Showing posts with label Reserve Currency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reserve Currency. Show all posts

Sunday, October 7

"It's the asset prices, stupid"

In a good post titled 'Why Obama is Winning' Harold James points out that political strategist James Carville's famous "it's the economy, stupid" quip from the 1992 U.S. presidential election campaign has gained a new twist:
...the lesson about the economy’s electoral salience is being subtly reformulated. It is no longer the real state of the economy, but rather the perception of asset markets, that is crucial. And the perception can be far removed from reality, which means that the more the prevailing political wisdom assigns decisive electoral importance to the economy, the greater the temptation to view monetary policy’s impact on asset prices, and not on long-term growth, as crucial.
What James is basically saying is that people feel wealthier when asset prices - stocks, bonds, real estate, etc. - go up in value. This phenomenon -- the so called 'wealth effect' -- can make those who don't read The PolyCapitalist and the other recommended sites listed on the right side of this blog feel like the real, fundamental economy is doing better than it actually is. Or so the theory goes. 

Further, positive feelings about how the economy is trending due to rising asset prices can in turn drive higher consumer consumption and business investment, which in turn can increase GDP. At least in the short (and possibly) medium run.

For how long can this wealth effect ponzi-esque scheme go on? In other words, are programs like QE3 nothing more than an macroeconomic cheap trick?

No one knows for sure because, like much of modern macroeconomic theory, we are conducting a live, empirical test of the theory. And this test has arguably been running since at least 1987 (the year Alan Greenspan became Chairman of the Fed), if not 1971 (the year Nixon severed the U.S. Dollar's anchor to the price of gold).

What this means longer-term, according to James, is further politicization of the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world:
Republicans will blame their defeat in November on the Fed’s monetary stimulus (if not on the ineffectiveness of Mitt Romney’s blunder-filled campaign). 
Meanwhile, in Europe, many national leaders, looking at Obama and the Fed, may conclude that they would do better with more direct control over the central bank. Given the difficulty of establishing such control over the European Central Bank, the euro’s next great challenge may be growing sentiment in favor of a return to national currencies.
In other words, expect central banks to remain in the politial bullseye following the 2012 U.S. and 2013 German elections, regardless of the their outcomes.

Will major reform be applied to central banks? For example, there has been open discussion of terms limits for the Federal Reserve Chairman.

Perhaps changes like term limits, greater Fed transparency, etc. are in the cards longer-term. But I am personally skeptical that any significant reforms will be enacted at the Federal Reserve prior to the end of the U.S. dollar's global hegemony.

Wednesday, May 30

On the Topic of Financial Collapse Fear Mongering

"Ireland is in a death spiral" -FT

"After the November President election the U.S. is facing a fiscal cliff" -Federal Reserve staff

"Eurogeddon!" -The PolyCapitalist

On and on go the warnings of cataclysm and pending financial doom. Technical jargon and existential risks are bandied about in frightening fashion, leaving the general, less-economically literate with very little ability to understand what's actually happening or just how bad things could really get if say Greece leaves the Eurozone, or another country defaults, or something like this occurs.

This blog is not entirely innocent of this criticism, and this post is a brief attempt to quickly address the question of whether our global financial system is on the precipice of a financial collapse if say something 'really bad' happens in Europe?

The short answer is no.

Now before I expand on that answer I would like to clarify something very important: this post is about financial collapse and not about the extremely high levels of unemployment, which have reached approximately 50% for young people in countries such as Greece and Spain. The youth and general unemployment problems today are serious and something to be very concerned about. But this post is not about that but instead about whether another Lehman-style event could occur where the world's financial system risks implosion if say a country like Greece pulls out of the euro, the current 'bank jog' in Spain accelerates, etc.

So why isn't the risk of financial collapse as bad as some would have use believe?

For starters, we have to keep in mind that our financial world is a virtual world. Today, money is largely a set of numbers on a computer. This means that even in the most extreme scenario of financial disorder, where policymakers completely blow it and the ATMs stopped working and the stock market tanked, that everything that is real and tangible - the houses, the food that is farmed, the physical assets - none of this goes away and will all be here the next day when you wake up in the morning.

Now having said that, a financial implosion would definitely have a major impact on our lives, particularly for those with fewer resources or who are unprepared. But life will go on for nearly everyone and could actually rebound quite quickly given other historical cases. For example, Argentina began recovering within months following its utterly complete financial meltdown in 2001 even though the country achieved the relatively rare trifecta of a currency collapse, a banking crisis, and a sovereign default all at once. Iceland has had a relatively quick turnaround following its 2008 financial implosion. And other Asian countries in the late-90s also turned the corner pretty quickly following major financial crises.

