people in motion

people in motion

mercredi 22 mai 2013

ABENOMICS


Some Facts : Best of


Abenomics Synopsis


  • Year-over-year the is Yen down 21.82% vs. the US Dollar
  • Japanese consumer prices are still falling
  • Imports jumped 9.4%, up for a sixth straight month
  • Exports up 3.8%
  • Trade balance negative for 10 straight months
  • Largest April trade deficit since 1979

People think Shinzo Abe is a hero because the Nikkei is up.

I think Abe is an absolute economic nutcase who is going to create a currency crisis in Japan if he succeeds in changing the constitution like he desires (and quite possibly even if he doesn't).

See also our website :  Japan : Plan ‘jg’ B

Abegeddon

So, what’s behind this jarring surge in yields, which occurred even as the BoJ began to roll-out its aggressive purchase program? 


In Japan, the term Banzai! literally means “ten thousand years” and can be used to wish someone long life and happiness. But during World War II, “Banzai!” was shouted in battle. It was the Japanese equivalent of “Long live the king!” – but to soldiers on the other side it came to mean a suicidal, hell-for-leather attack.
If the central bankers of the world think they’re hearing a battle cry of “Banzai!” from the lips of their Japanese brethren, they may not be far from wrong, because the Japanese are indeed on a mad charge to fight deflation at all costs. As with all good suicidal charges, at least in legend and lore, once the cry has gone up and the thundering charge has begun, there can be no turning back.


SEE  BANZAI ! Abegeddon and  


                         
                                                                                                                           Edition

Edition




















                        
                                                      
                                

Krugman tempted to support Abe : Not Enough Inflation


Olivier Delamarche : 05.21.2013

On assiste en direct au décès du Japon et tout le monde se réjouit. Ça se paiera dans un bain de sang. Ça va se traduire par un effondrement total de la monnaie, la République de Weimar mais au Japon. Bernanke est obligé de continuer les QE, s’il arrête ça sera un effondrement économique. 







As the BoJ prepares to thrill us with even more in its latest policy meeting the following brief presentation covers it all . Christine Hughes sums it all up perfectly, for Japan, "The Math Is Stacked Against Japan - It's Not 'If', It's When." 






Investors, take note… the financial system is sending us major warnings..

Two big events have occurred/ are occurring.
1) Chicago Fed President, Charles Evans who is one of the biggest pushers for QE, stated that the Fed has “the appropriate monetary policy in place” and that the economy is “improving quite a lot.”

2 )The Bank of Japan declaration after a two-day policy meeting.

Regarding #1, Evans has been one of the biggest pushers for more QE. So for Evans to suddenly change his tune and state that the Fed’s current policy is “appropriate,” indicates a significant shift in tone. This goes along with the Fed’s recent hint at tapering QE, which we’ve noted before on these pages. It’s now becoming more and more clear that the Fed is planning on tapering QE in the coming months and is trying to manage down investor expectations.
Which means that stocks are going to be losing some (not all) of their life support.

Regarding #2, The Bank of Japan raised its economic assessment at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, while holding its policy unchanged. The central bank said the measures would continue “as long as it is necessary” to achieve its goal of a stable inflation rate of 2%. It also said that the policy board had voted down a proposal by one member to set a “time frame of about two years” for its “intensive” quantitative easing.

As noted yesterday, Japan is Ground Zero for the great QE experiment. For decades now, Bernanke and his pals have claimed that the biggest problem with the Fed’s actions during the Great Depression was that it didn’t do enough.
Japan, which has now engaged in NINE QE efforts, has finally hit the “enough” stage by announcing a record $1.2 trillion QE plan. To put this in perspective, Japan’s economy is $5.86 trillion, so this single QE effort is equal to 20% of their GDP.

If this plan fails to bring about economic growth in Japan, or worse still fails to bring about growth and unleashes inflation, then it’s GAME OVER for Central Bankers.


FALLING YEN






After Japan's Crash…



Will Japan Trigger a Global Financial Meltdown? Japan’s bond market is officially losing control.We have definitely taken out the multi-year trendline here, making a new high higher after a higher low. This is BAD news as it indicates that Japan’s bond market could be entering a cyclical downturn.  see our website 




If this happens then the great global bond market rig of the last five years is coming to an end. Most analysts have been ignoring bonds because stocks are at record highs.As Japan has indicated, when bonds start to plunge, it’s not good for stocks. Today the Japanese Bond market fell and the Nikkei plunged 7%. The entire market down 7%... despite the Bank of Japan funneling $19 billion into it to hold things together.

