Thursday, April 18, 2013

Is the Aussie Safe to Short?

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TMM thought it would be time to review their old friend, the Aussie. A couple of interesting research pieces have come out from the sellside at the same time as one member of TMM has been travelling downunder so we thought we would try to find some sense between the 10,000 ft world of the big picture and capital flows and slightly more granular information on capital expenditures from corporates.


Lets start with the big picture of Aussie capital flows and what is holding up the currency. Shorting AUD has been about as much fun as being in the octogon with George St Pierre - just when you think you've got the terms of trade flow right you get slugged with flight to quality flows and just when you think they are receding with normalization of the volatility regime you find mining majors rushing into the market to build mines and gas plants as fast as they can. Its about as much fun as being hit in the face, then kicked, then thrown on the ground and strangled until you tap stop out. Ie not fun at all. So, where are we now with respect to these key drivers of flows and where are we going?

First, it appears that portfolio flows have slowed down somewhat. There are some tentative signs of a slowing of reserve accumulation ex Japan and Australia has not seen material net inflows for a couple of quarters.

TMM are big believers in normalization of current account balances as being a sign of the world getting better and this does appear to be happening. So, if reserve assets are generally going down and the eurogroup does not do anything insane for a while, perhaps having had their false idol of Reinhardt and Rogoff smashed by a bit of basic spreadsheet math then there should be less net flows and much less flows to Australia. TMM won't bet the farm on this one but having been blindsided by these flows despite having got the commodities picture largely correct we have stopped whimpering and gotten out of the fetal position on this one.

Second, what about European bank deleveraging? This provided a substantial tailwind to shorts in 2011 but has also tapered off as of late. BIS data seems to indicate that Eurobank exposures to Australia are now low enough that it is unlikely to be a key driver and anecdotal evidence from our trip down here indicates that most eurobanks that are leaving the market are down to their last couple of hundred million dollars of loans. The loan auction-palooza of 2011 appears to be a long way away now.

Third - what about all that mining investment? This is a bit more contentious and frankly much more important of a driver of flows in the last year and going forward. Investment continues to be torrid and while the coal sector is desperately looking to cut capacity after an apparent step function change in Chinese thermal power growth and iron ore projects get cancelled the gas sector rolls on. Or does it? Here is ANZ's pipeline of future projects as of Jan 2013:
The problem here is that Browse has been cancelled and Arrow is being doubted by the market. While this does not do anything to change the peak in investment (2013) the rolloff of projects appears to be very steep indeed after 2014 with not much in the pipeline. Now, TMM know there is more to life than gas, coal and iron so we thought we'd look at the contractors sector of the AS51 for clues as to what their development pipeline looked like:


Ohh er. Not pretty. Worst hit are coal and iron ore oriented names but the rest are not exactly in great health - maybe that has something to do with public sector sources of revenue being closely tied to resources like Queensland which tends to curtail public sector projects like rail and roads:

One partner of a insolvency advisory in Australia described what was happening in the Hunter Valley and Bowen Basin, both major coal mining areas as "a nuclear winter setting in". Not a lot of room for interpretation there. Word is that if you want to finance "yellow goods" - ie, things like bulldozers and massive trucks then you generally will not get much love from Australian banks who have seen this show before.

TMM have been wrong before on AUD but we are finding it hard to see what keeps it higher from here given the collapse in investment we are likely to see over the coming years. Even if the
investment flows do not do it then rate cuts cannot be that far behind.

Putting that lot together TMM feel that Aus$ is vulnerable to an old fashioned sharp move lower in a "thatshouldnthavehappened" style that is pure "Gold".

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Observations from Camp TMM

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- Nikkei did not fall despite Usd/Jpy pull back and the US falls.

- Asian Markets did not really fall despite US and European actions. 

- So this is not a global relinked "risk off" move and still sits within "positional" explanations.

- Gold has bounced though the bounce is still ex-feline. 

