draghi to thank for his new rank — the head of the European Central Bank's hints that the ECB would boost its quantitative-easing programme on Thursday sent shares in the eurozone surging upwards.
Note: I modified the Inditex chart to show of the acceleration of the trend as the ECB's balance sheet swelled (lower box). Inditex traded mostly sideways when the ECB contracted her balance sheet in 2012. Revival of ECB's balance sheet expansion ballooned its gains!

Bill Gates needs to coax Ms. Yellen and team Fed to further ease for him to regain his lead!

Yet more evidence of how central banking's invisible redistribution policies work in favor of the elites, banks and the government at the cost of currency holders and general welfare.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Breaking: MOOOAAARR Monetary Narcotics: China's PBOC Panics Cuts Interest Rates for the 6th Time this year!

Stock markets went wild on ECB's promise last night. Now, the Chinese government delivers the real stuff... 

From Bloomberg:
China’s central bank cut its benchmark lending rate and reserve requirements for banks, stepping up efforts to cushion a deepening economic slowdown.

The one-year lending rate will drop to 4.35 percent from 4.6 percent effective Saturday the People’s Bank of China said on its website on Friday. The one-year deposit rate will fall to 1.5 percent from 1.75 percent.

Reserve requirements for all banks were cut by 50 basis points, with an extra 50 basis point reduction for some institutions. The PBOC also scrapped a deposit-rate ceiling.


This marks the 6th interest cut for the year! Why the PBOC's panic? Reported 3Q GDP was at 6.8%. Could it be because the number had been inflated as many economists suspected? The irony of it all is that the PBOC's panic (expressed through policies) equates to panic buying rampage by Pavlovian stock market dogs!

Belated 'Back to the Future' Day! (October 21, 2015)

Remember the 1985 Scifi comedy movie series Back to the Future?

In one of the series, protagonists Marty McFly (Michael J Fox) tand Dr. Emmett "Doc" Brown (Christopher Lloyd) travel from 1985 to October 21, 2015 (two days ago)


Image from Daily Mail
Marty McFly: Where are we? When are we?
Doc: We're descending toward Hill Valley, California, at 4:29 pm, on Wednesday, October 21st, 2015.
Marty McFly: 2015? You mean we're in the future?
Jennifer: Future? Marty, what do you mean? How can we be in the future?
Marty McFly: Uh, Jennifer, um, I don't know how to tell you this, but I... you're in a time machine.
Jennifer: And this is the year '2015'? Doc: October 21st, 2015.
Movie excerpt from the IMDB's Back to the Future II
 
USA Today Headline (Back to the Future Tweet)

Marty McFly and Doc on the Jimmy Kimmel show...


Trivia: 11 Technologies which Back to the Future got right (Business Insider)

Headline of the Day: Pavlov's Dogs Rampage on ECB Promises for MOOOOAAARRR Monetary Narcotics!

And people have been made to think that stocks are about fundamentals (earnings or economic growth)....


The above headline and report is from Reuters...
 
Yet in the new normal, bad news is GOOD news. Bad news paves way for more redistribution or monetary heroin that electrifies the stock market's Pavlovian dogs.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Quote of the Day: Slash Taxes to Restrain Government

This is the problem with taxation. Major public corporations can move their tax domicile offshore to avoid taxes legally. The average person cannot move his labor offshore to lower his taxes, which is a disadvantage we must address with tax reform. VAT is far worse than a sales tax. Every person in the chain must collect and file paperwork. It must require three times the number of people to administer such a system compared to a point of sales tax collection.

But that issue aside, there should be ABSOLUTELY NO income taxes whatsoever. That not only eliminates government having to track everything, but it also eliminates the whole movement of capital solely for tax purposes. This is unfair, for the average person cannot send their labor offshore to avoid taxation without moving. Even then, that would only get an American the first $100,000 tax-free; after that, it would be subjected to U.S. income tax. 

The Founding Fathers of the United States revolted over taxation without representation. We are back to that now, for we are being taxed to pay interest to service debts from the last two generations. We had no right to vote on that spending, which took place before we were born. This is not a democratic process.

There should be ONLY a retail sales tax EXCLUSIVELY for local government. Federal government should be prohibited from imposing ANY tax and it should be barred from borrowing money. The local tax will naturally be checked by the free market, for if they keep raising taxes, businesses will move to the next town and there goes the jobs. This will help to restrain government on a more practical level.
This is from former Princeton Economics chairman and present day analyst, Martin Armstrong at his website.

Aside from than administrative taxation, the INFLATION TAX should be ABOLISHED.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Quote of the Day: Why Health Care Is Not a Right

The problem with his statement is that rights aren't the government's to give. John Locke, the 17th century English philosopher, wrote about inalienable rights: God-given rights that can't be taken away. (Agnostics and atheists may prefer to think of these rights as inherent in nature.) Locke considered life, liberty and property to be among such natural rights.

A century later, Thomas Jefferson adopted Locke's definition when he drafted the U.S. Declaration of Independence, citing "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" as inalienable rights. Government's role is "to secure these Rights," Jefferson wrote, not to create new ones.

The Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, enumerates some of these natural rights: freedom of speech and religion; a free press and free assembly; and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Even more important, the Bill of Rights prohibits Congress from enacting any law interfering with the exercise of these freedoms. (I'll leave the interpretation of the 2nd Amendment's right to bear arms to Constitutional scholars.)

That hasn't stopped Progressives from creating all kinds of new rights: a right to a job, a right to a minimum wage, a right to health care.

These aren't rights as conceived by the Founding Fathers. A right is something we can all exercise simultaneously without imposing a burden on someone else. The only obligation, in fact, is that others not interfere with an individual's exercise of his rights.

That concise concept of rights, sometimes referred to as negative rights, comes from the book, Clichés of Politics, a collection of essays published by the Foundation for Economic Education. It provides a simple basis for determining what constitutes a right.

Many politicians insist on transforming every privilege or benefit or entitlement into a right.
(bold added) 

This excerpt is from an article by mainstream commentator, former Bloomberg analyst, Caroline Baum at EC21.org on first presidential debate of the Democratic Party

US Stocks Soar as Credit Dynamics Erode

Last weekend I wrote,
It has been a fascination to see global stocks race back to old highs in the face of a stream of bad news. It seems that all it takes for this to happen is for a connected media personality to whisper that the FED won’t be raising rates. Such whisper would then spike the proverbial stock market punch bowl.

