Understand The Trading Arena

"It is said that if you know your enemies and know yourself, you will not be imperiled in a hundred battles; if you do not know your enemies but do know yourself, you will win one and lose one; if you do not know your enemies nor yourself, you will be imperiled in every single battle." Sun Tzu

Global Macro Analysis

Every markets are linked and should be analyse as a whole to understand what is really happening in the world

Forex Trading

The foreign exchange market is the market of choice for the retail prop shop to capitalize on macro themes.

Liquidity And Market Micro-Structure

Welcome market inefficiencies and learn to profit from them.

Trading Professionaly

Plan your trade and trade your plan.

Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Market Talk. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Market Talk. Afficher tous les articles

dimanche 3 août 2014

Time And Cycles


Time-based economic forecasting is unfashionable. Until the mid-twentieth century, economists were sympathetic to the idea that business activity and prices fluctuate in regular cycles. The majority view today is that booms / busts reflect policy errors, market failures or supply-side shocks: cycles still occur but they are unpredictable. The behaviour of the global economy in recent years, however, is explicable in terms of the old fixed-length cycles. The approach suggests that another significant economic downswing will occur in 2016.
According to the old approach, there is no single “business cycle”. Observed growth fluctuations, instead, are the product of separate cycles in different parts of the economy. The three main cycles are: the 3-5 year Kitchin cycle in stockbuilding; the 7-11 year Juglar cycle in business investment; and the 15-25 year Kuznets building cycle. Each cycle is named after the economist who “discovered” it.
Recessions almost always involve significant weakness in business investment. In the US, recessions occurred in 1981-82, 1990-91, 2001 and 2008-09, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. The spacing, clearly, fits the 7-11 year periodicity of the Juglar cycle.
The severity of recessions, however, depends on the direction of the other cycles. In 2008-09, a Juglar downswing coincided with the weak phase of the Kitchin stocks cycle and the final stages of a downswing in the longer-term Kuznets building cycle. The previous occurrence of simultaneous weakness in the three cycles was in 1974-75. Global industrial output fell by 13% from peak to trough in 2008-09 and by 12% in 1974-75 – much larger declines than in other post-World War Two recessions.
In the early 2000s, by contrast, the recessionary impulse from the Juglar investment cycle was moderated by an upswing in the Kuznets building cycle. The 2001 US recession was unusually mild, while the UK avoided any fall in output. Central bankers attributed this benign result to their policy-making brilliance, a belief that contributed to complacency during the credit bubble and the initial stages of the subsequent bust.
The short-term Kitchin stocks cycle is usually associated with minor growth fluctuations, unless reinforced by the other cycles. Such fluctuations, however, can still have a significant impact on financial markets. The last Kitchin cycle downswing occurred in 2011-12: the global economy hit a soft patch and equities fell by 23%. The weak cyclical backdrop contributed to the Eurozone crisis.
What do the cycles suggest about current economic prospects? The last Juglar cycle downswing began in 2008 so the next one is scheduled to occur between 2015 and 2019. The Kitchin cycle is due to enter another weak phase in 2015-16. A recession will be likely if the two downswings coincide. The most probable year for a recession is 2016, since the Kitchin cycle will embark on another upswing in 2017-18, offsetting Juglar cycle weakness.
Thankfully, any such recession should be of average severity or even mild because the longer-term Kuznets building cycle will remain in an upswing until the early 2020s, at least. The “great recession” of 2008-09 was a once-in-a-generation event resulting from a rare confluence of the three cycles. The next boom / bust episode will be painful but not system-threatening.

Source:http://moneymovesmarkets.com/journal/2014/7/31/time-and-cycles.html

mardi 8 juillet 2014

How Is Barclays Positioning In FX, Equities & Other Markets Right Now?

 
 
Barclays Capital's Global Asset Allocator team is out with a note outlining their positioning strategy in FX, equities, bonds, and other markets. The following are the key points in Barclays' note. 
The threat of higher US inflation and yields in H2 calls for a more defensive portfolio. We go long US 30y breakeven inflation and are positioned for a back-up in US front-end yields. We are also long USD versus EUR, JPY and AUD via options.
We also go long value sectors in the US (energy and financials) versus growth ones (healthcare and food and beverages) as this strategy typically outperforms in an environment of rising US yields.
We are more defensive but not bearish as stronger global growth should partially offset the headwinds from higher yields. We stay long a basket of growth-linked assets (EM equities, resources stocks and base metals) and also long euro periphery equities (Spain and Italy with equal weights).
Also in equities, we favour the FTSE 100 over the FTSE 250. The former should benefit from firmer global growth in H2 while small/medium sized firms in the 250 are expensive and are likely to underperform with higher UK yields. European fixed income – core and periphery – looks less appealing after prolonged rallies. But we still see room for spread compression in European banks credit.
The Japan trade remains alive, but we think it is better expressed via long equities and short fixed income. Go long large caps as they appear cheap and pay 20yf10y JGB rates for slightly positive roll down, unlike most other bearish duration trades.
We go long front-end Brent futures (Sep 14) to take advantage of the backwardated curve/positive roll. Going long energy equities via options (our current implementation) also makes sense as vol is low and there is room for equities to catch up with crude prices.
 