Don't get spooked by nowaday's action. Too many investors are easily "brainwashed" when markets move in one direction for too long. Anyone who thought stocks would never have an off day is waking up on the wrong side of the bed today…







lundi 20 mai 2013

Gold Update


Bad Money drives out good money.
Bad money is driving up shares and good money is going to gold... could be the short version of Gresham's Law. What it really means is that people interested in self-preservation don't follow trends. When inflation runs amok in financial markets or in the economy, prudent people tend to hoard what's valuable. They spend what's less valuable before it becomes even more devalued (paper money).
What exactly do we mean?
Gold holdings by exchange-traded funds and products declined by 16% in the first quarter, according to Bloomberg. The institutional side of the gold picture is getting easier to understand: sell gold and buy stocks. 



Gold  Update

David Tepper of Appaloosa Management said in 2010 that it was a 'win-win' bet. Either stocks would go up because the economy was bound to recover, or stocks would go up because the Federal Reserve would drive billions in capital out of the bond market and into the stock market. He figured he couldn't lose, and so far he's right.

The important point to make is that front running the money printers is just a form of Gresham's Law. You're not investing any more. You're betting on higher asset prices. That bet doesn't have anything to with the value of securities. But if it's a bet on the direction of asset prices, it doesn't have to.
Everyone's joining in on the bet now. That's one way of looking at daily all-time highs on the S&P 500 and gold retesting levels it last saw in February of 2011. Stocks aren't money of course. But then, the ETF aren't gold either.
Anyone who bought gold through an ETF in the last two years was betting on rising gold prices. That looks like a bad bet now. A stronger US Dollar (relative to the other fiat currencies) caps the gold price.But the Tepper trade is now being taken up by all institutional traders and investors. The ETF made it easy for the institutions to buy gold. But they've also made it easier to sell it.


Let's be clear though. If the exchange-traded gold funds are facing redemptions, all they're really redeeming is units of the E.T.F. People sell those units for cash, not gold. The trust sells the gold to raise the cash. What's really worth paying attention to is who buys the gold at E.T.F. sells.

Right now, all the buying is on the retail side. Institutions have to chase returns. That's what makes them trend followers, inherently. Retail investors are not compelled to be blind trend followers.

When you're managing your own money, you have the luxury of independent thought. You make decisions based on what's best for your wealth in the long-term, not what your returns will be this quarter. In Hong Kong, retail gold buyers are thinking that they're happy to buy physical gold at these prices, even if it means paying a premium over the spot price.
Right now, the institutional selling outweighs the retail buying. There are more sellers than buyers. But the sellers are selling in order to make a bet. The buyers are buying in order to convert their savings into sound money. Either that, or the buyers are morons and the sellers are savvy.


Gold will have its day but in the meantime investors should make hay

Thus far, central bankers, led by Ben Bernanke, have pulled off the ultimate feat. They have served up just the right amount of monetary stimulus which has given us this ‘Goldilocks’ recovery in which the forces of inflation and deflation are canceling each other out. Ultimately these efforts to maintain our broken monetary system will manifest in a currency crisis and it is then that money will flee from low yielding debt instruments into hard assets such as gold and silver (and stocks).

Gold investors will have their day, but the “great reset” may be postponed for a lot longer than most people (ourselves included) thought possible.

Physical gold that’s held outside the banking system still plays an important role in investors’ portfolios. In the meantime however, investors should look to take advantage of a macro environment that is bullish for equities. Low inflation, central bank support and relatively robust economic data have created a Goldilocks scenario for equities.

When fixed income, which is the world’s largest asset class, is yielding almost nothing, it has a significant impact on other asset classes since money goes in search of returns elsewhere. In fact, as noted recently central banks are also now buying equities for this very reason.

All of this is why we continue to hold gold but have also increased our exposure to stocks (particularly dividend paying blue chips; in order to make hay while the sun shines.
There is a philosophical issue buried in here somewhere too : "Gold is the corpse of value." It's a way of freezing your purchasing power in a bar of inert metal in order to liquefy it later when the world is safer. Gold is value in suspended animation.





