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Thursday, April 28, 2011

qe

QE: the slogan masquerading as serious policy. Marshall Auerback.
The U.S. Federal Reserve signaled the end of its controversial $600 billion bond-buying program as planned. And not a moment too soon. This was probably the most over-hyped event since the launching of the Titanic. Frankly, I’m not surprised by the lack of impact of QE2. I’ve always regarded it as a slogan, rather than a policy, and contended that its effects were oversold and predicated on a fundamental misunderstanding of basic monetary operations. The Fed introduced a program whose central thesis was that the unprecedented central bank intervention would reboot bank lending. Yet three years later, total bank loans are lower than they were before the Fed undertook quantitative easing.


The inability of monetary policy initiatives to do anything more than stabilize a very shaky financial system was always clear from the outset, if only policy makers truly understood what the problem was. There wasn’t a shortage of credit nor were interest rates punitive with respect to intended borrowing. People just didn’t want to borrow because the economy was collapsing and they were carrying too much debt.

As Stephen Randy Waldman has noted, the mainstream belief that quantitative easing would stimulate the economy sufficiently to put a brake on the downward spiral of lost production and increasing unemployment was nonsensical and based on a completely wrongheaded understanding of basic monetary/banking operations. He quotes from Winterspeak:

People believe that fractional reserve banking, in some weird way, has banks taking deposits, multiplying it (through what seems like a strange and fraudulent process), and then making a larger quantity of loans. In fact, banks make whatever loans they think make sense from a credit perspective, and then borrow the money they need from the interbank market to meet their reserve requirements. If the banking sector as a whole is net short of deposits, it can borrow the extra money it needs from the Fed. If you think this is a weird and pointless regulation you are correct. Canada, for example, has no reserve requirements and yet seems to have a banking sector. The quantity banks can loan out is constrained by capital requirements and credit assessments.

Reserves, then, are like a bank’s checking account at the Fed. A bank can lend those reserves only to another institution that is allowed to hold reserves at the Fed. Banks do lend reserves to one another in the fed funds market, but since banks already have more than a trillion dollars in excess reserves, there is no need to give them more in order to encourage them to lend to one another.

Those who point to the success of QE2 make the following observations: In the US, growth accelerated after the implementation of QE2 from a 1.7% annualized pace in the second quarter to 2.6% in the third quarter and 3.1% in the fourth quarter. Inflation expectations ceased falling and began rising back to normal levels. Confidence rose. And the pace of hiring improved meaningfully. In both February and March, private firms added over 200,000 jobs. Since the Fed’s policy began, the unemployment rate has fallen a full percentage point.

But just because a rooster crows first thing in the morning doesn’t prove that this is what causes the sun to rise. These are two separate occurrences with no underlying causation. The very deficits now decried so loudly by the deficit hawks and ratings agencies are likely what engendered recovery, not QE2.

So what has QE2 actually achieved? Little in the way of positive impact, but much in terms of its deleterious impact by fomenting additional speculative activity, notably in the commodities complex — gas and food prices. Obviously, with other determinants of aggregate demand in question, commodity prices and the gasoline price in particular now matter. The price of gasoline is almost as high as it was at its brief peak in May-July 2008. In the past, increases in expenditures on gasoline could be managed by consumers because they had access to credit. That is certainly less true today. Rising fuel prices could tip the economy towards greater weakness. As it now stands, the U.S. economy has been growing around trend (2.7%) and the first quarter was probably below that. Tipping the economy towards weakness would bring growth way below the current optimistic above trend consensus.

Though it cannot be proved, in the minds of many the current wave of speculative and investment demands is tied to the Fed’s emergency measures of ZIRP and QE. Within the Fed itself, a number of inflation hawks have reflected this belief, notably Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher and former Kansas President Tom Hoenig. If so, this inadvertent adverse consequence of QE means that the Fed might be hoisted on its own petard.

In sum, whether one wants to focus on the bank reserves or the deposits created by QE2, it does not increase the “ability” of banks to create loans or the private sector to spend that did not exist before. In both cases, the effect of QE2 is to replace a longer-dated treasury with shorter-term investments within private portfolios, which on balance reduces income received by the private sector. Whether or not that increases spending would depend on whether the private sector wishes to borrow more or to reduce saving out of current income (things they can do anyway with or without QE2). Again, it makes little sense to encourage households and firms to increase debt or to reduce saving within the current context of record private sector debt. But the current prevailing deficit hysteria is, perversely, encouraging precisely that state of affairs.

Ultimately, QE2 screwed savers by robbing them of income through the Fed’s treasury purchases, undermined banks’ earnings by in effect swapping a higher yielding treasury with bank reserves that today yield a mere .25%, and eviscerated the living standards of the middle class by helping to spike the speculative punch bowl in the commodities space. Not a bad trifecta for a Fed Chairman who claims to be doing everything in his power to prevent us from becoming the next Japan but who in fact is hastening our arrival at that very destination.
A pros and cons analysis of QE3. Peter Tchir.
I’m a little concerned that much of what I read and hear tends to view re-investment as a continuation of QE2. I don’t see it that way. Any re-investment of proceeds from a treasury redemption is merely keeping the status quo. No new money is being created nor being pumped into the system, its no different than if the Fed had originally purchased this longer dated bond....


Certainly the argument that ‘it worked’ would be difficult to make, the reality would be that just like so many other programs is that it increased current economic activity at the expense of future economic activity. 

Apparently QE2 is "disappointing". Cullen Roche.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

March 30

QOTD:
Won't it be cool if subsequent versions of QE are referenced with Roman numerals like the Super Bowl?
John Roque, WSJ.

The unbelievable truth about Ireland and its banks. BBC.
To prevent Irish banks toppling over one after another, the European Central Bank has lent 117bn euros to them and the Central Bank of Ireland has lent them a further 71bn euros. So that's 188bn euros of loans from the eurozone's taxpayers to Ireland's banks - which makes the 67.5bn euros lent directly by the eurozone and IMF to the Irish government look like peanuts. And a further 20bn euros of bank bonds - another form of bank debt - is still guaranteed by the Irish state through the Eligible Guarantee Scheme. So that is 208bn euros of taxpayer loans to Ireland's banks - equivalent to a remarkable 154% of GDP.
[Irish] Bank bailout cost (so far). Corner Turned.

