Showing posts with label Italy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italy. Show all posts

Friday, August 10, 2012

How Much Stimulus Will Be Done by China, the EU and UK?





The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Much weaker than expected trade data out of China on Friday indicates more economic stimulus will be forthcoming there soon.  Even bigger stimulus is expected from the ECB as it revs up the printing presses to bail out Spain and Italy (unless Germany stops it of course). According to a recent released report, the recessionary economy in the UK may need massive doses of quantitative easing to recover.

Exports in China rose by only 1% year over year in July and this was well below forecasts of an increase of 8.6%. Imports were up 4.7%. For a country that has an export-based economy like China does, this is a serious problem. Like the U.S., Europe and Japan, China engaged in a massive amount of stimulus during the Credit Crisis in 2008/2009, spending $586 billion or 14 percent of its GDP in addition to cutting interest rates and lowering banking reserves.  This led to a big expansion of local government debt, a major housing bubble that has yet to burst and consumer inflation. Apparently, there are unfortunate side effects when governments apply a lot of economic stimulus (notice you rarely read about them in the mainstream media).
This time around, China has already cut interest rates twice and reserve requirement ratios for banks three times since November. Its economy has slowed for the last six quarters and probably by much more than official figures indicate (China's economic numbers should be taken with a grain of salt).
China is still in spectacular shape though compared to Japan, which had a massive trade deficit in the first half of 2012. Japan has been economically troubled for 22 years and despite zero percent interest rates and an unending number of stimulus measures its economy remains in the doldrums. While all the stimulus hasn't solved Japan's economic problems, it has led to a debt to GDP ratio of over 200% (worse than Greece's).
One reason China's exports are doing so poorly is the weakening economy in Europe. On Thursday, the ECB cut its growth forecasts and is now predicting the eurozone economy will contract by 0.3% in 2012.  They are still hopeful of slight growth in 2013 however. Maybe they think it will come from all the money they plan on printing to bail out Spain and Italy. The Eurozone is basically tapped out from all the bailouts it has already done in Greece, Portugal, and Ireland (Cyprus and banks in Spain are now on the list as well). Greece needs a third bailout and is struggling to make it through the month until it receives its next welfare payment in September. The situation there is potentially explosive. The IMF has stated Ireland will need another bailout by next spring.
When ECB President Draghi said on July 9th that the central bank will take any measures within its mandate to save the euro, the inevitable conclusion was that he was willing to engage in massive money printing. The amount of money needed for the huge bailouts that Spain and Italy would require simply doesn't exist so it has to be created out of thin air. The Draghi proposal is for the ECB to buy bonds, but the ECB has already tried buying bonds under the SMP program.  The moment the buying stopped, interest rates shot right back up. This approach is costly and only effective in the very short term — a typical government program. It won't prevent the Eurozone's failure, it will merely delay it and make it worse when it happens.
The UK is not part of the Eurozone, but its economy is also contracting. Citigroup economists have stated that the UK will need to print an additional £500 billion and lower interest rates to 0.25% to prevent continued stagnation. Apparently, they don't think there are serious risks if this approach is taken. Neither did the Weimar Germans in the early 1920s, the Zimbabweans in the 2000s, the Chinese in the 1940s, the Brazilians for most of the 20th century, the Yugoslavians in the 1990s or the Hungarians in 1946. In fact, countries that create hyperinflation always claim the risks of money printing are minimal before it takes place. And there are usually a large number of top economists that support this view.  

There are serious structural problems in the major economies today. The usual Keynesian quick fixes that have been applied since World War II no longer seem to work, nor will they. These have led to a world drowning in debt and all debtors eventually reach their borrowing limit. When this happens with countries, they then try to print their way to prosperity. History makes it quite clear that this doesn't work either. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, July 20, 2012

The EU May Have Reached Its Bailout Limit




The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Today, yields on Spanish 10-year sovereigns tested their yearly high yield of 7.28%, while Italian rates reached 6.16%. This was after funds for the Spanish bank bailout were approved by the EU, although the money won't be going directly to the banks. Earlier in the week, the IMF admitted that  the only solution to Europe's debt woes was to run the printing presses at full speed.

The situation in Spain is ugly and getting worse. Unemployment is almost 25% there and the country is in a recession. The Spanish economy is dependent on public spending and building empty houses that no one buys. The government has recently announced severe spending cuts and higher taxes, both of which will lower future growth. Yet, until today Spain was forecasting GDP growth of 0.2% for next year. It now thinks that GDP will decline by 0.5% in 2013. This is not just an optimistic scenario; it's a Harry Potter fantasy scenario. As is the case with Greece, Spanish economic and financial numbers cannot be trusted. Greece in the early stages of its bailout also produced optimistic projections of how easily and quickly everything would be fixed. Instead, its financial problems escalated out of control.  The same outcome should be expected in Spain.

Bailed-out Bankia is a good example of the how reliable the books are for Spanish banks. Bankia claimed to have earned a 300 million in profits in 2011, but in late May revised that to a €3 billion loss. Now Spain is in line for a €100 billion bailout from the EU, although it has claimed that it needs less. Based on how Bankia did its accounting, Spanish banks are likely to need more, maybe ten times more than that amount. This does not include money for bailing out the bankrupt Spanish government.  

Originally, the EU planned on providing the bank bailout money (structured as a long-term loan) directly  to Spain, who would in turn distribute it internally. When this caused Spain's sovereign debt rating to be downgraded, creating greater fiscal problems for the struggling government, the EU then decided to route the loan directly to the banks. Yesterday, the German parliament refused to go along. They were only willing to approve a loan directly to the Spain itself. It wasn't easy to get even that passed. Twenty-two members of Angela Merkel's coalition voted against it. The leader of the Free-Democrats described the bailout as "a bottomless pit". It doesn't look like German legislators have an appetite for any further bailouts and this is bad news for Spain and Italy as well.  