It’s as if all bad news will have little bearing not only on valuations but on debt, liquidity and access to credit.

Monetary cocaine has not only been very addictive it works well to lobotomize reason.
Justin Spittler at the Casey Research has a dandy elaboration of the festering bad news on the credit front which continues to gnaw at the core of the US economy and US stocks (bold mine)
-Downgrades to corporate credit ratings are at a six-year high...

A credit rating measures a borrower’s financial health. A company with a low credit rating will often struggle to repay debt.

Credit rating agencies lower a company’s rating when they think the company’s financial health is getting worse. So far this year, there have been more downgrades than in any year since the Great Recession. The Wall Street Journal explains:

Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services downgraded U.S. companies 297 times in the first nine months of the year, the most downgrades since 2009…with just 172 upgrades.

Energy and commodity companies make up a large slice of these downgrades. Last week, Business Wire said that energy and commodity companies accounted for 40% of the downgrades during the third quarter.

Casey readers know the Bloomberg Commodity Index, which tracks 22 different commodities (including oil and natural gas), recently hit its lowest point since 1999. The recent crash in energy prices is a big reason why. Oil is currently down 55% from its 2014 high. And natural gas is down 61%.

Weak commodity prices are translating into dramatically lower profits for many energy and commodity companies. This is a big reason for the recent credit-rating downgrades in the sector.

Ratings agencies have also downgraded several big companies outside of the energy sector…

Standard & Poor’s cut Mattel’s (MAT) credit rating in January. S&P is concerned the toymaker is losing market share. And in March, Moody’s downgraded McDonald’s (MCD) after the fast food giant announced plans to borrow a lot of money to pay shareholders.

-U.S. companies have been on a seven-year borrowing binge...

Casey readers know the Federal Reserve dropped its key interest rate to effectively zero in 2008…and left it there. The past seven years of incredibly low interest rates have allowed for all kinds of reckless borrowing.

U.S. companies have issued $9.3 trillion in new debt since the financial crisis. That includes $1.4 trillion in bonds last year, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. This was an all-time high, but the record probably won’t hold for long…

Through September of this year, U.S. corporations had already issued $1.2 trillion in bonds. That’s an 8.4% increase over the same period last year.

This excessive amount of debt is hurting U.S. companies. Last week, The Wall Street Journal said the balance sheets of big U.S. companies are weaker than they were before the 2007-8 financial crisis.

According to one metric, the ratio of debt to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization [Ebitda] for companies that carry investment-grade ratings, meaning triple-B-minus or above, was 2.29 times in the second quarter. That’s higher than the 1.91 times in June 2007, just before the crisis, according to figures from Morgan Stanley.

-U.S. companies are also paying out more than they earn...

Last year, companies in the S&P 500 spent 95% of their profits on share buybacks and dividends. That figure hit 104% in the first quarter of 2015, according to Bloomberg Business.

Bloomberg Business also says the last time this happened was just months before the 2008 financial crisis hit.

Shareholder payouts previously rose above 100 percent of operating earnings in the second quarter of 2007. Two quarters later, the figure peaked at 156.5 percent of profit -- and the bull market ended.

This means companies are giving cash to shareholders instead of using the cash to grow their businesses. Every dollar a company spends on dividends and share buybacks is a dollar it doesn’t spend on research and development, new factories, equipment, etc.

-Now corporate profits are falling too...

Earnings-per-share for companies in the S&P 500 fell 16% during the second quarter, according to Standard & Poor’s. It was the biggest drop since 2009.

Last month, Reuters said investors should prepare for another ugly earnings season.

Forecasts for third-quarter S&P 500 earnings now call for a 3.9 percent decline from a year ago, based on Thomson Reuters data, with half of the S&P sectors estimated to post lower profits...

Expectations for future quarters are falling as well. A rolling 12-month forward earnings-per-share forecast now stands near negative 2 percent, the lowest since late 2009...

But even as earnings fall, large U.S. companies are still paying out record amounts of cash to shareholders, according to Bloomberg Business.

In the second quarter, the most creditworthy companies posted declining earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Yet they returned 35 percent of those earnings to shareholders, according to JPMorgan.

That’s kept their cash-payout ratio -- how much money they give to shareholders relative to Ebitda -- steady at a 15-year high.

clip_image001

Chart from Zero Hedge

-Falling profits are making it hard for companies to pay off debt…

In June, Fortune wrote:

According to credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s, 52 companies have defaulted on their debt in the first six months of this year. That’s more than double the number of companies that missed interest payments in the first half of 2014, and it’s close to eclipsing the 60 companies that defaulted in all of 2014. It is also the highest pace of defaults since 2009.

For many companies today, almost every dollar of earnings goes towards paying off debt. For example, the U.S. Energy Information Administration reports that onshore oil producers use 83 cents of every dollar they generate to pay debt. This has created a very fragile situation. The stocks of companies with big debts often fall the hardest during an economic slowdown.

This has created a very fragile situation. The stocks of companies with big debts often fall the hardest during an economic slowdown.
It’s interesting to see how central banking monetary narcotics have spawned and magnified what seems as a parallel universe. How long will central banking free lunch last?

Economic Myth Busted: In the US, Savings from Lower Gas Prices was Spent on even More Gas!

Remember the popular mantra/incantation “low oil prices equals more consumer spending”? (this applies not only to the US but elsewhere including Philippines too)

Well, in the US, a study debunks the popular myth: savings from lower gas prices was spent on even more gas!

And bizarrely, media and ‘experts’ blame such unexpected course of development on human irrationality!

From the New York Times  (bold mine)
When gas prices fall, Americans reliably do two things that don’t make much sense.

They spend more of the windfall on gasoline than they would if the money came from somewhere else.

And they don’t just buy more gasoline. They switch from regular gas to high-octane.

A new report by the JPMorgan Chase Institute, looking at the impact of lower gas prices on consumer spending, finds the same pattern as earlier studies. The average American would have saved about $41 a month last winter by buying the same gallons and grades. Instead, Americans took home roughly $22 a month. People, in other words, used almost half of the windfall to buy more and fancier gas.

This is not rational behavior. Americans spent about 4 percent of pretax income on gas in 2014. One might expect them to spend about the same share of any windfall at the pump — maybe a little more because gas got cheaper. Instead they spent almost half.