The 'grand bargain' is just a start. Martin Wolf, FT.
It would be helpful – and honest – for the German government and the governments of other creditor countries to tell their people that they are rescuing their own savings in the guise of rescuing peripheral countries. The alternative is to write off loans and recapitalise their banks directly. To admit this would be to admit their policies have been at fault. That would surely be helpful.
Europe needs debt relief, not decades of austerity. The Guardian.
From Donegal to the Algarve, to the streets of Athens, voters on Europe's "periphery", as economists dismissively call it, are slowly waking up to a sobering truth – they face years of austerity, yet wage cuts, job losses and crumbling public services will not extricate them from financial crisis. In fact, by driving their economies into an ever deeper slump, it may even make things worse. The pain could just bring more pain....
Markets and voters across the eurozone have grown wearily accustomed to watching the cycle of a looming fiscal crisis as bond yields rocket, followed by just enough action from Brussels to jolt investors out of panic mode, followed by another bout of the jitters as they realise the rhetoric from euro leaders isn't matched by reality.

As Steen Jakobsen, chief economist at Saxo Bank, put it in a note on Friday: "It's clear that the electorates are beginning to realise that all solutions offered by the policymakers are based on the promise to do something in the future, and never right here, right now."

But time is running out, and Europe has two choices. It can continue hammering the economies of Greece, Ireland and soon Portugal deeper into crisis, while their already furious voters become increasingly resentful about the pain being imposed by their European "partners"; or it can accept that the scale of debts has simply become unsustainable, and open negotiations now about an orderly default.
As Obama and Congress fiddle, America liquidates housing sector. Chris Whalen.

the current national policy mix of more regulation, decreased government subsidies and, to add further urgency, a shrinking banking system, is the perfect storm for the housing, which is now down six months in a row. Despite my long-held desire to see market-based reform in the US housing sector, I think all parties need to be aware of the precarious situation facing the American economy and banks as home prices collapse for lack of credit....
The net, net here is that the available pool of credit available for the housing sector is shrinking and thus prices must also decline to adjust for that supply of credit. This fact of continued decline in home prices is going to have a chilling effect...
I estimate that Fannie and Freddie alone are hiding $200 billion worth of bad loans on their books simply because there is no market for these foreclosed homes. Ditto for the largest servicer banks such as Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup. To clean up this mess with finality is going to cost $1 trillion or so in round numbers. But nobody in Washington wants to go there.
Where the bailout went wrong. Neil Barofsky, NY Times Op-Ed.
As per James Kwak:
Back in late 2008 and early 2009, there was a lot of talk about how a true solution for the problems of the banking system would require a solution for the problems of homeowners, since the banks’ losses were largely the result of mortgage defaults. One of the major technical achievements of the administration was showing that it was possible to stabilize the financial system and restore the banks to short-term profitability without doing much for homeowners.
The Federal Open Mouth Committee is back in action. Pater Tenebrarum.
Hawks (relatively speaking) and doves within the Fed are busy trading slightly contradictory statements in public again, in a performance that is eerily reminiscent of the 'exit talk' (exit from unusual monetary accommodation measures that is) that proliferated about one year ago.....

led to this campaign of advance burying of 'QE3' by means of 'QE2' funeral eulogies. Surely 'QE3' won't be talked about so much anymore if even 'QE2' comes under official scrutiny. Since the current QE program is slated to end in June, market participants are given fair warning not to expect more 'coups de whiskey' for the stock and commodity markets immediately thereafter. This in turn means that the times are set to become slightly more interesting. Given that there is not the slightest evidence yet that private sector deleveraging has run its course, a cessation of excessive monetary pumping may end up stopping various bubble activities in their track in very short order. This is to say, both financial markets as well as the economy may slump again fairly quickly....

Helicopter pilot Ben Bernanke has been rather quiet, letting the rest of the board spread the message. Alas, we suspect he's personally still firmly in the pro easy money camp. At least this is what we would have to conclude considering his well known views on the Great Depression as well as Japan's post bubble era. His usual refrain was that policy makers were 'too timid' in these instances, but as it were, the BoJ is a veteran of two (now 2.5) QE programs as well, so if one wants to be 'less timid', then 'QE1' and 'QE2' alone obviously won't cut it. In that sense we would be inclined to discount the advance funeral rites for 'QE3' as just more hot air. Nevertheless, there will be a pause, and should the economy's momentum not falter again immediately, then we'd expect the 'exit' palaver to increase in both volume and frequency.

Surpluses, debt and depressions.... Randall Wray via Pragmatic Capitalism.

China's 5-year plan and global interest rates. Martin Feldstein.

Visualizing the food and energy crunch. Pragmatic Capitalism.

Debt: The first five thousand years. David Graeber.

The biggest urban legend in finance. Rob Arnott.

Fannie and Freddie hiding over $100 billion of losses? naked capitalism.


other fare:
Exceptional And Unexceptional America. Andrew Sullivan, The Atlantic.

Monday, March 21, 2011

March 21

QOTD:

"The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation."
Barack Obama
uhhmm, I guess that was then and this is now:

The Libyan War of 2011. George Friedman, Stratfor.

Yemen in crisis. Stratfor.

What's happening in Bahrain explained. Mother Jones.

Iran calls on Saudi Arabia, UAE to leave Bahrain "immediately"



Japan's financial position is better than you think. Prag Cap.

QEII fails - sell US equities. Russell Napier, CLSA.




Friday, March 11, 2011

March 11

How QE works. Ed Harrison.

QE and the term structure of rates. Warren Mosler.
summary: if the market thinks QE will work, then the economy will heat up over time and inflationary pressure will build so the Fed will need to hike rates, and the term structure of rates reflects more Fed hikes down the road; if the Fed ends QE, the market place will deem that as the Fed removing support from the economy, and this less stimulative policy will mean a relatively weaker economy and less inflationary pressure so fewer future interest rates hike --- and the curve will respond appropriately

Thursday, March 10, 2011

March 10

Bank of America says nearly half its mortgages are bad. WBJ Morning Call.

Saudi foreign minister warns against protests. The Independent.
Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said today that dialogue — not protests — is the way to bring reform and warned that the oil-rich nation will take strong action if activists take to the streets..... Prince Saud al-Faisal... said his regime would cut off any finger raised against the regime
Saudi Arabia is losing its fear. Guardian UK.
It's very difficult to predict what will happen on Friday. My guess is that there will be protests. The larger protests will be in the eastern region and mostly by Shia Muslims. I also expect smaller protests in Riyadh and Jeddah. What tactics the security forces use will greatly influence not only the demonstrators but also the people watching from their homes. If undue violence is used against the demonstrators, it could possibly ignite the same fuse that led to full-blown revolutions in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.
Erste Oil Special Report: "Force Majeure - Middle East". zerohedge.

Exclusive: Ex-CIA Chief Says Saudi Arabia Is Vulnerable. Plug-in Cars.
Could the political unrest spread to Saudi Arabia?

It’s quite possible. Yemen is in flames. Bahrain is at least seriously shaken. And they’re both right on the borders. And the Saudis in the eastern province have a huge population of Shia that they’ve treated very badly. And Iran is almost certainly using Hezbollah and Al-Quds [Iran’s revolutionary guard] to stir things up in the Gulf, in Bahrain, in Yemen, and quite possibly soon in Saudi Arabia. We just don’t know.

