Posts Tagged ‘Bonds’

Japan, the next country to fall into sovereign debt crisis?

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

We all know about how badly indebted the Greek government is. With its national debt at 115% of GDP, everyone sees Greece as a basket case.

If Greece is a basket case, what about the world?s second largest economy, Japan? It?s national debt is fast approaching 200% of GDP this year. It all began in the 1990s, as we wrote in Are governments mad with ?stimulating??,

In the 1990s, when the Japanese bubble economy burst and fell into debt deflation, its banks were crippled with bad debts. In the ensuing decade, the Japanese government embarked on massive government stimulus programs. Roads to nowhere were built and there were even comments about resorting to military spending (which of course was dismissed later as mere rhetoric because of neighbouring countries? sensitivities to Japan?s wartime past). When the first stimulus programs proved to have failed in its objective, a second and bigger one was announced. When that failed too, a third and bigger one was announced. Altogether, the Japanese government had embarked on 10 stimulus programs totalling 30 trillion yen.

For Japan, they are a nation of mighty savers. More than 90% of their government debt are owned by their citizens at pathetically low interest rates. That is the reason why the purchasing power of the yen had not gone down the drain- the Japanese government?s spendthrift ways are financed by the savings of its people.

But now, Japan is facing a problem. It?s population is aging fast and more and more retired/elderly Japanese need access to their savings (that they generously loaned to their government) as they leave the workforce. As this Bloomberg article reported,

?Japan?s inability to finance its debt sales domestically is approaching,? Kusano said. ?And when that time comes, you can?t expect foreign investors to accept Japanese debt with such a low coupon of 1.2-1.3 percent.?

?

?If bond yields spike, Japanese financial institutions will take a heavy blow, shaking the nation?s financial system,? Kusano said.

We do not know when the financial wolf packs will turn their eyes on Japan. But you can be sure that hell will break lose when it happens, because Japan is the world?s second largest economy.

Marc Faber: Bernanke Policy Will “Destroy” U.S. Dollar

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Recently, Marc Faber was being interviewed in Chicago where he freely shared his thoughts. You can watch the interview at Bloomberg here. Below is the content of the interview as summarized and transcribed by us:

If the statistics were measured properly in the United States, the US would already be in a recession and would already be so in a couple of months.

See our article, How much can we trust the price indices (e.g. CPI)?.

If the US goes into recession, it will not be a total disaster for the rest of the world, except that in the rest of the world, we also have colossal bubbles [in asset prices].

Since the world is in a global boom from November 2001, then this will one day lead to a global bust.

It is very doubtful that the global financial market is de-coupled from the US because of the close linkages and connectivity. For example, if the US stock market goes down, the rest of the world’s stock market will be dragged down as well.

As Marc Faber acknowledged by psychologists’ study, a dosage of bust is more painful than the joy of an equal dosage of boom. In other words, the implication the coming bust will be more pronounced and painful than the euphoria of the preceding 75 months of boom.

In the US, they pursue essentially economic policies that targets consumption, which in my opinion is misguided. What they should pursue is economic policies that stimulates capital investments and capital formation.

We would agree with Marc Faber wholeheartedly, as we quoted Ludwig von Mises in The myth of financial asset ?investments? as savings. As the US began their aggressively loose monetary policy from September 17 2007 by cutting interest rates from 5.25% to 3%…

What is the result? I tell you what the result is! The stock market in September 17 by the S&P is down 10%, the US dollar is down 10%, gold and oil are up 40%. Well done Mr. Bernanke!

Will the stock market continue to fall? Marc Faber said that we have to ask Mr. Bernanke…

… because if he prints money- and I have to add here one point: had I been the professor who had judged his thesis for his PhD, I would not have let him pass. I would have told him actually, “Mr. Bernanke, I have one condition in which I let you pass, and this is you never join a central bank, because you are a destroyer of money as store-of-value function, of the function of money being a unit of account. The only central bank that I would allow you to go to is the one under Mr. Mugabe in Zimbabwe. And I tell you Mr Bernanke with his monetary policy, he will destroy the US dollar.

This is what we said before in Peering into the soul of Ben Bernanke.

As pointed out by the interviewer, the dollar was in decline before Mr. Bernanke took over. Does Bernanke need to ease monetary policy to ease the US economy from this “spunk?” As Bernanke studied about the Great Depression, his conclusion was that the lack of flexibility in the monetary policy that resulted in such a prolonged downturn. Marc Faber disagreed:

The Depression occurred not because the central bank was tied when the Depression occurred. But because it was far too easy in its monetary policy in the period leading to the Depression, from 1925 to 1929.

This is what we said before in What causes economic booms and busts?. As Marc Faber said, it is not only Bernanke is at fault. Greenspan is responsible too, with his loose monetary policies when he cut interest rates to 1% in September 2001 and keep it that way till 2004. That led to the “reckless lending” and “reckless credit growth,” which in turn led to the problems we have today.

Marc Faber said that if he is the central banker, he will raise interest rates much earlier to target asset and credit price bubble and would not have cut the Fed Fund Rate to 1% in 2001. This is because unlike the Fed, he would not base his monetary policy on core inflation (which excludes food and fuel) because all humans eat and uses energy. Now that the Fed had created a “gigantic” credit and asset bubble, which is deflating right now, it is very difficult to re-inflate the bubble because “we are in the process of de-leveraging” as the private sector is now tightening credit conditions, “not the Fed.”