Americans, in short, have not been behaving like the characters in economics textbooks…

The study, based on the spending patterns of about one million JPMorgan customers, does not track the kind of gas consumers purchased. It shows that people bought more gas as prices fell, and that the increase in consumption is not sufficient to explain the entirety of the increase in spending on gas.
Here is what the law of demand says “all else being equal…as the price of a product decreases, quantity demanded increases.” 

"People bought more gas as prices fell..."

Have consumers not been “behaving like the characters in economics textbooks”? Really? Or have consumers not been behaving in accordance to the fictitious outcomes generated from econometric models?

Of course, such econometric models have been constructed principally on the assumptions that humans DO NOT act based on ever changing preferences and values, in the face of an equally dynamic complex environment, that shapes incentives and consequently their actions. Or in short, for the math pedagogues, humans are NOT humans but automatons or robots whose actions are programmed.

But one may retort, they shifted from “regular gas to high-octane gas”.

So why not? Perhaps high octane gas could have been seen as more "energy efficient" (more fuel savings or longer driving mileage). If so then this reinforces, the law of demand.

But refuting the mythological gas-savings-equal-to-consumption-binge meme goes beyond the statistical technicalities.

Yet as I have noted here and many times elsewhere: the economics of spending is MAINLY a derivative of INCOME conditions—secondarily the utilization of savings and of credit—and NOT from the changes in spending patterns or the redistribution of spending from static income.

And as for the perspective of economic punditry versus real world phenomenon, the great Ludwig von Mises warned (Misapprehended Darwinism, Refutation of Fallacies, Omnipotent Government p.120)
Nothing could be more mistaken than the now fashionable attempt to apply the methods and concepts of the natural sciences to the solution of social problems. In the realm of nature we cannot know anything about final causes, by reference to which events can be explained. But in the field of human actions there is the finality of acting men. Men make choices. They aim at certain ends and they apply means in order to attain the ends sought.
Now whose behavior have not been rational…acting humans or ‘experts’ whose views have been shaped by rigid econometric models?

Infographics: The Internet of Things and Our Mobile Future, Lessons from the Matrix

The internet of things will likely be one of the major technological advances from the information age that will have significant influence in the shaping of the future. 

The Visual Capitalist writes
By the time you finish reading this infographic, there will be 3,810 new devices connected to the Internet of Things.

That’s because there are 328 million devices being connected to the internet each month. It’s also why researchers estimate that there are going to be 50 billion devices connected by 2020.

In fact, the future looks very different as we adopt to these technological trends. Already, 71% of Americans using wearable technology claim that it has improved their overall health and fitness. Imagine what will happen with more immersive analytics, a preventative mindset, more metrics of useful health functions, and integration into the health system.

The connected lifestyle means that there could be 500 devices in each home connected to the web by 2022. Every lightbulb, lock, thermostat, appliance, and item with an electronic circuit could be networked together, finding synergy. As strange as it may seem, by 2020 researchers even expect 100 million lightbulbs and lamps to be connected to this grid.

Entertainment and convenience are driving the “smart home” concept, which is expected to be worth $56 billion in 2018. However, there is also the benefit of creating a more energy efficient world. It’s already expected that street lamps could save energy costs up to 80%, so why can’t that be the case in the home as well? Self-adjusting thermostats, lights, and appliances will increase the efficiency of homes to make a big impact on net efficiency.
Internet of things should be something to look forward to.

But as tools, they can be use for productive or non-productive activities. By non-productive, this can even enhance the government's repression of the public. The internet of things may even pave way for the realization of omnipresent surveillance society ala George Orwell's 1984.

John Whitehead of the Rutherford Institute analogizes the internet of things with the trilogy movie the Matrix:
Make no mistake: the Internet of Things is just Big Brother in a more appealing disguise.

Even so, I’m not suggesting we all become Luddites. However, we need to be aware of how quickly a helpful device that makes our lives easier can become a harmful weapon that enslaves us.

This was the underlying lesson of The Matrix, the Wachowski brothers’ futuristic thriller about human beings enslaved by autonomous technological beings that call the shots. As Morpheus, one of the characters in The Matrix, explains:

The Matrix is everywhere. It is all around us. Even now, in this very room. You can see it when you look out your window or when you turn on your television. You can feel it when you go to work… when you go to church… when you pay your taxes. It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.

“What truth?” asks Neo.

Morpheus leans in closer to Neo: “That you are a slave, Neo. Like everyone else you were born into bondage. Born into a prison that you cannot smell or taste or touch. A prison for your mind.”
Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Quote of the Day: The Worst Thing That Can Happen to a Socialist



This is from Ludwig von Mises's Marxism Unmasked. (Hat tip EPJ)

Nobel Price Winner Angus Deaton on Mao’s Great Leap Forward to Famine

Excerpted from the book,  The Great Escape: Health, Wealth, and the Origins of Inequality, authored by the winner of 2015 Nobel Prize for economic science,  Angus Deaton  (hat tip Jeff Tucker at the FEE.org) [bold and italics mine]
One of the worst in human history was China's "Great Leap Forward" in 1958-61, hewn of deeply misguided industrialization and food procurement policies led to the deaths of around thirty-five million people from starvation and prevented the births of perhaps forty million more. Weather conditions were not unusual in these years; the famine was entirely man-made.

Mao Zedong and his fellow leaders were determined to show the superiority of communism, to quickly overtake production levels in Russia and in Britain, and to establish Mao's leadership of the com­munist world. Outlandish production targets were set to match the food needs of rapidly industrializing cities and to earn foreign exchange through exports of food.

Under the totalitarian system maintained by the Communist Party of China, rural communes com­peted to exaggerate their output, further inflating the already unattainable procurement quotas and leaving nothing for people to eat.

At the same time, the Party caused chaos in the countryside by order­ing that all private land be turned into communes, confiscating private property and even private cooking utensils, and making people eat in communal kitchens.

Given the enormous increases in production that were confidently expected, peasant labor was diverted to public works projects and rural steel-making plants, most of which achieved nothing.

Draconian restrictions on travel and communication prevented word from getting out, and the penalties for dissent were clear: three-quarters of 1 million people had been executed in 1950-51. (In any case, in these early years of the revolution, the Party was widely trusted.)

When Mao learned of the disasters (though probably not of their full scale), he doubled down on the policies, purging the messengers, labeling them "right-deviationists," and blaming peasants for secretly hoarding food.