Will the U.S. work to quell those movements in Saudi Arabia, considering what would happen to oil markets?

If we will not even criticize Ahmadinejad in the mildest terms when a year and half ago he stole the election and there were millions of Iranians in streets risking their lives, and the most we could say is “Hmm,” then how in the world does anybody think that we can affect something in that part of the world? How are we going to keep Iran from funding Hezbollah and the Al-Quds force from creating disruptions and problems in much of the Gulf, when we won’t even criticize them?
IEA confirms peak oil was in 2006. (according to Energy Watch Group).

For Big Oil, Libya is just another fix it's in. Foreign Policy.

No end to the Tunisian contagion and $100-plus oil prices. Foreign Policy.
There's a presumption out there that things look tough in the Middle East, but that soon enough -- maybe by summer -- they will sort themselves out, and becalm the volatile prices of oil and gasoline. Not so, says veteran oil analyst Edward Morse, a student of history who correctly called the 2008 oil bubble while everyone else was still throwing money into the pot. "This is not a one-off disruption," Morse says. Instead, we're in a new age of geopolitical risk that threatens to disrupt the region for a decade or even longer.
Lurching toward the peak. Marc Brodine.

The old American dream is a nightmare. interview with James Howard Kunstler, Grist.

The end of growth. Richard Heinberg, Post Carbon Institute.

6 energy experts address the economic impact of Middle East unrest. Post Carbon Institute.

The coming misery that Big Oil discusses behind closed doors. Foreign Policy.

Demanding cheaper oil is disastrous. Johann Hari, The Independent.
What would the world be like today Jimmy Carter had been listened to by the Western world, instead of being demonized by Big Oil and booted out of office as a "whiner"? With the U.S. no longer backing Arab petro-tyrannies and occupying Arab territories, there would probably have been no 9/11. There would have been no Iraq War. There would have been no BP oil spill. We would not be facing an oil price shock today that could cripple our economies and leave backing some of the worst dictators in the world. The Copenhagen climate summit could well have established a path to dealing with global warming, rather than burying it. If we pursue Drilling As Usual, what unnecessary disasters will they curse us for 30 years from now?



Joseph Tainter: talking about collapse. Cassandra's legacy.

Former Goldman Sachs analyst Charles Nenner joins Marc Faber and Gerald Celente in predicting major war. Washington's blog.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

March 9

What does QE2's end mean for various asset classes? Part I & The end of QE: Part II. Barry Ritholtz. Part III to come.

Richard Koo: the strange world of a balance sheet recession. interview posted on Economist's View.

The seven immutable laws of investing. James Montier, GMO.

Slowing China. Barry Eichengreen.

It's pretty obvious how China can achieve its top economic priority of price stability. Rebecca Wilder.

More on China. Mish.

What will Saudi Arabia do? Jim Hamilton.
If all of Libyan production gets knocked out, we'd need 1.8 mb/d to replace it. If the Saudis weren't able or willing to go above those production levels in 2008 when oil was selling for over $140 a barrel, why would you expect them to do so now with West Texas only at $106? My answer is, I don't.

other fare:
What scientists believe. The New Atlantis.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

March 8


Un-American Revolutions. Niall Ferguson, Newsweek.




Are Middle East Revolutions a Prelude to Armageddon?

America had best prepare itself for a long haul and reorganization of our hold in the oil-producing world. The Middle East and North Africa revolution has only begun.

Oman riots increase fears for Saudi Arabia. UPI.

Arab unrest and the 'End of the Oil Age'. UPI.

Libyan Ides of March? UPI.
Both the Spanish civil war (1 million killed 1936-39), which divided both Europe and America between pro-Nazi and pro-Soviet camps, and the 1992-95 Bosnia war that killed about 100,000 civilians and displaced 2.2 million, found the United States on the side of the Muslims. Both are models of how quickly such conflicts can escalate into global crises.

Bahrain key to Persian Gulf power struggle. UPI.
Bahrain and the battle between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Stratfor.

Iran has another, more challenging strategic interest, one it has had since Biblical times. That goal is to be the dominant power in the Persian Gulf.


For Tehran, this is both reasonable and attainable. Iran has the largest and most ideologically committed military of any state in the Persian Gulf region. Despite the apparent technological sophistication of the Gulf states’ militaries, they are shells. Iran’s is not. In addition to being the leading military force in the Persian Gulf, Iran has 75 million people, giving it a larger population than all other Persian Gulf states combined.

Outside powers have prevented Iran from dominating the region since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, first the United Kingdom and then the United States, which consistently have supported the countries of the Arabian Peninsula. It was in the outsiders’ interests to maintain a divided region, and therefore in their interests to block the most powerful country in the region from dominating even when the outsiders were allied with Iran.

With the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, this strategy is being abandoned in the sense that the force needed to contain Iran is being withdrawn. The forces left in Kuwait and U.S air power might be able to limit a conventional Iranian attack. Still, the U.S. withdrawal leaves the Iranians with the most powerful military force in the region regardless of whether they acquire nuclear weapons. Indeed, in my view, the nuclear issue largely has been an Iranian diversion from the more fundamental issue, namely, the regional balance after the departure of the United States. By focusing on the nuclear issue, these other issues appeared subsidiary and have been largely ignored.

Friday, March 4, 2011

March 4



A long way to go. FRBSF.


How to kill a recovery. Paul Krugman, NYT.

The madness of Jean Claude Trichet. Krugman.

Dead nation walking. Richard Russell.

Why the maven is morose. interview of Stephanie Pomboy in Barron's.

Why real estate will hold the economy back. The Daily Capitalist.
Commercial real estate loans and residential housing will continue to be a significant drag on economic performance. Until the mass of over-built homes and commercial properties are liquidated credit will remain tight and unemployment will remain high.


The unfortunate fact remains that credit for most of America is still tight, banks are still trying to repair their balance sheets, and the overlying problem is real estate, the detritus of the Fed’s reckless monetary policy. Credit expansion fueled by the Fed’s easy money policy of the early 2000′s drove private debt to fuel housing over-production, and drove commercial debt to fuel commercial real estate (CRE) over-production. It was the greatest such expansion of money and credit the world has ever seen and it went primarily into real estate. We are now facing the consequences of that expansion and boom: the bust.
includes much more on the FDIC Q4 banking report

Banks face more loan write-downs. WSJ.


Game changers? Tim Duy's Fed Watch.

