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Posts Tagged ‘Growth’

View from the Bottom #23

In Uncategorized on October 20, 2011 at 3:17 am

(image credit:  labourlist.org)

I am sorry I didn’t write.  I haven’t been able to use my right hand for the last month.  The truth is the worst possible answer, carpal tunnel.  A hunting accident would at least provoke feminine pity and the hope to bridle something untamed.  Instead, it looks like I am fast with my figures, but slow on my feet.

Which brings me to Europe.  The Eurozone has been pushing out press releases at a desperate pace.  Week in, week out, we get rumors of the ECB buying Italian bonds.  The Chinese buying Italian bonds.  Germany and France buying something with 3 trillion dollars.  Hope, perhaps.  But this is like playing defense in your kid soccer league- watch the torso not the feet.  The torso is economic growth; everything else is the feet.  Without economic growth, Europe can’t meet its debt obligations and interest rates will stay high and smother hope.  The arguments for economic growth in an environment with declining wages are stretched.  So I don’t want to spend much time on Europe.  We covered it; we know what is going to happen for the next 6-12 months.  The only hard part is not getting distracted from the truth.

What is really interesting is China, and I wish I could have written more about it earlier.  Yes, the stock market is down over there, but there is more to come.  Let’s look at what has happened in China to understand what will happen.  China’s economy has been rapidly growing, particularly after executing the largest stimulus in the world in 2009 on a not quite so large economy.  In order to pull back the reins, China has tried to curtail loan growth at the banks.  Unlike other economies, China controls how many loans are made by banks.  It is actually the best way to control monetary policy.  Except, that if banks can’t lend, then other entities in the economy will meet demand and start lending.  So what has happened in the last three years is that thousands of large and small enterprises have started to lend money out for projects that official banks could not lend to.  In other words, the least qualified lenders have been lending to the most marginal borrowers.  How much have they lent over the last two years?  One or two trillion dollars.  Between us, that is a lot of money.  For a five trillion dollar economy, that is a lot of money.

But no one knows for sure how much money has been lent out through informal channels, which is what makes it so interesting.  For all the attention that the subprime crisis got, it wasn’t that interesting.  You could go on Bloomberg, see all the securitizations and the underlying collateral mortgage-by-mortgage, know what was going to happen to home prices, then know what the impact of falling home prices would be on consumption and then know the impact of consumption on GDP.  In China, we just have no idea.  Analysts are publishing many numbers about the informal lending sector, but there are no official figures.  We simply do not know how big the problem is and China is also lacking dozens of econometric studies exploring the effects of leverage on real estate prices, real estate prices on consumption, consumption on GDP, and on and on.  They’ve had private property for 10 years, total.

However, there are a few things we can know about China.  First, it is highly likely that informal lending is at least 10% of Chinese GDP, which would make it double subprime at the peak.  Unlike subprime mortgages, the informal loans are working capital or property development loans, which means they are short duration, highly cyclical  and need to be constantly refinanced.  This means that, if we have a problem, we’ll experience it quickly.  Like, over the next 12 months, not 3 years as was the case in the subprime crisis.  We also know that the collateral (inventories and incomplete construction projects) is worse than that of the subprime mortgage market.  We also know that the Chinese government is taking steps to prevent informal lenders from foreclosing on projects, which is good in the short-term, but it means that fewer new informal loans will be made.  This is bad because if a whole portion of the economy exists because informal loans can be refinanced, then a meaningful portion of the economy will be stripped of its oxygen supply, shortly.

So what we can conclude is: that the up-and-to-the-right-line that China’s growth has tracked has had some support from an exponential growth in lending.  The trips to Macau, the handbags and empty condominiums were made possible by artificial growth in leverage.  So the correct growth trajectory for China is not 8%, but some number of degrees lower.  If M2 (money), doesn’t grow at 30% anymore, but instead grows at 10%, does the Chinese economy continue to grow at 7-8%?  Maybe, anything can happen.  But not ever before has a sharp downward change in M2 been accompanied with constant economic growth.  Nevertheless, for the moment, China and its strategists are sticking to the 7-8%, with the caveat that all bets are off if the US and Europe go into recession.  Great, so we know all bets are off.