samedi 8 mars 2014

A Warning On Junk Loans

Record margin debt is not the only dangerous sign of the overly leveraged and speculative atmosphere the Fed has encouraged.  Now the head of the world’s largest distressed debt fund, Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital, is warning of the dangers as retail investors gobble up distressed debt.
Here is a pretty scary line…
“You can’t go on strike and refuse to buy the securities you’re paid to invest in, because the market may not turn for months or years,” Marks said. “Never forget the old adage, being too far ahead of your time is indistinguishable from being wrong. So you have to buy but with caution.”
So in other words, the thing just keeps going until one day… it just ceases to go.  Yeh, that’s a great fundamental underpinning right there.

vendredi 7 mars 2014

RBA Hints Cash Rate May Not Fall Further From Here

The Reserve Bank of Australia provided one of the strongest hints that the cash rate may not go further down from here, saying it remains unclear if a shortfall in demand can be made up quickly through monetary policy action.
The hint was delivered by Governor Glenn Stevens in his opening statement to the House of Representative Standing Committee on Economics in Sydney and later while answering their questions.
Stevens said monetary policy is very accommodative and based on current indications, the RBA expects to keep the cash rate stable for a while.
He admitted "the outlook contains many uncertainties, not least the 'hand over' from mining investment spending to sources of demand outside mining," even as there are signs that handover is happening.
"The question then is: will the additional demand likely to be generated outside mining as a result of these trends be just the right amount to offset the large decline in mining investment spending, so keeping the economy near full employment?"
But even if there was a shortfall in demand, Stevens said, it "could not be assumed that a shortfall in demand could necessarily be made good in short order by monetary policy. Monetary policy can have a powerful effect on the general environment, but it cannot hope to fine-tune the quarterly or even annual path of aggregate demand,"
Later Stevens repeated he expects the cash rate to remain stable for some time but added the RBA hasn't specified "how long" the cash rate will remain stable because "I don't know."
The guidance to keep the cash rate stable for some time is a change from the previous signal there could be a scope for easing, Stevens said. But the change indicates that based on the current outlook, the RBA doesn't see scope for more easing, even as he emphasized that the guidance is based on "current indications" and could change if the outlook changes.
In short, Stevens seemed to suggest there was no scope to lower the cash rate further based on the current outlook but even if the outlook didn't come to pass as the RBA now forecasts, there isn't much scope for monetary policy to step in and make up for the shortfall in demand.
At the same time, Stevens provided no hint that the RBA was in any rush to raise the cash rate.
He said the unemployment rate is expected to drift higher in the quarters ahead. Asked specifically on how much the labor market lags the growth in the economy, Stevens said it may be "one or two quarters."
Assistant Governor Christopher Kent elaborated on the labor market, saying "roughly speaking, we see the unemployment rate drift up a little bit from here, but probably sometime early 2015 peak and stay there for a while."
An improvement in economic growth is not likely to make inroads to the labor market until late 2015, Kent said.
On the housing market, Stevens didn't show any discomfort with the rise in prices or the increase in buying interest from overseas investors.
Stevens said foreign investors have a role to play in the housing market. "In a way, we tend to feel we want to be open to foreign investment.. this is a form of that."
Stevens said foreign investors were buying new structures as it is easy for them to do this. "If there was a supply side constraint, the issue is worth addressing. Beyond that, the question is how welcoming we want to be... this is a matter for the Parliament to manage."
On the effect of restrictions in Canada on the housing market here, Stevens said there will be some effect but "I cant quantify the extent of spillover in our direction"
But if house prices continue to rise further, would the RBA consider macro-prudential tools, Stevens was asked.
Stevens said he has previously stated the RBA has had preliminary discussions with the prudential regulator about macro-prudential tools for housing. While he recognizes such tools are useful, he said, "we should use them with a bit of realism."
Deputy Governor Philip Lowe also said macro-prudential tools can be useful but can also create distortions, especially harming first-home buyers when tools like a cap on loan-to-value ratios are used.
A better tool would be tighter lending standards, where a home loan application is tested for scenarios of 300 basis points higher interest rate than around 200 basis points as is currently donr, Lowe said. This would be more useful than raising the cash rate as current mortgage borrowers and other sectors of the economy could continue to enjoy the benefit of lower rates.
On inflation, Stevens said the higher-than-expected fourth quarter inflation data may have contained both noise and signal for future inflation. But the RBA's overall assessment is "that inflation is not quite as low as it might have looked six to twelve months ago, but nor is it accelerating to the extent a literal reading of the latest data might suggest."
Still, the RBA's view remains that the "outlook for inflation, while a little higher than before, is still consistent with the medium-term target," Stevens said.
Stevens said monetary policy is very accommodative and is doing the sorts of things that is normally expected to result from low interest rates, including promoting a rise in asset prices, construction of dwellings and depreciation in the exchange rate.
However, he added, the exchange rate "is still high by historical standards."
Later, on a question on the meaning of "jawboning" that the RBA is said to be doing for the exchange rate, Stevens said they refer to the fact that "we made remarks about levels of exchange rate" and the assumption is "these remarks were made in an effort to move it."
But Stevens said jawboning has a limited effect in lowering the exchange rate and in theory a central bank could take other steps like intervening in the foreign-exchange market or lowering the cash rate in an effort to bring the exchange rate down.
On the current level of the exchange rate, Stevens said his view is unchanged from that expressed in an interview with the Australian Financial Review newspaper back in December.
He said, "($)0.90 or higher is rather higher than any plausible assessment" of the economy.
In the AFR interview, Stevens had said: "I don't think the extent of our knowledge about what's correct is that good, but I did think ($0.95) was rather too high. I thought ($0.85) would be closer to the mark than ($0.95) at the time we started to make some comments some months ago, but, really, I don't think we can be that precise."
"I just think that if things over the medium term evolve as we're presently assuming - and I think it's reasonable to make these assumptions - it's going to be surprising if a nine at the front is the right number."
A high school student asked Stevens a question on what policy step he would take if inflation rises above the target band and the unemployment rate also rises to, say 7%. Stevens said it depended on what caused that combination but if inflation was higher, he would focus on the outlook for inflation.
"I hope the combination remains hypothetical," Stevens said.
On a question on where future growth in the economy would come from, Stevens said the mining sector is likely to contribute positively to growth in to the long run, after the initial downturn in the near term. But based on history, it is likely the economy will evolve in the direction of services.
"That's where most opportunity lies, included trade in services," Stevens said.
Steven was asked his view on the U.S. Federal Reserve's tapering plans. He said he believes that a "fair bit" of weakness in the labor market may be needed there for Fed to change its path on tapering.
He reminded that even with tapering, the Fed's balance sheet is still expanding, so in effect it is "still easing monetary policy" but easing at a slower pace.
A question was asked about monetary policy comments made by RBA board members to which Stevens replied he's the only one authorized to speak on behalf of the board. He admitted the RBA can't stop board members talking about things they know about, including in their own field. 