Saudi Arabia contagion triggers Gulf rout. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph.
latest sell-off was triggered by the arrest of a Shi’ite cleric in the Kingdom’s Eastern Province after he called for democratic reforms and a constitutional monarchy. The province is home to Saudi Arabia’s aggrieved Shi’ite minority and also holds the country’s vast Ghawar oilfield, placing it at the epicentre of global crude supply. "Unrest in this region can have fatal consequences for the world," said JBC Energy. "The plunge on the Saudi stock exchange can be interpreted as a sign of waning trust."

re: Bahrain
protesters have "the right to appeal for help from Iran" if Saudi military units interfere in the struggle. Tanks were seen crossing the 17-mile causeway from Saudi Arabia to Bahrain on Tuesday

Religious tensions in Bahrain on edge. zerohedge.
concludes:
And once religion is involved, which of course means Iran, then all bets are off especially if Saudi sends reinforcements to support the Bahraini status quo.

German-Irish brinkmanship raises EMU stakes. Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph.

The EU's band-aid on a bullet hole. Daniel Gros, Project Syndicate.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

March 3

Some Prices Are Up, but Is That Inflation? FRB of Cleveland.


The flexible CPI is intriguing in that, by design, it is likely to show evidence of pricing pressure ahead of the sticky CPI. However, the series is very volatile relative to its sticky-price counterpart and likely dominated by relative price changes. As a result, inflation forecasts based on the flexible CPI perform rather poorly.

While rapid price increases in a few categories seem to have pushed up the headline CPI lately, underlying measures of inflation are relatively low and have only ticked up slightly in the past few months.
Perspective on the copper/oil divergence. Pragmatic Capitalism.

Excerpts from Seth Klarman's 2010 Letter. My investing notebook.

Revisiting the Shiller P/E. Pragmatic Capitalism.

The complexity of Persian Gulf unrest. Stratfor.

Energy Talking Points Series, #1: Three Signs the end of oil exports is coming. American Society of Mechanical Engineers.

Australian debt update. Steve Keen.

Extend and pretend practices attracting SEC scrutiny. Barry Ritholtz.

Budget forecasts, compared with reality. NYT interactive graphic.

What happens if there is no QE3? David Rosenberg responds. zerohedge.

Cash and credit; implications for the markets. John Hussman.

the gap is still too wide between the credit that has been extended and the productive capacity that we have accumulated. Much of that gap has emerged because we continue to punish saving by depressing the rate of return available to investors, while at the same time pursuing policies aimed at consumption rather than real investment, research & development, and other activity that would add to the productive capacity of the nation. Stimulating consumption and speculation have been the life-blood of government policy interventions over the past two years, yet they are exactly the approaches that got us into trouble, and are likely to fare no better in producing better outcomes in this instance. Our problem is not with debt itself (much of which represents productive past investment), it is with imbalances, misallocated resources, distorted financial markets, bad debt held on the books as if it is good, and the quiet reliance on the public to bail out losses that should be borne by the private sector.


I strongly believe that part of the gap between total credit market debt and cumulative gross investment is literally thin air, in the sense that assets are being held on the books of banks and other financials that are not worth the sharpened pencils that are needed to perpetuate the illusion of value. On that subject, we've received a number of notes from observant shareholders pointing out that the Chief Financial Officer of Wells Fargo has inexplicably resigned. I observed several quarters ago that we could observe a wave of fresh risk aversion "at the point where the first bank CFO resigns out of refusal to sharpen his pencil any further," but as I've noted below, the FASB appears intent on preserving the existing set of accounting rules allowing financial institutions to value their assets with "substantial discretion," with no necessary link to market values. So it remains unclear what the true state of the banking system is, and the extent to which further bailouts will ultimately become necessary down the road. It will be important to keep watch on how this develops.



Thursday, February 17, 2011

February 17

Quarterly report on household debt and credit. FRBNY.
this data is a little dated, as more recent data has shown a touch of releveraging, but on a long-term trend basis:
Aggregate consumer debt continued to decline in the fourth quarter, continuing its trend of the previous two years. As of December 31, 2010, total consumer indebtedness was $11.4 trillion, a reduction of $1.08 trillion  (8.6%) from its peak level at the close of 2008Q3, and $155 billion (1.3%) below its September 30, 2010 level. Household mortgage indebtedness has declined 9.1%, and home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) have fallen 6.5% since their respective peaks in 2008Q3 and 2009Q1. For the first time since 2008Q4, consumer indebtedness excluding mortgage and HELOC balances did not fall, but rose slightly ($7.3 billion or 0.3%) in the quarter.  Consumers’ non-real estate indebtedness now stands at $2.31 trillion, the same level as in2010Q2, 8.4% below its 2008Q4 peak.


But if we get some further payroll growth, we should see more credit growth:

Intermezzo: the fight against credit contraction. macrofugue.

Rich valuations and poor market returns. John Hussman.
Last week, the S&P 500 Index ascended to a Shiller P/E in excess of 24 (this “cyclically-adjusted P/E” or CAPE represents the ratio of the S&P 500 to 10-year average earnings, adjusted for inflation). Prior to the mid-1990′s market bubble, a multiple in excess of 24 for the CAPE was briefly seen only once, between August and early-October 1929. Of course, we observe richer multiples at the heights of the late-1990′s bubble, when investors got ahead of themselves in response to the introduction of transformative technologies such as the internet. After a market slide of more than 50%, investors again pushed the Shiller multiple beyond 24 during the housing bubble and cash-out financing free-for-all that ended in the recent mortgage collapse.

And here we are again. This is not to say that we can rule out yet higher valuations, but with no transformative technologies driving the economy, little expansion in capital investment, and ongoing retrenchment in consumer balance sheets, I can’t help but think that the “virtuous cycle” rhetoric of Ben Bernanke is an awfully thin gruel by comparison. We should not deserve to be called “investors” if we fail to recognize that valuations are richer today than at any point in history, save for the few months before the 1929 crash, and a bubble period that has been rewarded by zero total return for the S&P 500 since 2000. Indeed, the stock market has lagged the return on low-yielding Treasury bills since August 1998. I am not sure that even members of my own profession have learned anything from this....
While we can certainly find analysts who believe stocks are cheap, we can easily test the long-term accuracy of their methods (which often amount to nothing more than applying an arbitrary multiple to forward operating earnings, or dividing the forward earnings yield by the 10-year Treasury yield). Frankly, many of those alternative methods stink. Regardless of whether an analyst claims that stocks are cheap or expensive, they should be expected to provide some sort of evidence that their methods have a strong relationship with subsequent market returns.

The cognitive dissonance of it all. Kyle Bass, Hayman Advisers.

Per Chris Whalen, Wells Fargo's CFO quit due to an internal dispute over financial disclosures. zerohedge.

