June 22, 2013

James Gruber
James Gruber, Contributor
An unconventional take on Asian markets
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6/22/2013 @ 1:30PM |36 views

Is That The Sound Of Asset Bubbles Bursting?

Ben Bernanke’s recent press conference and China’s interbank market crash may appear to have little in common but the truth is rather different. For both the U.S. and China are trying to deflate asset bubbles caused by excessive money printing and interest rates being kept too low for too long. And politics is largely behind the timing of their decisions to clamp down on these bubbles. Bernanke is desperate to avoid the mistakes of his disgraced predecessor, Alan Greenspan, whose loose money policies blew up soon after he departed the post. And China’s President Xi Jinping would rather have an economic slowdown now than later on so that he can blame it on his predecessor, Hu Jintao.
The question for investors is whether Bernanke or Xi will blink, choosing to reflate their asset bubbles (the U.S. bubbles are principally in stock and bond markets while China’s are more broad-based) rather than face the consequences of unwinding them. At Asia Confidential, we’re not certain of anything. But our best guess is that the U.S. economy is too fragile and deflationary forces are too strong for QE tapering to take place this year. China is a different matter as we now suspect the new president may just have the political backing and will to carry out tightening measures. Either way though, the asset bubbles in both countries are likely to deflate, it’s just a matter of how and when this happens.
The context to market gyrations
What’s behind the wild market gyrations of the past week? It’s clear that the U.S. and China are attempting to deflate their asset bubbles and markets don’t like it. To better understand why this is the case though, it’s important to appreciate how these bubbles developed in the first place.
And to do that, we need to step back in time. All the way back to 1994, in fact. Why this year, you ask? Well, it’s then that China devalued its currency by 50%. Asia Confidential believes that this singular event has been the keydriver behind events leading up to the financial crisis and thereafter.
That’s because the 1994 devaluation resulted in a substantial under-valuation of the yuan. This under-valuation created the conditions by which China was able to become an exporting powerhouse.
For China to become this powerhouse though, it needed buyers. The developed world was only too happy to oblige, scooping up the cheap Chinese products. It didn’t matter that consumers in the developed world didn’t have enough money to purchase all of these products. They simply piled on debt to pay for them.
The beauty of this arrangement was that China received U.S. dollars from U.S. consumers. Its subsequent trade surplus led to the rapid accumulation of foreign exchange reserves, which China used to buy U.S. government bonds. This in turn kept U.S. bond yields and interest rates low, making it cheap for U.S. consumers to take on more debt to buy Chinese products and other things (such as local property).
But to maintain its currency peg to the U.S. dollar, China had to create yuan through the printing press. This whole process helped created inflation at home and deflation abroad.
An elegant arrangement, no? Not so much. Since 2008, this seemingly virtuous circle has slowly unravelled as the developed world pays down its excessive debt load. Meantime, political pressure to appreciate the yuan has resulted in that currency recently reaching 19-year highs versus the dollar.
CNY-USD_v2
You’re probably wondering what all of this has to do with the events of the past week. Well, the developed world has never paid back those excessive debts as governments thought that process would be too painful for their countries to take. Instead, those governments took over the private sector debts and printed loads of money to try to inflate these debts away.
That printed money has been used to buy U.S. government debt, which has depressed U.S. bond yields and interest rates. That’s hurt savers, who’ve searched for better returns in risk assets, such as stock markets.
There’s little doubt that the U.S. Federal Reserve’s solutions to the 2008 crisis have provided artificial support to stock and bond markets. And undoubtedly to the U.S. housing market too. Bernanke is clearly worried about all this and it goes some way towards explaining his push to reduce U.S. stimulus.
Meanwhile, China’s response to the 2008 crisis was to print 4 trillion yuan (close to US$600 million in 2009 terms) to pump prime its economy and prevent a downturn similar to the one which occurred in the developed world.
This pump priming went largely into fixed asset investments, financed principally via debt at the local government level. It’s directly resulted in a property bubble of substantial proportions. It’s also led to debt issues, with total credit to GDP in China increasing from 125% to 200% over the past five years.
China’s new president came to power in March and inherited this mess. He’s intent on deflating the credit bubble without crashing the economy. That intent is behind the spike in China’s interbank interest rates in recent weeks.
Bernanke is focused on his legacy
Why is Bernanke choosing to act now to reduce stimulus then? Before getting to that, let’s take a quick look at what he actually said at his press conference post the FOMC meeting. Bernanke suggested that QE cutbacks could begin later this year if growth picks up as the Fed projects, unemployment comes down and inflation comes closer to the central bank’s 2% target. If those expectations bear out, the Fed could stop QE altogether by the middle of next year, when it forecasts unemployment to drop to 7%.
In short, Bernanke thinks the economy is improving to the point that it will be able to stand on its own without the assistance of stimulus. And this line has been parroted by the vast majority of the investment community.
But there appears to be more than a few holes in this argument:
  1. U.S. economic growth is mediocre at best, particularly when considering that it’s coming out of such a deep downturn.
  2. The majority of recent data points on the economy has disappointed, indicating a slowing growth rate in the short term.
  3. If economic growth remains at current levels, or falls, Bernanke’s unemployment targets won’t be reached.
  4. The biggest issue of all is one that I have alluded to many occasions and only recently have other commentators started to pick up on: U.S. inflation is slowing and deflation remains the primary risk right now.
Under these circumstances, QE tapering would likely undo what remains a fragile economy.
If that’s the case, why would Bernanke be pushing ahead with this tapering? We suspect that politics may have something to do with it. In a recent TV interview, President Obama all but said that Bernanke won’t serve a third term as Fed Chairman from January next year.
This means that Bernanke, like any good politician (central bankers are as much politicians as they are economists), has one eye on his current job and the other eye on how he’ll be remembered in the history books. He won’t want to become another Alan Greenspan, who left office shortly before the 2008 financial crisis that he arguably contributed too.
Put bluntly, QE tapering - even a small reduction thereof - offers the chance for Bernanke to be remembered as the responsible central banker rather than the one who re-created asset bubbles that led to a further financial crisis.
Xi Jinping’s iron fist
China has been the other focus of market attention, with good reason. The country’s interbank market – where banks lend money to each other – essentially froze for a short period of time. And the central government initially refused to step in to provide the liquidity to get the market functioning again. It only caved in when things became critical.
Below is the Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate (SHIBOR) courtesy of Zero Hedge.
Shibor
Sure, there were a number of factors which contributed to the spike in interbank rates, including:
  • The gradual tightening in policy this year.
  • A sharp fall in foreign exchange inflows in May due to a government crackdown on illicit activity.
  • Banks hoarding cash for seasonal reasons.
But this crisis was principally caused by the central government stepping back and refusing to inject liquidity into the market.
There was a lot of silly commentary out of the U.S. about how this was China’s “Lehman” moment – alluding to 2008, when Lehman Brothers went under, freezing U.S. credit markets. It ignored the fact that the central government largely initiated the interbank rate spike.
The obvious question is: why would the central government do this? And the logical explanation is that it wants banks to slow the pace of lending and this was its crude way of communicating the message. We think, though, that almost everyone has missed a key driver for the credit crackdown.
The government and its new leaders are no dummies. They realise that they inherited a mammoth credit bubble that’s in the process of bursting. They have two choices:
  1. Reflate the credit bubble and risk enormous economic damage down the track.
  2. Or acknowledge that the economy will slow as the bubble pops and attempt to manage it as best they can.
No one knows for sure, but we suspect that the interbank event signals that Xi Jinping has chosen the latter path. The reason for this suspicion is that Xi appears a pragmatic, canny politician. He would have calculated that by having a serious economic slowdown now, the blame can justifiably pinned on his predecessor, Hu Jintao. A slowdown later on would afford him no such luxury.
In other words, Xi knows that China’s credit bubble will burst. It’s better to get it out of the way to preserve his authority. He can then get on with the job of introducing the crucial reforms needed to restructure the economy and drive growth over the next decade.
What happens from here?
You’re probably thinking that this is all well and good, but what can we expect to happen from here? The truth is that no one knows. But here are a few tentative guesses:
  • In the short run, the U.S. economy is unlikely to recover, weighed down by excessive debt. And deflation will remain the primary risk.
  • China’s economy may well have some encouraging weeks or months. For instance, upcoming data should be somewhat better given the accelerated banking lending in early June, rollout of significant infrastructure projects across several key cities and a normalisation in consumption following the Avian flu scare. However, the general economic trend will be down and it could well take a long time to recover.
  • It’s our expectation that Xi will positively surprise when he announces broad-ranging economic reforms, likely in the second half of this year. Substantive moves toward privatising state assets may be a centrepiece. It won’t be hard for Xi to exceed the very low market expectations on this. Any reforms will do little to mitigate the current economic slowdown though.
  • In the long-term, all the asset bubbles in the developed world and China will deflate in one way or another. All bubbles pop eventually and these ones will be no different. No central banker or leader can prevent this from happening. They can try, but they’ll only succeed in delaying the process.
This post was originally published at Asia Confidential: http://asiaconf.com/2013/06/22/sound-of-bubbles-bursting/

May 31, 2013

May 31, 2013, 12:39 p.m. EDT

Social Security trust fund to run dry in 2033

Medicare finances improve modestly; Lew urges long-term fix

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By Robert Schroeder, MarketWatch 
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Medicare’s finances got an upgrade on Friday but the long-term prognosis for Social Security stayed the same, in the latest snapshots of the politically sensitive entitlement programs that are certain to play into Washington’s coming fiscal battles.