The Good The Bad and the Ugly

Kamikaze Rally, Gold Crash and Currency Wars

The evils of this deluge of paper money are not to be removed until our citizens are generally and radically instructed in their cause and consequences, and silence by their authority the interested clamors and sophistry of speculating, shaving, and banking institutions. Till then we must be content to return, quo ad hoc, to the savage state, to recur to barter in the exchange of our property, for want of a stable, common measure of value, that now in use being less fixed than the beads and wampum of the Indian, and to deliver up our citizens, their property and their labor, passive victims to the swindling tricks of bankers and mountebankers.
–Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to John Adams, 21 March  1819

In a growing, healthy, productive economy, you're probably better off owning shares in enterprises that create value. But you would have to be retarded to say that US stocks (or Japanese stocks for that matter) are rising because corporations are suddenly creating more value. That's not happening. Bad money is driving up shares and good money is going to gold.
Another way of putting it is that the currency war is forcing investors to take a side. You're either with stocks, or against them. Gold doesn't have a yield and neither do most government bonds anymore. Central bankers have eliminated the spread of assets competing with equities. By doing so, they've produced a rally in stocks which they hope will precipitate a recovery in the real economy.
They need the recovery because the only non-catastrophic way to deal with the big public and private debt overhangs is to grow it out of it (with a little inflation salted in). If they can't print their way to a recovery, then the whole model of creating prosperity through money printing is exposed as a giant fraud – which is exactly what it is.

Japan has opened a new front in the 'currency wars'
'Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they only have permanent interests.' 

The US, UK and Switzerland are already enjoined, with Europe likely to take up arms shortly. Nations which constitute around 70% of world output are 'at war', pursuing policies which entail devaluation and currency debasement.
But currency conflicts are merely skirmishes in the broader economic wars between nations. Most developed nations now have adopted a similar set of policies, to deal with problems of low economic growth, unemployment and overhangs of high levels of government and consumer debt.
The US and Japan defend their actions, claiming that they are not seeking to devalue their currencies but only trying to boost their domestic economy. 

In a recent speech, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke refused to countenance that the US was involved in 'beggar-thy-neighbor' policies, arguing that America had adopted an 'enrich-thy-neighbor' strategy. He did not elaborate on how this would work, beyond the homily that a strong US economy was good for the world.
Though, ultimately, a policy of devaluation to attain prosperity is flawed, especially when all major nations implement similar policies, especially given increasing American and European disquiet at Japanese actions to weaken the Yen.
In a shift to economic isolationism, all nations want to maximize their share of limited economic growth and shift the burden of financial adjustment onto others. Manipulation of currencies as well as overt and covert trade restrictions, procurement policies favoring national suppliers, preferential financing and industry assistance policies are part of this process.
Central banks are increasingly deploying innovative monetary policies such as zero interest rate policies (ZIRP), quantitative easing (QE) and outright debt monetization to try to engineer economic recovery.






Artificially low interest rates reduce the cost of servicing debt allowing higher levels of borrowings to be sustained in the short run. Low rates and quantitative easing measures help devalue the currency facilitating a transfer of wealth from foreign savers, as the value of a country's securities denominated in the local currency falls in foreign currency terms.
A weaker currency boosts exports, driven by cheaper prices. Stronger export led growth and lower unemployment assists in reducing trade and budget deficits.
The policies have significant costs, including increasing import prices, increasing the cost of servicing foreign currency debt, inflation and increasing government debt levels.
Eventually, when QE programs are discontinued, interest rates may increase, compounding the problems. In extreme cases, the policies can destroy the acceptability of a currency.
The policies also force the cost of economic adjustment onto other often smaller nations, especially emerging countries, via appreciation of their currency, destabilizing capital inflows and inflationary pressures, for example through higher commodity prices.
Given that emerging markets have underpinned tepid global economic growth, this risks truncating any recovery in developed nations.

Since the onset of the global financial crisis governments and central banks have been attempting to bring about economic prosperity by creating money and pushing it out into the global economy. After almost six years however, they have failed to produce a lasting recovery, or indeed anything close.



Policymakers around the world are trying to prevent the “great reset” by re-inflating the global credit bubble. However, by trying to sustain the unsustainable, principally via their policy of QE Infinity, what they have done is create massive distortions in the economy and financial markets, most notably in sovereign bonds

The fact is, this policy of massive money printing is incredibly reckless and our view that this will end badly Central banks have accelerated QE because they think it is essentially a free lunch, but that their actions are creating significant risks in the system.