Victor Shih on the Chinese economy. The Browser. (Five Books)

Monday, February 7, 2011

February 7

QOTD1:
Faced with the choice between changing one’s mind and proving there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof. ~ John Kenneth Galbraith

QOTD2:
People can foresee the future only when it coincides with their own wishes, and the most grossly obvious facts can be ignored when they are unwelcome. ~ George Orwell


Canadian corporate bonds an expensive proposition. FP.
according to PIMCO's Ed Devlin.
“The fundamental problem with the Canadian corporate bond market is that there is are too many investors chasing too few issuers,” Mr. Devlin said in a recent note to clients.

He noted that 59% of Canada’s main corporate bond benchmark is concentrated in just 10 issuers. By comparison the percentage of the index concentrated in 10 issuers is 20% in the U.S., 26% in Great Britain and 35% in the Eurozone.
Housing prices to drop 25%, [Capital Economics] forecaster predicts. The Star.

Negative annualized stock market returns for the next 10 years or longer? It's far more likely than you think. Mish.

Entranced by China's bubbling economy. Edward Chancellor, FT.

Mr Mansharamani starts out with George Soros’s theory of reflexivity.... markets are determined by a “two-way feedback mechanism in which reality helps shape the participants’ thinking process and the participants’ thinking helps shape reality”. Chaos rules as errors of perception feed back into reality.

The financial instability hypothesis of the late Hyman Minsky complements Mr Soros’s reflexivity.... already inflated asset prices can only be sustained by further price appreciation and ever increasing leverage. 

According to Mr Minsky, when Ponzi finance is widespread, the economy is likely to develop into a “deviation-amplifying system”. All great bubbles have easy money and growing leverage. Mr Mansharamani turns to Friedrich Hayek and the Austrian economists to show how inappropriately low interest rates fuel credit growth and over-investment.

Behavioural psychology also helps explain why bubbles develop. Humans have a chronic tendency to overconfidence. We underestimate the probability of events that we haven’t recently experienced... For instance,...  it was generally believed house prices could not fall because they had been on a continuously rising trend in earlier decades.

Mr Mansharamani surveys recent research into swarm behaviour in the insect world. While ants lay and follow trails of pheromone, the speculative crowd follows a trail of recently minted money. Politics provides yet another prism for identifying bubbles. Great speculative booms are often stimulated by governments, sometimes with the intent of lining the pockets of public officials. All bubbles are accompanied by fraud.

China today has the characteristics of a truly great bubble. The value of the housing stock is set to exceed 350 per cent of GDP this year... Construction accounts for around one-quarter of economic activity in China...

A reflexive process appears to be at work as the anticipation of future Chinese economic growth drives new construction, while new construction drives economic growth.

Ponzi finance proliferates in China. Wasteful infrastructure projects are funded with bank loans and land grants from local governments, which themselves depend on land sales for the bulk of their income. Chinese banks bypass credit restrictions by securitising loans to developers, while state-owned enterprises boost profits by dabbling in real estate. China’s financial system has become in Mr Minsky’s phrase a “deviation-amplifying system”.



Tuesday, February 1, 2011

February 1

The 5 Black Swans That Keep Dylan Grice Up At Night... And How To Hedge Against Them All. Dylan Grice via zerohedge.

Why credit deflation is more likely than mass inflation - an Austrian perspective. Pragmatic Capitalist.

The financial crisis of 2015: an avoidable crisis. Oliver Wyman.


Estimating the Macroeconomic Effects of the Fed's Asset Purchases. FRB San Fran.
long on modeling and simulations, short on facts; they concluded that QE is helpful, based on the assumption that credit costs have come down, but since QE2 has started, US 10s and bonds are up about 100bp each and the average 30-year mortgage rate also spiked 100bp, though has since come down somewhat, but is still up 60bp since autumn. In other words, nice P.R., but a little soft on real research



other fare:
Egypt and Obama. self-evident.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

January 30

2011 Investment Strategies: 9 Buys, 9 Sells. Gary Shilling.

Pavlov's bulls. Jeremy Grantham's quarterly letter.

A potent brew for a tall glass of regret. Alan Hartley, Morningstar.

further commented on by Mish at:
Market participants learn the wrong lesson from Bernanke; conflicts of interest in stay the course advice.

A bubble in complacency. John Mauldin.
discusses GDP #s, imports, inventories and how the rise in oil prices affected all that

Similar discussion at Pragmatic Capitalism in Really Nominal GDP.

Also at PragCap, Is QE really working? cites Richard Koo.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

January 24

Do we really have a balance sheet recession? David Beckworth.

The age of de-leveraging. Jason Leach.

How I learnt to stop worrying and love The Bank. Steve Keen.

How will they prop up stocks after QE? An answer? Bruce Krasting.

The Fed can’t go bankrupt. Anymore. FT Alphaville.

More evidence of undercapitalization/insolvency of major banks. Yves Smith.

National debt = great recession 2.0. Dian Chu.

Spain's bank nationalization and the euro zone crisis. Ed Harrison.

The real cost of Chinese NPLs. Michael Pettis.

China vs. inflation: a love-30 match so far. Dian Chu.
Beijing most likely will come to grip very soon that eventually somebody got to pay somewhere, and there’s just no way around it, and that the time has come for some decisive actions with a combination of more aggressive monetary, fiscal and regulatory measures to show it really means business.

For example, instead of the symbolic two 25-bps interest rate hikes in Oct. and Dec., Beijing probably will do an immediate 50-bps rate hike by early February and another 50 bps in early March to blunt the start of the typical yearly run-up of crude oil, and other commodities. Then, depending on the market reaction and new economic data, more hikes could be implemented later on in the year. Fiscal policies such as taxes, and financial regulations and restrictions on speculative activities could be necessary.

Meanwhile, the expectation of a Yuan appreciation is keeping liquidity swimming. So, perhaps China would do just the opposite, as suggested by Andy Xie, a currency depreciation, which would lead to a capital outflow forcing interest rates up. There [are]many more things that China has to do to get the inflation situation under control, which most likely will send shock waves throughout global markets.

Social Unrest Could Make or Break A Party: Nmbers may be rigged or "smoothed out", but can't fool the regular Chinese Joe's and the smart money.

China's runaway chariot. Charles Smith.

SocGen crafts strategy for China hard-landing. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard.

Record Food Prices Causing Africa Riots Stoking U.S. Farm Economy. Bloomberg.

Inflation: not here, not now. John Taylor.


other fare:
of amusement: Gartman investment SAT score 410.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

January 20

Consumers and the Economy, Part II: Household Debt and the Weak U.S. Recovery. FRBSF.

The U.S. economic recovery has been weak, especially in employment growth. A microeconomic analysis of U.S. counties shows that this weakness is closely related to elevated levels of household debt accumulated during the housing boom. Counties where household debt grew moderately from 2002 to 2006 have seen a moderation of employment losses and a robust recovery in durable consumption and residential investment. By contrast, counties that experienced large increases in household debt during the boom have been mired in a severe recessionary environment even after the official end of the recession.

