piatok 15. januára 2010

History Suggests Recovery From Financial Crisis Will Be Slow and Painful

History Suggests Recovery From Financial Crisis Will Be Slow and Painful: "

Several sectors, including commercial real estate in several countries are at high risk of deleveraging, McKinsey says in new study.

The recent bursting of the great global credit bubble not only led to the first worldwide recession since the 1930s but also left an enormous burden of debt that now weighs on the prospects for recovery. Today, government and business leaders are facing the twin questions of how to prevent similar crises in the future and how to guide their economies through the looming and lengthy process of debt reduction, or deleveraging.

McKinsey Global Institute created an extensive fact base on debt and leverage in each sector of ten mature economies and four emerging economies. In addition, MGI analyzed 45 historic episodes of deleveraging, in which an economy significantly reduced its total debt-to-GDP ratio, that have occurred since 1930.

Key Findings:

  • Leverage levels are still very high in some sectors of several countries—and this is a global problem, not just a U.S. one.

  • To assess the sustainability of leverage, one must take a granular view using multiple sector-specific metrics. The analysis has identified ten sectors within five economies that have a high likelihood of deleveraging.

  • Empirically, a long period of deleveraging nearly always follows a major financial crisis.

  • Deleveraging episodes are painful, lasting six to seven years on average and reducing the ratio of debt to GDP by 25 percent. GDP typically contracts during the first several years and then recovers.
  • If history is a guide, many years of debt reduction are expected in specific sectors of some of the world’s largest economies, and this process will exert a significant drag on GDP growth.

Deleveraging

The right tools could have identified the unsustainable build-up of leverage in pockets of several economies in the years leading up to the crisis. Policy makers should work to develop a more robust system for tracking leverage at a granular level across countries and over time. One needs to look at specific metrics such as the growth of leverage, and the borrowers’ ability to service debt if there is a disruption to income or rise in interest rates. MGI found that sufficiently granular data do not exist today.

MGI’s analysis provides support for several of the current regulatory proposals, including improving the quality of bank capital through higher Core Tier I ratios, monitoring leverage as a proxy for asset bubbles, and creating better macro-prudential regulation to reduce systemic risk. However, the analysis raises questions about some aspects of the current regulatory agenda, such as limiting gross leverage ratios (which did not change appreciably in most banks).

Coping with pockets of deleveraging is also a challenge for business executives. The process portends a prolonged period in which credit is less available and more costly, altering the viability of some of business models and changing the attractiveness of different types of investments. In historic episodes, private investment was often quite low for the duration of deleveraging."

štvrtok 14. januára 2010

Mike Mayo: How Banking Became An Industry On Steroids In 10 Steps

Mike Mayo: How Banking Became An Industry On Steroids In 10 Steps: "

In his testimony in front of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, analyst Mike Mayo identifies 10 ways 'banks have been on steroids.'


  1. Enhanced performance with excessive loan growth. Banks and the financial industry grew loans 10%, while the GDP only grew 5%, thus loan growth was twice the natural rate.
  2. Banks pumped up products with higher yielding assets. Low yielding securities and treasuries fell from 32% in the 90s of bank assets to 2%.
  3. All the fastest growing loan categories were real estate related.
  4. More balance sheet leverage. In the 80s, leverage was 20x. In the last decade it was 40x.
  5. Investment banks pumped themselves up with exotic CDO-related derivatives. They also bought 'protection' from the monolines, which turned out to be garbage.
  6. Consumers levered up as well.
  7. Due to accounting issues, banks stopped setting aside as much for reserves.
  8. The FDIC didn't collect any fees for several years ending in 2006 because there was such confidence about the state of the fund.
  9. Through the GSEs, the government doled out steroids.
  10. Salary incentives have never matched performance. The bonus system has always encouraged excessive risk.

Now read his full testimony.

2010-0113-Mayo(2)

False Street says hello to the world!

False Street says hello to the world!

Yes, after couple of "shared" posts I would like to write something of my own. I started this blog because I wanted to archive articles and posts from various bloggers in one place. I already have a Google Reader shared page, but wanted to make it bit more like a real blog. So... this is it :)

Most of the time the posts will be shared from other bloggers and also from some other pages. I don't do this for money or to be Zero Hedge one day, but just for my personal record. I'm employed as a stock market analyst in small company and most of the time I try to comment on the market action.

But I don't want this blog to be about day trading, but about financial markets and the economy, and occasionally about art & some crazy stuff I find when surfing the web :)

This first post is also good place to write some kind of outlook for the year 2010. I'm not good in making long time predictions, but for my own personal record only, I should make an outlook for the new year.

It will be short one, because as I said, long term outlooks are not my strong point, plus I'm pretty lazy... So here we go :)

This year will be again volatile. I expect that in 1Q and 2Q there will be a continuation of the market rally, but bulls will start to lose their breath. Strong expectations of earnings will just not come true. In the second half of the year, I expect a market correction. In total the S&P500 will end the year with a single digit percentage profit.