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Trustees for the Medicare program said its hospital insurance fund would be exhausted in 2026, two years later than was estimated a year ago. Social Security’s reserves, meanwhile, will run out by 2033, a projection unchanged from last year.
While the Medicare report paints a slightly healthier picture for that program, neither report will likely do much to quell a partisan debate about entitlements and overall government spending.
That debate will ramp up this fall, when Congress and the Obama administration face a deadline for raising the U.S. debt ceiling. Another flashpoint will be government funding for the next fiscal year. House Republicans and Senate Democrats have each passed budget blueprints, but they differ vastly in approaches to taxes and spending.
“These programs face long-term challenges,” Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said in a statement. “Social Security and Medicare represent a fundamental obligation we have as a country to provide income and health care security for our fellow citizens.”
Trustees said the improvement for Medicare’s fund was due, among other things, to lower projected hospital insurance spending, especially for skilled nursing facilities.
The trustees also said President Barack Obama’s health-care law extended the life of the Medicare fund by reducing costs, something Lew highlighted in his statement. Republicans have tried to repeal the law, most recently in mid-May. Read earlier story.
The better picture for Medicare’s trust fund means that benefits wouldn’t have to be reduced as quickly as previously thought. If the trust funds for either program are exhausted, benefits are cut, but not stopped altogether. Read Medicare report.
In their annual report, the trustees who oversee Social Security’s two trust funds said reserves for the fund that pays disability benefits would be exhausted by 2016. Combined with the fund that pays benefits to retirees, all Social Security reserves would be exhausted by 2033. Read Social Security report.
Republicans have demanded cuts to retirement programs, something that could factor strongly into negotiations this fall over raising the U.S. debt limit.
For his part, Obama offered in his most recent budget to shrink the growth of Social Security benefits as part of a bigger deal to cut the deficit. Republicans said that offer didn’t go far enough.
Other options for bolstering Social Security’s finances include raising the retirement age. The program pays retirement and disability benefits to 57 million Americans. Last month, the average monthly benefit was nearly $1,270.
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Republicans and Democrats differ vastly in their approaches to Medicare. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, has authored a Medicare overhaul that would allow seniors to choose between receiving subsidies to buy their own health insurance or stay in the traditional program.
Democrats say that Ryan’s so-called premium support program is a non-starter.
Obama’s fiscal 2014 budget would reduce the growth of Medicare and other health-program spending by about $400 billion over the next 10 years by asking wealthier Medicare beneficiaries to pay more, among other means. 
Robert Schroeder is a reporter for MarketWatch in Washington. Follow him on Twitter @mktwrobs.