- Some of TMM have been doing some company visits downunder and keep hearing that "winter is coming" from mining guys. We aren't sure if this something to do with "Game of Thrones" or just a southern hemisphere reverse seasons thing or whether this is just a reflection of mining contractors' order books.

- Aud is looking as sick as a dawwg (our cross hairs are back on it). 

- Not much real news, with Price is News starting to dominate. 

- Boston - really terrible and hopefully an isolated event. 

- China is slowing but not crashing. 

- Jim Reid has devoted 50 odd pages to showing that historical returns to high yield at these spreads are really bad. Thanks Jim, we know. Now what is the catalyst?

- Soft ZEW result is already in the price. 

- John Sweeney's BBC Panorama program about North Korea didn't tell us anything new or actionable and in TMM's eyes was a journalistic self-indulgence that, having used LSE students as cover,  puts future acedemic research in dangerous lands at risk. TMM wonder if, like they do with dodgy banks, it's time to split the BBC into a "Good BBC " and a "Bad BBC".   

- A recent dreadful dining experience has spawned a new entry for the TMM glossary:- 

Aqua Nueva - A distillation of pure arrogance and appalling service containing no spirit whatsoever served in a glitzy shallow vessel to the detriment of the recipient.  As in  "The Eurogroup served Aqua Nueva to Cyprus". Like the London restaurant with the same name and dreadful attributes, to be avoided at all costs. 

- John Sweeney = Aqua Nueva

Monday, April 15, 2013

Price = Theory + Reality

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TMM are finally emerging from their Gold bear bunker, having decided two years ago that there was never ever any point in discussing the value of gold as it verged on religious resulting in a torrent of abuse from the spamchuckers that made it just not worth the bother. But this morning we have got to the point where it can't be ignored any longer as some are blaming it for moves in other assets.

Gold is back to 2011 levels and Silver has just broken through a support at 26.00 that, if you like horizontal support lines, has been the road over a sinkhole.

Anyone who has ever studied supply and demand Econ 1.0.1 will now be scratching their heads and looking for a conspiracy theory to explain away something that "shouldn't have happened" (just go and have a look at the Hero Zedger comments in any gold piece they have posted recently). At this rate the tin-foil beanie wearers will be able to afford silver ones  But isn't it the biggest no brainer that if you print money then the value an asset of limited supply against that money has to rally?

Let's pose a question to our Econ 1.0.1 class in the style of "A Question of Sport's" "what happens next" round.

Presenter - "Japan, running out of options and seeing the success of US actions, opens the taps and announces it will print an incredible amount of money, vowing never to stop until it encounters inflation. So what happens next?"

Ex sports star - "Well Jpy takes in on the chin and hits the deck and gold goes to the moon and his shorts fall off"

Presenter -  "Anyone else?"

Other ex Sports star - "Gold catches fire and runs up the pitch screaming whilst the yen crashes into the posts"

Presenter "No. Run the film and lets see what happens to gold in yen terms.."



So what's all that about then?  TMM sees it as a lovely example of how theory disconnects from price via reality, in other words - TMM's price equation of Price = Theory + Reality (P = T + R) where reality is everything that isn't in the theory.  Theory is all well and good as long as you have enough people believing in the theory, or more rightly willing to back the theory with their own money. Its all very "Bitcoin". It will go up whilst everyone believes it will go up, whether that is based in economic theory, technical analysis, or just straight forward herd mentality. But TMM like to think that the world is more complicated that Econ 1.0.1 and just as Econ 192.168.0.1 is doing for Bitcoin so Econ 79.197.1 is doing for gold. No matter how much of a fixed asset it may be it is reliant on a) everyone agreeing that it is a store of value  and b) being better to hold than any other store of value, whether that is stocks, bonds, fiat cash or lumps or gallons of any other commodity.