QE has caused a distorted recovery in which financiers are doing well while the man in the street continues to suffer. The world needs growth that isn’t related to monetary policy. We need “innovation, not currency depreciation”, especially if we’re going to confront entitlement obligations that are “utterly unpayable”. The ultimate question for a fiat money regime is at what point does confidence in money disappear?

Focusing on Japan (the world’s most indebted country), we note that the BoJ is engaging in a far bigger programme of QE than the Fed, since it’s doing about 70% of what the Fed is doing in an economy around one third the size. Japan Shinzo Abe is adding a ponzi scheme to a ponzi scheme… the beginning of the end has begun.
More on Abenomics and Is Abenomics Going to Put Japan Back on the Map?

Those that have studied the writings of Austrian economists understand the common sense notion that printing money does not create real wealth or prosperity. If it did then Argentina and Zimbabwe would be G8 nations. Indeed, it was the creation of unprecedented amounts of money and credit that led to the 2008 bust, and we are seeing more and more signs that monetary policy is creating a new credit bubble just like the one that culminated in the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers in September 2008.

Risky lending practices have returned to Wall Street, with banks now packaging up new forms of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), known as collateralized loan obligations (CLOs). Margin debt at the NYSE has also risen dramatically in recent months and is now only slightly below the level it reached in 2007, and the junk bond market is also at record levels.

As mentioned previously, we live in a world where all currencies are fiat  and every fiat currency since the time of the Romans has ended in devaluation and eventual collapse. Indeed, there have been 34 hyperinflations in the last 100 years – most of which took place in the 20th century with fiat currencies – and it’s not only the currency that collapsed but also the economy that created it.


Currency Wars Summary

Ultimately all these efforts to maintain our broken monetary system will manifest in a currency crisis, however identifying the precise trigger or predicting when it will happen is extremely difficult.
When will it end?
The most likely trigger still looks to be the bursting of the bubble in government bonds, but as Jeremy Siegel, professor of finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, pointed out in a recently Bloomberg interview, “I think bonds have been in a bubble for a couple of years. “If you’d have asked be a couple of years ago if they would still be at 170 (the yield on a 10-year US Treasury) I’d have said no, but one thing we know is that bubbles last a lot longer than any of us can imagine.”
SEE our comments on investlogic website 
When asked what the trigger might be for a bursting of the bond bubble he simply said, an improvement in the US economy and a reduction in bond purchases by the Fed. Right now however there is no sign of this and the appetite among investors for sovereign debt is huge. In fact, due to the fact that central banks are crowding out other buyers, there may soon be shortages.
In the short-term then, this tightness of supply is helping to drive bond prices higher and yields lower. Twelve months ago, for example, Greek 10-year bonds were yielding 27.58%, today that are yielding just 9.45%, and Portugal’s 10-year debt was yielding 11.42%, whereas it’s now down to 5.43%. 
Actions to weaken currencies risk economic retaliation. Affected nations could intervene in currency markets, try to fix its exchange rate (as Switzerland has done against the Euro), lower interest rates, undertake competitive QE programs, implement capital controls or shift objectives to targeting nominal growth or unemployment (as the US has done).
But currency wars are not conflicts between equals. In the currency wars, major economies have larger armies.
Smaller countries and their taxpayers simply do not have the ability to bear such costs of defending themselves in the currency wars.
In the worst case, large economies, like the US and Europe, have the economic size and scale to retreat into near closed economies, surviving and retooling its economy behind explicit or implicit trade barriers.
This option is unavailable to nations requiring access to external markets for its products and foreign capital.
Actions to try to set a nation's currency have significant direct costs. Indirect costs include risk of inflation, domestic asset bubbles and other distortions.
In 2012, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) was forced to build record foreign exchange reserves to maintain the Euro at Swiss Franc 1.20 in an effort to shield Switzerland from an economic downturn, driven in part by an appreciating currency.
Its reserves of over Swiss Franc 427 billion ($453 billion) are over 75% of Switzerland's annual gross domestic product. The SNB purchased Swiss Franc 188 billion francs ($199 billion) in foreign currencies in 2012, more than ten times the Swiss Franc 17.8 billion ($18.9 billion) it spent in 2011. The SNB's intervention resulted in losses totaling Swiss Franc 27 billion in 2010.