The U.S. Dollar should continue to fall and I don't expect a rate hike from the Fed this year. This background will surely be positive for stocks. At the end of 2009 I expected a very slow recovery of the labour market, but the census in the US will be a big positive. However, the trend in households deleveraging will continue so don't bet on a fast recovery. This is a credit driven recession, not a simple inventory recession.

A big risk for this outlook are bond vigilantes. Rising yields because of rising public debt can stop any recovery. But didn't the central banks and governments just "kick the can down the road a bit"? I think they did. They just transferred the problems from private companies onto our shoulders. That's not a solution, that's just pretending to be a solution. The day of reckoning will come... but it will not be 2010. Japan can still service its debt which is twice as large as their annual output. One day the music will stop. But I'm sure we will all know by then :)

streda 13. januára 2010

GLOBAL HOUSEHOLD LEVERAGE, HOUSE PRICES AND CONSUMPTION

GLOBAL HOUSEHOLD LEVERAGE, HOUSE PRICES AND CONSUMPTION: "

Interesting reading here from the San Francisco Fed. Sometimes I wonder if the SF Fed even communicates with Ben Bernanke. Although Bernanke clearly had no idea there were bubbles forming in the global economy, remains oblivious to reflating future bubbles and emphatically denies that Fed policy has made problems worse, the SF Fed appears to argue the opposite. This paper concludes what we have long believed – the recovery is likely to be weaker than expected as global debt remains a hindrance to overall consumption and the Fed plays an important role in exacerbating the boom bust cycle:

In the years leading up to the crisis, a combination of factors, including low interest rates, lax lending standards, a proliferation of exotic mortgage products, and the growth of a global market for securitized loans fueled a rapid increase in household borrowing.

Going forward, the efforts of households in many countries to reduce their elevated debt loads via increased saving could result in sluggish recoveries of consumer spending. Higher saving rates and correspondingly lower rates of domestic consumption growth would mean that a larger share of GDP growth would need to come from business investment, net exports, or government spending. Debt reduction might also be accomplished via various forms of default, such as real estate short sales, foreclosures, and bankruptcies. But such deleveraging involves significant costs for consumers, including tax liabilities on forgiven debt, legal fees, and lower credit scores.

As countries begin to emerge from the recession, it is important to consider what lessons might be learned for the conduct of policy. History suggests that asset price bubbles can be extraordinarily costly when accompanied by significant increases in borrowing. During the recent housing bubble, underwriting standards were weakened and credit extension rose at abnormally high rates, creating a self-reinforcing feedback loop that drove house prices upward. In the aftermath of a global boom-and bust cycle in credit and housing, financial regulators should take the necessary steps to prevent a replay of this damaging episode.

"

Upcoming Government Funding Crises: Japan Edition

Upcoming Government Funding Crises: Japan Edition: "

One of our favorite strategists, SocGen's Dylan Grice is out with a masterful in its simplicity analysis, looking at the possibility of a funding crisis enveloping the governments of the developed world, and originating in the place where ever more people see brewing trouble: Japan. The full presentation can be found here, and while we recommend a full read, for those strapped on time, here are the cliff notes.

Risk is back: in fact, it is as if nothing ever happened. Junk spreads and the VIX are practically at the levels where we were before the first cracks in the housing bubble appeared. Is the economy really sufficiently stable to merit such risk metrics?

In answering the last question, one needs to look no further than the governments of the developed countries. In one word: insolvency. The ratio of total net liabilities, including off balance sheet, to GDP is at 400%. Greece is at 875% (the Greek finance minister once again was comforting anyone who cares to listen that the country does not have a funding crisis. We are waiting for this third promise in this regard).

Such insolvency typically can end in only one way: hyperinflation. The chart below captures the budget deficits a few years before hyperinflationary episodes in five countries during the 20th century.

Why are budgets so inflated: one word - stimulus. Or taking from the future (and funding it handsomely) to avoid political, financial and social unrest (as well as maintaining even a slim hope of a second term). The entire world now runs on one ongoing stimulus: from the US, to the UK, to the EU, to China - the spigot has been turned on. And where do look to make sure that this is a viable structure? Where else - Japan. After 20 years of off again, on again stimulus after stimulus and quantitative easing episode, the country still has deflation. Where is this alleged hyperinflation. It may very well be coming. Japan's budget deficit has been funded over the past decades with internal source of capital. Prudent Japanese savers had been buying up JGBs hand over fist due to their perceived safety. Yet something is changing - demographics (and not only in Japan, but in the US as well, as an aging baby boomer population hits retirement). The Japanese demographic decline is in full swing, with the working age population now dropping materially.

And as more and more of the domestic population enters asset run-down mode, savings decline, and existing assets are sold.

Indeed, the demographic shift is already having an impact on Japanese holdings of JGBs.