jeudi 6 mars 2014

Draghi Boosts Euro, Rebuffs Disinflation

Another euro-positive ECB presser highlights the reasons for lower inflation, with the implication that low prices are of temporary nature. The conference re-affirms the ECB is in no hurry to use up its eroding interest rate armory to tackle disinflation risks without first considering unsterilising its money market operations.
The chart below reminds that the last time extreme lows in Eurozone inflation were accompanied by multi-year highs in German business and macro data was in mid-2009, a period propped by optimism in global equities rather than a manifestation of broad Eurozone improvement. Less than 6 months later, the Eurozone was dragged into a 3-year slump of debt defaults, bailouts and austerity.


Today, 3-year lows in Eurozone inflation are not only occurring simultaneously with 3-year highs in Germany business confidence, but also backed by broadening stabilisation of growth dynamics in the periphery, four upgrades in the Eurozone since Nov alongside robust performance in equities and the single currency.
Draghi offered fresh data attributing low inflation to the euro's appreciation and the growth spillover from high austerity policies in "stress nations". Draghi quantified the effect of the euro rise on inflation at -0.4%, while stating that 2/3 of the 1.9% decline in inflation from 2012 Q1 to have been caused by lower energy prices, or -0.3% impact.
The ECB lowered its CPI forecasts for 2014 to 1.0% from 1.1% in December and held its 2015 forecasts at 1.3%. These forecasts may reflect the central bank's commitment to improved transparency but they prove of little value to the markets, especially as the accuracy of these forecasts is constantly challenged by revisions.
More importantly, the 1.0% rise in preliminary core Eurozone CPI for February showed a 25% rise, which was the biggest since September 2011. The main difference between now and 2011 is the dissipation of sovereign debt factor (four upgrades in periphery nations since November) and improved macro dynamics in those economies. Considering that the euro's sole handicap over the past 6 months anticipation of a forced rate cut, any indications that the ECB will abandon such this solution, will maintain the pair supported above 1.3600 and make $1.40 a reality.


Money Managers Aren’t Paid to Forecast; They’re Paid to Adapt

It seems we can’t go a week without someone predicting the end of the world and stirring up everyone’s fears of a market meltdown. These apocalyptic warnings are becoming routine and the sad thing is that it does cause the squeamish individual investor to run for the hills and liquidate their investment portfolio. Just look at the market calls for a crash over the last few years:
Whenever a client refers me to an article of someone calling for a crash I like to respond with a question: How many crashes can you list over the last century? I’m not talking about a 20%+ bear market, but a market crash as defined by Investopedia:
Definition of 'Stock Market Crash'
A rapid and often unanticipated drop in stock prices. A stock market crash can be the result of major catastrophic events, economic crisis or the collapse of a long-term speculative bubble. Well-known U.S. stock market crashes include the market crash of 1929 and Black Monday (1987).
Think about that, we have had two real market crashes occur in the last 100 years, which works out to about one every 50 years. If they are so infrequent, then why do we hear so much about them? I'll give two reasons: One, people often crave attention and can easily gain it by making bold forecasts (whether they turn out incorrect or not) and, two, people assign a higher probability to market crashes now than they have in the past.
For example, shown below is the S&P 500 along with a Bloomberg story count for articles that have the words “market crash” in them. Since the early 1990s, we saw a spike on the 10-year anniversary of the 1987 market crash, then another around the September 11th 2001 terrorist attacks, and then again on the big October swoon of 2008. I want to draw your attention to the first two spikes in 1997 and 2001 and point out that, once they calmed down, fears over a “market crash” returned to normal levels. However, after 2008, there has been a continual and ongoing spike in calls for a market crash unlike anything we've seen over the prior two decades. 