In the case of Argentina, dozens of people died in Dec. 2001 riots, so I don't want to minimize the very real suffering and dislocation which comes with a financial collapse. But Argentina's experience is a far cry from the level of suffering of say a war or severe natural disaster. In short, a 'cataclysm', it was not.

A further point needs to be made about the above examples, which is that they were all relatively isolated, contained crises that did not threaten a systemic collapse in arguably the same way as the current crisis. But this leads me to point number two, which is that a systemic collapse is extremely unlikely, particularly given two facts:
  1. what was learned from the recent Lehman-experience in 2008 by the current crop of policymakers.
  2. the world's central banks, especially the Federal Reserve, still have loads of financial ammunition.
Regarding the first point, current policymakers got a first-hand glimpse of just how interconnected the world's financial system is and how the failure of a seemingly small cog in the wheel could threaten to topple the whole system. So while yes, Greece's financial implosion could lead to a chain reaction that threatens the entire global financial system, it is utterly inconceivable in the wake of the Lehman crisis that policymakers would sit back and let that happen given what they learned and how they responded in 2008-2009.

So I hear you asking whether all our problems are solved then because central banks like the Federal Reserve are all powerful, financially speaking, and able to contain any crisis which comes its way? Over the long-term, I would say no, they are not all powerful financially. But in the short-term, meaning right now and over the next few months at least, they are all powerful financially, and here's why.

Central banks like the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan, and Bank of England which operate fiat currencies have an extraordinary power, which is that they can create an unlimited amount of money.

'Unlimited', meaning a truly infinite amount of money? Yes

What this means is that even if, for example, all the depositors in Spain and Greece withdrew every last euro from their local banks the ECB can supply all the notes that citizens want to hide under their bed mattresses. In short, the ATMs should never, ever run out of money in a fiat money system which is being managed by competent professionals.

But earlier I alluded to the fact that even though central banks can print an unlimited amount of money that they were not in fact financially omnipotent over the long-term, so what did I mean by that?

With the magic that is the computer a central bank could literally go and create and infinite amount of money. But there are side effects with central banks creating a lot of money, namely inflation. Without getting technical, simply put inflation is a rise in prices. Hyperinflation is a very large, sudden rise in prices.

But here is the crucial point to remember: rising inflation acts as a brake on a central bank's ability to create money. In other words, a rise in inflation is perhaps the key to understanding when central banks would be constrained in any effort to bail out the financial system.

Today, most of the world's advanced economies (North America, Europe) have relatively modest inflation, meaning low single digit annual percentage increases in official measures of core inflation. And even though they would say otherwise, the central banks in these advanced countries would be more than willing to trade an increase in inflation to stem the risk of a systemic financial collapse.

So how much more inflation would central banks be willing to tolerate as a tradeoff for not risking financial collapse? As the Bank of England has demonstrated in the past couple years, inflation creeping up towards 5% is not enough of a concern to prompt a significant deviation in policy. So my guess (it is a guess) is that at the extreme central banks like the Fed could tolerate up to 10% if they perceived the risks of collapse to be great enough before they would think twice about pulling another post-Lehman style bailout of the world's financial system. And since we're still in low single digit inflation this gives the Fed a decent amount of runway to maneuver.

This room to maneuver is what is meant when it is said that the Fed, which controls the world's most important reserve currency, and other central banks still have lots of ammunition.

The existence of this ammunition is likely a factor behind why given all the current distress in Europe that the stock markets haven't fallen further. In other words, the markets expect central banks to step in and flood the financial system with money if Greece leaves the euro or a banking run accelerates. Even the supposedly hemmed in by the Germans/hard-money crowd ECB. After LTRO and all the sovereign bond debt purchases, anyone who still thinks the ECB won't step in to save the system if things go completely pear shaped by creating a lot money is living in a fantasy. And this flood of central bank money would likely be very bullish for stocks in the short-term.

Should inflation increase significantly, then the ability of central banks to rush in and save the day could be diminished. But for now, they have the power to act, and that's why (for now) a general financial collapse is not on the immediate horizon.

So in sum, if you want to understand when it might be time to get worried, keep an eye on official measures of core inflation, particularly if it starts creeping up near the 5% level as that is about the time a proper central banker will begin to twitch over fears of runaway inflation.

Now, in terms of how you want to position your investment portfolio given the above, the very first post on this blog just over two years ago argued for allocating some of your portfolio into gold, which is arguably the best hedge against excessive central bank money printing. Even though the price of gold has gone up significantly in the last two years this blog still stands by that recommendation for long-term investors.

Tuesday, January 3

Prediction #1: U.S. Dollar Bears Will Remain On the Run in 2012

Since its March 2008 low the U.S. Dollar is up 13% against a basket of the world's most widely held currencies, including the yen, sterling, franc, loonie, krona, and of course the beleaguered euro.