To do otherwise and admit the error of the Great Leap forward would have imperiled Mao's own leadership position, and he was prepared to sacrifice tens of millions of his countrymen to prevent that happening.

If Mao had reversed course when the extent of the mass starvation first became clear to the leadership, the famine would have lasted one year, not three, and in any case there was more than enough grain in government stores to prevent everyone from starving.

According to several accounts, life expectancy in China, which was nearly 50 in 1958, fell to below 30 in 1960; five years later, once Mao had stopped killing people, it had risen to nearly 55. Nearly a third of those born during the Great Leap Forward did not survive it.

We sometimes have a hard time identifying the benefits of policies, or even convincing ourselves that policy makes a difference. Yet the catastrophic effects of bad policies can be all too obvious, as the Great Leap Forward shows. Even in the absence of war or epidemic disease, bad policy within a totalitarian political system caused the deaths of tens of millions of people.

Of course, bad policies happen all the time without causing millions to die. The problem in China was that the policy took so long to be reversed because of the totalitarian system and the lack of any mechanism to make Mao change course.

The political system in China today is not so different from the system that Mao created; what is different is the flow of information. In spite of continuing state control, it is hard to believe that such a famine could happen today without the Chinese leadership, and the rest of the world, finding out very quickly. Whether the rest of the world would be able to help any more today than it could then is far from clear.
My comment: “policy took so long to be reversed because of the totalitarian system and the lack of any mechanism to make Mao change course…

Well Mr. Deaton earlier provides on the why: Draconian restrictions on travel and communication prevented word from getting out, and the penalties for dissent were clear: three-quarters of 1 million people had been executed in 1950-51.

In other words, the path towards a nirvana state through totalitarianism (collectivism) means strict intolerance, or importantly, the suppression of any opposing or dissenting feed back mechanism by the use of force (mass executions, purging). However, economic reality always prevails. But in this case, it came with the terrifying slaughter of tens of millions of people…all for the political vanity of a single person! 

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Phisix 7,550: Sorry Folks, But Declining Growth Rates of OFW Remittances Represents An Established TREND!

“We have Dodd-Frank and we’re in a bubble right now anyway,” Trump said, alluding to social media companies that he says have initial public offerings worth “billions” but “haven’t even made 10 cents.” Trump also accused Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen of keeping interest rates low in order to shield Obama from having to leave office during a recession. “She’s keeping the economy going, barely,” Trump said. “The reason they’re keeping the interest rate down is Obama doesn’t want to have a recession-slash-depression during his administration.”… “You know who gets hurt the most? People who practice the American dream and did what should have been the right way — the people that went through 40 years of their life and saved a hundred dollars every week [in the bank],” Trump said. He paused, shaking his head before adding: “They worked all their lives to save and now what happens is they’re being forced into an inflated stock market and at some point they’ll get wiped out.”—Donald Trump on the US Stock Market-Economic Bubble from an interview with the Hill

In this issue

Phisix 7,550: Sorry Folks, But Declining Growth Rates of OFW Remittances Represents An Established TREND!
-Comment on Headline Quote and This Week’s Marking the Close
-OFWs Are Symptoms of Government Failure!
-Sorry Folks, But Declining OFW Remittances Represents An Established TREND!
-Why OFW Remittances Are Down: External Forces: The Saudi Arabian Case
-Implications of the Flailing OFW Remittance Growth Trend
-Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart, Goldman Sachs and HSBC Warns on Emerging Market Crisis!

Phisix 7,550: Sorry Folks, But Declining Growth Rates of OFW Remittances Represents An Established TREND!

Comment on Headline Quote and This Week’s Marking the Close

Disclosure: I am not a supporter of any US presidential candidates. The reason for the quote above is to exhibit on how financial bubbles have entered mainstream outlook to the point that populist politicians bring this up even during their campaign trail or even use it to generate political mileage.

Back to the Phisix.


As I have repeatedly been saying, trading at the PSE has undergone a massive transformation. From what used to be a rudiment function of ‘price discovery’ of capital markets, present day PSE has transmogrified into a political instrument. Such impudent mutation can be seen through the rampant use of “marking the close” or the price fixing of the PSEi index at the close. Intriguingly, the brazen use of “marking the close” comes in the face where such actions have been deemed as illegitimate, according to Philippine statutes. Apparently, political convenience has supplanted any form of self-imposed mandates to have accommodated or tolerated such unbridled unscrupulous activities.

Yet some of this week’s flagrant accounts:

Monday October 12’s 11.38 points gain was a product of a 24.23 point last minute pre-close pump which reversed ALL losses (see upper window). Said differently, a shocking 100% of the day’s index advance was a PRODUCT of price fixing of the index!

Meanwhile, 65% of Wednesday October 14th’s 88.67 losses (lower window) was due again to price fixing.

While upside headline price fixing stratagem has characterized most of the “marking the close” incidences, which essentially engendered the record Phisix 8,127, there have been minority incidences of downward actions.

Sustained use of price fixing means the impairment of the fundamental function of capital markets. It entails of a grave distortion of prices and of valuations and all of other subsequent actions from these which leads to the progressive decay of the essence of stock markets.

As I have been saying here, I will document on the brazen manipulations of the PSEi for historical purposes.

The wanton and shameless use of ‘marking the close’ somewhat resonates with the warnings of historian economist Charles P Kindleberger[1],
The propensities to swindle and be swindled run parallel to the propensity to speculate during a boom. Crash and panic, with their motto of sauve qui peut induce still more to cheat in order to save themselves. And the signal for panic is often the revelation of some swindle, theft embezzlement or fraud
I say ‘somewhat’ because Mr. Kindleberger looks at such misdemeanor as purely an outcome of market failure. Applied to the Philippines, I suspect instead complicity between political agents and their private sector factotums. The undeclared goal objective has not only been to inflame speculation during a boom but more importantly to attain political capital (in order to advance political careers), as well as, to justify politically induced wealth redistribution in favor of the government and their cronies brought about by financial repression policies under the masquerade of an illusionary stock market boom.

At the close of this cycle, perhaps some may come to realize on how manipulations, deceptions or even fraud have substantially contributed to the domestic stock market’s unhappy ending or tragic outcome. And most likely Mr. Kindleberger’s warnings will be confirmed when the emergence of panics will be highlighted by revelation of some swindle, theft embezzlement or fraud. A great example would be Brazil’s current bubble bursting episode which has set in motion a string of corruption scandals.