But isn't gold an alternative currency? One of the requirements for a useable currency or money is that its value is predictable and has a low volatility. Pricing eggs in a currency that is wanging around in 10s of percents per day, whilst exciting for traders,  is not conducive to reducing risk for shopkeepers or customers. The argument that a complete transition to the newer money would eliminate the volatility relies on 2 assumptions. First that things would settle down after transmission as currency supply steadies and second that a transition would be possible whilst high volatility exists. The European transition to the Euro was accompanied with a volatility that tailed to zero in the run up. Jumping straight to a Bitcoin or gold function with the current levels of volatility would be impossible. So obtusely,  the very reason that Bitcoin (or Gold during its run up and collapse) could not replace existing currency is because of the very volatility that is responsible for its heightened visibility.

Isn't it a hedge against inflation? Well let's look at the chart below which is the US price of gold inflation adjusted.



We would imagine that a perfect hedge against inflation would see a flat line with the  odd wobble as expectations get ahead of price. The chart above shows that they are hardly small wobbles and at current levels we would need to see 100% inflation or the price drop from these levels by a half to get back to the sort of eyeballed averages of $350 inflation adjusted. If the above chart implies expectations for inflation are already to be 100% over current price then there is an awful lot of room for inflation expectations to take off before the price has to budge.
+
Which leads us on to think about inflation expectations again and to wonder if we are seeing something that should worry the BoJ. Just when they have unveiled their nuclear bazooka, designed to spark the living fear of inflation into its populace, are we instead seeing a general market capitulation in the inflation trade? Commodities are off everywhere. Oil is down another 2.5% on the day and linkers are doing the same. Even the ultimate measure of usd/jpy is off 2.5% from its highs. Or is it the growth trade being unwound? The growth and inflation trades are to TMM (and obviously the BoJ) much as the interaction of magnetism and electricity are to each other. They are probably bound by a single Maxwellian equation combining the two, resulting in some Fleming hand gestures. In this case, the resultant force on gold is represented by an extended middle digit.

Where is this leading us?  Corrective moves or a new phase? We have to say that our short term trading antennae are concerned that Asian time saw the biggest wash down in gold prices and Asian time zone rarely sets new direction and often sees blow off peaks or troughs. which causes us to pause before jumping in, but with Econ 1.0.1 having been taught a lesson in P=T+R we think it less likely for such trades to be as reloaded. In a way if this is either the US growth trade being lightened or the global inflation trade being lifted it is still very interesting as it is indicative of some sizable perception changes.

Our debate extends to where this leaves equities. On one hand we should have sectoral suffering as commodity producers fall but on the other hand the feedback loop of lower input prices is great for everyone elses' margins, which once again leads us back to preferring equities to much else. Having been left behind by the equity train since the start of Feb we are still hoping for a drop to buy on, hopefully that will be on a continued growth/inflation trade unwind. We do believe that ultimately policy WILL stimulate to the tipping point that will provide inflation. How do we know? Well they've told us haven't they? But that could be a long time off.

In the meantime there are a lot of 5 minute macro managers trying to reconcile  money management issues with long term theory.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Post BoJ New World Quiz

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Sorry to stick to a Japanese theme but the 2013 Japanese money tsunami is engulfing everything financial to the extent that many new questions are now being asked. Here are some of them.   

If you are a Japanese central banker do you -

a) Retire to the mountains having done your job.
b) Read the story of "Pandora's Box" that someone has just handed you.  
c) Wonder if leaving out the "capital controls" part of the Japanese 1932 Great Depression rescue plan policy you are trying to reuse, might be causing all your fresh money to fund other people's recoveries rather than your own.
d) Resume normal policy -  Do nothing and say nothing.   

If you are the FED do you -

a) Give praise that BoJ policy provides you with an exit route to QE via Japanese UST purchases. 
b) Suggest the BoJ also looks at buying US Munis. 
c) Wonder how long it will be before someone realises that Abe is a CIA asset orchestrating (a) and hopefully (b)
d) Write your CV and try and get out on a high to the private sector before you have to fire-hose real inflation and get engulfed in the flames.  

If you are US Congress do you -

a) Vigorously support Japanese actions by signing new trade and defence agreements (but ask not to be paid in Jpy).
b) Kick up a rumpus over Japanese currency manipulation and introduce trade sanctions.
c) Blame the other side and praise yourself ( business as usual).
d) Ask where Japan is and ask why they ain't speaking English.     