May 30, 2013

Disarming Realities: As Gun Sales Soar, Gun Crimes Plummet

EAST WINDSOR, CT - DECEMBER 21:  The Riverview...
(Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
A couple of new studies reveal the gun-control hypesters’ worst nightmare…more people are buying firearms, while firearm-related homicides and suicides are steadily diminishing. What crackpots came up with these conclusions? One set of statistics was compiled by the U.S. Department of Justice. The other was reported by the Pew Research Center.
According to DOJ’s Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. gun-related homicides dropped 39 percent over the course of 18 years, from 18,253 during 1993, to 11,101 in 2011. During the same period, non-fatal firearm crimes decreased even more, a whopping 69 percent. The majority of those declines in both categories occurred during the first 10 years of that time frame. Firearm homicides declined from 1993 to 1999, rose through 2006, and then declined again through 2011. Non-fatal firearm violence declined from 1993 through 2004, then fluctuated in the mid-to-late 2000s.
And where did the bad people who did the shooting get most of their guns? Were those gun show “loopholes” responsible? Nope. According to surveys DOJ conducted of state prison inmates during 2004 (the most recent year of data available), only two percent who owned a gun at the time of their offense bought it at either a gun show or flea market. About 10 percent said they purchased their gun from a retail shop or pawnshop, 37 percent obtained it from family or friends, and another 40 percent obtained it from an illegal source.
While firearm violence accounted for about 70 percent of all homicides between 1993 and 2011, guns were used in less than 10 percent of all non-fatal violent crimes. Between 70 percent and 80 percent of those firearm homicides involved a handgun, and 90 percent of non-fatal firearm victimizations were committed with a handgun. Males, blacks, and persons aged 18-24 had the highest firearm homicide rates.
The March Pew study, drawn from numbers obtained from the Bureau of Justice Statistics and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also found a dramatic drop in gun crime over the past two decades. Their accounting shows a 49 percent decline in the homicide rate, and a 75 percent decline of non-fatal violent crime victimization. More than 8 in 10 gun homicide victims in 2010 were men and boys. Fifty-five percent of the homicide victims were black, far beyond their 13 percent share of the population.
Pew researchers observed that the huge amount of attention devoted to gun violence incidents in the media has caused most Americans to be unaware that gun crime is strikingly down” from 20 years ago. In fact, gun-related homicides in the late 2000s were “equal to those not seen since the early 1960s.” Yet their survey found that 56 percent believed gun-related crime is higher, 26 percent believed it stayed about the same, and 6 percent didn’t know.  Only 12 percent of those polled thought it was lower.
The Pew survey found that while women and elderly were actually less likely to become crime victims, they were more likely to believe gun crime had increased in recent years. On the other hand, men, who were more likely to become victims, were more likely know that the gun rate had dropped.
Those gun crime rates certainly aren’t diminishing for lack of supply…at least not for law-abiding legal buyers. Last December, the FBI recorded a record number of 2.78 million background checks for purchases that month, surpassing a 2.01 million mark set the month before by about 39 percent. That December 2012 figure, in turn, was up 49 percent from a previous record on that month the year before. FBI checks for all of 2012 totaled 19.6 million, an annual record, and an increase of 19 percent over 2011.
Firearms sellers can thank the gun-control legislation lobbies for much of this business windfall. Marked demand increases have been witnessed over the past five years thanks to the 2008 and 2012 elections of U.S. history’s most successful, if unintentional, gun salesman as president. The firearms market got a huge added boost after the tragic shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Connecticut activated a renewed legislative frenzy.
If that gun-purchasing fervor has abated with the defeat of several congressional regulation proposals, as I’m sure it has, you surely wouldn’t have known it by witnessing the overwhelmingly enormous annual NRA convention in Houston earlier this month. Attendance was estimated to be more than 70,000 people from all over the country.
Those attendees weren’t all guys either…not by a long shot. Last year, theNational Shooting Sports Foundation reported that participation by women increased both in target shooting (46.5%) and hunting (36.6%) over the past decade. Also, 61% of firearm retailers responding to a NSSF survey reported an increase in female customers. A 2009 NSSF survey indicated that the number of women purchasing guns for personal defense increased a whopping 83 percent.
Is John Lott, the author of “More Guns, Less Crime” right? Does the rapid growth of gun ownership and armed citizens have anything to do with a diminishing gun violence trend? His expansive research concludes that state “shall issue” laws which allow citizens to carry concealed weapons do produce a steady decrease in violent crime. He explains that this is logical because criminals are deterred by the risk of attacking an armed target, so as more citizens arm themselves, danger to the criminals increases.
Whether or not you buy that reasoning, and it does make sense to me, what about the notion that tougher gun laws have or would make any difference? With the toughest gun laws in the nation, Chicago saw homicides jump to 513 in 2012, a 15% hike in a single year. The city’s murder rate is 15.65 per 100,000 people, compared with 4.5 for the Midwest, and 5.6 for Illinois.
Up to 80 percent of Chicago murders and non-fatal shootings are gang- related, primarily young black and Hispanic men killed by other black and Hispanic men. Would tightening gun laws even more, or “requiring” background checks, change these conditions?
Gwainevere Catchings Hess, president of the Black Women’s Agenda (BWA), Inc., an organization that strongly advocates strict gun-control legislation, rightly points out that  “In 2009, black males ages 15-19 were eight times as likely as white males the same age, and 2.5 times as likely as their Hispanic peers to be killed in a gun homicide.”
Those are terrible statistics, but here are some others. Today, 72% of black children are born out of wedlock, as are 53% of Hispanic children and 36% of white children. Back in 1965, 25% of black children were born out of wedlock, nearly one-third fewer. As a result, promiscuous rappers, prosperous dope peddlers and street gang leaders are becoming ever more influential role models. It’s probably no big stretch of imagination to correlate such grossly disproportionate crime and victimization rates with comparably staggering rates of single-parent families, those without fathers in particular.
Yet in the general population, and although the agenda-driven media hasn’t noticed, we can be grateful that gun violence has been trending downward since 1993 when it hit its last peak. Don’t want to credit a rise in gun ownership and concealed carry by law-abiding citizens for this good news? Fine. But then, don’t imagine that gun legislation is the reason or answer either. Leave that illusion to gun-control cheerleaders in the media.