Source: Bloomberg
This brings up an important point—a theme really—that I try to stress again and again: To be successful as investors we can’t fixate on the recent past, nor complain about what should be happening, but rather focus on what is taking place and why.
I typically write one to two articles a year on the subject of being flexible and want to include an excerpt from an article I wrote back in 2009:
All investors will be wrong at some point and the trick is to admit your error in judgment early rather than being a broken clock that is eventually right well down the road. Being wrong is human; being stubborn in the face of changing facts is foolishness. Another pearl of wisdom summing up this thought comes from famous investor Peter Bernstein who said the following after a long and successful investment career (emphasis added):
After 28 years at this post and 22 years before this in money management, I can sum up whatever wisdom I have accumulated this way: The trick is not to be the hottest stock-picker, the winning forecaster, or the developer of the neatest model; such victories are transient. The trick is to survive. Performing that trick requires a strong stomach for being wrong, because we are all going to be wrong more often than we expect. The future is not ours to know. But it helps to know that being wrong is inevitable and normal, not some terrible tragedy, not some awful failing in reasoning, not even bad luck in most instances. Being wrong comes with the franchise of an activity whose outcome depends on an unknown. Look around at the long-term survivors at this business and think of the much larger number of colorful characters who were once in the headlines, but who have since disappeared from the scene.

Remain Bullish Until the Market and Economy Undergo an "Identity Crisis"

In light of the above, it is important not to extropolate out too far in the future, but to focus on how fundamental drivers of the stock market and economy are changing on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis. For example, if the majority of stocks are in strong uptrends across most time-frames (as measured by short to long moving averages), I have to conclude the bull market in stocks is alive and well. Similarly, if the bulk of U.S. states are showing increasing economic growth, it’s logical to assume the economic recovery remains in place. What investors must understand is that market tops and economic peaks are a process and do not occur overnight. Rather, there is a period of time in which fewer and fewer stocks participate in the bull market and fewer and fewer states showing increasing economic growth.
There comes a point where the number of stocks rallying versus the number of stocks in their own private bear markets is roughly equal. The same is true for the economy where eventually there are an equal number of states participating in a recovery versus those that are not. This is the identity crisis point in which you have the potential transition from a bull to a bear market and from an economic recovery to a recession. However, until you reach the identity crisis point you have to adhere to the Wall Street maxims, “The trend is your friend” or “Don’t fight the tape.”
Consequently, much of my research is focused on looking for clues as to how close we are to that identity crisis point. On Fridays, I throw the stock market under the microscope with my “Weekly Bill of Health” report to gauge the level of participation in the bull market; as long as the bulls have the upper hand I remain bullish. An example of this is by looking at the percentage of stocks within the S&P 1500 that are within 2% of their 52-week highs versus those that are down more than 20% from their 52-week highs. This builds on the study done by Lowry Research Corp. in which they found that at major bull market tops, on average, only 16.54% of stocks were within 2% of their 52-week highs while 22.26% of stocks were 20% or more below their 52-week highs. This highlights the fact that market tops have an identity crisis when they peak as there are roughly an equal percentage of stocks near new highs as those already in bear markets.
Below is data from Lowry’s showing the average breadth of stocks at market tops compared to the 2007 top and the recent breakout to new highs on February 28th in the S&P 1500 (the S&P 1500 encompasses nearly 92% of the entire US market cap). As we can clearly see from the columns on the far right, there is absolutely no identity crisis present in the markets as bullish stocks clearly outnumber bearish stocks, with overall breadth quite healthy.


Given the bulls clearly have control of the stock market it makes sense that the economic bulls hold control of the economy. This can be seen when looking at the Philadelphia Fed’s Coincident Diffusion Index for all 50 states. Referring back to the identity crisis moment I mentioned, typically we see the onset of a recession when the Philly Fed’s Diffusion Index is zero, meaning there is an equal number of states expanding as those contracting. These periods are highlighted by the blue arrows below and what is most important is the fact that the Philly Fed Diffusion Index rested at 74 as of the end of December, well above the zero line associated with recessions.


Given the strong economic breadth seen in the Philly Fed data, it comes as no surprise that our own recession probability model shows only a 4% chance the U.S. is in or near a recession.


We truly live in interesting times and we need to open our minds to make sense of how to navigate as an investor while also avoiding falling into the "perma-bear" or "perma-bull" camp. If we are to succeed and thrive in this climate we have to be able to adapt and remain flexible, which was a key concept in a great book written by Louis-Vincent Gave, “Too Different For Comfort.” Louis was recently interviewed by Jim Puplava on the Financial Sense Newshourand you can listen in to the four key themes Louis believes will drive the markets over the coming years by clicking on the following link:

I’d like to end this article with the concluding remarks by Mr. Gave in his book, which are as priceless as they are timely:
This leads me to conclude with the words of my departed friend Clay Allen: “Remember Louis, money managers are not paid to forecast. Money managers are paid to adapt.” Unfortunately, adapting to this ever-more rapidly changing world is not always easy — but there is no other recipe for making money in today’s world.

http://www.financialsense.com/contributors/chris-puplava/money-managers-not-paid-forecast-paid-adapt

samedi 1 mars 2014

Short Interest Surges To New High

Incredibly, the recent short interest data showed the total cumulative short interest on SPX components surged 4% to it’s highest point since mid-2012.