If you are a French politician do you -

a) Point to the rally in OATs and say it reflects confidence in French policy.
b) Point to the rally in OATs and say it reflects confidence in French policy and so raise taxes. 
c) Blame Gerard Depardieu for eur/usd's rally which is solely responsible for the demise of your oh so competitive export industries. 
d) Go back to lunch as it's the Germans running Europe not you so why bother. 

If you are a Swiss central banker do you -

a) Welcome continued large inflows of private money which you can use to fund local industry.
b) Worry like hell about why anyone in their right mind still wants to buy the Chf. 
c) Get ready to cut rates and protect the eur/chf floor
d) Wonder if you intervened by selling chf/jpy there would be some sort of financial logic loop explosion. 
e) Make all foreign deposits in Swiss institutions junior to locals.

If you are a Eurogroup member do you - 

a) Send a large hamper of Italian luxury goods to Abe with a bouquet and thank-you note.
b) Slap yourself on the back and issue press statements linking periphery rallies to confidence in your policies. 
c) Say the rally is a template to recovery, but Japan is not a template, neither is Cyprus (but bank reforms are) HOWEVER - you may use any of these as templates as mercilessly as hip hop artists use 70s funk bass lines.
d) Ask the Troika for a report on Japan and eye their haircuttable deposit base with envy.
e) Ask Germany. 

If you are the Bundeathstar do you -

a) Follow the master plan ignoring all other external influences. 
b) There is no plan b. 

If you are a European Utility with structural demand decline but with a sudden source of cheap Japanese funding do you -

a) Delever, take it like a mensch and show some regard for shareholder returns.
b) Go bananas building wind farms and other renewables on the cheap.
c) Help the Saudis build nuclear facilities. I mean, what possibly could go wrong?

If you are a Japanese REIT now valued at a 3.5% cap rate do you -

a) Build more condos and sell them to..err..... your declining population. 
b) Build more condos and lobby for immigration in order to have customers. 
c) Screw it, buy a bunch of assets in Brazil, Australia and anywhere else with vaguely positive carry.

If you are an Australian miner staring at what Japan has done to AUD/USD do you - 

a) Cry to the RBA and make a fuss. 
b) Lie on your back while your creditors have their way with you and think of England which long ago gave up inflation targeting.
c) Try not think about the topical debate about Thatcher and the history of the UK mining industry. 
d). Mortgage your jet skis and V8s.

If you were a struggling Greek Region facing all the grim reality of uber-austerity do you -

a) Knuckle down and get the olive presses going again, Japan and its effects are just too far away from the daily struggle.
b) Pray for a miracle involving finding a huge deposit of Gold under your feet which will transform your lives. 
c) Have all your prayers answered and find a huge deposit of Gold under your feet but then argue with your neighbours to the extent that no one ever digs it up and you lose all your friends. (for clue click here)

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

UK Model for Japanese Inflation.

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If Japan is serious about wanting inflation then instead of flooding money into the global pool they should just turn to the UK and announce that they will soon - 

Have UK energy companies running their utilities. 
Have UK insurers insuring their cars. 
Have UK government price tobacco.
Have any UK train company running their public transport.
Have UK's "PC World" fix their computers.
Have UK main dealers fix their cars.
Have UK local authorities run their car parks.
Have UK motorway service stations provide all fuel. 
Have their children educated at English private schools.
Have all online billing done by Ryanair. 
Have UK "payday loans" run their bank lending.
Have EasyJet supply all preprepared foods
Have UK Farmers' Markets supply all fresh food.
And then make everything organic.

 That should scare the hell out of the population with respect to inflation expectations. It's worked wonders in the UK. Just a shame about no growth.