Quarterly Review and Outlook. Van Hoisington and Lacy Hunt.
We see seven main impediments to economic progress in 2011 that will slow real GDP expansion to the 1.5%-2.5% range. First, fiscal policy actions are neutral for 2011. Second, state and local sectors will continue to be a drag on the economy and labor markets in 2011. Third, Quantitative Easing round 2 (QE2) will likely produce only a slight economic benefit as the Fed continues to encourage additional leverage in an already over-indebted economy. Fourth, while consumers boosted economic growth in the second half of 2010 by sharply reducing their personal saving rate, such actions are not sustainable. Fifth, expanding inventory investment, the main driver of economic growth since the end of the recession in mid-2009, will be absent in 2011. Sixth, housing will continue to be a persistent drag on growth. Seventh, external economic conditions are likely to retard U.S. exports....

In spite of the adverse psychological reaction to the QE2, long Treasury bond yields dropped to 4.3% at the end of 2010, down 30 basis points from the close of 2009, producing a total return of slightly more than 10% for a portfolio of long Treasury and zero coupon bonds. The problematic economic environment and its depressive effect on inflation suggests long Treasury bond yields could easily decrease another 30 basis points in 2011, which would produce another double-digit rate of return for a similar portfolio. The probabilities of even lower yields are significant.

One step forward in the Euro zone? Claus Vistesen.
The system has reached the stage that a bankrupt sovereign state is issuing debt to buy bonds in a vehicle that is tasked with buying debt from a bankrupt Sovereign state that is no longer able to go to market. Folks this is reaching the level of a Monty Python skit.

This brings up a serious question not seen answered in the public yet.Who is ultimately responsible for the bonds that the rescue fund is going to be selling as AAA investments? Whose AAA balance sheet is guarantying these bonds that will be sold to investors like Japan?

EMU policies are pushing Southern Europe into systemic political crisis. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard.
Let us assume for the sake of argument that Europe succeeds in containing the immediate EMU debt crisis, with help from Asia, and that Germany’s fractious coalition actually agrees to a bail-out fund big enough to make any difference. What does this achieve, other than allowing banks to buy time by offloading liabilities onto European and Chinese taxpayers?

Is core Europe heading for a hard landing? Michael Darda.


Europe's Gordian Knot. Scott Minerd, Guggenheim Investment.


America has ‘reached the point of no return,’ Reagan budget director warns. Raw Story.

Stockman, who described himself as a libertarian during a recent interview with Reason.tv, told Raw Story that the economy got into this mess because of the public and private sectors' addiction to "guns and butter Keynesianism," an economic policy that amounts to a Ponzi scheme that has ballooned since 1990.

"If we see what's going on carefully, we've reached the final unmasking of the Keynesian illusion, that Keynesianism is really nothing but borrowing, stealing from the future to induce consumption today," he said. "There are no multipliers. Every one of these programs we've had from 'cash for clunkers' to housing purchase credits have disappeared as soon as they expired and simple shifted activities in time by a few months."

Stockman explained that before 1980, it took about $1.50 of new borrowing -- public or private -- to generate $1 of GDP growth. By the mid-1990s, it was $2.50 or $3 of borrowing for a $1 of GDP growth. By 2007, before the big collapse and meltdown finally came, $7 of public and private debt was added to the national balance sheet in order to get $1 of GDP growth.

"When you get to the point of $7 of borrowing to get $1 of income, you're obviously on an unsustainable path and pretty close to hitting the wall, which more or less we have," he said.

"So the addicts in Washington are now unfortunately terrified to stop all this borrowing whether it's for guns or butter for fear of the economy will collapse.... That's why we're just at the beginning of solving this massive financial collapse we had in 2008 and not in the process of healthy recovery as some of the pals in the White House or on Capitol Hill or on Wall Street would have you believe."

We cannot support ever-rising debt. Andrew Smithers.


Hedge funds bet China is a bubble close to bursting. Telegraph.


I like Ike: A powerful warning ignored. Jeremy Grantham.


I have been wrong -- I've been too bullish: Albert Edwards.



Sovereign debt crisis -- can it happen here? Soc Gen, via zero hedge.


Sustainable Credit Report 2011. World Economic Forum, via zerohedge.
finds that while global credit stock doubled from $57 trillion to $109 trillion in just 10 years (from 2000 to 2010), it will need to double again to $210 trillion by 2020 in order to provide the necessary credit-driven growth for world GDP to retain its current growth rate


The Financial Crisis: Will It Lead to America's Decline? FORA.TV.
Niall Ferguson, David Gergen, Mort Zuckerman.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

January 16

QOTD:
"We are shaped by our thoughts; we become what we think. When the mind is pure, joy follows like a shadow that never leaves." ~ Buddha



The great food crisis of 2011. Foreign Policy.

La Nina as black swan; energy, food prices and Chinese economy among casualties. Yves Smith.

How many Senators does it take to screw a taxpayer. Jim Quinn, on stupidity of using corn for ethanol and impact on food prices


other fare:
Darkness on the edge of the universe. Brian Greene, NYT.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

January 12

"Illusory Prosperity" - Ludwig von Mises on Monetary Policy. John Hussman.


Hussman: The Anti-Tepper Makes an Apology (kind of). The Reformed Broker.
The manager's January 10th commentary reads as part admission of wrongheadedness, part bitter cartoon villain fist-shaking (you'll see!) and part doubling down on his bear case thesis. He admits that it's his job to generate returns in all environments but then pulls the fiduciary card to excuse his excess caution. Oh yeah, he also basically calls us all idiots. I guess we'll have to make do with only our profits as consolation for the insult.
Bearish John Hussman Is Sounding Like Someone Desperate To Keep His Clients. Clusterstock.


The market is a heartless beast. Pragmatic Capitalism.
The equity market is priced based on future profit expectations that are often right, but more often than not prove to be wrong. As we saw in 2007 those expectations were high, investors believed economic downturn would be thwarted and the environment ultimately surprised substantially to the downside. As the waterfall decline ensued we experienced the inverse reaction in 2009. Markets and expectations overshot to the downside. Expectations for profit growth became far too low and classic mean reversion ensued. As the economy stabilized in 2009 the economy remained stagnant at best. But the economy’s loss had become corporate America’s gain. The massive cost cuts made these corporations lean and mean. Corporate America’s diverse revenue stream kicked in as the global economy strengthened and leveraged up these lean balance sheets. Despite persistent weakness in the US economy profits continued to rebound through 2009 & 2010 even as US unemployment continued to climb. That heartless bitch did not care about the unemployed, stagnant wages or l-shaped recoveries. She cared only for the bottom line and the bottom line was robust – particularly when compared to expectations....