The IMF has an idea of what to do instead, but its solution could hardly be described as constructive. In a report issued on Wednesday, the organization essentially advised the EU to engage in every type of money printing possible, do a lot of it, and to start doing it immediately. The ECB has already expanded its balance sheet by more than the U.S. has and it hasn't solved the EU's problems so far. Massive money printing as suggested by the IMF would debase the euro significantly. So, in order to save the currency union, the currency it issues must be destroyed. Somehow, there seems to be a logic flaw in this line of reasoning (sort of like, a debt crisis can be solved by incurring more debt).

The bailout news today was disastrous for Spain and Italy. The Spanish IBEX index was down 5.79% dislocations  — a mini-crash and the worst drop in the two years. The Italian market was down 4.4%. The euro hit a new yearly low. The ETF FXE traded down to 120.78. This is below its bottom during the Credit Crisis, but still above the 2010 low made when the debt crisis first appeared. As the situation continues to unravel, more selling should be expected.


Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Europe Continues Its Slide Toward the Precipice




The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The Finnish finance minister has said all eurozone countries are making contingency plans in case the currency union breaks up. With debt downgrades, bond market anomalies, troubled bailouts, and austerity packages with their associated riots becoming the new EU norm, their worries are obviously justified.

Last night, Moody's downgraded Italy's government bond rating two notches from A3 to Baa2. This is just above junk status. Moreover, the outlook is negative with further downgrades possible in the near future.  So what happened in the Italian government bond auction this morning?  Did buyers  demand higher interest rates to buy Italy's increasingly risky debt as basic economic principles would predict? No they didn't. Italy sold €3.5 billion of three-year bonds at an average yield of 4.65%, much less than the 5.3% it had to pay last month.  How is this possible? Apparently Italian banks couldn't resist an urge to grossly overpay for their governments newly issued debt. The ECB was most certainly backing them up behind the scenes. If this is how Italian banks do business, can we assume that they're solvent?

There is little need to pose that question for Spanish banks. Recent data indicate that they borrowed €365 billion in June from the ECB — a record amount. This compares to €325billion in May. These numbers indicate that Spanish banks have been closed out of the interbank lending market (a good indication of insolvency). The highly troubled Spanish banking sector, which has €3 trillion in debt on its books, will be receiving an immediate infusion of €30 billion in bailout funds from the EU and another €45 billion in November. This represents 2.5% of its total debt and that amount is supposed to fix the problem. The actual funds needed will be many times that. It is impossible to say exactly how much because the financial numbers for Spanish banks are not reliable.

Spain seems to be following Greece's descent into a self-reinforcing economic collapse. This week Prime Minister Rajoy announced further budget cuts of €65 billion over the next two years.  VAT was raised from 18% to 21%. Almost a quarter of the Spanish work force is unemployed, even worse than Greece's 22.5%. Spain though seems to be making a more serious effort at fiscal austerity than Greece. According to reports in the German daily Rheinische Post, the troika on its latest visit found that the Greek government failed to implement 210 of the 300 budget savings requirements it had agreed to in exchange for its bailout money.

While interest rates are pushing against unsustainable levels in Spain and Italy, they have gone to theoretically impossibly low levels in northern Europe. Negative interest rates first appeared in government debt in Denmark and the Netherlands last December. Then Germany paid negative rates on some of its short-term bonds starting in January. This week, France sold six-month Treasuries at a yield of -0.03% and two-year bonds at -0.001%. Below zero yields are a sign of severe market stress.

The euro this week has traded below 1.22 to the U.S. dollar, but is slightly higher today. Investors should watch the 1.20 level. If the euro breaks and stays below this area of support, it could drop to parity with the dollar. The major central banks would intervene to prevent this though, so the ride down wouldn't be smooth.

Stock markets reacted bullishly in late June and early July to the news of further bailouts in the EU. Most traders didn't ask where the money would come from, nor if the plans were even legally possible. They may not be. The German constitutional court will be ruling whether or not Angela Merkel's promises to participate in the ESM (European Stability Mechanism) can go forward.  Even if they rule favorably, there is little actual money committed to the ESM. More money printing (and the ECB has already done quite a bit) is the only option left to fund the various bailout schemes to save the euro. Of course, it's logically absurd that a fiat currency could be saved by producing excess amounts of it. The same is true for trying to solve a debt crisis by taking on more debt.  But hope reigns eternal in the land of euro make believe.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Central Bank Action Supports Credit Crisis View



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

There was another confirmation of an emerging credit crisis yesterday as central banks in various parts of the globe took coordinated action to pump money into the financial system. The banks involved though claimed it was mere coincidence that they all acted at the same time.

Central banks are generally only interested in dealing with their own internal matters. On ocassion though, they act together as they did in October 2008 at the height of the Credit Crisis. Massive stimulus from lower interest rates and quantitative easing finally allowed the markets to put in a bottom six months later.

On Thursday, the People's Bank of China cut its key lending rate by 31 basis points (a basis point in one-hundredth of a percent) to 6%. This was a previous cut less than a month ago. Manufacturing has been declining for months now in China and there are some estimates that GDP will barely be above 7% this quarter. While this would be enviable for any North American or European economy, below 7% growth would feel recessionary in China. Lowering interest rates is not without risk for China since the country also has a massive real estate bubble and this will continue to feed it. 

At the same time that China was cutting rates, the ECB cut its refinancing rate to 0.75% from 1.00%. The banks' deposit rate however was lowered to zero (obviously not much room to maneuver left there). While the ECB has still not fully implemented ZIRP (zero interest rate policy), which Japan and the United States have now maintained for years, it is so close that the difference is irrelevant for all practical purposes.  The Bank of England did not lower its 0.50% benchmark rate, but instead raised the ceiling on its current round of quantitative easing by 50 billion pounds. They've obviously come to the conclusion that once rates have gotten close to zero, money printing is the only way to go.

Absent in any obvious way from yesterday's action was the U.S. Federal Reserve. It already had its monthly meeting at the end of June and announced an extension of Operation Twist (an attempt to drive 10-year yields lower even though they had already hit all-time lows on June 1st). The market bulls were claiming that the Fed would announce a third round of quantitative easing, but they didn't. The Fed is also going to have trouble engaging in more QE in the near future because the U.S. is once again near its debt limit. National debt is now over $15.8 trillion and the debt ceiling is $16.4 trillion. The two will come together at some point this fall. To implement quantitative easing, the Fed has to buy newly issued treasuries. When the debt ceiling is reached, there won't be any. It took months to raise the debt ceiling last time and it is likely to be just as contentious an issue this time as well.