The biggest problem for Japan, however, is that it can not afford to ween itself off bond issuance. Japan's current debt service amounts to 35% of pre-bond issuance revenues, while the ratio of revenues from bond issuance to that from tax collection is expected to rise over 100% in 2010: 'tax revenues will be less important than borrowing as a source of income.'

Will foreigners agree to purchase JGBs at 1.5%. No. Due to the abovementioned structural considerations, Grice notes 'I doubt there is any yield international capital markets can find acceptable that will not bankrupt the Japanese government.'

And if wholesale selling of assets does in fact occur, this will mean very bad things for America:

This is far from just a JGB market problem. As Japan's retirees age and run down their wealth, Japan's policymakers will be forced to sell assets, including US Treasuries currently worth $750bn, or Y70 trillion 'eight months' worth of domestic financing. At nearly 10% of the outstanding US Treasury stock, this might well precipitate other government funding crises (bearing in mind that the Japanese model is the argument buttressing confidence in Western government bonds in the face of deteriorating fiscal conditions). At the very least I'd expect it to trigger an international bond market rout scary enough to spook all other asset classes.

Will 2010 be the beginning of the end of flawed Keynesian economics?

Maybe Japan's will be the crisis that wakes up the rest of the world and triggers some tough decisions on world-wide debt loads. Or maybe not - maybe the Greeks will beat them to it? or the Irish or the UK, or the US? Like banks in 2007, developed market governments today rely on sustained capital markets more than any time in their history. What if they shut?

It should be a very interesting year.


AttachmentSize
Grice Japan.pdf168.57 KB
"

US Will Hit 94% Debt to GDP Ratio Next Year, Surpassing the Level Where Debt Starts Reducing Economic Growth

US Will Hit 94% Debt to GDP Ratio Next Year, Surpassing the Level Where Debt Starts Reducing Economic Growth: "

Ambrose-Evans Pritchard notes:

Fitch
expects the combined state and federal debt to reach 94pc of GDP next
year, up from 57pc at the end of 2007. Federal interest costs will
reach 13pc of revenues, meaning that an eighth of all taxes will go to
service debt.

The figure of 94% is dramatic given that two top American economists - Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff - wrote last month :

The
relationship between government debt and real GDP growth is weak for
debt/GDP ratios below a threshold of 90 percent of GDP. Above 90 percent,
median growth rates fall by one percent, and average growth falls
considerably more. We find that the threshold for public debt is
similar in advanced and emerging economies...

Indeed, as Forbes noted in December:

Add the unfunded portion of entitlement programs and we're at 840% of GDP.

Deficits do matter.

Note
1: Reinhart and Rogoff also make it clear that the larger the ratio of
external to internal debt, the greater the drag on economic growth. The
U.S. had a high level of external debt, although the Fed
is now covertly monetizing much of the U.S. debt. So I'm not sure what the ratio of external versus internal debt really is at the moment.

Note 2: Fitch's 94% figure includes state as well as Federal debt. I am not sure if this changes the above analysis.

"

Investors.com - Is China Really Growing That Fast?

Investors.com - Is China Really Growing That Fast?: "

Is China Really Growing That Fast?

Posted 01/11/2010 07:36 PM ET

Competitiveness: A spate of new reports show China leapfrogging other nations on its way to economic superpower status. Time to concede the global economic lead to the world's most populous nation? Hardly.

The news these days is filled with Chinese triumphalism. The indispensable Drudge Report did us all a favor by collecting a number of very recent headlines about China's soaring, seemingly unstoppable, economy. Among them:

• 'China Ends U.S.'s Reign as Largest Auto Market' (Bloomberg).

• 'China Becomes Biggest Exporter, Edging Out Germany' (Associated Press).

• 'China Banks Eclipse U.S. Rivals' (Financial Times of London).

To top it off, Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Fogel predicted early in the new year that China's economy alone would hit $123 trillion in 2040, three times what the entire world produced in 2000 and more than twice the world's current output. Per-capita income will be $85,000, more than triple that in the European Union.

Such news is sure to spark a new round of hand-wringing in the U.S. It's only in a matter of time, they will tell us, that China will be top dog — and the U.S. just an economic pup by comparison.

With reported average GDP growth of 10% (even last year, during a global financial crisis, China reportedly grew at an 8% pace and is predicted to grow 9.5% this year), that's a real possibility. Ten percent growth leads to a doubling of the economy in just seven years. At 2.5%, where the U.S. is now, it takes about 29 years.

So China's total GDP of $5 trillion will soon overtake our $14 trillion, right? Not so fast.

First, let's ask the question that economists often ask but is all but ignored in the media: Can China's data be trusted? Many economists believe the answer is no. In fact, no one knows for sure what China's GDP is. The communist government simply announces it — there is virtually no transparency.

These problems go way back. In 1992, China finally stopped using economic accounting methods it learned from the USSR — methods that led to consistent overestimates of Chinese growth.