If I have made one mistake in recent years it has been focusing on what should be good for an economy (job growth, fair markets, organic growth, etc) as opposed to what the market desires (higher profits no matter how they come).... Ultimately, the purpose of research is to generate investment profits.  Connecting the dots between this research and actionable ideas is vital to success.  If you allow the emotion of a macro outlook to infect your work your results will suffer.   Remember, the market is not the economy.

Which country prints more and runs bigger government deficits: Canada or the US? Rebecca Wilder at Angry Bear.

Is inflation about to burst the Chinese bubble? naked capitalism.

China's lending quota? Michael Pettis.
would I have taken seriously a quota on new lending? Not really. It seems to me that if Beijing wants GDP growth in 2011 to come in at the expected 9%, the amount of new investment in China – which is determined in large part by the banking system – is really not something they can decide today. It is going to be whatever it needs to be given developments in household consumption growth and the trade surplus.


This is why I argued a few weeks ago that at whatever level the new loan quota was set, I was not going to think of it as constraining new lending in any way. Either the loan quota would be adjusted (upwards, almost inevitably) or more new lending would occur outside the banks’ balance sheets, as it did in 2009 and 2010.

Investment this year I suspect is going to be extremely high, as high as in 2009 and 2010, because it is only with very high levels of investment that we are likely to manage GDP growth rates high enough to keep Beijing happy. So my guess is that 2011 will be yet another year in this increasingly strained investment-driven party. Chinese GDP growth will continue to be the envy of the world, while those of us who worry about the sustainability and quality of the growth will worry more than ever.
Economic forecasting delusions. FT Alphaville.

So economists who tend to predict near the consensus are, by definition, unlikely to anticipate extreme events, while those who correctly predict the occasional Black Swan tend to get everything else wrong... Generally we agree with the standard defence that it’s not the forecast part of forecasts that matters, but rather their underlying information and logical coherence. And indeed, sometimes these are extremely helpful regardless of the outcome.

Monday, January 10, 2011

January 10

Rosenberg says that Q1 US GDP may come out as high as at a 4% annualized rate. But...
What is important is what happens in the second and third quarter when we see the U.S. economy hitting an important air pocket. In Q2, there is a loss of fiscal support at the margin. Moreover, we will be deeper into this renewed leg of the downturn of home prices, with negative implications for the household wealth effect, confidence, and spending. We will be seeing the peak impact from the runup in energy prices too. The inventory cycle has pretty well run its course as well (it was responsible for half of the GDP growth in 2010). It would also likely be prudent to assume that some risk aversion will resurface from the renewal of European debt concerns in March after the Irish elections (if the opposition party wins, expect the EU deal to be renegotiated and the debt to be restructured, and if that happens, look for other countries to follow suit). Of course, we have the debt-ceiling issue to contend with in March-April and the GOP are dangling $100 billion of spending cuts in front of the White House in order to get a deal done. This is not last year’s lame duck Congress. And this doesn’t add to uncertainty and possible disappointment in the second and third quarter?
The long road ahead. Paul Krugman.
notes that economy has to grow at least 2.5% per year just to keep unemployment from rising, and concludes:
suppose that from here on out we average 4.5 percent growth, which is way above any forecast I’ve seen. Even at that rate, unemployment would be close to 8 percent at the end of 2012

three viewpoints on the economy

first, the conventional cyclical interpretation by most economists who view the credit crunch-inspired recession as little different than typical post-war recessions:
Glory days: another good year in 2011? Liz Ann Sonders, Charles Schwab.
This reacceleration has inspired an uptick in GDP forecasts both for the fourth quarter of 2010 and the full year of 2011. There are numerous reasons for this increased optimism, including:
  • Taxes are not going higher, while the bill also includes a payroll tax reduction and immediate and full expensing for business investment.
  • Leading indicators have reaccelerated and manufacturing is expanding at a seven-month-high pace.
  • Initial unemployment claims have significantly broken out to the downside.
  • Credit conditions are improving markedly for both consumer and commercial loans.
  • Real consumer spending is back in expansion mode, having surpassed its 2007 high (ahead of GDP doing the same).
  • Earnings growth remains high and steady, keeping valuations reasonable.
  • Core inflation remains contained.
  • Merger-and-acquisition activity is picking up sharply, especially among technology and energy companies.
  • Long-term yields are up, but short-term rates are low and steady; lending support to the economically important steep yield curve.
  • QE2 is having success boosting asset prices and should offset some of the recent drag on the savings rate while boosting household net worth and confidence.  
  • The election cycle greatly favors the pre-election year (2011), with an average annual gain of over 17% for the S&P 500 index and no down years since 1945.

second, a secular perspective influenced by debt dynamics, which leads to the conclusion that sustained economic growth will be illusory if not well-nigh impossible:
Why the world is financially doomed. Charles Hugh Smith.
1. When money is dear and difficult to borrow, then productivity and capital accumulation are encouraged, speculation, malinvestment and debt-based consumption are discouraged.
2. When money is "free" (zero-interest rate policy) and liquidity is unlimited, then the opposite conditions hold: speculation in risk assets, malinvestment and debt-based consumption are all encouraged, and productivity and capital accumulation are heavily discouraged.
3. When debts exceed the value of the underlying assets, the only way out of the Tyranny of Debt is to write off the debt on both the borrower and lender's balance sheets, wiping out their capital via liquidation and bankruptcy.
4. The "extend and pretend" policy pursued by all major nations is simply transferring the impaired debt from private hands to the taxpayers (public debt), crippling the economy with higher taxes and higher debt service.
5. The Central State's "extend and pretend" policy requires heavy borrowing every year to prop up the status quo, pushing the Central State (or equivalent, i.e. the Eurozone) in an inescapable double-bind: either continue increasing public debt and cripple the economy with high taxes and high public-debt servicing costs, or let the financial status quo of "profits are private, losses are public" implode.
third, a sociological, structural/institutional perspective, which implies that though corporate profits and therefore stock markets may still have reason to do okay, they are doing so via multinationalist policies which come at the expense of domestic economic prospects:
Corporate America: paving a downward economic slide. Harold Meyerson, WaPo.
Our economic woes, then, are not simply cyclical or structural. They are also - chiefly - institutional, the consequence of U.S. corporate behavior that has plunged us into a downward cycle of underinvestment, underemployment and under-consumption.
other items of concern, in addition to those above, to contrast with Sonders' points:
- high oil and gas prices tax on consumer (undoing benefit of reduced payroll taxes)
- ditto for food price inflation
- persistently low inflation / disinflation
- steep yield curve helps banks but hurts savers (low short-term rates reduce household interest income) and hurts those in debt trying to refinance
- US housing prices in decline since July persists as more foreclosures come on stream (having been stalled in autumn due to fraud-closure and robo-signing scams and then due to holidays) and shadow inventory adds to existing excess supply
- revival of uptrend in residential mortgage delinquencies as Option ARM and Alt-A resets trend up from May through November, with residential mortgage rates now higher than they were in the fall
- delinquencies on commercial mortgage backed securities hit a record high in December
- potential political gridlock due to typical political dynamics but also to deficit hysterics
- what happens to QE come June: more? less? is a wildcard for both economy and markets
- policies of artificially boosting asset prices to induce a wealth effect to induce increased consumption are unsustainable and have historically worked for a time.... only until they failed miserably with a bust
- equity valuations based on reliable historical metrics, Shiller PE and Q-ratio, are very high
- forward earnings estimates' extrapolation of recent earnings growth implies expansion of profit margins from already very high levels, in contrast to historical very regular pattern of reversion to mean of profits/GDP
- markets not just over-valued but over-bullish and over-bought in period of rising yields
- high corporate cash balances not only mask high corporate debt burdens (cash is high in large part because debt issuance has been high) but indicate that companies are not willing to make investments in expansion of productive capacity
- state and local government retrenchment and possible defaults
- sovereign credit risk in Europe
- refinancing risk for both European banks and governments in spring
- risk of Chinese credit and housing and malinvestment bubbles popping due to government measures to cool inflation