We keep hearing how there are signs of ‘froth’ and everyone is bullish.  I don’t totally agree, but there are some warnings signs – sure.  Yet, when I see the shorts continue to pile on, I find that very bullish.
Let’s get one thing straight, those shorts very well could just be hedges and not outright bearish plays.  None the less, keeping things very simple, going back the past few years – high short interest hasn’t been bearish.  Late 2011 and Summer 2012 were great times to stay long.  They were also the last two times short interest was this high.  Could it happen again?  I wouldn’t bet against it.
Considering the last time short interest was this high the SPX was around 1,350 (or 37% ago), that very well could represent some major potential buying pressure for this rally to continue.

dimanche 23 février 2014

George Soros: 'I Believe In The Euro' And Am Looking To Invest In EU Banks



FRANKFURT (Reuters) - George Soros wants to invest in Europe's financial sector, according to a German magazine's interview with the billionaire investor on Sunday.
"I believe in the euro," weekly Der Spiegel quoted him as saying.
"Therefore my investment team is looking forward to make a lot of money soon in Europe by, for example, pumping money in banks which urgently need capital," he added, noting the euro zone needs this kind of private investment right now.
Soros, who founded Soros Fund Management, is one of the hedge fund industry's most closely watched investors.
Soros told Der Spiegel his management team was also considering investing in Greece.
"The economic conditions in the country have improved. The question now is whether one can earn money there on a sustainable basis. If that is possible we will invest," he said.
Soros renewed his criticism against Germany's policies to save the euro, saying the austerity measures Chancellor Angela Merkel had forced upon Europe had aggravated the crisis.
Euro zone financial markets have calmed down in the meantime, but a sustainable recovery still does not exist, he said.
"I fear that the euro zone could experience a long phase of economic stagnation similar to Japan's in the past 25 years," he said.
(Reporting by Marilyn Gerlach; Editing by Louise Heavens)



EUR: Here Is What To Expect Ahead Of Eurozone Inflation Print On Fri - Citi


Global commodity prices have been on the rise recently driven by cold weather in the northern hemisphere and, to a certain degree, weak dollar. Below we assess the risks that the latest bounce pose ahead of the Eurozone inflation print next Friday. We conclude that the latest price spike, if not sustained, may be too small to have a lasting impact on HICP. In addition, EUR appreciation continues YoY and that could limit the impact. Still weak domestic demand in the Eurozone could further mean that the downside risks going into the HICP release remain non-negligible. Investors may adopt a more defensive view on EUR ahead of the data.
The February HICP print next Friday could prove quite important in determining whether the ECB cuts rates or not in March. Market would use any potential downside surprises to add to bets on more ECB easing ahead of the March meeting. Citi economists think that a rate cut to the tune of 10-15bp cannot be excluded if the annual HICP inflation comes in below market expectations of 0.7%. EUR could remain under pressure under this outcome.
By the same token, evidence that inflation held up close to recent lows may not have a significant impact on short rate markets given that they are already pricing in about 50% chance of a rate cut on March 6.
Absent significant disappointments from the German ifo the single currency may even consolidate to a degree."
Valentin Marinov, Head of European G10 FX Strategy at Citi

lundi 17 février 2014

Zulauf on Global Economy: “Another Deflationary Episode”

By Felix Zulauf (via Itau Global Connections).
The U.S. has run an ever increasing deficit in her trade and current account since the early 1980s. She has thereby provided tremendous stimulus to the rest of the world by allowing other countries to export to an increasing extent. Some have accepted this opportunity with pleasure and have built a powerful export industry due to their competitive labor costs. The U.S. policy of increasing monetary and often also fiscal stimulus has allowed countries like China to build up their economies and become large and competitive economic powers. The U.S. behavior really triggered the rise of the emerging economies to a very large degree.
Like an oil supertanker that turns very slowly when changing direction, the U.S. is improving to smaller deficits in her trade and current account (Chart 1). The main reasons are a domestic energy production boom (and much cheaper energy prices than in other parts of the world), cheap and more competitive labor (due to a weak U.S. dollar over the last 15 years) and the end of a leverage-driven consumption boom. Smaller deficits by the largest economy have unpleasant implications for many other nations. Of course, foreign oil producers will earn less income, but foreign exporters selling to U.S. markets are also being hurt. Simply speaking, what once was ever-increasing economic stimulus provided to the world is now turning into restraining factors for the rest of the world.

For the U.S., it means she is now losing less growth to the rest of the world and keeping more for herself, which is growth positive. That is one of the reasons why the U.S. is performing relatively better than other economies, although still well below an average recovery. While I completely disagree with the consensus about the “normalization” of the world economy and the reacceleration thesis, if one economy can achieve the forecasts, it will be the U.S.
Credit Booms Are Followed by Busts
As Chart 1 shows, China’s surpluses are declining and therefore trade data for many other economies are deteriorating. At the same time, many of the EM economies have gone through a tremendous boom in recent years, driven by their previous success story and large capital inflows. As I outlined in the second quarter of last year in my piece “Butterfly Effect,” we have witnessed many years of a virtuous cycle. The inflow of capital (Chart 2) revalued those currencies, and while many central banks intervened to dampen the revaluation, the liquidity thereby created fueled a domestic investment and consumption boom. It was a great success story leading to a credit and real estate boom of large proportions virtually everywhere. In the last five years, Hong Kong real estate has doubled in price, Singapore’s has increased by 70% and China’s has more than doubled. It was felt throughout the whole Asian region and also in selected EM economies in other parts of the world. Of course, they and many Western commentators interpreted this as “normal” because they all believed clocks tick differently in those economies. While some may have better demographics and less government debt, they have created private sector credit bubbles of historic proportions (Chart 3). Most importantly, they are exposed to cycles as everybody else. And that is exactly the point.