OFWs Are Symptoms of Government Failure!

Conditions of OFWs reflect on real state of the Philippine political economy. I am talking of an unorthodox or unconventional perspective here.

Let us put it this way, a real boom in the economy, which should be accompanied by REAL jobs and wage GROWTH should extrapolate to LOWER OFW activities (both in the context of flow and stock). Why go abroad when there is copious economic opportunities here?

Alternatively, sustained growth in OFW activities simply means real jobs and wage growth has HARDLY been sufficiently generated.

So despite the much trumpeted economic boom, OFW dynamics continues to grow. This only means that the ballyhooed boom has been limited to certain segments of the economy and NOT to the general economy.

So in contrast to the constant weaseling, fudging and equivocation by media, by political entities and by their private sector non-media allies, OFWs are symptoms of government failure, and importantly, of financially oppressed people voting with their feet.

As I wrote in 2012[2] (bold added)
The mainstream savors the romanticized notion that OFWs are the “modern day heroes”. In a way they are. Yet hardly any of these experts deal with why OFWs thrives and why they are heroes, outside of the context of $ remittances.

People seem to have mental blackout if we point out that today’s modern day heroes, the OFWs, like their shadow economy counterparts, have been products of unfree economies.

The remittance phenomenon serves as an incredible paradox: The lack of economic opportunities as manifested by high unemployment which has been the outcome of the towering walls of arbitrary regulations and the politicization of markets, has been offset through migration and overseas employment. Yet politicians and media glorify what in reality has been exposing on their flagrant mistakes of collectivization.

Yet the heroic part of the OFW is this; oppressive laws have not prevented them from finding ways and means to survive. So they go abroad and elude domestic government. This has been the part not seen by the mainstream. What has been mostly seen has been the dollars sent and social costs of parting ways with the family, a theme that has been assimilated in media (tv series or movies).
The OFW saga represents the unintended ramification of the peso’s travails from accrued government ineptitude and abuses. 


All the cumulative bromides spouted by mainstream schnooks on how a weak peso would enhance exports, tourism or consumption and have basically ignored facts. Yet as Aldous Huxley has warned, facts DO NOT cease to exist because they are ignored.

The slomo boiling frog crash of the peso from Php 2 to a US dollar in 1960s to 2004’s Php 55, has led to neither goods or service exports nor consumption boom. What it produced instead has been a diaspora of workers. And as with any action, the consequences from worker exodus come with unexpected social costs such as family separation, longing for parental care, abuses and so on…

Nevertheless, because such social costs are either intangibles (mostly indirect consequences) or substantially diffused as to account for statistical significance, such costs has mostly been subordinated to economic considerations (which again have been embraced as political accomplishments).

Yet in spite of the numerous social costs, survivorship has been THE priority for the household choice for overseas employment.

This dynamic has hardly changed today.

The 2009 pivot by the BSP to implement financial repression—negative real rates—policies in order to boost aggregate demand (a.k.a. boost domestic demand/consumption) and to lessen dependence on exports or external links, which represented ‘trickle down’ subsidies to the elites, have failed to reduce the incentives for struggling households to send family member/s for employment overseas.

There has been no better proof than Libyan based OFWs whom resisted government efforts to be repatriated in 2014, during the festering of the Libyan civil war. OFWs reportedly said they were better “dying as heroes” in war torn Libya than starvation.

I noted[3] of a quote by media that Libyan OFWs as having “better chances of surviving” there than in the Philippines. Such sentiment, in the stirring words of a government spokesman, OFWs “would rather take the chance. They think they have greater chances of surviving the war [there] than of surviving uncertainty [without jobs] here

Striking irony isn’t it? A boom with little jobs, yet OFWs would rather risk dying from violence overseas than from hunger at home.

I further admonished of the domestic economic façade[4],
in a nutshell, the Libyan OFW episode brings to light the quality of the so-called economic boom. This accentuates signs of the deepening misperception by the cheery consensus that has backed the prevailing conviction supporting today’s one way trade in the financial markets.

When reality begins to shatter such forceful expectations, then trouble lies ahead especially for those blinded by overconfidence.
Here comes trouble!

Sorry Folks, But Declining Growth Rates of OFW Remittances Represents An Established TREND!

Unlike mainstream insight, OFW trends are subject to the fundamental law of economics.

This means OFW dynamics are also determined by the law of diminishing returns!


Given that OFW flows have grown faster than the population for decades, its long term growth rate has been diminishing

Yet only clowns in C-suites and their junior C-suite aspiring appendages, as well as their media puppets, will say that OFW growth rates can perpetually grow faster than the population! They must be thinking of a population of gremlins.

The reality is that OFW growth is bounded by domestic demographics. Simply put, population dynamics serve as natural limits to OFW deployments.

It’s partly true, that the current credit inflation aggregate demand stimulus bubble has somewhat reduced the share of OFWs to statistical GDP. But that’s because the credit inflation dynamics still has been in operation. Yet take away the credit inflation, the economic role played by OFWs should be larger.

Finally, OFW trends, as I have been repeatedly pointing out, must not be seen as operating in a linear route[5] as popularly held. That’s because OFWs, like other external based revenue earners such as BPOs, export and tourism, are levered to overseas dynamics or conditions.
Revenues of both OFWs and BPOs are SOURCED externally. This means OFW remittances depend on the INCOME of foreign employers. BPOs revenues depend on the INCOME of foreign based principals. This likewise means that the economic, social and political CONDITIONS of the nations serving as HOST to foreign employers and foreign principals essentially determine indirectly the REVENUES of OFWs and BPOs.
In other words, to see the Philippines as immune to external risks because of the assumption of the permanence of OFW remittance growth would serve as a fatal misread.

Paradoxically, OFWs have served as inspirational theme to the current credit inflation (borrowing from the future to spend to day) bubble.

Yet growth in OFWs remittances has hit a roadblock last August. For the first time since April 2003, OFW remittance growth has turned NEGATIVE!

From the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas[6]: (bold mine) Personal remittances from overseas Filipinos (OFs) totaled US$2.3 billion in August 2015. This brought personal remittances for the period January–August 2015 to US$17.9 billion, higher by 3.9 percent relative to the level posted in the same period last year…The US$2.3 billion remittances in August 2015, however, were lower by 0.8 percent compared to the year-ago level. This was partly due to the depreciation of some currencies against the US dollar, particularly the euro, Canadian dollar, and Japanese yen, which reduced the dollar equivalent of remittances sent from host countries.