Yet problems remained. In a 2001 study, economist Thomas Rawski of the University of Pittsburgh declared that 'recent growth claims defy economic logic and clash with a broad array of credible information from Chinese resources ...'

Last year, Derek Scissors, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, likewise critiqued China's economic record-keeping — and asserted China's current economic model of high growth based on forced lending by the government is unsustainable.

'In the past, the People's Bank would report loan growth in the 15% range, supporting better-than-10% GDP growth,' he wrote. Last year, China's lending surged by a third, thanks to its own $590 billion 'stimulus' package. But growth was just 8%.

Sound familiar? In the late 1980s, Japan was set to own the world based on its vast expansion of lending and exports. Some see a similar Chinese bubble in the making — one that would dwarf the financial tsunami that hit Western economies after 2007.

This is not to say China's economy is not growing. It is. It's just not growing as fast as its officials say.

But the real question is — how well do individuals do in China in terms of output? Even using questionable current data and despite decades of rapid growth, the results aren't so impressive.

Per-capita GDP in China isn't even $2,500 a year, in real dollars (see chart). In the U.S., it's $42,000 a year. In short, it'll be decades, if ever, before China closes that gap.

"

A global fiasco is brewing in Japan – Telegraph Blogs

A global fiasco is brewing in Japan – Telegraph Blogs: "

A global fiasco is brewing in Japan

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Economics
Last updated: January 12th, 2010

I have felt rather lonely after suggesting in my New Year Predictions that Japan is dangerously close to blowing up on its sovereign debts, with consequences that will be felt across the world.

My intended point — overly condensed — was that 2010 will prove to be the year that Japan flips from deflation to something very different: the beginnings of debt monetization by a terrified central bank that will ultimately spin out of control, perhaps crossing into hyperinflation by the middle of the decade.

So it is nice to have some company: first from PIMCO’s Paul McCulley, who said that the Bank of Japan should buy “unlimited amounts” of long-term government debt (JGBs) to lift the country out of a “deflationary liquidity trap” and raise the souffle again.

His point is different from mine, in that he discerns deflation “as far as the eye can see”. But in a sense it is the same point. Once a country embarks on such policies, the game is nearly up. The IMF says Japan’s gross public debt will reach 227pc of GDP this year. This is compounding at ever faster speeds towards 250pc by mid-decade.

The only reason why this has not yet blown up is because investors (mostly Japanese) have not yet had the leap in imagination required to understand their predicament, and act on it. That roughly is the argument of Dylan Grice from Societe Generale in his latest Popular Delusions note released today. “A global fiasco is brewing in Japan.”

Japan’s deficits are already within the hyperinflation “red flag” zone identified by historian Peter Bernholz (”Monetary Regimes and Inflation” .. the Bible on this subject). As you can see from the charts below, prices start to spiral into the stratosphere once the deficits as a share of government expenditure rises above a third and stays there for several years.

japandebt

japandebt2

The Bernholz range for the five hyperinflations of France, Germany, Poland, Brazil, and Bolivia over the centuries is surprisingly wide, from 33pc to 91pc. Japan has been in the that range almost continuously for the last eight years. The US joined the party in 2009. Japan’s Bernholz index will rise above 50pc this year for the first time, meaning that it will have to borrow more from the bond markets than raises in tax revenue. You see the problem.

We all know that Japan has been racking up debt for Two Lost Decades, yet the sky has refused to fall. Borrowing costs have slithered down to 1.36pc on 10-year JGBs and under 1pc on shorter debt, though they are not as low as they were .. nota bene. This seeming defiance of gravity has emboldened the Krugmanites and Keynesian prime-pumpers to call for a repeat in the US, UK, and Europe. There lies a great danger.

Mr Grice said Japan was able to pull off this feat only because its captive saving pool was large enough to cover the short-fall, and because the Japanese people continued to be reassured by the conjurer’s illusion that all was well. This cannot continue.

The country tipped into outright demographic decline in 2005. Households have already stopped adding to their stock of JGBs. As the aging crisis accelerates, the elderly are running down their assets. The savings rate will soon crash below zero.

Japan can turn to foreign investors to plug the gap, or course, but at what price? If yields reached UK or US levels of 4pc, debt costs would soak up nearly all the budget, leaving nothing for schools, roads, the police, or salaries for the Ministry of Finance. “I doubt there is any yield that international capital markets can find acceptable that will not bankrupt the Japanese state,” he said.

Note too that the Japanese will also have to run down their holdings of US Treasuries, currently $750bn or 10pc of the entire stock of US Treasury debt, as well as selling a lot of Gilts and Belgian bonds.

“This might very well precipitate other government funding crises. At the very least I’d expect it to trigger an international bond market rout scary enough to spook all other asset classes. So maybe we should all be concerned that Japan is in the hyperinflationary range. And if so, maybe we should think a little more carefully about how Western governments consider their debt burdens. Maybe Japan’s will be the crisis that wakes up the rest of the world,” he said.