The problem with credit booms is that they always end badly, although they usually go further and last longer than rational minds expect. The weakest links are breaking first, as always. Completely mismanaged economies like Argentina and Venezuela are already in deep crisis, but that was no surprise. Next follow the deep and chronic deficit countries like Turkey or South Africa, which have already seen their currencies declining sharply. Both have little foreign exchange reserves and virtually no tools to defend the currency except for raising interest rates, which will trigger a recession. Whatever these countries do, they will end in a recession because that is the way balance-of-payment crises are resolved. It is Ying and Yang, action and reaction; booms will be followed by busts, particularly when built on quicksand of phony money and credit creation. These are of course also the unintended consequences of many years of quantitative easing (QE) in the major economies spilling over to emerging economies.
Now, markets have become aware of the problem and are attacking the imbalances. Research on private sector credit booms over the last 20 years show that whenever credit to the private sector expanded by 30% or more within a 10-year period, a banking crisis and recession resulted without any exception. The following countries are all far above that danger level today and candidates for a banking crisis: Hong Kong, China, Thailand, Brazil, Turkey and Singapore. And recently even Korea, Romania, Ukraine and even Russia have broken the danger level. This is quite a long list, and the big EM economies are all part of it except India that has other deficiencies.
Now, these economies differ from each other, of course, but they share a common disease, namely a previous economic boom built on excessive credit. Most have chronic deficits in their external accounts that were unimportant as long as foreign capital flowed in at large. The response to current problems – which have been with us since the tapering was announced last summer – also differs as some simply cannot intervene in the currency market due to the lack of enough foreign exchange reserves (Turkey, South Africa) while others do intervene due to large reserves, like Brazil or Russia. Some are struggling due to the compounding effect of political trouble (Turkey) and some like Russia due to spending their foreign exchange reserves on weak political allies, in this case the Ukraine. All of them will end up with higher interest rates, a weaker economy and a weaker currency, eventually.
The Mother of All Bubbles
While some may understand the mechanism of a balance of payment that is seriously out of line and its ultimate adjustment process, most investors don’t. That’s why most voices one hears do not, in our view, address the problem properly and think it is an isolated case. While some may understand a case like Turkey, most disagree when it comes to China. While I am as impressed as others by China’s economic performance over the last 2-3 decades, we shouldn’t overlook the fact that, particularly since 2008, the economy enjoyed the most dramatic credit boom ever seen in modern history.
China became the second largest economy in a very short period. In the last five years, China’s total credit outstanding more than doubled and grew more than the equivalent of the total U.S. commercial banking sector, namely the equivalent of $14 trillion. That is equivalent to 150% of their current GDP. Moreover, the balance sheet of the Chinese central bank showed the biggest balance sheet expansion since 2000 of all central banks, which is testimony of an ultra-easy monetary policy.
Credit growth in the years leading to the bursting of previous bubbles has been 40%-50%, as was the case in the U.S. from 2002-2007, in South Korea in the mid-90s and in Japan in the late 80s. China’s credit growth has been by far higher than all of those. Now, we see all the signs one usually sees before the bubble bursts. For instance:
– Large expansion and acceleration of credit not matched by GDP, as credit growth is still 2.5 times faster than GDP but slowing.
– An aggressive expansion of a shadow banking system (wealth management products WMP) that has similarities to the U.S. subprime loans.
– Massive investments in property leading to a bubble in many locations. Tier 3 and 4 cities already see real estate prices declining, while prices are still rising in tier 1 and 2 cities.
– Weak risk management at financial institutions similar to U.S. and European banks before the Great Financial Crisis. There are recurring stories of banks in trouble in China and the government throwing money at them. Recently, some shadow banking institutions went bust and investors lost money.
– Finally, a heavily state-directed financial and corporate sector, which in China is a given, primarily in banking. In the U.S. it was Freddy Mac and Fanny Mae.
– Rising interest rates driven by competitive bidding for funding, not by central bank tightening. We saw this first in spring 2013, then in December of last year and now again.
China is facing the ugly choice of either deflating the bubble, hopefully in a controlled way, or of re-inflating even more, leading to an even bigger debt crisis further down the road. Continuing on the current path and procrastinating would mean even more waste investment than has already occurred and would be rather stupid. Hence, I think the chances are better than 50:50 that China will try to deflate in a controlled way, although it would be a hesitant approach at the beginning. Whether it would remain controlled is another question as it would lead to bankruptcies, an economic crisis of some sort and big problems in the financial, real estate and construction sectors. It is clear that such an outcome in the second largest economy of the world wouldn’t remain a domestic affair but impact the rest of the world. At particular risk are those financial institutions exposed with large loan portfolios to China, including WMPs. Hong Kong is at extreme risk, with bank loans amounting to almost 150% of GDP. The U.S. will certainly be impacted the least, as I have outlined above.
If the Chinese try to procrastinate by throwing more liquidity at the problem, capital would flow out and weaken the yuan despite capital controls. If China tried to support her currency, she would face a situation similar to Russia today. Supporting your own currency by intervention drains liquidity from your domestic credit system, and that’s why Russia is facing a banking crisis at present. Hence, if China chose this route, her currency would weaken and compound the structural problems due to capital outflow weakening the banking system’s deposit base. A weaker yuan could trigger the next problem as it would hurt Asian competitors in particular. Japan’s weakening of the yen was an important trigger to weaken many other Asian competitors, recently. If China would follow suit, it would simply be another deflationary hit for many others, probably the world as a whole.
While the timing of this described process is open as is the way the Chinese will choose, we must expect it to begin at any time and last many quarters if not years. The message is that problems in emerging economies are not over, and weakness in currencies, bonds and equities are in general not an opportunity to buy, yet. What investors should be aware of is that the problems in Turkey, South Africa or Russia are only sideshows compared with what’s out there in China and its implications for the world, which in our view are still not understood and not priced in by markets.
As we don’t live in an isolated world, there will be knock-on effects. Emerging markets ex China account for virtually 1/3 of total global imports, similar to the European Union, while the U.S. accounts for approximately 15% and China for only 10%. Arthur Budaghyan of BCA, Montreal, who does excellent work on emerging markets, recently published Chart 4, showing the high correlation and leading function of emerging equity markets’ relative performance to global industrial production. Moreover, Chart 5 illustrates so clearly how weakening currencies in emerging economies will eventually lead to sharp declines of imports. Those imports are of course someone else’s exports.