As usual, the BSP applied headline prophylaxes to an adverse headline to say that August OFW “reached” X amounts. In addition, the disclosure focused on cumulative growth by clouding on monthly year on year contraction.



Meanwhile mainstream media immediately went on air to put a lipstick on the pig stating that negative growth in August was “small”, was a “single data”, or was an anomaly.

The above personal and cash remittance charts are from the BSP data.

Some statistical facts. 

In 2015, BSP’s Personal Monthly year on year data shows of THREE accounts of below .5% growth rates; specifically, January +.2%, July +.5% and August -.8%.

The same applies to growth rates on cash remittances during the same months, January +.5%, July +.5% and August -.6%.

So in 3 of the last 8 months (or 37.5%) OFW remittances growth has fallen below .5%!

On January’s lackadaisical growth I wrote last March[7]
It would appear that the law of compounding and diminishing returns likewise affects remittance trends. Nominal remittance levels have reached size and scale where growth rates have become incremental.

Yet January’s nominal remittance trend may have even broken its long term trend
Rewind one year back. November 2014’s personal and cash remittance monthly growth rates were at 1.5% and 1.8% respectively. 

Then I wrote[8], Both personal and cash remittances reveal of a sharp drop in remittance growth rate as of November on a monthly basis. It’s the lowest since 2009!

So for the past 12 months, there have been 4 accounts (or 33%) where personal and cash growth rates were below 2!

Do you see any small, single data or deviation here?

Both the BSP chart above reveals that growth rates have been on an inflection point or that growth rates have been descending since 2014 from the 2013 peak.




I expanded the charts of personal remittance data to cover the monthly growth rates averaged annually, as well as, the quarterly growth rates from 2014-2Q 2015.

The above charts punctuate on the August 2015’s predicaments:
-2014 remittance growth rates have plunged to 2009 levels (left)!
-4Q 2014 to 2Q 2015 monthly have plummeted from the 1-3Q of 2014 (right)!

The average annual remittance growth rates from 2009 to 2014 tallies at 6.86%.

Personal remittance for 1Q 2015 5.07% and for 2Q 5.4%. July and August’s growth rates were at .5% and -.8% respectively. So to achieve 5% September remittances should spike by an astronomical 15.45%!

Anything below that number would entail for a remittance growth rate of below 5%. Yet even at 5%, 2015 will be way (27%) below the 6.86% annual average!

But what happens if September and 4Q data will be as uninspiring July or August or even the 1Q and 2Q?


More luscious data. 

I expanded to cover ALL August Cash remittances monthly (left) and cumulative (right) growth rates from 2000 to 2015.

Whether from cumulative or from monthly both charts tell of the same story… Drumroll pls…the law of diminishing returns in motion!

Small? Single data? Anomaly?

Media and the establishment consensus have been in a massive state of denial of reality!

There are those who say that weak remittances signify an offshoot to weak peso.

Yet it’s totally misplaced to say that the weak peso contributed to the lethargic remittance growth, because the reality has been that a firming US dollar relative to non-US dollar pegged currencies has exacerbated an existing trend.

All the charts above indicate that August was barely an anomaly but a data point WITHIN an existing cyclical trend. Said differently, August data simply reinforced an ongoing dynamic or a trend!

August data didn’t emerge out of a strong USD/weak peso too!

I wouldn’t also dare suggest that a fall from 6% to 1% or even to 5% would be reckoned as “small” considering the billions worth of amount involved. That would be taking proportionality out of context! 

Well, but you know nothing can ever go wrong in the Philippines! And this is why shocks would seem inevitable.

Let us see things from the perspective of OFW stock.

Data from the Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) say that as of 2013, the estimated stock of OFWs (inclusive of permanent, temporary or irregular) totaled 10.239 million.

The OFW’s three major global distribution as follows (in millions): US 3.536 (34.5%), Saudi Arabia 1.029 (10.04%) and United Arab Emirates .822 (8.02%). These three accounted for 52.56% of OFW employment in 2013.

Note that Saudi’s riyal and UAE’s dirham are PEGGED to the US dollar. Hong Kong, whose dollar is also pegged to the US dollar, has an estimated .201 million of OFWs or a 1.9% share. The euro has risen vis-a-vis the US dollar (USD-euro fell by 2.4%) in August. The Eurozone has .866 million OFWs deployed in the region for an 8.46% share.

This means that OFW share of employer countries that have been unaffected by the USD strength totals 62.92%.

Four insights from the above

One, ceteris paribus (or given all things equal), the downside factor from foreign currency effect of a strong US dollar on non-pegged, and non-euro currencies have been sizeable enough to offset whatever gains from OFW employment from the US dollar, US dollar pegged currencies and from Eurozone nations

Two, growth from the US dollar, US dollar pegged currencies and from Eurozone have been negligible or stagnant to have amplified the growing slack in domestic OFW remittance growth

Three, Philippines economy must be booming for job creation and job growth to have suddenly exploded. And this may have reduced demand for overseas employment, therefore the decline in remittance growth trend.

Fourth, since nothing exists in a vacuum, planet Mars must have opened doors for OFWs where the deluge of remittances will take years to reach the Philippines.

Seriously now. While I believe that first factor could have played a big role, I suspect that the second factor, the global economy could likely be the major unappreciated force operating behind the scenes.

Why OFW Remittances Are Down: External Forces: The Saudi Arabian Case

Last December I wrote[9],
Yet if oil prices remain at below the cost to maintain the GCC’s and oil producing welfare states which may end up with the cutting of social services, how far before Arab Springs or popular revolts emerge?

And yet how will the blowing up of the Middle East bubble extrapolate to Philippine OFW remittances? More than half or about 56% of OFWs according to the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) have been deployed to this region. Will OFWs (and their employers) be immune from an economic or financial crisis? This isn’t 2008 where the epicenter of the crisis was in the US, hence remittances had been spared from retrenchment. For this crisis, there will be multiple hotbeds. The ongoing crashes in oil-commodity spectrum have already been showing the way.
I will use Saudi Arabia as example. I have no direct updated data on OFW conditions in Saudi. But nonetheless I will use circumstantial evidence to support my theory.