Risk trades will test investors through 2011. Stacy Williams, Head of FX Quantitative Strategy at HSBC, in the FT.
[The risk-on / risk-off trading pattern] reflects the great uncertainty in the outlook for the global economy in the coming years. A world where stable growth returns and government indebtedness is brought under control is very different to one where growth falters and sovereign debt problems escalate. Markets are struggling to correctly price in these very different outcomes. Feelings of optimism and pessimism oscillate nervously within the markets and the prices of a whole range of assets move up and down with them.... Only when talk of quantitative easing, sovereign risk, and deflation starts to fade will we see any change. It would be optimistic to imagine this happening within the next eighteen months.

Baltic Dry and the risk trade. Bruce Krasting.
of the 3 things weighing on the BDI now, Australian floods leaving ships idle, new ships having come on service in last 18 months so no shortage of ships, and China's previously very aggressive pace of accumulating raw materials has slowed in last 60 days:
"China trumps everything. It's not just shipping rates; all the froth in the commodities market is at risk."

This is of course just one mans opinion. Who knows, maybe China will ramp up its infrastructure development again sometime soon. But given that they are going hell bent for leather in the opposite direction to cool an overheated economy I would suggest that a revival of their build-out program is the least likely thing we might see.

There are two basic trades. The Growth Trade and the No Growth Trade. In many areas of the markets (stocks, commodities, currencies and to some extent bonds) the Growth Trade is fully priced in at the moment. When (if) more evidence of a China slowdown comes out it is possible that a fair bit of “air” will have to be released. Nothing like that is in today's 'print'.




other fare, first 3 serious, then 1 hilarious:

Twelve virtues of rationality. Eliezer Yudkowsky.
The first virtue is curiosity. A burning itch to know is higher than a solemn vow to pursue truth.... The third virtue is lightness. Let the winds of evidence blow you about as though you are a leaf, with no direction of your own. Beware lest you fight a rearguard retreat against the evidence, grudgingly conceding each foot of ground only when forced
Peak oil and the changing climate. The Nation, featuring Bill McKibben, Noam Chomsky, Dmitri Orlov, James Kunstler, Nicole Foss, Richard Heinberg.

Population 7 billion. By 2045 global population is projected to reach nine billion. Can the planet take the strain? National Geographic.


Dave Barry's Year in Review. Washington Post.

Monday, January 3, 2011

January 3

Albert Edwards, SocGen bear, takes a bite out of China. Guardian.
Edwards is thus sticking to two eye-catching predictions. Stock markets will revisit their March 2009 lows (3512 for the FTSE 100). And, despite the hints in recent months of a return of inflation, gilt yields will fall below 2% (from 3.5% today) as deflationary forces reassert themselves. Oh, and for good measure, prepare for the hard landing in China and the crash in commodity prices.

In Edwards' view, China is a "freak economy"; its investment-to-GDP ratio is off the scale in terms of size and endurance. "In development history, Korea is the only one that got close. It then collapsed. China is basing a growth model on the most unstable part of GDP. The Chinese authorities have recognised this and are trying to steer the economy over to consumption – which is fine, but it will take a long time."

The danger, he suggests, is that China has produced such strong growth for such a long time that investors assume the process will last indefinitely. "There is too much confidence in the lack of volatility."....

He and his colleagues (at the French bank Société Générale) have been the top-rated analysts in the "global strategy" category for seven consecutive years, despite being too quick out of the blocks with some of their predictions. "Often the call is right but it is early and the clients know that,"

As his final research piece of 2010 put it: "I've been doing this job long enough to recognise when the markets are entering a new phase of madness that leaves me scratching my head with bemusement. The notion that we are back in a sustainable economic recovery is as ludicrous as it was in 2005-07. But investors are backon the dance floor, waltzing their way towards the next, inevitable implosion, [which] yet again they will no doubt claim in retrospect was totally unpredictable!"
Setup and resolution. John Hussman.
We enter 2011 at a point where investors have pushed risk assets to a speculative extreme, on the belief that the Fed has provided a "backstop" against losses. While there's no assurance that we won't see a further extension of this over the short-term, we've found more often than not that speculative setups in the financial markets are followed by a striking degree of subsequent resolution in the opposite direction....

I still believe that existing post-war data was not representative of what we were observing in 2008-2009, and that significant problems were papered-over instead of resolved. But in hindsight, I was wrong to expect investors to share that assessment. The aversion of investors to risk has vanished, so every concern about risk has been unrewarding. Thanks to a tripling of the Fed's balance sheet, a suspension of fair-market disclosure by major financial companies, and an ongoing Federal deficit of more than 10% of GDP, the economy appears to be slowly recovering, and investors care little about the dangers of the policies that produced that outcome. Though my concerns about other major risks have generally been well placed, to this point, risk aversion has been a mistake....

the stock market remained characterized by an overvalued, overbought, overbullish, rising-yields condition that has historically produced poor average market returns, and consistently so across historical time frames. However, this condition is also associated with what I've called "unpleasant skew" - the most probable market movement is actually a small advance to marginal new highs, but the right tail is truncated and the left tail is fat, meaning that there is a lower than normal likelihood of large gains, and a much larger than normal potential for sharp and abrupt market losses....

The upshot is that there is little historical basis at present to expect positive returns as compensation for accepting risk in stocks, bonds, or precious metals. This will change, possibly soon, but the result of the recent speculative run is that risk premiums have been compressed to levels that have historically been inadequate to compensate for risk.

addendum to Hussman's valuation evaluations of small-caps vs large-caps and the Nasdaq vs SP500:
since 1900, the Q-ratio has only been higher than its current level of 1.14 during one period: 1997-2001