The current global financial crisis is centered in Europe and nothing has been fixed there. The EU has been trying to keep 10-year bond yields below the critical 6% level in Spain and Italy since last summer. They have utterly failed in the case of Spain. Spanish 10-year governments were over 7% in June (higher than last fall, which was in turn higher than last summer). After being driven down close to 6% twice in the last two weeks, the yield was as high as 7.04% today. Italian 10-years traded at 6.08%. Rates continually above 6% mean that Spain and Italy will need bailouts, but the necessary money will have to be printed. Germany holds the keys to the printing press however and may not let them be used.

Stock markets worldwide have held up remarkably well considering there are serious problems in the financial system and the global economy is weak. Liquidity from central banks is responsible for this. However markets have a tendency to revert to realistic prices and if they aren't allowed to do that gradually, they will do so suddenly.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, June 29, 2012

EU Summit Implies Massive Money Printing on the Way

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Perhaps the EU is finally realizing that a debt crisis can't be solved by issuing more debt. The proposals emanating from their recent summit in Brussels will require massive money printing instead, especially if the EU doesn't wind up issuing eurobonds.

While EU leaders didn't state that they were going to start running the printing presses at full speed, it is the only way they can produce sufficient funds to actually implement their new policy initiatives. They may not be willing to do so however. Until there is an actual big increase in money printing, there is no reason to believe that the EU will implement any of the proposed fixes for its financial problems.

All the ideas that came out of the summit have been bandied about before. Some, such as direct recapitalization of banks (described as a "breakthrough"), had already been announced before (perhaps it should have been called a re-breakthrough). This was done in response to the EU's disastrous bailout of Spanish banks that went through the Spanish government causing significant downgrades to its credit rating and thereby raising its borrowing cost significantly. A joint banking supervisory board is now going to be added though. This seems sort of late in the game, considering the teetering insolvency of many EU banks.

As a summit attendee stated, lending money directly to banks means the loans won't have to be put on a government's books. He should have followed up with, "at least not immediately". The way Ireland got into serious trouble and required its first EU bailout was that its banking system failed and the debt had to be assumed by the government. The IMF now says it will need another major bailout soon. As long as the EU is willing to commit unlimited bank bailout funding this will not happen in other EU countries.

One new approach that did come out of the summit was a relaxation of conditions for receiving bailouts. This was not described as applying to all bailouts however. Only countries that are "well-behaving" will not have stringent conditions applied to them when they ask for a handout. This of course begs the question of why a "well-behaving" country would need a bailout in the first place. While this is an attempt to treat Spain and Italy better than Greece, Portugal and Ireland, it will not work in practice. All the previous bailout countries will demand that they be allowed to spend more money and run bigger budget deficits. Since they can't raise funds in the bond market, the EU will have to increase the amount of their bailouts. This will require a continual stream of additional payments from the EU. Where will the money come from?

The short answer is sharing debt through jointly issued Eurobonds. Not that this can happen in the near future. First a report on its feasibility will be issued in October. Then all the EU countries will have to agree to it. Whether Germany will be willing to do so remains to be seen (Angela Merkel supposedly said that this would take place over her dead body). Even if this eventually happens, and 2013 would be the earliest that it would, can bonds that mix subprime borrowers and prime borrowers be successful?  The history of this is not encouraging. This is what created the housing bubble and led to a massive financial system collapse in 2008. The issuing of eurobonds means the entire EU could default as a single entity as opposed to just the weaker members. That doesn't exactly sound like an improvement over the current state of affairs.

One interesting note from the summit was the declaration from Italian premier Mario Monti that Italy did not intend to apply for a bailout. Greek and Spanish leaders said the same thing just before their countries applied for a bailout. As the French say, "the more things change, the more they remain the same". Perhaps the EU should adopt this as their new motto. At least it sounds better than "bailouts are us".

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Europe Wrap Up Going Into the Greek Elections

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

As Greeks go to the polls in a pivotal election, trouble is escalating all over the EU.
Spain is rapidly becoming the new trouble spot, with Italy not far behind. Ireland's debt problems have resurfaced and tiny Cyprus needs a bailout. Markets are confident though that the same people who have failed to solve the problem so far with their various money-printing schemes will now be successful solving it with new spinning straw into gold approaches.

Interest rates in Spain and Italy continue to climb and in the case of Spain remain at destabilizing levels. The 10-year bond has gone over 7% in Spain and 6% in Italy. When rates stay above 6%, it creates the danger of a downward financial spiral because of the heavy debt burden of the countries involved. Things would be no different in the United States.

Spain has suffered a number of credit downgrades recently. This week, Egan-Jones downgraded Spain's sovereign debt to CCC+,  a rating lower than Uganda's. Moody's cut Spain to Baa3, one notch above junk. Fitch had previously cut its rating for Spain to two notches above investment grade. Moody's further warned that it could cut Spain's rating to junk within three months. The downgrades are a direct result of the ECB bank rescue plan. Technically, this is structured as a loan to the Spanish government, so it increased the country's indebtedness significantly. A lower credit rating of course means higher borrowing costs. So the EU's plan to rescue Spain's banking system has wound up damaging the ability of the Spanish government to fund itself. Genius, pure genius.

A recently released IMF report was fairly hopeful about Spain's prospects however. It cited Ireland as a bigger worry. The IMF is urging the EU to help Ireland refinance its bank debt and consider taking equity stakes in Irish banks. Otherwise, it thinks Ireland will need a second bailout. While the average person might consider option one to be a bailout as well, the IMF obviously has a very narrow operational view of the word bailout.

The Spanish bank bailout itself has become an issue in the Greek elections. The leader of Syriza has pointed out that it came with no harsh conditions, but Greece is suffering terribly because of the austerity imposed on it. If Syriza wins on Sunday, it should thank the EU leadership for handing it the election. What is actually going on in the voters' minds is hard to discern. Polls cannot be published in Greece within two weeks of an election. There have been independent polls leaked to the press outside the country that show either anti-bailout Syriza or pro-bailout New Democracy ahead. There seems to be a steady stream of propaganda as well indicating how much the Greek people love the euro.