If they do need to go further then perhaps-

Have USA run their fighter jet programs.
Have France run fiscal policy. 
Have Singapore tax their cars and price the beer.
Have Norway provide their holidays 
Have Switzerland run their McDonalds.
Have Courchevel run their ski resorts.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Japanese Laughing Gas

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Wandering into the Accident and Emergency department of Financial Hospital, Globesville, US data took a seat next to European Growth, who shuffled up closer to European Politics to make room. Australian mining looked on mournfully from the other side of the room nursing a broken bid. The room was full and the staff looked worried. 

The US had been on QE antibiotics for years and the doctors were worried it might have caught a resistant strain of slowdown. It  looked as though its Seasonal Affected Disorder was coming back too. 

European Growth had looked like it was recovering from its savage mugging but, despite the countless sticking plasters its brother Politics had applied, it was bleeding again. 

European Politics had been in counselling for 3 years for its multi-personality disorder, yet was still trying to kill itself at every opportunity. Its job as a party balloon twister (take a straight Maastricht treaty and with a few twists .. like this and...Voila!! It's a pig's ear!) had also left it with chronic arthritic joints. 

Australia had been at its own party and was intoxicated when it slipped on its own hubris and broke its main export market. 

UK, having blown its inheritance on an addiction to foreign imports and lavish spending, sat shivering in the corner. The methadone of low rates and QE was doing little to return it to health. 

Germany was suffering from "Munchausen by Proxy", convinced that everyone else was ill and in need of a dose of their German cure. It was having to be restrained by the guards, but its protests were upsetting the Peripheral family huddled in the corner waiting for their repeat prescriptions. 

The relatives did their best to soothe the patients but there was only so much the Far East could do. 

Dr Ben was exhausted after a full night on call and his drug cabinet was seriously depleted. Dr Aghi had taken over and tried to order more pharmaceuticals but had been blocked as they weren't yet approved for European use. Things were looking dire and the markets were fearing the worst. 

But then the doors burst open and in flew Dr Abe, dressed in a magnificent golden coat!  "I have a plan!" he screamed maniacally. "What's your plan doc?" cried the others. "THIS .." and with that he opened all the taps to all the Nitrous Oxide cylinders in the department. The intoxicating vapours of the laughing gas  swiftly filled the whole building and were soon working a wonderful magic. The Peripheral family were the first to giggle and were back on their feet. Seeing this and realising what was happing, European Politics started to relax and burst into laughter and even made friends with its alter egos. European growth was soon to follow and was on its feet cranking up the volume of   "Remember Me" on the Tannoy.

 Abe's laughing gas and the beat soon had everyone up and partying. The US had a big smile on its face and was dancing with the Far East relatives who themselves were so happy they were opening their wallets and throwing money around instead of saving. Australia had found the surgical spirit in the cupboard and was glugging it down telling everyone who would listen how great it was and even the UK had a grin on its face as it swigged on a bottle of secondary effects.

Only Germany sat miserably in the corner behind the gas mask it had swiftly donned to prevent it from inhaling the narcotics it so abhorred. 

The staff watched in awe as Dr Abe led the party like the Pied Piper out of the hospital and into the night. But as the doors swung closed and the sound of revelry diminished into the distance, Dr Aghi shook his head and let out a resigned sigh to Dr Ben...

"They'll be back"

Sunday, April 7, 2013

TMM Translate the Euro Commission Statement on Portugal

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Team Macro Man translate the Statement by the European Commission on Portugal
As usual the original is in italics.

 Brussels, 7th April 2013

The European Commission welcomes that, following the decision of the Portuguese Constitutional Court on the 2013 state budget, the Portuguese Government has confirmed its commitment to the adjustment programme, including its fiscal targets and timeline. Any departure from the programme's objectives, or their re-negotiation, would in fact neutralise the efforts already made and achieved by the Portuguese citizens, namely the growing investor confidence in Portugal, and prolong the difficulties from the adjustment.

We are  totally stunned. Are they mad? Haven't they seen what we have done to Cyprus? At least their Government realise what it means. This is like stopping the antibiotics early, the infection is going to come back even stronger and kill them - and probably us.

The Commission therefore trusts that the Portuguese Government will swiftly identify the measures necessary to adapt the 2013 budget in a way that respects the revised fiscal target as requested by the Portuguese Government and supported by the Troika in the 7th review of the programme.