How is this a problem for portfolio manager Axel Merk, the self described "Authority on Currencies"? After all, according to Merk's written after-the-fact letters he claims to have traded out of and back into the euro just in time to surf its wild gyrations.

Merk moved his fund management business to California a number of years ago, where he has been beating a steady 'demise of the U.S. dollar' drumbeat ever since. This past year Merk Funds even took to deploying amusing anti-Dollar cartoon propaganda while routinely touting the superiority of the euro over the U.S. dollar.

Continue reading the full article at Seeking Alpha here.

Tuesday, August 30

Book Review: 'Sustainable Wealth' By Axel Merk

Axel Merk’s Sustainable Wealth is very readable personal finance guide to today’s increasingly complex investment world. The book contains a wealth of practical information, and it can be particularly useful for novice investors who are interested in learning more about the role of macro forces and currencies, and how they influence markets.

About the Author

Axel was born in Munich, Germany and grew up in a family of investors. It was during college that he first began investing on behalf of clients. His academic training is in finance and computer science, and he has lived in many parts of Europe before relocating to the U.S. He is the founder and CIO of Merk Investments, a Palo Alto, California based mutual fund focused on currencies. In his personal life he is a distance runner and pilot, and he is married with children. Axel Merk also gives regular media interviews and periodically writes for SeekingAlpha.

Sustainable Wealth

With his book, written following the financial crisis in 2008, Merk aimed to reach an audience that is intelligent and interested but not necessarily educated in economics or currencies. While Merk runs a currency mutual fund, the book is not aimed at currency traders. Rather the book primarily targets the man in the street who is concerned with the actions of today’s policymakers. In the book Merk describes the pressures between where the market would like to go and the interference run by policymakers. Understanding this pull-push dynamic is at the heart of Sustainable Wealth.

One of the key themes of the book is the idea that “there is no such thing as a safe asset” and that investors may want to take a diversified approach to something as “mundane as cash”. The book contains a number of helpful, easy to understand explanations about the fundamental nature of the world’s current debt problem, and ways to address it on a personal level.

During an interview, Merk emphasized his independent opinion. That certainly can bee seen with his often seemingly minority view on the euro versus the U.S. dollar over the past 12+ months. Other than the temporary slide in the euro last summer to $1.18, Merk’s view on the euro has more or less proven correct. However, it is worth keeping in mind that Merk runs a currency mutual fund inside the United States, and that one of the ways in which more American investors would take an interest in his fund is if they are concerned about the fate of the U.S. dollar.

Continue reading the full review at SeekingAlpha here.

Friday, July 22

Video: Barry Eichengreen on Why Economics Needs History

Berkeley Professor Barry Eichengreen discusses the importance of history to the study of economics and other topics in the below video.



A summary of Professor Eichengreen's recent book, Exorbitant Privilege, can be found here; a video lecture he gave on this book can be viewed here

So far Germany's current generation of leaders seem to be as committed to supporting the current Eurozone project as Professor Eichengreen has suggested they would . However, it's less than clear to me whether Germany has the appetite or capacity to support countries such as Spain and Italy should a full blown debt crisis ignite in these two large countries. Perhaps Germany would prefer a smaller Eurozone, comprised primarily of more economically homogeneous northern European countries instead of the current version which includes slow growing Club Med countries?

Thursday, June 2

War on Drugs, Say Hello to Silk Road: the Amazon.com of Illegal Drugs

On a day when a number of former and current leaders from around the world are calling to end the failed War on DrugsGawker has a story about a website where you can readily purchase illegal drugs and have them shipped right to your doorstep.

The site is called Silk Road, but finding it is not as simple as typing the name into Google and clicking:
The URL seems made to be forgotten...It's only accessible through the anonymizing network TOR, which requires a bit of technical skill to configure.
 How can you trust what you buy there?
Once you're there, it's hard to believe that Silk Road isn't simply a scam. Such brazenness is usually displayed only by those fake "online pharmacies" that dupe the dumb and flaccid. There's no sly, Craigslist-style code names here.
Silk Road cuts down on scams with a reputation-based trading system familiar to anyone who's used Amazon or eBay. The user Bloomingcolor appears to be an especially trusted vendor, specializing in psychedelics. One happy customer wrote on his profile: "Excellent quality. Packing, and communication. Arrived exactly as described." They gave the transaction five points out of five.
And here's what's available for purchase: 
Here is just a small selection of the 340 items available for purchase on Silk Road by anyone, right now: a gram of Afghani hash; 1/8th ounce of "sour 13" weed; 14 grams of ecstasy; .1 grams tar heroin. A listing for "Avatar" LSD includes a picture of blotter paper with big blue faces from the James Cameron movie on it. The sellers are located all over the world, a large portion from the U.S. and Canada.
Transactions are conducted with a semi-anonymous online currency known as Bitcoins:
Bitcoins have been called a "crypto-currency," the online equivalent of a brown paper bag of cash. Bitcoins are a peer-to-peer currency, not issued by banks or governments, but created and regulated by a network of other bitcoin holders' computers. (The name "Bitcoin" is derived from the pioneering file-sharing technology Bittorrent.) They are purportedly untraceable and have been championed by cyberpunks, libertarians and anarchists who dream of a distributed digital economy outside the law, one where money flows across borders as free as bits.
Although...
Jeff Garzik, a member of the Bitcoin core development team, says...that bitcoin is not as anonymous as the denizens of Silk Road would like to believe. He explains that because all Bitcoin transactions are recorded in a public log, though the identities of all the parties are anonymous, law enforcement could use sophisticated network analysis techniques to parse the transaction flow and track down individual Bitcoin users. 
Whether or not Silk Road succeeds in remaining in business, it does point out yet another difficulty of enforcing illegal drug laws.