The G20 meets on Monday in Mexico and one of the major items on the agenda will be how much additional money should be printed now. The markets rallied strongly much of the week on just such "hopes". Not that this has stopped the crisis from continually getting worse so far and there is no reason to believe that it will. Apparently, while money may die, fantasy never does.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Market Selloff Might Pause Despite EU Debt Crisis

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The markets should soon find support on their current selloff, but this will only be temporary.  Europe's debt problems, which are at the epicenter of the current financial crisis, are not going to go away, they are only going to get worse until some realistic solution is found.

Stocks in Europe have been selling off for days and so have the euro and gold and silver. Only on Thursday did the U.S. markets start to drop significantly. Gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) managed to rally off deeply oversold conditions after reaching chart support around their lows from late last year. Even the euro (FXE) was trying to rally after getting close to its low from January. The major U.S. market indices are all approaching their 200-day moving averages (the Russell 2000 has already reached it). Some bounce should be expected at or just above those levels. Any upward movement should be considered to be a just a relief rally for now.

Once again the debt crisis in Europe has reared its ugly head. Greece is going to have new elections in June and an anti-bailout party is expected to win. Its credit rating was downgraded to CCC by Fitch on Thursday. An exit from the euro is now being seriously discussed in the halls of European power. At the same time, interest rates are rising in Spain and Italy to the levels where the Greek problem initially began.

Spanish 10-year government yields were as high as 6.38% this morning. The same Italian interest rates had reached just above 6.00% yesterday. Italy's rates were over 7.00% from last November to early January and Spain's were close to that level in November. The ECB then began a massive effort funded with money printing to drive them back down. It worked for a while, but as soon as the printing presses are paused, the market takes right back over.

The more serious problem is with the European banking system itself. Moody's downgraded 16 Spanish banks Thursday night and Spain had to partially nationalize Bankia last week. There was a run on Bankia Thursday and massive amounts of funds have been withdrawn from the entire Greek banking system. Contagion spreading to the major banks in the rest of the EU is a real danger. The LTRO (Long-Term Refinancing Operation) programs of the ECB have encouraged them to load up on the government debt of the failing peripheral countries. Many of the banks that did so were barely solvent as is.

More bailout programs from the central banks should be expected, but they aren't likely to work either. The real problems are with the non-functional economies. Spain is still building empty houses that no one buys and the Spanish banks are funding this activity.  Adding more debt to the problem is only going to make matters worse. Printing money to pay for that debt takes the problem to an even higher level. It all has to give at some point and it looks like the new few months will be one of crisis. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.


 

Thursday, March 29, 2012

More Debt Problems in Europe

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

While stocks weakened in the U.S. on Thursday because of disappointing economic data, they were down in Europe on the resurfacing of the debt crisis issues.

The head of sovereign ratings at S&P, Moritz Kraemer, speaking at an event at the London School of Economics said that another restructuring of Greek debt is likely, with the bailout partners such as the IMF having to take a hit the next time around. Speaking at the same event, the IMF mission chief to Greece acknowledged it would take at least a decade to fix Greece's finances. His prediction may be optimistic considering the situation in Greece is volatile and its economy is in free fall. 

Greece is of course not the only problem child in the eurozone. Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy also need some sort of fix. The Eurozone has attempted to put together a firewall to prevent these countries from collapsing into the same debt crisis that engulfed Greece. There are now plans to extend the ceiling of the rescue aid package to 940 billion euros ($1.25 trillion). This money is used to buy up bonds from the debt-challenged countries in order to keep their interest rates down.

The funds do not solve the underlying problem however — all of these countries are living beyond their means and until they drastically cut their expenses they will require a continual stream of rescue money. German central banker, Jens Weidmann, recognized as such when he stated, “Just like the ‘Tower of Babel,’ the ‘Wall of Money’ will never reach heaven. If we continue to make it higher and higher, we will, in fact, run into more worldly constraints".

The program has been effective in the short term however. Portuguese 10-year bond yields were at 17.39% on January 30th, but were trading at 11.52% on March 29th (still too high for Portugal to remain afloat in the long term). Italian 10-year bonds had a yearly high yield of 7.46%, but traded at 5.29% today and Spanish 10-years were as high as 6.72%, but recently went for 5.47%. The eurozone's goal is to keep these rates below 6% — the level at which Greece got into trouble.

The rescue funds should run out by 2013 and more money will have to be added to the mix. Whether or not this will be the point when additional money is not forthcoming remains to be seen, but there will be such a point. The amount of assistance Ben Bernanke is willing to provide may impact the timing. As reported by Zero Hedge, the  U.S. Fed already holds some European sovereign debt. It could easily buy more. Once again, the end will be the same unless you believe that a debt crisis can be solved by taking on more debt or by printing more and more money. At least some of the more responsible authorities are beginning to admit that this isn't possible.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

EU Debt Crisis Spreads Worldwide

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

As the situation in Greece deteriorates further, Moody's announced today that it intended to downgrade 114 European financial institutions and 17 global banks. Hopes that China will buy up   EU sovereign debt to help prop up the faltering eurozone may wind up costing the U.S. more than it does China. 

The hostility between Greece and the EU/IMF/ECB bailout troika is palpable. Nevertheless, there are claims that a deal should be reached by Monday. Whether the severe budget cuts demanded will actually be implemented is another story. Greece's GDP is shrinking 7% this year and additional budget cuts will only make the situation worse. Athens is already riot torn and elections in April (assuming a democratic government still exists) are not likely to produce a government favorable to the bailout terms. The market remains increasingly skeptical of Greece's near-term future with one-year government bond yields reaching 528% today.

While all attention is focused on Greece, the European debt crisis permeates the continent. Banks have lent too much money to not just Greece, but to Portugal, Spain, Italy and Eastern European countries as well. There is a still a hangover of pre-Credit Crisis debt that wasn't resolved in 2008, but merely papered over with newly printed money. Moody's just announced it was planning on downgrading 114 European financial entities including 7 in Germany, 9 in Great Britain, 10 in France and over 20 each in Spain and Italy. Global banks Nomura and Bank of America are in line for a one-notch downgrade, while Barclays, BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, Deutsche Bank, HSBC Holdings and Goldman Sachs could have their ratings lowered two notches. UBS, Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley could be reduced three notches.