Will it happen, this week, this month, this year, or will Tokyo keep the illusion of solvency going for years longer? Who knows. Japan is an endlessly mystifying society. But as Mr Grice puts it, if you are sitting on a tectonic fault line, expect an earthquake.

"

THE ART OF TAPE READING: PART ONE

THE ART OF TAPE READING: PART ONE: "
Trading is not about knowing. Trading is about acting on situations, patterns, and signals that you are familiar with. This all comes from experience, proper training, and something that you and I call intuition. Intuition is required for reading the tape.

Reading the tape is basically studying pure and magnified price action. Long ago, traders used to study the ticker tape to assess price action, the volume, momentum, and other signals long before the internet was born. You must have this skill to refine and perfect your entries and exits. Since most people already know a lot about technical analysis, I wanted to cover the next evolution in your development.

Most of you know that I keep things simple and focus exclusively on price action, volume, moving averages, trends, and other simple signals. If you master price action, then you will be able to tell whether a stock is strong or weak prior to breakouts, one of my most favorite and practiced strategies. You'll be ahead of the pack of technical traders that don't know how to read the tape. Instead of going into Level 2 or the bid/ask, I will integrate the tape with charts as I am most proficient in this area.

Learning to trade requires two things. The first was mention in the second sentence of this article. The other is creating the perfect mindset that can handle unusual and uncertain liquid trading environments. This isn't something that can be taught from a textbook or in a school. It must be practiced over and over again. A teacher must demonstrate what has to be done and I will be that teacher. In addition, I expect you as the student to work on the personal experience that's necessary. Luckily, that's developed over time.

I chose 'art' for tape reading because that's what it is. It's not a science. The physicist Yakov Zeldovich once said, 'Science has one answer where art has many.' Tape reading requires an open mind. It is also interpreted differently among traders, therefore I consider it an art. You are the artist and the trade is your artwork. A big side of trading where art plays a big role is when you adapt when the market changes it's tune. You must adjust or face indefinite loss.

The biggest benefit of tape reading for me is how it defines my entries and exits. Most of you have been following me for months, perhaps even a year and a half when I first started blogging. You already know what I do, and you know my trades already. My job is to read stock price action correctly and then viciously attack each trade. You may have witnessed me attacking the same stock over and over again in a single day. This is possible because of the synergy that technicals, charts, and reading the tape produce.

All of this leads to the 'edge'. Do you have it? I can tell you that my personally trained army of traders do and demonstrate it on a daily basis. They are confident in their actions. They are consistent with their results and their emotions. Our plays are easily distinguishable and we have our own style. We know exactly what to do with each setup. There is no hesitation to attack. How do they do it? It's their
edge and reading the tape is a huge component of it. There's only one way to develop an edge and reading the tape and it's through experience.

The highest possible level a trader can reach is intuitive trading. As we continue to trade, we reach critical mass that profoundly results in second nature reactions. This is your ultimate goal in developing as a trader.

The next article in this series will explain the tape in detail. We'll talk about various emotional attributes to the tape such as capitulation or euphoria, as well as accumulation and distribution,trend continuations, select high-probability setups, and many other things in future articles.

----------------------------------------------------------

If you haven't done so already, vote for me in the ShortyAwards in Finance. It only takes a minute and I'll appreciate it greatly. For those that already voted, thank you so much.

http://shortyawards.com/WeeklyTA
"

utorok 12. januára 2010

Terminator 2: The Musical

YouTube- Skynet Symphonic


Trapped Inside A Property Bubble-Caixin

Trapped Inside A Property Bubble-Caixin

By Andy Xie 01.10.2010 18:32

Trapped Inside A Property Bubble

When China's real estate bubble finally bursts while exports become less competitive, the consequences could be severe.

The next 10 years will be more challenging than the past decade. Indeed, unless economic policies are adjusted, China's inflated real estate market could suddenly shrivel while the decade is still young.

China's market share gains in global trade and foreign direct investment due to low costs and rising global demand drove the nation's success. But China is no longer the lowest of the low-cost producers, and it's unlikely to gain market share. Moreover, global demand isn't likely to rise as fast as before; expect economic development at one-third previous speeds.

The biggest risk to China's economy is the desire to maintain past economic growth rates by maximizing investments in property -- an unproductive asset. It supports short-term growth by sacrificing long-term growth as capital's average productivity declines over time.

Local government performance in China is measured according to GDP and fiscal revenue. Property development can achieve high numbers for both quickly. This is why property's share in China's capital allocation is rapidly rising as prices appreciate and volumes increase. This is a politically driven bubble -- and it's already massive. Unless the trend is reversed by reforming incentives for local governments, China's property bubble could mushroom in two years from what's now a dangerous level. The burst could happen in 2012, endangering social and political stability.