In many states, like California, prison costs have overtaken funding for higher education due to the internment of people associated with the War on Drugs. We need to reverse this trend.

There must be a better policy than the one we currently have. It's time to fundamentally rethink the War on Drugs.

Sunday, January 16

U.S. Debt Interest Payments to Surpass Defense Expenditures Within Decade

The Congressional Budget Office is estimating that annual interest payments on federal debt will more than double over the next decade to $778 billion.

Put another way, the U.S. will soon be paying federal debt interest (much of it to Asian and Middle East creditors) equal to the U.S.'s annual defense budget.

What assumptions lay behind the CBO's estimates? From the WSJ:
In 2010, it (the U.S. federal government) paid an average of about 0.1% interest on 3-month Treasury bills, and 3% on ten-year notes. Total net payments amounted to $197 billion, or 1.4% of annual economic output. That’s a bit more than what the government spent on unemployment insurance.
Low interest rates, however, won’t last forever — assuming the U.S. economy doesn’t succumb to long-term, Japanese-style stagnation. The CBO estimates that interest rates on 3-month bills and 10-year notes will reach 5.0% and 5.9%, respectively, by 2020. That, together with a rapidly rising debt load, would cause annual net interest payments to more than double by 2020 — to $778 billion, or a record 3.4% of GDP.
As bad as that sounds, I believe the CBO could be painting an overly optimistic scenario.

Whether the U.S. will actually be able to borrow long-term at a (historically) relatively low 5-6% interest rate in a decade's time is pure speculation by the CBO.

I'd also like to better understand why the CBO is projecting that U.S. interest rates across the yield curve will dramatically flatten? Right now the U.S. pays an interest rate of roughly 0.15% on 3-month borrowings, while the 10-year note is yielding 3.32%, for a difference of over 3% between short-term and longer-term borrowings. That's a pretty significant difference compared between the current level and the 0.9% difference the CBO is projecting in 2020.

If the U.S. continues its current debt trajectory is it reasonable to assume that it will be able to borrow long-term at a mere couple percentage points higher than today's levels?

Professor Barry Eichengreen is predicting that emerging financial powerhouses, such as China, will be able to offer a reserve currency alternative to the U.S. Dollar by 2020. The U.S. is undoubtedly realizing lower interest rates right now due to the European sovereign debt crisis, and the lack of any real alternatives to the U.S. dollar as the world's primary reserve currency and the unparalleled liquidity of the U.S. treasuries market. What will happen when (not if) the situation changes?

Interest rates can certainly rise faster and/or higher than the CBO is projecting. A recalculation by the bond market of the U.S.'s credit worthiness can occur suddenly, as we saw last year with Greece. Professor Niall Ferguson for one is predicting that a U.S. fiscal crisis, similar to the one experienced by Greece last year, will occur within 2-4 years.

Sunday, November 7

World Bank President Zoellick Gift Wraps Gold $1400+

'Tis soon to be the season of giving, and the monetary gifts to gold owners are getting off to an early start.

Not to be outdone by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's recent 'QE2' goody bag, World Bank President Robert Zoellick has penned an editorial in the Financial Times calling for a global monetary debate on returning to a gold standard of sorts.

Zoellick's proposal is for a basket of the world's leading currencies - the dollar, euro, yen, pound, and renminbi - to be paired with gold (which he describes as "an international reference point of market expectations") in a new Bretton Woods styled monetary order.

Gold really didn't need much of a reason to finally poke its head above $1400/oz, but Zoellick's op-ed and the gold chatter that's sure to follow will almost certainly provide the nudge.

Meantime gold owners can sit back, grab a bag of popcorn, and enjoy what's about to happen to the price of your Au.