Saudi Arabia is state of economic funk. As evidence, she has declared a cut on political spending in response to ‘record’ budget deficit, have been drawing from her foreign currency reserves to bridge this record deficit (forex reserves has plunged 11% from August 2014 highs), Saudi’s sovereign wealth fund has been selling equities (mostly European equities) also designed to shore up her government’s finances, and lastly, statistical GDP has been falling and has been expected to fall further.

Saudi’s plight has not entirely been about oil, but also about her huge welfare state. She has been an active geopolitical player in the Middle East where Saudi forces have been militarily involved in the Yemen civil war against Iran supported Shia Houthi insurgents.

And it has been more than Yemen. The Saudi Arabia government has long helped in the plotting of the overthrow of the Syria’s Assad regime which she has been forthright

Syria’s civil war, which is an extension of the proxy war between the US and Russia (aside from Ukraine), has become an enormous humanitarian disaster.

And Saudi’s anti Assad stance brings her directly against the alliance of supporters of the Syrian regime: Russia, Iran, Iraq and China which raises the risks of escalation of war in the region.

As side note, Russia’s Putin seems to have deftly used one of Chinese 36 military strategies (explained as proverbs) called ‘beat the grass to startle the snake’. Long suspicious that the ISIS may have been partly sponsored by the US*, Russia’s direct intervention has only exposed the US air war against ISIS as a farce.

*From Putin’s UN speech last September 28[10]: (bold mine) It seems, however, that instead of learning from other people’s mistakes, some prefer to repeat them and continue to export revolutions, only now these are “democratic” revolutions. Just look at the situation in the Middle East and Northern Africa already mentioned by the previous speaker. Of course, political and social problems have been piling up for a long time in this region, and people there wanted change. But what was the actual outcome? Instead of bringing about reforms, aggressive intervention rashly destroyed government institutions and the local way of life. Instead of democracy and progress, there is now violence, poverty, social disasters and total disregard for human rights, including even the right to life. I’m urged to ask those who created this situation: do you at least realize now what you’ve done? But I’m afraid that this question will remain unanswered, because they have never abandoned their policy, which is based on arrogance, exceptionalism and impunity.


Yet the Syrian war has brought US and Russian warplanes on very close encounters (from CBS News) early October, where a miscalculation can bring about direct confrontation between the world’s superpowers. God forfend what happens next!

Back to Saudi. Saudi Arabia has not just been in economic doldrums or embroiled in geopolitical controversies, domestic politics have likewise become unstable.

As predicted in 2011[11]: Lastly like a house of cards, once oil prices collapse, Saudi’s political leadership will most likely suffer from a political backlash which may end their grip on power.

Well, a senior Saudi prince, according to Guardian has “launched an unprecedented call for change in the country’s leadership” by publishing to letters “calling for the king to be removed.”[12]

In short, if my suspicions are correct, given the economic and political deterioration in the region, hiring trends in the Middle East may have been on a downswing.

Based on 2013, the Middle East accounts for 24.31% share of global deployment.

So aside from the population barrier, the size and scale reached by cumulative years of labor migration, the recent firming of the US dollar, geopolitical and related economic variables are likely forces behind the obstacles to OFW’s remittance growth.

While the artificial domestic economic boom may have may have contributed to the OFW declining trend, but it’s likely an inconsequential one.

My guess is that once the economic boom reversal happens, there will be another labor emigration stampede. That’s if there are jobs for them!

Implications of the Flailing OFW Remittance Growth Trend

The next question is what are the implications of stagnating OFW remittances?

I alluded to the sudden appearance of many vacant retail spaces at major shopping malls to November 2014 and January 2015’s dissipation of OFW remittance growth.

As I have noted above, OFWs have become the titular inspirational icon behind the race to build supply side: namely, shopping malls, casino-hotels, vertical condos, finance and housing.

Given what seems as deepening trend of OFW growth reduction, what will happen to the cumulative supply side inventories (mall spaces, hotel rooms, condo units, housing and loans extended) built on expectations that OFWs trends are unbreakable and has been set on a stone? What happens to all the massive amount of debt that has financed the one way positioning on the real economy?

Will BPO’s be able to sufficiently replace the growth slack generated by stagnating remittances? Yet are BPOs immune to the world economic conditions, domestic politics and geopolitical forces????

Exports, manufacturing and prices of everything else in the real economy according to government measures as CPI, general wholesale and retail, construction materials wholesale and retail, producers price index have been on a streaking slump! FDI’s have stagnated too. Only imports have recently rebounded. But that’s after a string of declines. The latest import rebound as stated last week has most likely been about restocking*, positioning for Christmas, foreign exchange effect, and likely frontrunning in anticipation of an even lower peso.

*Given that both sources of supply, manufacturing and imports have stalled, inventories must have been depleted to require replenishment.

And if government’s data have been anywhere accurate, all these seem to indicate that the real economy have been plodding too. Will income growth from these industries fill-in the gap from OFW remittances????

Yet the only thing booming have been high end properties and stocks!

How about the stagnating remittance effects on US dollar supply, GDP and earnings? 

Again, will tourism and BPOs amply cover for the deficiencies in US dollar supply generated by trade deficits and from the sagging OFW remittances?

Propagandist media boldly asserts that the Philippines will NEVER run out of US dollar supply. But what happens if the world economy turns for the worst where remittances and exports will be joined by tourism and BPOs? Will US dollars just fall from heaven? Or will BSP stop printing peso and print US dollars instead? 


How about GDP? The mercantilist bias built into the computation for GDP means trade deficits extrapolate to GDP reductions. So that’s one negative. 

True, government spending on infrastructure supposedly zoomed in August. But government spending accounts only for only about 15% of expenditure GDP. And that’s statistical growth not real growth. It’s really growth for the pockets of cronies, politicians and bureaucrats and not for the public.

Yet given that the kernel of 5.6% 2Q GDP has been mainly erected from consumers which accounted for 66%, which ironically came even when remittances have been struggling, the question now is where will the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), and its underling, the National Statistical Coordination Board (NSCB) get HFCE G-R-O-W-T-H if September remittances fails to deliver 15.45% for a quarter growth of 5%? 



As BSP data as seen above suggests, growth in personal savings appears to be accelerating! August data appears to have jumped by 10% year on year. Although only a small segment of the Philippines are banked where only 15% of the population has savings in banks, according to Findex, surging savings means less consumer spending!

So who will be spending? The underprivileged whose incomes most likely depend on OFW remittances??? The informal sector, whom has recently been financially strained from 10 successive months of 30+%%% money supply growth???? The still booming property prices which are likely to add to the rental/overhead costs of businesses in the face of weakening demand?