The Commission therefore make's it abundantly clear. Identify what went wrong, eliminate the problem and continue taking the foul medicine in the doses prescribed by Dr. Troika.

Continued and determined implementation of the programme offers the best way to restore sustainable economic growth and to improve employment opportunities in Portugal. At the same time, it is a precondition for a decision on the lengthening of the maturities of the financial assistance to Portugal, which would facilitate Portugal's return to the financial markets and the attainment of the programme's objectives. The Commission supports that such a decision be taken soon.

Continued and determined implementation of the programme is your only choice as the only other people willing to lend to you will have names like "Big Joe" and interest rates that make payday loans look like Japanese monetary policy. You have twenty seconds to comply. (See annex 1)

The Commission will continue to work constructively with the Portuguese authorities within the parameters agreed to alleviate the social consequences of the crisis.

The Commission will continue to work constructively with the Portuguese authorities and if things get tougher we will be sending aid. Namely 17,000 portions of Ikea Moose Lasagne we found going cheap (or rather "oink"). After that, any alleviation of social consequences will probably involve water-cannon.

The Commission reiterates that a strong consensus around the programme will contribute to its successful implementation. In this respect, it is essential that Portugal's key political institutions are united in their support.

If you all agree to this it will be easy. If you don't then, well, you remember "Robocop"? We once again suggest that you comply within twenty seconds.

Annex 1 - Eurogroup Plan for necessary adjustments to indebted European countries threatening to disrupt the success of the Eurozone as implemented with Mr Kinney Cyprus.

Friday, April 5, 2013

The Japanese Grand National.

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The BoJ delivered, and then some. TMM has been fairly positive on the reflation story for Yen-denominated assets all along, but even TMM is pleasantly surprised. With a unanimous vote behind an ambitious act of policy, Kuroda has at the very least pushed back any scepticism that BoJ policy will be timid.

TMM feel that there are two questions here and it may be helpful to clarify that ahead of time:

A) How will the BoJ policies affect the actual economy?
B) How will the BoJ policies affect investor perceptions, and through that, asset prices?

For A) TMM think the question could be framed as the battle between expectations and declining real demand with the expectations channel being the main channel by which the BoJ hopes to succeed. Creating base money, even lots of it, hasn't worked, as we know and a 50bp decline in 10y rates is arguably not SUCH a big deal. And now it can't fall much further.

As it's the weekend of the UK "Grand National", the most gruelling of horse races noted for its number of fatalities, perhaps we should consider the policy as the course, the Japanese economy as the horse and growth as the finish. The BoJ has chosen a course to growth that goes via "Inflation" so let's have a look at the course and fences -

1) Force inflation to rise through a decrease cost of money relative to goods which compounded by (2) an FX driven rise in imported goods costs should create within the populace (3) an expectation of inflation to continue rising and therefore (4) a propensity to spend now rather than later. Combined with a (5) negative real interest rate this will push a move from (6) saving to spending and should drive local demand and (7) increase investment domestically and so lift growth.

As per our Non-prediction number 1 at the start of the year we see this policy ultimately working and the expectations of it working yielding profits for long inflation trades this year. However the true measures of success are going to be a long way down the line and probably only visible once 5 minute macro has moved on to fight other wars.

The processes laid out in our yearly non-predictions are clear, however and here we invoke that classic Japanese "however" clause. TMM know that Japan occupies a part of the financial universe that is far enough away from the normal universe not to share the same rules of economics. Before you cry out in horror perhaps we should apply a caveat. Japan does share the same rules of economics but the cultural and demographic overlay applied to those same rules means that the paths to predicted outcomes are not as straightforward and definitely not as efficient as others we know. So where as we may expect some obvious results to occur when an inordinate amount of freshly printed money is thrown at an economy, things are different in the land of ZIRP where the culture is to save, particularly offshore, and not to spend (c.f. Western culture and media programming of today's young). If normal economics are Newtonian physics, then Japanese economics is what happens at the event horizon of a black hole.