The mechanism, in simple terms, has been QE in the developed world leading to capital flows into emerging markets, triggering an investment and consumption boom built on cheap credit. The boom led to rising wages, reduced competitiveness, less household income after inflation, taxes and rent (which rose sharply due to the real estate boom). Now, domestic and external demand is weakening while inflation is high and external accounts are imbalanced. Hence, the world will see the next chapter of the unintended consequences of QE, namely many economies going through a balance-of-payment crisis leading to recessions and banking crises and hurting global economic growth. The U.S. will be hurt too, but is the least exposed.
Fragile Euro Zone
The big winner in equity markets in recent quarters has been the euro zone, the periphery in particular. Those yield-hungry investors who previously bought emerging market bonds have switched to buying peripherals driving the yield down to almost half the level of what prevailed in 2012, when many feared an immediate euro breakup. U.S. and Japanese investors were at the margin quite active due to the strengthening euro and the “normalization” of yields. The thesis has been sharply reduced risks due to stabilization and expected recovery.
Indeed, some like Spain have made some progress but the fundamental problems of the monetary union have not been resolved. Part of the stabilization is due to less austerity leading to growing public sector deficits again. At present, nobody cares about it and believes the situation will heal over time. It won’t, in my view. Problems have a habit to stay and grow bigger and not right themselves without proper tackling. It is true, some indicators have improved, but most of them are sentiment-based, like PMIs. As long as short-term improvements are not supported by monetary aggregates – and they are definitely not, with total credit shrinking by more than 4% year over year in the euro zone – upticks are simply coincidental and no indication of a new trend. There is no change on the horizon, as the banking industry continues to shrink its balance sheet in view of the upcoming stress test.
The ECB has recently decided not to sterilize its bond purchases any longer, which is a slight easing move. It was supported only by the Bundesbank to prevent other more aggressive steps, of course. While some may think this step will lead to a better European economy, I rather see it as too little, too late to make a change.
Risk aversion will rise again, once investors find out the world has entered another deflationary episode, with many balance-of-payment crises that are only now beginning. Yes, it may look far away in the emerging world, but it will have knock-on effects and slow down the global economy much more than expected and hurt particularly multinationals’ revenues and profits. Nowadays, the emerging world is half of the world economy, and the world economy is more intertwined than ever before.
Changing Market Character
“As January goes, so goes the year” has an accuracy of 73% for the U.S. equity market, according to the Trader’s Almanac. I don’t rely on such statistics, but what is clearly visible is the changing character of the market. This correction so far is already the most vicious in many months. Importantly, sharp short-term sell-offs could not attract new buying, as was the case all of last year, but triggered renewed selling. Some important momentum and trend indicators are breaking down (Chart 6), and divergences built up over many months are now forcing the indices down. In Chart 7, we also witness fewer and fewer markets with rising 200-day moving averages (71%) and less and less trading above that moving average (59%). A break below 60% in the first in combination with a break below 50% in the second usually confirms a global bear market underway.