According to Marc Faber’s latest Doom, Bloom and Gloom report, investing in the bond market (mainly Treasuries) is “financial suicide” because with such low yields, actual price inflation will result in negative real returns. Marc Faber believed that “at some stage, the corporate bond market will offer some value.” However, the 10-year and 30-year Treasury market is a “disaster waiting to happen.” As the Fed cuts the Fed Funds Rate to possibly zero, the Treasury market will “tank” at some point in time. Though he is not a US credit analyst, Marc Faber reckoned that in the junk bond area, there should be some good quality bonds from company that can survive and continues to pay interests. He continued,

The arguments for stocks is frequently that you take the earnings yield of the stock market and compare it with the bond yield and people compare it to Treasury bonds. I think you should take the earnings yield of equities and compare it with, say, a typical S&P company, and that is a yield that correspond to, say, a triple-B, and so, basically as of today, some bonds are more attractive than equity.

Over the past 4 to 5 years, US stock market has underperformed other markets, e.g. the emerging market and the commodity market. However, today, the emerging market is far more vulnerable (e.g. China and India market could easily fall by 30% to 40%). With the money printer in the Fed (Ben Bernanke), the deflation will more likely lead to the US dollar decline than an actual asset price deflation. Thus, relative to the Euro and gold, the US stock market is going down.

Some may argue that given the commodity market has risen so much since 2001, would it be too late to join in the bull market? Marc Faber disagreed with that argument. When the commodity market bottomed and rallied in the 1990s/2000s (note that not all bottomed at the same time), they were at the lowest level, inflation adjusted, in the 200-year history of capitalism. For example, gold was at around $250 when it fell from a high of around $850 in 1980 (which Marc Faber admitted is too high). But in the last gold bull market in the 1970s, gold rose 25 times from $35 to $850. The current gold bull market of several years rose only 4 times. Among the commodity markets, sugar is the cheapest commodity in real terms.

When asked, “Are we going to see a major US bank fail?”

“I hope so.”

“You hope so????”

Marc Faber saw that this is the only way to “introduce discipline” into the US financial system. By continuously bailing out banks, the Fed introduces moral hazard that “perpetuates the mistakes” that the Fed has already done. When asked, which major bank is more likely to fail, Marc Faber had no opinion because that depends on the banks’ derivative exposures, which is the next time bomb to explode. The ‘derivatives’ that he mentioned does not include the structured products (e.g. SIV, CDOs, etc). This will be the next major financial issue in the next 3 to 6 months. Marc Faber believed that we will not see the bottom of the stock market until we see stocks like Google falling 50% from their highs, hopefully more. In a bear market, one sector (e.g. home building) will fall first and then the goldilocks crowd will reassure the market that everything is fine. Then the next sector will fall, followed by next. And so, the bear market has to mature, like “good cheese and wine.”

One potential trouble-maker to watch out for in 2007

Wednesday, January 3rd, 2007

As 2006 closed with stock markets around the world in record high with an eerie calm in terms of volatility, it is very tempting to assume that 2007 will bring more of the same. From the news report, many fund managers have such optimistic view. With the supply of money and credit still expanding, it is indeed very much possible for the good times to continue in 2007. But this does not mean there are no dangers. Hence, today, we will look at a possible danger scenario: the sustained downtrend of the US dollar. As we said in Will the US dollar collapse?, it is only a matter of time before this scenario will happen. The question is, will it happen in 2007?

At this point in time, both the US bond and stock market (especially the bond market) are expecting interest rates to decline in 2007. We said before in Are you prepared for the coming storm?, the ?market seems to be spell-bound by some kind perfect wonderland myth?it ?thinks? that the economy is so weak that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next year (which is good for stock prices) and so strong that a recession will be avoided.? If events turn out to contradict the markets? expectation, we can be sure that the results will be very unfavourable.

As we elaborated in What can we expect in a US dollar decline?, a sustained decline in the US dollar will show up as inflation in the US domestic front, which will force the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates. With the US economy already faltering, this will lead to a recession. When that happens, the bull run of 2006 will turn into a bear, as it happened before in May 2006 when talk of raising interest rates spooked the stock and commodity markets. Thus, we will be faced with a hard-landing scenario of declining US dollar and rising interest rates. At this point in time, it will be much harder to foresee what will happen next. As such, what follow will be merely our gloomy guesses.

It is possible for a sustained decline of the US dollar to descend into a nightmare rout in the US dollar through a circuitous route of cause and effects (though it is unclear how likely it would be). If that happens, the results will be unpredictably ugly. Though Asian and Middle-Eastern central bankers certainly have the means to set off a disorderly collapse of the US dollar (see Awash with cash?what to do with it?), it is unlikely that they will have the motivation to do so unless some unpredictably drastic developments took place in their domestic front. It is more likely that they will not sell their US dollar reserves out of their own accord?that is, if they should do so, it would likely be because the US dollar is already falling. But whatever the initial cause, if should we see foreign central bankers dumping their US dollars, it will be the sign of the beginning of great global upheaval as there will be great implications on the Middle East and oil (we will talk about that in the future). Since much of the world?s financial assets are denominated in US dollars, there will be a rush to shift from those assets into safe havens?that can only mean old trusty gold, which is humanity?s choice since ancient history.

So, for 2007, watch out for the US dollar!

Advertisement

Strange rally

Monday, October 9th, 2006

Recently, the US stock market had been in a rally mood. Currently, with the North Korean nuclear tests just completed, we are not sure how the rally mood will turn out. But we smelled something very fishy about this recent rally. The economic news had not been good (and the good news wasn’t good enough), and the risk of a recession in the US economy is something that we believe is quite likely to happen. The US Federal Reserve chairman himself had warned of a substantial correction in the US housing market. Even the bond market believes that a recession is on its way.

Yet the stock market was incredibly optimistic. It?s simply beyond our belief.

We are getting out while we can.