The first decade of the 21st century began when an IT bubble burst. It was laced with 9-11 and SARS, and ended with a global financial crisis. It was a horrible decade. Now, much of the world has stagnated or regressed. Western prosperity mid-decade turned out to be a mirage manufactured on Wall Street.

The West didn't accept the need for adjusting living standards as emerging economies caught up, which led to a delayed bubble that made the problem bigger. Now the West, particularly the United States and Britain, faces a terrible decade ahead.

Amid the horror, China has risen like no other. Its GDP in dollars has quadrupled while exports quintupled. Adjusting for dilution due to dollar's external depreciation and internal inflation, from outside looking in, China's economic strength has still more than doubled in real value. It is an unprecedented accomplishment for such a massive country. And the primary drivers of success were gains in global trade and investment market share.

Low base, reform and luck could explain China's success. When the Asian Financial Crisis hit more than a decade ago, China chose not to devalue to maintain competitiveness but lowered state sector costs. When the global economy normalized, China became more competitive. Joining the World Trade Organization was an insurance policy that maximized low-cost benefits, and China's global market share tripled. Internally, China built infrastructure for growth without inflation that could erode competitiveness. The policy mix was perfect.

Neither competitiveness nor winning share in a shrinking market can guarantee growth. But by increasing consumer debt, the United States sustained demand while losing in areas of global investment and income. The credit bubble maintained global demand while China's market share gained rapidly. It was a lucky break for China, but now it's run out. The 2008 financial crisis means the United States is likely to cut debt-financed consumption with half as much growth over the next decade, while Europe and Japan are likely to have zero growth.

Meanwhile, China over the past five years has seen rising prices for production factors such as labor, raw materials, land, environmental control and taxes. These prices had been stable previously. Now, wage costs for export factories have roughly doubled in yuan terms, as have raw material prices. Before the Asian Financial Crisis, China's wage costs were half of Southeast Asia's. Now they are twice as high. Bangladesh's wage costs are even lower. It's likely China will lose market share to these low-cost competitors.

Two of three factors for the past decade's success are gone, so China needs to depend more on improved efficiency for growth. But instead, the recent trend seems to be going the other way. Rising costs and weak demand are making manufacturing less profitable. Hence, capital investment is weak, as reflected in weak equipment import data.

Most local governments seem to embrace property development as a growth savior. But shifting surplus capital into property is likely to lower future growth by decreasing average capital efficiency. This deters consumption development by increasing property expenditure expectations, and threatens financial stability by increasing loan levels, using overvalued land as collateral.

Other Asian economies such as Japan, South Korea and Taiwan failed to shed export dependency and develop domestic growth. Periodic spikes in consumption are usually due to asset inflation. Once a country loses export market share on rising costs, it stagnates because property bubbles during high growth periods deter consumption while overwhelming the middle class with housing expenses. China may be following the same path: Despite a decade of talking about promoting consumption, that share of GDP has been declining year in, year out.

Japan stagnated roughly at per capita income of US$ 40,000 over the past two decades. Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan have stagnated at about US$ 20,000 for the past decade. Stagnation at such high income levels doesn't seem bad. However, China's size means its exports face challenges at much lower per capita income levels. Unless China changes its growth model, it could stagnate at a much lower level.

The overwhelming desire for getting rich quick dominates every nook, fissure and strata of Chinese society. Such desires cannot be fulfilled; the terrible logic of economics is that money must circulate. Creating bubbles can temporarily blind people to this logic, as overvalued assets substitute for money to fill psychological needs. This is why, whenever conditions permit, China seems to have asset bubbles.

Bubbles exaggerate reality but are not formed out of thin air. Cheap money and strong growth are the usual ingredients for bubble-making. Both existed over the past five years. But now, China depends entirely on cheap money to support overvalued assets. Cheap money came from past exports and was warehoused in banks. Cash also came from hot money inflows due to the yuan's peg to the dollar and weak Fed dollar policy.

Neither money source is sustainable. The dollar has bottomed. The Fed will begin raising interest rates in 2010. The combination of China's strong loan and weak export growth is reducing bank liquidity, but inflation soon may force China to tighten anyway. The cheap money may not last long.

China's exports are recovering from a low base – a trend that may last through 2010. But one should not confuse low base recovery with a revival of past trends.

The high export growth era is over for three reasons. China's market share in global trade is twice as big as its GDP share. The odds are low that China could continue to expand its market share. Second, the tide won't rise as fast as before. The Greenspan era saw a credit bubble supercharge western consumption, but the bubble has burst. Odds are that future trade growth will be half or less as in the past. Finally, a western employment crisis will lead to protectionism targeting China. Other developing countries may gain market share at China's expense.

One possible way to prolong the bubble is to appreciate the currency, as Japan did after the Plaza Accord, to contain inflation and attract hot money. Such a strategy will not work in China. Japan's businesses were already at the cutting edge in production technologies and had pricing power during currency appreciation. They could raise export prices to partly offset currency appreciation. Chinese companies don't have such advantages but rely on low costs to compete.