China with its vast foreign reserve holdings has been considered the potential savior of the eurozone. If this does occur, it won't be only China that is paying however; the U.S. will be sacrificing as well. China has previously announced it wants to diversify its reserve holdings. Since a disproportionate amount of these are in U.S. treasuries, the obvious implication is that it will be funding less U.S. debt as it funds more EU debt. The most recent figures for November 2011 indicate that China decreased its U.S. debt security holdings by almost 3%.

The EU debt crisis is likely to be us for some time to come. The situation with Greece is not stable and at some point it will have to leave the eurozone. Attention will increasingly focus to the other debt-ridden countries and the weak banking system. Just as the crisis spread from Greece throughout Europe, it will then spread from Europe to the rest of the world. We are already seeing this happen.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Will Greek Bailout Deal Falter Now or Later?

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The Greek bailout deal is once again falling apart. Whether or not it is patched together another time, the end will inevitably be an ugly default.

On Thursday, news sources around the world were trumpeting that the EU and Greece had come to terms that would allow Greece to receive a 130 billion euro bailout payment that would prevent the country from defaulting by March. But late in the day, EU finance ministers made additional demands on Greece. They wanted another 325 million euros in budget cuts, that the Greek parliament pass the cuts and that a written guarantee that the cuts will be still be implemented after the April elections. On one hand these demands are not surprising since the Greeks have been less than honest about their budget numbers in the past. On the other however, they are surprising because this could be the straw that breaks the camel's back.

Greece is in its fifth year of recession and its economy seems to be in an unrelenting downward spiral. This is happening because just like the United States, Japan and a number of other nations, the economy is dependent on government spending made possible by huge budget deficits. Each time Greece has been forced to cut its budget deficit, the economy has shrunk some more. Additional cuts will only cause additional contraction. Although they receive little coverage by the U.S. media, riots have become common place in Greece (there is currently a 48-hour strike). Democracy might itself be threatened there. Greece does have a history of military dictatorship, with a military junta running the country between 1967 and 1974.

Lately, the country is becoming increasingly politically unstable. The far-right LAOS party, which is part of the governing coalition, has refused to support the new terms of the bailout. Its members resigned the coalition today. Even more disturbing, Reuters has reported that the Federation of Greek Police has issued the following statement to Greek officials: "Since you are continuing this destructive policy, we warn you that you cannot make us fight against our brothers. We refuse to stand against our parents, our brothers, our children or any citizen who protests and demands a change of policy. We warn you that as legal representatives of Greek policemen, we will issue arrest warrants for a series of legal violations ... such as blackmail, covertly abolishing or eroding democracy and national sovereignty."

Even if things are patched up once again and the next bailout payment is made, there will still be another one after that and even more to follow.  Greece is like the family that is only one paycheck away from homelessness, except one welfare check away from homelessness would be a more apt analogy. Eventually, something will give and this will have a major impact on the world financial system.

The real crisis in Europe is not Greece in and of itself, it is the stability of the banks in France and Germany that have lent money to Greece (and Italy, Spain and Portugal). These banks are in precarious shape and a Greek default will have similar consequences to Lehman's collapse in the fall of 2008. Expect the central bankers of the world to unleash a tsunami of money-printing liquidity into the system to stabilize it just as they did in 2008. They will be quicker this time around, so the collapse should be briefer. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Risks to the Global Financial System in 2012



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.   
As 2012 begins, markets are rallying as they did at the beginning of 2011 -- a year when the S&P 500 closed flat after many huge moves up and down. The problems in Europe that rattled markets in 2011 have not been resolved and new problems are or will be emerging in China and Japan. At the very least, investors should expect another rocky ride in the upcoming year.

The debt crisis in the EU is far from over. It is simply being momentarily contained by another short-term solution that will hold things together for a while until the crisis erupts again. The mid-December LTRO (long term purchase operations) announced by the ECB excited the markets as any money-printing scheme would. This new "solution" to the debt crisis is essentially an attempt to handle a problem of too much debt with more debt. Already close-to-insolvent EU banks are able to hold fewer assets for collateral in exchange for cheap funding from the ECB, which can in turn be used to buy questionable sovereign debt from the PIIGS. While this will keep Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland financially afloat for a longer period of time, it may collapse troubled EU banks sooner (the real epicenter of the debt crisis). 

Half way across the globe, problems are emerging in China. It is estimated that there are between 10 and 65 million empty housing units in the country that investors have purchased with the hope of selling at higher prices. There are in fact entire "ghost districts" there that are filled with new buildings and no residents. Prices have become so high that by last spring the typical Beijing resident would have to have worked 36 years to pay for an average-priced home. The pressure appears to be coming off though with new home prices dropping 35% in November. Beijing builders still have 22 months of unsold inventory and Shanghai builders 21 months. In the peripheral areas, existing home sales have plummeted -- down 50% year on year in Shenzhen, 57% in Tianjin, and 79% in Changsha. Investors should take note that the Chinese real estate bubble is far worse than the U.S. one that brought the global financial system to its knees at the end of 2008.

Twenty years ago, Japan had a massive real estate bubble and it is possible that prices have finally bottomed there, but that doesn't mean that they are ready to go up. Japan has had two decades of economic stagnation (and is heading toward a third, if it is lucky) because of the collapse of its real estate and stock market bubbles. Massive borrowing by the government has prevented the situation from getting worse. The debt to GDP ratio in Japan is now estimated to be 229% (well above the just over 100% in the U.S.).  More people are leaving the workforce there than entering it and this bodes ill for tax receipts. The aging population is using up its savings instead of adding to them. This is a potentially serious problem because the massive debt the Japanese government has incurred has been funded mostly internally by the savings of the Japanese people. A lot of old debt has to be rolled over in 2012 and additional debt is still being incurred. Where the money will come from is not clear.