To expect nations not to use fiscal and monetary policy to manipulate currencies is disingenuous. British statesman Lord Palmerston noted, 'Nations have no permanent friends or allies, they only have permanent interests.' Circumstances now dictate the use of every available policy tool to serve individual national interests.







jeudi 9 mai 2013

Emerging Chronicles


Why You Should Worry About Inflation 
in the Developing Economies

China’s consumer price index rose more than expected in April, while wholesale prices suffered a steeper fall. The April CPI showed a gain of 2.4% from a year earlier, led by a 4% rise in food prices, the National Bureau of Statistics said Thursday.The producer price index, meanwhile, fell by the most since October, dropping 2.6% against a decline of 1.9% in March.
Investors in local currency emerging market bonds should recognize the threat of inflation and consider protecting themselves against it.
While it is difficult to believe that inflation will be much of a problem in the Advanced Economies (AEs) over the next several years, there are reasons to worry about inflation in the Developing Economies (DEs). This should be of particular concern to those contemplating investments in emerging market local currency bonds.

The threat reflects a number of factors:

  • Inflation is already high in the DEs. According to the IMF, consumer prices (CPI) rose 5.9% last year.1 Moreover, they have risen at an average 6.4% annually over the last ten years,1 suggesting that inflationary expectations are entrenched and inflation therefore more difficult to bring down.
  • The DEs are growing robustly, and have been throughout the global recovery, reducing levels of surplus capacity and increasing the potential for a further acceleration of inflation.
  • Price indexes in the DEs are typically comprised differently from those in the AEs, with both food and energy obtaining much larger weights. This makes it difficult for policy makers to control inflation because both are determined by global as well as domestic conditions.
  • To the extent that governments and central banks in the DEs influence core inflation, they are currently inclined to run too accommodative a monetary policy to prevent exchange rate appreciation, thereby increasing upside risks.

While there are obviously individual countries in the developing world that boast low to moderate inflation, consumer prices generally rose quite quickly in the DEs last year. Prices rose 4.5% in Developing Asia, 5.8% in Central and Eastern Europe, 6.0% in Latin America and 10.7% in the Middle East and North Africa.1 Moreover, the numbers were not overly distorted by extreme outliers (one country experiencing hyper-inflation and thus distorting the average) as the median inflation rate in the DEs was 4.9%.



The relatively poor inflation performance in the DEs is not new. Indeed, over the last 10 years, consumer prices have risen at an average annual rate of 6.4%. Such a protracted period of relatively high inflation affects inflationary expectations, effectively embedding them into the wage bargaining and producer pricing processes. Until these expectations unwind, policy makers will find it difficult to lower inflation.

The DEs have grown relatively robustly during the global recovery. Using the IMF’s purchasing power parity aggregates, real GDP has grown at an average annual rate of 6.3% over the last three years, and while it slipped to 5.1% last year, it is projected to reaccelerate by about 0.2 percentage point to 5.3% this year.1 The speed and persistence of growth suggests that output gaps have already narrowed and will narrow further this year, posing an upside risk to inflation.

The CPI is often disaggregated into food, energy and core. In AEs, food and energy typically obtain weights of around 15.0% and 7.0%, respectively, leaving the core index at around 78.0%. However, in DEs, food can obtain a weight of 50.0%, and energy of 20.0%, leaving core at just 30.0%. Given that the price of food, and particularly energy, are heavily influenced by global as well as domestic economic and other conditions, policy makers in DEs have a much more difficult task controlling inflation. Moreover, given the capacity for large and sudden swings in food and energy prices, headline inflation is inherently volatile in the DEs.

Although some countries such as China, are attempting to become more balanced, DEs typically depend on exports to drive growth. Hence they fret about international competiveness. Given the extremely accommodative monetary stance of the AEs, the DEs are currently apt to keep monetary policy easier than domestic economic conditions would otherwise dictate in order to prevent exchange rate appreciation and the associated loss of export competitiveness. (That partly explains why the recent policy moves by Japan were met with such hostility.) India seems to provide a good example of this phenomenon, as the Reserve Bank cut its key policy rate 100 basis points over the last year despite a CPI inflation rate of 10.4%.

In summary, investors in local currency emerging market bonds should recognize the threat of inflation and consider protecting themselves against it.

"Real" Inflation in the US

P.S. To have a broad picture citing The Economist's Big Mac index, Peter Schiff says real inflation has been understated since the government started adjusting the way inflation was measured in the early 2000s. Since 2002 the Big Mac has risen in price at nearly three times the rate of overall inflation.