After export-led growth peaks, consumption is the alternative to sustaining growth at a lower rate. This transition would require a wholesale change in the political economy. The key is to increase middle class disposable income and lower consumption costs. No East Asian economy has made this transition.

China has been trying to promote consumption for a decade. However, consumption's share of GDP has declined annually. The reason is the policy environment has been squeezing China's nascent middle class through high property and auto prices along with high income tax rates. China's disproportionate dependency on exports and withering consumption components are results of national policies, not the peculiar characteristics of Chinese households.

A large, vibrant middle class is the foundation of a stable, modern society. China's policies rightfully care for the lower class. Yet the semi-market economy offers a few spectacular gains from arbitrage and speculation. Society is drifting toward a small, super-rich minority along with a small -- possibly less than 20 percent of the population – yet heavily burdened middle class, and a vast, low-income majority. Such an income structure cannot support a balanced economy, forcing export dependence.

China's rapid economic growth has spawned millions of white-collar jobs: managers, engineers, accountants and bankers. Such jobs should provide middle class income for buying property, cars and vacations. However, property prices have increased more rapidly than middle class income, increasing fear of the future.

China's property market is creating winners and losers based on timing. All other factors – including education and experience -- have been marginalized as the economy rewards speculators. And as more play the game, the speculator ranks rise and fewer people work, perhaps contributing to a labor shortage.

In the previous decade, the West refused to acknowledge its competitiveness problem and created a bubble to hide it. I am afraid China could try the same in the next decade, and the consequences could be serious. Fear of consequences could lead many to argue for sustaining the bubble, but that worsens the problem.

During a bubble period, most people think nothing will bring it down. But bubbles always burst, and the longer one is prolonged, the more severe the consequences. Oversupply or rising interest rates will bring down China's property bubble. The former brought down the U.S. bubble, and later Hong Kong's.

China's banks always seem ready to roll over credit lines for developers during market downturns. Hence, supplies tend to dry up during market downturns, preventing price adjustments. Such manipulation has created a speculative psychology that theorizes the government would never let prices fall. When speculators think prices won't fall, speculative demand lasts as long as banks have the liquidity.

The liquidity environment, however, is likely to turn against the bubble soon. The killer is inflation driven by a surge in money printing. The average lag between currency creation and inflation is 18 months in the United States. China's lag could be two years since the government uses subsidies to suppress inflation. By 2012, China could experience 1990s-like inflation. And that's when the property bubble will probably burst.

Bespoke Investment Group: And You Thought The Rally in Equities Was Impressive

Bespoke Investment Group: And You Thought The Rally in Equities Was Impressive: "

And You Thought The Rally in Equities Was Impressive

Even though the S&P 500 has rallied more than 60% off its March 2009 lows, the index is still well below the 1,251.70 level it closed at on the Friday before Lehman's bankruptcy filing. While the rally has been quite impressive, it pales in comparison to the gains we've seen in the corporate bond market. As of last week, the spread between Baa rated corporate bonds and 30-year US Treasuries had narrowed to its lowest levels since July 2007! Yes, you read that right - July 2007. Back then, the S&P 500 was trading above 1,500.

S&P 500 vs Baa Spreads 2007 - 2010

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January 11, 2010 at 11:11 AM in Interest Rates | Permalink

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pondelok 11. januára 2010

Bespoke Investment Group: The Market Heading Into Earnings Season

Bespoke Investment Group: The Market Heading Into Earnings Season: "

The Market Heading Into Earnings Season

The S&P 500 is up more than 5% this earnings off-season, which is the biggest off-season gain since mid-2007. Below is a chart of the S&P 500 with earnings seasons highlighted in green and off-seasons highlighted in red. The first earnings season on the chart was the Q1 '09 reporting period in which the S&P 500 gained 9.5%. The following off-season saw a flat market, and then the Q2 '09 reporting period saw another big gain of 15%. The market then continued higher throughout the next off-season, and then traded essentially flat during the Q3 '09 earnings season. We're heading into this earnings season on a high note for the market, so the question now is whether this batch of reports can propel stocks even higher or if we're due for some sideways action like we saw last reporting period. Stocks surely have a lot to live up to this time around, but don't they always?

Bespoke Premium is the number one place to stay on top of earnings season. Click here to subscribe.

Spxearnings111

January 11, 2010 at 03:05 PM in Market Analysis | Permalink

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Comparing Global House Prices

Comparing Global House Prices: "

Great interactive chart from the Economist, comparing Houses prices in 21 countries. Looks like the Housing Boom & Bust was mostly global (Canada being one of the notable exceptions).