None of the problems that could strain the global financial system originated in 2011. They have been building up for years and even decades. The first major blow up was the Credit Crisis in 2008. In every case, that problem was "solved" by more debt and money printing. This approach has of course only postponed the inevitable since taking on more debt only creates a bigger debt problem down the road and you can't create something of value out of thin air by printing money (although you will ultimately create a lot of inflation). The markets have already spent most of 2011 in an unstable state. It looks like continuing and even bigger crises await investors in 2012.
Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Gold and Silver Plummet as Dollar Rallies on EU Woes

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The euro fell to a yearly low on December 14th as Italian interest rates at auction hit new highs. Collateral damage to the EU crisis is showing up not only in stock prices, but in the precious metals markets as well. 

The euro fell below the psychologically important 1.30 level in European trade and is testing support from last January. If it breaks that support (and it is pretty certain that it will), the 125 level is the next stop and 1.20 after that. The euro can be tracked through the ETF FXE. At the same time the euro is breaking down, the trade-weighted dollar has broken out. The dollar has been stuck at key resistance at 80 since September. It tested  this level both in September and in November. It traded as high as 80.67 in early morning trade. There is still strong resistance just under 82. A break above that will cause the dollar will head toward 88. The dollar can be tracked through the ETF DXY.

As the dollar rises, gold and other commodities fall. Spot gold was as low as $1562 an ounce in early New York trade. Gold plummeted after the New York open and was down as much as $68 an ounce.
Gold can be tracked through the ETF GLD. Gold decisively broke its 200-day moving average (which is very bearish) and this was the first time it has traded below this level since early 2009. The next level of support is the 65-week moving average, which is currently in the high 1400s.

While gold in general should go up during a crisis, this did not happen in the fall of 2008 -- gold was down around 30% at the time. During credit crises -- and the situation in Europe is a second global credit crisis -- it is reasonable for gold to decline. Central banks lease gold cheaply to banks and large hedge funds and they sell it on the market to raise quick cash (I have explained how this is done is some detail in my book "Inflation Investing"). This time around, there is the added danger that the IMF will sell some of its large hoard of gold to raise money for a eurozone bailout.

Gold's companion metal silver is much more volatile than the yellow metal and is influenced by the economy as well as financial market events. Silver traded as low as $28.47down $2.37 after New York trading opened. This was more than a 7% drop. Silver can be tracked through the ETF SLV. It has strong support around $26. If it breaks that, expect it to head toward the $21 level.

The EU debt crisis is not over and is likely to continue for a while longer and possibly for many more months. EU leaders have come up with one "solution" to the crisis after that has failed shortly after it was announced. Look to the markets to see whether or not their future gambits will create some viable end to their problems. So far the markets have made it very clear that the situation in Europe is continuing to deteriorate and it is dangerous to be on the long side of almost any investment except the U.S. dollar. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, December 9, 2011

New EU Plan is Much Ado About Nothing

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Once again the EU has come up with a too-little, too-late solution to deal with its very serious debt crises. Proposals for a tighter fiscal union and the small amount of funds committed will only delay the inevitable default.

Treaties only have meaning if their terms are actually followed. The eurozone already has a treaty that created it. That treaty has very clear fiscal benchmarks that all members must follow. The key benchmark concerning a maximum 3% debt to GDP ratio for an annual budget was almost universally ignored by all member states. Greece was only the most extreme example. It finally admitted to lying about its numbers (it was not "caught in the act" by the central EU head office even though the numbers it submitted were too good to be true). Greece originally reported a projected debt to GDP ratio of 2.0% for 2009. After many revisions, it turned out to be 15.4%. It was not punished for its duplicity or major violation of EU accords; instead it has been offered three bailout packages so far.

The new treaty provisions once again state that the eurozone countries need to have a balanced budget and should not violate the 3% debt to GDP limit. This wasn't enforced the first time and there is no reason to believe that it will be enforced the second time either. This time however the new treaty states that there will be automatic consequences, including possible sanctions. I'm sure they all had a good laugh about those possible sanctions. This is a complete and total joke and should be treated as such.

As for the current amount of money proposed to rescue the over indebted EU countries, it is much too inadequate to be more than a temporary stopgap measure (the only thing the Europeans seem capable of doing). The debt problem for the troubled EU countries -- Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain -- runs into the trillions. How much is on the table now --  €200billion. The EU will loan this amount to the IMF, which will in turn use it to provide the same amount of aid back to the EU.  Not only is this is a paltry sum, it is disturbing they need to engage in a financial shell game as part of their bailout attempts. Even more absurd is that the ESM (European Stability Mechanism), set up to handle the debt crisis, will be capped at €500 billion. What will happen when they run out of this money and there is still a large amount of debt in danger of defaulting?

The problem with debt crises is that the amount needed to handle them is a moving target. It keeps rising and rising with time because interest rates keep rising and this makes borrowing costs continuously more expensive. Greek one-year bond yields are at 353% today. Even with three rescue packages, they continue to climb toward the stars. Immediately after the announcement of each rescue plan, yields dropped significantly for a short period of time, then they went much higher than they had been before. Expect to see this pattern with the other EU debt crisis countries. The EU is very good at getting its problems under control for a few weeks with its band aid measures.  Expect its current efforts to be another short-term success that turns into a long-term failure.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

EU Deal With Greece Falling Apart

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The market lost its rose colored glasses today with Greece announcing a political referendum early in 2012 on the recent EU bailout deal. This could lead to the deal falling apart sooner rather than later.  Stocks sold off on the news in Europe and the U.S. while interest rates rose in Greece and other troubled EU countries.

The deal that the EU put together last week to handle its debt ridden members and to help prop up its banks was essentially smoke and mirrors surrounding a house of cards. It had no chance to work in the long run and the best it could accomplish was to buy more time before the inevitable day of reckoning. The 50% haircut on Greek debt, plus $130 billion euros did provide Greece with enough funds to keep going. It did not stabilize the situation enough however to ensure another debt crisis didn't occur within the next few years. Nor was there any reason to believe that Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland wouldn't need a similar bailout in the future. The plans for recapitalizing EU banks were likely to create a credit crunch and send the EU into a deep recession before further steps were taken. The centerpiece of all the bailout operations  the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) was based on essentially printed money that was going to be leveraged. This was how the problem of too much debt was going to be solved.