The well-performing markets in Europe and the U.S. didn’t see any new negative news, but they were so overheated and overbought that markets were selling off without. Markets had entered a highly speculative stage, with sentiment indicators hitting multi-year extremes. U.S. margin debt as a percentage of GDP has now hit 2.6%, the same extreme as in 2007 at the peak and close to the all-time high of 2.8% in 2000.
In discussions with European investors in recent months, it was unbelievable how bullish they have become. Picking the right stock was all they cared about, since in their view it was a given that stock prices could only rise as long as central banks pursued easy money and low interest rate policies. Any word of caution was moved to the side. I spoke at a conference recently, before this sell-off really began, and was looked at like somebody from another planet, as all others were so indiscriminately bullish. They didn’t even care about asset allocation. Equities were simply the only game in town – no bonds, no cash, no gold, no real estate, just equities. Frothy markets by themselves may not make a top, but they indicate high vulnerability for corrections.
The most important fundamental change at the margin is the “tapering” by the Fed. There have been intense internal discussions at the Fed, and the way I am reading the tea leaves, the Fed is tired of money printing and wants out. Hence, I am expecting their tapering to continue and to be complete later this year, provided no major accident happens in the financial markets in between. This is equivalent to raising interest rates from minus two percent to zero. And while zero is still low, it is in my view a step by step removal of stimulus and therefore a regime shift in monetary policy at the most important central bank of the world. This is a strong message. Unfortunately, we have no experience with “tapering” and therefore do not know when and how it impacts markets. However, such a change in combination with frothy markets has now triggered a serious correction that in our view has more to run. Since developments in the developed world will not lead to an immediate economic downturn, opportunity hunters will appear and buy the dip, perhaps several times. Hence, it could be a step by step correction during this quarter followed by another upside attempt, particularly in the U.S. and Europe.
In our reading, the current weakness is led by emerging equity markets, and most of them are already deep in their second downleg of this cyclical bear market, while for most equities in developed markets it is only the first downleg of a new bear market. There is an outright chance that once this downleg ends, a few indices may make it back to the highs or even marginally above, but now is not the time to decide that. Now, the message for investors simply is to pursue defensive strategies.
The sell-off has now created an oversold situation at a time when the U.S. and European markets reached the December lows, while Japan is a bit weaker. Hence, some attempts to bounce off these levels are likely in the short-term. If recovery attempts remain weak and do not lead far, which is my hunch, we may be facing the right shoulder of a head and should top, from where markets could break down further thereafter.
Strong Dollar
In the currency arena, the U.S. Dollar has been firming for quite some time against virtually all others except the euro family of currencies. I expect the stronger dollar trend to continue despite some interest rate hikes in selected emerging economies. Those economies have to be rebalanced through a full-fledged balance of payment crisis that does include a recession. While the extremes of last week may lead to a temporary pause in EM currencies, I expect them to continue weak later.
The euro is a deflation currency with the same characteristics of the Japanese yen until the regime change in the country of the rising sun. We see chronic current account surpluses, a stagnating and aging population and a deflationary economic policy mix with economic stagnation. This condition must change, similar to Japan in late 2012. We don’t know when, but further disappointments this year will create rising stress in the euro zone. The recent change at the ECB of withdrawing the sterilization of bond purchases amounts to some easing and a weakening of the euro; however, it will not be enough to improve the economy. Hence, we see the upside of the euro against the U.S. unit as very limited and expect a weaker euro in coming months and lasting well into next year, as the ECB will at some point be forced to do a lot more.
The big surprise for the world will in our view be a temporary strengthening of the yen. The world is short yen, as it has been used as a funding currency that declines in value and costs extremely low interest. Moreover, the Japanese have outlined their goal of weakening the currency to end deflation. The economy will do well up until April 1, when the VAT will be hiked by 3%. This will lead to CPI inflation of close to 4% while wages will only be raised by 1%-2%, leading to an income shortfall in real terms. Hence, the economy will most likely be quite weak in the 2nd and 3rd quarters. The Bank of Japan is aware of this and has recently stopped buying JGBs to make room for more aggressive steps later. Hence, I expect the world to be forced to cover their yen shorts, as Abenomics will look like a failure. We expect the Japanese to launch another stimulus program, including aggressive monetary easing, that will most likely start sometimes in the second half and trigger the next phase of yen weakness, but only after a temporary correction that could amount to approximately 10% from recent extremes versus the U.S. dollar and more versus other major currencies.
Bonds Offer a Safe Haven
We share the view that bond yields of perceived quality borrowers have terminated their 30-year secular decline and are in a multi-year bottoming process. Within this bottoming, our hunch is that the cyclical rise from the secular low in 2012 has ended. As outlined, we are expecting another deflationary episode and see in particular U.S. Treasuries with maturities of 10 years and longer as offering attractive trading opportunities over the next 6-12 months, whereby 10-year yields could decline to around 2%. This may not be attractive in the eyes of many, but in view of medium- and most likely cyclical declines in equities, Treasuries offer a safe haven.
While yields on German Bunds or some other selected quality bonds may also decline, I think U.S. paper will be the most attractive and offer the best total return potential, as capital will be returning from virtually all other parts of the world and thereby strengthening the currency, which will not be the case for others.
Restrained Bottoming Attempt for Gold
In the scenario outlined, economic-sensitive commodities are unattractive and at risk of further declines. I would exclude them from portfolios.
Gold has disappointed so many that it is hard to see how Western investors who have sold are getting back into gold anytime soon. Rising deflationary risks could hinder a gold recovery despite its deeply oversold cyclical position. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised to see gold breaking $1,180 first for a final washout before the recovery starts, most likely from late spring onwards, when rising risk in the global credit system will become more visible. It is reasonable to expect citizens in those countries directly impacted to store part of their wealth in gold instead of paper currencies, which are losing value virtually every day.
Since the gold market is very oversold from a cyclical point of view after declining from $1,920 to $1,180 in more than two years, investors should take a constructive and contrarian view of gold and accumulate step by step on weakness. It may take a few more months until the dimension of risk in the credit system become more visible, but I expect this to be on the table in the second half at the latest, when the price of gold should be higher again. Even gold mining stocks can be purchased with a 12-month view, as they have been beaten down badly and are cheap on a valuation basis. They are, however, not for widows and orphans.
In general, we expect another deflationary episode leading to systemic risks and economic disappointments. Hence, it is time to structure portfolios much more conservatively and put capital preservation ahead of aggressive return strategies. In contrast to last year, 2014 will hardly be a year with a powerful and easy trend to ride. Instead, it will bring much more volatility but also plenty of trading opportunities for flexible investors.