The implications of a low-growth Chinese economy with a negative interest rate environment over the coming decade will have to wait until next time.  Sorry to hold you in suspense.

View from the Bottom #21

In Uncategorized on July 30, 2011 at 8:22 pm

Downgrade or default.  Let’s start there.  A US sovereign downgrade won’t hurt the markets.  Rating agencies are a few years late to the party and market participants have already devalued US$-denominated assets by 80% over the last 5 years.  In English, an 80% decline in value is well within the meaning of the word “downgrade”.  So a change in rating or outlook by the agencies is a friendly  reminder and not a change in facts.

Default – not getting a debt limit deal done – is a different story all together.  The US Treasury not paying its debts may mean your wealth changes by an order of magnitude and your ATM card stops working this week.  You can see the first signs of this happening in the funding markets last week.  To make sense of the funding markets – a quick explanation of the way these markets work in 50 words:  there are trillions of dollars of assets at banks, mutual funds and companies – rather than moving these assets around constantly to do transactions or borrow money, which would be cumbersome, these institutions leave the assets alone and instead pledge the assets as collateral in exchange for cash to do whatever needs to be done day-to-day.  Sort of like if you had a house, and needed to pay a $1,000 bill before payday – you wouldn’t sell the house to pay the bill, you’d just borrow $1,000 against the house until you got your pay check.  This is called a “repurchase obligation” or “repo”.  If there is no debt limit deal by Monday morning, the “repo markets” will be the news, here’s why.

This past week was an important time for the repo markets because non-bank financial institutions that usually borrow for 30 days had to do their borrowings by month end (Friday).  30 days from now means August 31st, so after the August 2nd debt ceiling deadline.  This crunch at the end of every month usually pushes prices to borrow for 30 days up by .03%, but at the end of last week it moved out by .30%.  This change in pricing was worse than during the financial crisis.  Despite this shock, all was calm elsewhere in the markets on Friday because the big boys of the funding markets – banks – primarily borrow “overnight”, so their repo borrowings on Friday were mostly for August 1st, before the deadline.  It’s not really clear what will happen on August 1st in the afternoon, when the world financial system tries to borrow trillions for August 2nd, pledging as collateral securities that may be in default the next day.  These repo markets is what did in Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and others during the financial crisis.  If counterparties don’t really believe/like the collateral you are pledging, the game is up the next morning.

There is talk that the US can prioritize payments and pay its debts for a short while, but it’s hard to imagine this will be acceptable to the markets.  Fixed income investors are often faulted for their lack of imagination, but they aren’t stupid.  This is an old trick that every company in the deadzone – including Lehman – has tried.  It’s not a slippery slope for a company that briefly stops paying its employees, it’s a cliff.

What will actually happen without a deal on Monday morning?  The value of assets will probably decline throughout the day.  A bit more cash will be found to push out the August 2nd deadline and a deal will get done because constituents’ savings will decline in value rapidly.  With TARP in 2008, an intransigent House of Representatives voted it down – the stock market fell ~10% – and TARP was passed a week later.  I’d expect replay.

Distant from the debt ceiling headlines, the economy is plodding along, but still at a stalling speed that is below expectations and certainly below projections that justify the current market P/E multiple.  Technology companies are seeing orders moderate and valuation multiples are contracting.  Industrial demand is ebbing across the board.  And financial services firms continue to shrink in a low interest rate environment.  There is no escaping the economic math that financial services and real estate are the largest contributors to US GDP by a wide margin  - the 80/20 of the US economy.  So it’s hard for other sectors to perform for an extended period of time without a recovery in the core of what our economy has become over the past 40 years.  Of more than passing interest, the stock market remains at cyclical highs.  Sigh.

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