While stock markets worldwide had huge rallies based on the "good" news that came out of the EU last week (traders like hearing about governments printing more money), they were giving back those gains on Tuesday. Both the German DAX and French CAC-40 were down over 4% in late day trading. The euro, which has held up remarkably well during the entire crisis was down over 1%. Big EU banks were getting slammed hard. France's Société Générale (FR:GLE) was down  almost 17%, Credit Agricole (FR:ACA) fell almost 13% and BNP Paribas (FR:BNP) dropped almost 12% .  Deutsche Bank (DB) was down over 6% and Commerzbank (DE:CBK) down over 10%. The U.S. S&P 500 was lower by a comparatively mild 2% in early going.

Bonds reacted more strongly. The yield on the safe haven 10-year U.S. treasury fell over 6% and the yield was barely above 2% in the morning in New York. Yields on trouble country debt in the EU were moving in the opposite direction. Italian 10-year governments traded over 6.25% (above 6% is considered a critical point of potential breakdown). Only buying from the ECB, which also included Spanish government debt, kept yields from soaring much higher. Yields in Greece were even more telling of the market's true opinion of the EU debt deal and its aftermath. Before the deal, yields on one-year Greek governments reached 193%. They had only fallen to 154% (no solvent country pays anywhere close to this amount) before the announcement of the Greek referendum. This yield peaked at 200% today (November 1st).

Panic was caused by the proposed referendum in Greece because polls show that the terms reached with the EU and IMF are highly unpopular with the Greek people. Even though they have gotten an incredibly good deal, the average Greek is focused on the additionaly years of austerity that would be required on Greece's part.  Apparently, neither the Greeks, nor the markets like hearing that there is no free lunch.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

It's a 50% Default for Greece

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

EU leaders have agreed to seek a 50% reduction in Greek debt from bondholders. This supersedes the 21% reduction decided on in July that was supposed to resolve Greece's financial problems. Apparently $30 billion will be given to the banks as an inducement for them going along with the plan. The EU and IMF will also give Greece an additional 100 billion euros in bailout aid.

While the announcement was delivered with a sense of finality, the first bailout of Greece in May 2010 was supposed to solve Greece's debt problems and so was the second bailout this July. It has only taken three months since the  "everything is really fixed now" July announcement before a much bigger bailout and debt writedown proved to be needed. Until fairly recently, EU officials have constantly denied that this would be necessary or that Greece would default. Not paying 50% of your bond debt is not only a default, but it's a major default.

EU officials still seemed mathematically confused about the situation in Greece. EU President Van Rompuy claimed that the current deal will reduce Greece's debt to GDP ratio to 120% by 2020. If so, Greece is still likely headed for more trouble. Since it is estimated that Greece's debt to GDP ratio is around 160%, it should fall to 80% if all bondholders took a 50% hit. Perhaps all bondholders will not be taking a reduction after all. Both the IMF and ECB hold large amounts of Greek government debt and have in the past been reluctant to accept any writedown of their investments.

The pre-dawn news for the EFSF (European Financial Stability Fund), which is supposed to receive 440 billion euros, is that it will be leveraged up to a trillion euros. The U.S. has been pressing for two trillion. This money can be spent to bail out all the EU banks hurt by the Greek default, but only if they can't raise additional capital in the open markets. So the debt problem will be solved by incurring additional debt and borrowing against it. If this isn't a financial system ticking time bomb, nothing is.

The unanswered question is what is going with happen to Portugal (the next most likely crisis), Ireland, Spain and Italy. EU officials tried to minimize the situation by saying Greece is a special case. It would have been more accurate to say that its problems were more extreme and urgent. They are not unique.  The other countries are already somewhere on the path to insolvency and this will have to be dealt with in the future. The only question is how soon that future will arrive. 

 Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

10 Reasons We Are in a Credit Crisis

 
The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Yesterday's news was about a potential Greek default and it caused a global market selloff. Today,  hopes of preventing a Greek default are causing markets to rally. This alternating news flow is repeating over and over again. Investors should pay attention to the big picture however and not the noise of the day. The important thing to realize is that we are in a second global credit crisis.

Credit crises follow certain patterns, which include: recognition of overpriced financial assets, money flowing into safe havens, increased market volatility, rising costs for financial insurance, and various forms of government action to stop the problem. The specifics of the current credit crisis are below.

1. Government debt is being downgraded. This happened in Italy yesterday, the U.S. in early August and many times in Greece. This is the upfront recognition of the problem, which is almost always widespread public knowledge by the time it happens. In 2008, securitized debt containing subprime real estate loans was downgraded in mass, frequently from the triple A ratings that had previously been given.

2. Global money is flowing into safe haven U.S. treasuries. When yields hit lower levels than a previous credit crisis or all-time lows, this indicates this is happening on a mass scale. U.S. government two-year notes had a yield below 0.15% at one point this September 19th. During 2008, the two-year held above 0.60%. The ten-year yield has fallen below the 2.04% low in 2008 and below the all-time low of 1.95% in 1941.

3. Global money is flowing into safe haven currencies. In 2008, this was the U.S. dollar and the Japanese yen. In 2010, this is the Japanese yen, the Swiss franc, and gold (which needs to be thought of as a currency if it is to be analyzed correctly). The Swiss franc rallied so much that the Swiss stopped it from trading freely. The Japanese have also taken action to try to lower the value of the yen.

4. Stock market volatility has increased enormously. In 2008, there were a significant number of mini-crashes (a drop of 5% or more in one day). These were more common in the U.S. back then. Now they are more common in Germany, but they have been happening here as well. The flip side of mini-crashes is sudden sharp moves up in the market. These are also occurring.

5. Bank stocks are the focus of the big moves up and down in the stock market. U.S. banks and other financial stocks really got hit in 2008 -- a number of the companies themselves went under. This time it's European banks falling the hardest. One-day drops for some major EU and UK banks have been as high as 10%. Bank stocks aren't dropping that much in the U.S., but they are underperforming other sectors like technology.