So let's have a look at the fences.

1) The cash injections are indeed huge and as a proportion of GDP, dwarf the US actions. On this basis alone decrease in the cost of money through the huge cash injection will dilute the money/goods ratio. But global connectivity spreads the flood increasing liquidity everywhere just as the US actions did. The melting of the Greenland ice sheets means sea levels in New Zealand rise a bit. Japanese banks may be queuing outside the study of the BoJ ready to have their orders to lend spelled out to them, but TMM wonder how much of it will ultimately remain domestic as the real demand for credit is in the West "Roll up, get your cheap funding here", rather than within a domestic culture that saves rather than borrows. The flow out of yen to achieve this moves the affect to FX (2). We are already seeing the liquidity tsunami with Japanese lifers hoovering European bonds at the expense of JGBs. Check France / Japan 10 year spreads today. (Note - remind Eurogroup to write thank you letter)

2) FX driven inflation tends to be a one off shock, unless you can get your currency to crawl lower but then the incremental moves are just smaller. It's all good, but do it too much and things start getting bad quickly, either due to a lack of investor confidence or trade partners setting up tariffs. FX driven inflation can be seen as the wrong type of inflation if it doesn't drive wage demands higher but locally stifles purchasing power.

3) Expectations of inflation rising will most probably first be seen through the FX function, which as we said could be transitory (unless this goes Weimar). So once the FX starter motor of inflation expectation is done a continued domestically driven inflation has to take over. As with the west this will have to be associated with wage inflation which we know can be extremely stubborn and culturally even more difficult to kick off in Japan.

4) Propensity to spend now rather than later. If, as we gather, the BoJ is hoping to increase inflation in the service sector we wonder how increases in inflation expectations will increase demand, as most services are not hoardable. A consumer who anticipates the cost of haircuts going up cannot go and get his hair cut 20 times now in order not to have any later. The same applies for most of the service industries that we can think of. Entertainment, accountants, lawyers, medical services, transport, maintenance - it's all time spaced. So what do you do if you are a consumer who thinks inflation is going to go up. You don't buy tech as that depreciates faster than jpy can. Once you have bought a car a year early, and the furniture you were putting off, maybe had a holiday, there is little else apart from putting on financial hedges. Property? Japan considers property as a depreciating asset and "An unusual feature of Japanese housing is that houses are presumed to have a limited lifespan, and are generally torn down and rebuilt after a few decades, generally twenty years for wooden buildings and thirty years for concrete buildings" and is taxed as such. However this could imply that the price of the land that they are built on rises.

5) Real rates are very important to the investor as a measure against returns, but TMM would suggest that to the man on the street the cost of a loan on something he isn't going to sell again (so won't consider for asset growth - see furniture, household stuff) is the cost of loan against how much more he thinks he will earn in the future. Wage inflation rather than CPI. So if wage inflation stays flat (as it has in the UK) then his real interest rate will not be negative. This is where the investor, who is always looking at resale value is very different to the consumer, who as a "consumer" by definition won't have anything left to sell on.

6) And where do they save? Overseas where the yields are and you are hedged against the expected FX driven inflation. BoJ policy change does not remove the incentive for Mrs Watanabe to borrow locally and buy Aussie bonds. It may even increase it.

7) Domestic investment will react to FX moves as wage costs become more competitive. We see no problems with this last fence. In fact once this occurs the finish line of growth is clearly insight. We just have to hope that all the other fences have already been cleared.

We will not know the result of this race for a few years but market punters are piling in to the bookies backing their horses .

So where is the money is going? Or our question B)

Looking ahead, TMM reckons that the BoJ is probably done for a few months, as it watches to see the results of its announcement today. The next step for the markets is likely to be dependent on the evolution of retail inflation expectations. This will all take time to properly assess, but in the meantime, there is little (at least domestically) that stands in the way of a continuation of recent trends.