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Pimco's Paul McCulley Wants Japan To Go "All In"

Pimco's Paul McCulley Wants Japan To Go "All In": "In spite of the complete failure of Keynesian and Monetarist policies of Japan over two decades, amazingly Paul McCulley wants Japan to go 'All In'.

Disgusted minds are reading Pimco Says BOJ May Consider Selling Yen, Buying Debt.
“Japan’s problem is deflation, not inflation as far as an eye can see,” wrote Paul McCulley, a member of the investment committee, and Tomoya Masanao, the head of portfolio management for Japan, in a report on the Web site of Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. “An ‘all-in’ reflationary policy is what is needed.”

The BOJ may also consider promising to refrain from raising interest rates until inflation becomes “meaningfully positive,” McCulley and Masanao said.
Japan has the highest debt-to-GDP level of any industrialized country to the tune of 227% of GDP. It has built bridges to nowhere, held interest rates at .1% for a decade, tried massive amounts of quantitative easing, Keynesian stimulus, and even at times sold Yen to buy dollars.

The result is two decades of total failure. Japan's recession is 19 years running. The Nikkei hit 38,900 in 1990 and sits at 10,800 today, down 72% two decades later.

$Nikkei Monthly



click on chart for sharper image

Paul McCulley Wants Japan To Go 'All In'


This brings to mind a frequently cited definition of insanity.

Definitions of Insanity

  • In One Sentence: Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over and expecting different results each time.
  • In Two Words: Paul McCulley
  • In One Word: Keynesianism
  • In Another Word: Monetarism

Japan has already gone 'all in'. It has tried everything under the sun for two decades including Keynesianism, Monetarism, and selling its own currency to sink it. All it has to show for its efforts is a massive pile of debt equaling 227% of GDP.

Amazingly, some people have learned nothing from two decades of complete failure.

Mike 'Mish' Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List
Mike 'Mish' Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

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nedeľa 10. januára 2010

CHART OF THE DAY: WHY THE FED COULD BE ON HOLD FOR 2010

CHART OF THE DAY: WHY THE FED COULD BE ON HOLD FOR 2010: "

Great interactive tool from Bloomberg:

fed CHART OF THE DAY: WHY THE FED COULD BE ON HOLD FOR 2010

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Lessons from Merrill Lynch

Lessons from Merrill Lynch: "

While I am not a fan of most big firm fundamental analysts, over the years, Merrill Lynch has had some sharp guys in their Chief Strategist/Economist positions.

Here are some lessons and rules from 3 of them.

Richard Bernstein was “notoriously cautious on stocks for much of this decade” — and was very bearish on the financials in 2007-08. Once BofA took over Merill, Bernstein moved on to greener pastures.

Here are his 10 “Market Lessons.”


Richard Bernstein’s Lessons


1. Income is as important as are capital gains. Because most investors ignore income opportunities, income may be more important than are capital gains.

2. Most stock market indicators have never actually been tested. Most don’t work.

3. Most investors’ time horizons are much too short. Statistics indicate that day trading is largely based on luck.

4. Bull markets are made of risk aversion and undervalued assets. They are not made of cheering and a rush to buy.

5. Diversification doesn’t depend on the number of asset classes in a portfolio. Rather, it depends on the correlations

between the asset classes in a portfolio.

6. Balance sheets are generally more important than are income or cash flow statements.

7. Investors should focus strongly on GAAP accounting, and should pay little attention to “pro forma” or “unaudited” financial

statements.

8. Investors should be providers of scarce capital. Return on capital is typically highest where capital is scarce.

9. Investors should research financial history as much as possible.

10. Leverage gives the illusion of wealth. Saving is wealth.


Well before the economy crumbled last fall, David Rosenberg was one of the few mainstream economists who had been warning — for years — that the U.S. faced a day of reckoning from heavy borrowing to sustain spending. Here are his 10 rules:


David Rosenberg’s Lessons

1. In order for an economic forecast to be relevant, it must be combined with a market call.

2. Never be a slave to the data – they are no substitutes for astute observation of the big picture.

3. The consensus rarely gets it right and almost always errs on the side of optimism – except at the bottom.

4. Fall in love with your partner, not your forecast.

5. No two cycles are ever the same.

6. Never hide behind your model.

7. Always seek out corroborating evidence

8. Have respect for what the markets are telling you.


Bob Farrell was considered the best strategist on Wall Street, and while he still pens a stock market letter, his “lessons learned,” written back then, are as timeless today as they were in 1992.


Bob Farrell’s 10 Lessons

1. Markets tend to return to the mean over time.

2. Excesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction.

3. There are no new eras – excesses are never permanent.

4. Exponential rising and falling markets usually go further than you think.

5. The public buys the most at the top and the least at the bottom.

6. Fear and greed are stronger than long-term resolve.

7. Markets are strongest when they are broad and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue-chips.

8. Bear markets have three stages.

9. When all the experts and forecasts agree – something else is going to happen.

10. Bull markets are more fun than bear markets.


Hat tip Jeff Saut