And has resident consumers, with access to the formal banking system, been saving due to rising perceived economic and financial uncertainties?

Curiously where will GDP G-R-O-W-T-H, an aggregated survey constructed statistical number, come from?

Of course, aside from horror movies, Sadako have become very useful especially for statisticians, especially for the domestic variety.

How about corporate earnings of PSEi?

Most of the business models of the PSEi’s 15 biggest market cap issues have catered to the mythical impervious domestic consumers.

With relevance to my first or original question, with lethargic OFW remittance growth, with a seeming downdraft in the real productive economy, and with soaring savings rate, where will the financing of consumer spending come from to buy all big ticket inventories coming from the race to build supply?

How will these affect top line, and subsequently, the bottom line of most of the 15 biggest market cap firms?

Will most of the 15 biggest market cap firms be in a capex cutting spree?

Yet why the panic buying spree of outrageously overpriced equities where valuations have been premised on the easy money growth days of 2012-13? Because people love to fight the last war (rear view mirror effect)?

Of course, today’s panic buying spree has occurred with vastly diminishing volume. This implies lesser or weakening belief on the G-R-O-W-T-H mantra. 

And I would suspect a lot of the volume comes from manipulators and their handy recruits of ‘greater fools’.

Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart, Goldman Sachs and HSBC Warns on Emerging Market Crisis!

It has been a fascination to see global stocks race back to old highs in the face of a stream of bad news. It seems that all it takes for this to happen is for a connected media personality to whisper that the FED won’t be raising rates. Such whisper would then spike the proverbial stock market punch bowl.

It’s as if all bad news will have little bearing not only on valuations but on debt, liquidity and access to credit.

Monetary cocaine has not only been very addictive it works well to lobotomize reason.

But even with the FED on stay, Asia’s currency markets haven’t been entirely convinced that the strains have been over. The ringgit, rupiah and interestingly, the peso underperformed and defied the general currency trends in Asia. 

The USD-Php rose by .39% this week to 46.05.

As the late great baseball legend Yogi Berra once said, It’s ain’t over ‘til its over!

Now comes one of the key author of “This Time is Different”, Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart to warn of the growing risks of an emerging market crisis.

At the Project Syndicate Ms. Reinhart writes[13], (bold mine)
While no two financial crises are identical, all tend to share some telltale symptoms: a significant slowdown in economic growth and exports, the unwinding of asset-price booms, growing current-account and fiscal deficits, rising leverage, and a reduction or outright reversal in capital inflows. To varying degrees, emerging economies are now exhibiting all of them.
She worries more about Emerging Markets’ hidden debts…
In short, though emerging economies’ debts seem largely moderate by historic standards, it seems likely that they are being underestimated, perhaps by a large margin. If so, the magnitude of the ongoing reversal in capital flows that emerging economies are experiencing may be larger than is generally believed – potentially large enough to trigger a crisis. In this context, keeping track of opaque and evolving financial linkages is more important than ever.
Well she surely sounds like me!

And it’s not just Ms. Reinhart. THE politically influential Goldman Sachs thinks that emerging markets are the third wave of the current financial crisis[14].
 

The financial crisis can be viewed as a number of separate but related waves. Wave 1; the US Wave started with the housing market collapse, spread into a broader credit crunch and ended with the Lehman collapse and the start of TARP and QE. Wave 2; the European Wave began with the exposure of banks to leveraged losses in the US and spread into a sovereign crisis, given the lack of a debt sharing mechanism across the Euro area. It ended with the OMT, promises to ‘do whatever it takes’, and finally the introduction of QE. Wave 3; the EM Wave coincided with the collapse in commodity prices.

The buck doesn’t stop with Goldman, HSBC jumps into the bandwagon!

HSBC throws in the bullish towel to announce that due to EM risks they too have become risk averse![15]
Monetary policy in the post crisis period has been like one giant blanket that has kept investors sheltered from the stiff breeze of structural stagnation. This blanket has also encouraged investors to move further and further into riskier assets. In effect, risk premia has slowly been pushed down. The eurozone crisis and now the EM crisis highlight that depressed risk premia are unlikely to unravel in a slow and gradual manner. Rather, once risk premia reach unsustainable levels, then only one proverbial straw will break the camel’s back. At the moment, EM assets are in the maelstrom of this unravelling…Going into year-end and looking at the financial landscape for 2016, we cannot help but remain highly risk averse.
It’s interesting to see how mainstream institutions seem as falling over each other to announce the likelihood of a global recession. 

More…

Ruchir Sharma, head of emerging markets and global macro at Morgan Stanley Investment Management sees recessions as cyclical and likely to reach within arm’s length, “Recessions follow expansions like nights follow day…We've experienced a global recession once every seven to eight years over the last 50 years. The last time we had that was '07-'08, but that was an extreme outcome. This [current] global expansion is in its seventh year, so we have to be careful[16]

And so with David Rubenstein, cofounder and co-CEO at The Carlyle Group who declared on Bloomberg that a US recession is “inevitable”, "We have not really had a recession in six years…We came out of the last recession in June of 2009. We tend to have recessions every seven years, more or less in the United States, since World War II. So at some point in the next year or two or three, you can expect a recession."[17]


Even Moody’s in last week’s outlook thinks that the risks of a US recession has risen, “Given the maturity of the current business cycle upturn, the latest deceleration by core business sales hints of rising recession risk”[18]

It is NOT my intent to use the above quotes as an appeal to authority.

Instead, for me the above represents a vital turnaround in the opinion of some of the major international establishment institutions on the global economy and of global markets.

Ideas also run from the fringes to the mainstream or periphery to the core phenomenon too.

As final note, in the past I have written that there are social implications to a market meltdown[19]
So a sustained market downturn will not only translate to losses, social frictions will likely follow.

Actions have consequences.



[1] Charles P Kindleberger, Manias, Panics and Crashes, A History of Financial Crisis, Third Edition, p.66











[12] The Guardian Saudi royal calls for regime change in Riyadh September 28, 2015

[13] Carmen Reinhart The Hidden Debt Burden of Emerging Markets Project Syndicate October 9, 2015

[14] FT Alphaville Goldman does New Wave October 12, 2015



[17] Ibid

[18] Moody’s analytics Stagnant Sales Reduce Rate Hike Odds October 15, 2015