6. Credit default swaps have hit record levels. Credit default swaps (CDSs) are bond insurance and they became a big news item in 2008 when they rose to unprecedented levels. While CDS rates for Greek sovereign debt have hit records and are rising for the other highly indebted EU countries, they have also hit records for some UK and EU banks in 2011 indicating a worse crisis than in 2008.

7. Major and ongoing bailouts are taking place. The EU had to bail out Greece in the spring of 2010 and then Ireland and Portugal. A second bailout for Greece had to be arranged this July, even though the first bailout was supposed to have taken care of Greece's debt problem. In 2008, the U.S. had TARP and arranged for failing banks to be taken over by stronger banks  (Bank America is now in trouble again because of the legacy loans from the banks it absorbed during this period). Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had to be nationalized. 

8. Central banks are buying bonds in the open market. The EU has been buying up Italian, Spanish, Irish and Portuguese bonds in order to hold down interest rates in those countries. As long as it has an infinite access to funds, this strategy will work. The Fed began buying U.S. debt instruments in the fall of 2008 during the Credit Crisis. 

9. Global coordinated central bank intervention took place last week. The need for global action is a consequence of the interconnectedness of the world financial system. A major problem in one region (in 2011 this is Europe, in 2008 it was the U.S.) will invariably spread everywhere. Central banks coordinate their activity to try to control the contagion. 

10. The global economy is turning down.  Problems in the financial system impact the real economy and they can turn a shallow downturn into a major one as has happened in 2008. Economic figures throughout the world have flattened and there are some warnings of a bigger drop to come (extremely low consumer confidence numbers for instance). GDP contraction in a number of regions will be the final confirmation that another global credit crisis has occurred. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Interest Rate Spread Widens as Greece Heads Toward Default

 
The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Global interest rates continue to diverge, with rates rising in the troubled eurozone countries and falling to new lows in Germany and the United States.  The same sort of divergence took place during the 2008 Credit Crisis with yields on safe-haven governments falling markedly, while yields on low-grade corporates soared.

Nowhere in the world is the current interest-rate spread more extreme than in the Eurozone (the epicenter of the current credit crisis). Greece is leading the pack with ever-rising yields on its government paper, while German rates keep falling. In Tuesday morning trade, two-year Greek government yields reached a high of 74.88% and ten-year yields a high of 25.01%. Yields on German 10-year bunds were moving in the opposite direction falling as low as 1.679%, even lower than Monday's record-low rate of 1.877% on 10-year U.S. treasuries.

Italy had an auction of 5-year bonds this morning and had to pay a 5.6% yield to get them out the door
compared to 4.9% in July.  Interest rates on the Italian 10-year were at 5.75%. They were over 6% before the ECB started buying Irish, Portuguese, Spanish and Italian bonds on August 8th to force down surging rates as contagion from Greece spread to other parts of the Eurozone. Before that, yields in Ireland had reached approximately 14%, they were over 13% in Portugal, and in Spain they were at similar levels to Italy. Intervention can only maintain below free market rates for so long however. Eventually, the ECB will run out of funds.

The trajectory of Greece's decline toward insolvency is instructive for the future of Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy in the near future and for other highly indebted countries such as Japan, the United States and the UK later in the decade. In early 2010, Greek 10-year rates spiked above 12%, but were then driven below 8% with the first bailout. Greece had a debt to GDP ratio around 120%. Severe budget cutting was implemented to hold the debt down. This caused the economy to contract sharply, which lowered tax revenues. Despite the first and now a second bailout a self-feeding spiral of ever-increasing interest rates began. Higher interest rates and a weakened economy have caused the debt to GDP ratio to reach the 140% level (according to official numbers, estimates are as high as 160%). Rates on credit default swaps now indicate a 98% chance of default.

What the immediate effects of a Greek default will be remain to be seen. There will certainly be damage to the Eurozone banking system, which is still in a weakened state from bad loans accumulated before the 2008 Credit Crisis. At some point, the euro will have to be restructured or
it will be weakened considerably. Economic damage will not be limited to Europe, but will affect other regions of the globe just as was the case in 2008.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Risks of Market Contagion from a Greek Default

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

While U.S. markets closed slightly up on Monday September 12th, panic reigned in Europe. The risks of a hard default by Greece reached 98% according to one model. Interest rates in Greece were spiraling out of control (the two-year government yield hit almost 70%) and credit default swaps on European sovereign and bank debt reached record levels again.

While Greece is a small economy and there are only two major countries --- France and Germany -- that hold substantial amounts of Greek government and corporate debt, this is only the very tip of the financial iceberg that threatens a titanic like sinking of world markets similar to what occurred during the 2008 Credit Crisis when Lehman Brothers collapsed. Problems in Greece are shared by two other small national economies, Ireland and Portugal, and by two much large economies, Spain and Italy. The Italian economy is roughly the size of the UK economy. It is too big to bail out. Can you imagine the UK defaulting and there being enough money available for an international rescue? If not, don't assume that problems with Italy can be fixed either. Spain is also too large to rescue.

Country defaults have implications well beyond their borders because large international banks have exposure to loans in them. In the global financial system, all large international banks are interconnected. Big banks such as Deutsche Bank, Société Générale, and Bank Paribas have substantial relationships with U.S. banks. The large banks are still in a weakened state from the 2008 crisis. This is showing up in British banks, which like the U.S. banks have limited exposure to Greek debt, and in Bank of America. Credit default swaps have reached record levels for some British banks and Bank of America's stock price keeps dropping.

The Greek default, and this will happen one way or the other at this point, will be similar to the demise of Lehman  in 2008. Contagion spread throughout the world financial system. In the U.S. the close to trillion dollar TARP program had to be instituted to hold up the banking system. In total, as much as $11 trillion in programs (the Federal Reserve alone had half a dozen major ones) had to be implemented to patch things up. The will for such an effort no longer exists, which will mute whatever response the authorities come up with will be delayed and muted. After Greece, something will have to be done with Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy. Those who think that the U.S. markets will be isolated from these events are at best engaging in wishful thinking and at worst are purposely misinforming the public.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.