With respect to the Nikkei, it's a bit like 1999 internet stocks, to the point that we could say that stock prices are showing stronger inflation expectations that anything else. But this is from the investment community, not the man on the street. TMM also have their money on Nikkei but not at these prices. We would like to see the 5 minute macro crowd get bored, get washed out and then join for wave two. We are acutely aware that were it not for the BoJ action equity markets would be on an even clearer downward move.

FX - We are also of the opinion that jpy has to depreciate. Either through first round liquidity transfers (as seen above) or second round inflation rallies (if they get them) moving faster than growth pushing real yields even lower.

JGBs - "The Battle of Kyle Bass". The huge JGB purchase program from the BoJ will see leakage as domestic JGB holders diversify for yield and currency fears. But this probably leaves a curve trade in play, short the short end for rate differentials (European spreads) against long the longer end for continued government QE purchases and as it becomes more apparent that this is a long race and that policy will not have the swift response that some are trading on.

In summary, the BoJ may have muddled causality and correlation and mistakenly picked inflation as the waypoint on its GPS route to growth. Its problems are demographic and a shorter route to growth, rather than the monetary response, may be the UK "Gordon Brown" response. Encourage immigration to rebalance both the demographic imbalances and maybe even some cultural ones.

However the monetary race has begun and it is a tough course.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

One over Zero and Decoupling

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Europe woes have not gone away and though it feels as though the market's ADHD has already confined Cyprus to the toy box, TMM still see it as a jack-in-the-box. Lid down for the moment but there is a nasty clown about to bounce out again. S"EU"prise!!!

Yesterday's Euro  PMIs weren't a great shock but are confirmation that Europe is suffering from both of its perennial problems at once, politics and economics. In the past when we have seen economic crises the political will has held firm. Perceived breaks in the unity of policy have only tended to shine through when the economics were supportive enough to allow luxurious room for "debate". But now we appear to have greater policy split than ever occurring as the economic outlook is getting worse. TMM still vote with their P/L on Europe and call the zone lower.

Meanwhile the US markets are doing OK leading to calls that US has DECOUPLED from Europe, but the US is playing a two speed game. We note that US earnings are diverging depending upon their US vs ex US exposures. CAT and Fedex in the naughty corner, homebuilders, telcos and other domestic names are leading the charge. However the general tone is that US recovery, spurred on by its new found cheap energy and free money, is the story of the decade and to be long anything US vs the rest of the world, especially Europe, is the best trade in town. So local has DECOUPLED from international.   

Cheap money is changing many equations as one divided by zero gives an answer that is hard to use. Though we have long understood that if you fund at zero then any dividend paying equity can be attractive, the price can be anything you like for div/price to still be greater than zero. We have heard this quoted today re P/E "should be at 30".  but why stop there? It could be anywhere, pick a number.   

This has seen an argument flourish that equities can go up  based on them having a yield and be damned with the price risk. Which is interesting, because it is another example of DECOUPLING. This time from the bond markets where the reverse logic is being applied. You can't possibly buy bonds because despite their yield, the price is "obviously" going to dump.   

This leads on to another current belief, that Emerging Market Debt is a great buy as the only risk is if US treasury yields rise and you believe in the link. But EMD investors are being told that the asset class has DECOUPLED  from Treasuries and are a buy on their own merits of better debt dynamics, growth and  inflation. 

We hear the cry of decoupling everywhere. The usually steady path of AUS$ tracking the Aud mining index has DECOUPLED, Cyprus is assumed to have effectively DECOUPLED from Europe (Scotland could soon be DECOUPLING from the UK)  and we could say that Bitcoin has DECOUPLED from the USD. US data is even DECOUPLING with itself with this week seeing a sudden slew of softer numbers, but that's ok, it's only decoupled. It's getting to the point where decoupling arguments are being used to sell any old rubbish. 

Whilst we understand the effect zero has on some investment equations and whilst we also understand that the Japanese may be about do an "Exxon Valdez" with global liquidity, TMM have a simple decoupling rule-

"Decoupling works really well right up until the point it doesn't, which is just after the point everyone says it does".

And that would appear to be right now.

 
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