BFTP: How to Become a Trillionaire And Other Thoughts

BTFP:  Blast From The Past

Time to repost our piece from January 2017, almost two weeks before the Trump administration took power.

We hit the big topics back then which are now making headlines today:  1)  Modern Monetary Theory;  2)  How Trump’s fiscal policy will lead to larger trade deficits, regardless of his “trade deals”;  and 3) Our call on spikey interest rates, which though gained some traction by breaking out in September 2018, which took the stock market down, but has yet to fully play out.  Give it some more time.

New Charts

Here are some up-to-date charts, which confirm some of our predictions back in January 2017.

Absolutely stunning to see such large budget deficits as far as the eye can see with the actual and projected unemployment rate under 5 percent. What kind of budget deficit beast will we run if we have a recession?  Will demand for Treasury securities be there to finance, say, a $2 trillion deficit?

 

Deficits and Unemployment

Source:   Forbes

 

Trade Deficit

Source:  Forbes

Another Macro Divergence 

The Exploding Twin Deficits Will Eventually Hit Stocks

TwinDefs_S&P500

Source:  Otavio (Tavi) Costa  @TaviCosta

Also see the recent Forbes article, Trump’s Twin Deficits Are Exploding.

Nobody cares until it they think it matters — and it will, folks.

 

How to Become a Trillionaire and Other Thoughts

Grab one of these:

zimbabwe_jan7

Careful what you wish for central bankers and fiscal policy makers.  Though we don’t see signs of “rollover risk” in any of the G5 or G20, it’s all about confidence and you know what Joe said about confidence:

Confidence is a very fragile thing.  – Joe Montana

.

The World Economic Forum reports this about Zimbabwe’s ghost of hyperinflation past,

Zimbabwe was once so gripped by hyperinflation that the central bank could no longer afford paper on which to print practically worthless trillion-dollar notes. 

The government reported in July 2008 that Zimbabwe was experiencing inflation of 231 million percent (231,000,000%). However, the Libertarian think tank, the Cato Institute, believes that the real inflation rate was 89.7 sextillion percent or 89,700,000,000,000,000,000,000%.

It is interesting to note that the country is now grappling with the opposite problem.

Like Britain, Japan, the US and other nations dealing with the consequences of weak demand and cheap oil, Zimbabwe is threatened more by the prospect of falling prices. But that doesn’t mean its people are ready to trust that hyperinflation won’t happen again.

This is what happens when you are not a reserve currency — i.e., there is global demand for and a financial incentive to hold your currency  — and markets have lost confidence in your central bank and central government.   That, in our opinion, is the next major systemic macro swan:  the loss of confidence in a G5 central bank and government.  Not a black swan as it is a known unknown rather than an unknowable unknown.

We still have ongoing debates with our good friends from the modern monetary theory (MMT)  about whether a major sovereign government can default if they have an independent central bank.   Yes, they can!

We had the same debate with our Argentine friends several years ago as to whether their government would or could devalue their currency when it was on an effective currency board.  Yes, they did!  And defaulted to boot.

Just as Russia chose to default on its GKOs (short-term ruble denominated treasury bills) in 1998 with an independent central bank,  the same can happen to a G5 country as we approach the upper bound of debt limits and the lower for longer interest rate meme seems to be sunseting in a post-Trump world.

Debt to GDP Ratios_Jan7.png

When a highly indebted sovereign crosses the tipping point — and nobody knows where the tipping point is —  when the markets lose confidence in its ability to repay or rollover debt coming due and the window shuts on refinancing,  they face three choices:

1)  bailout – easy for a small country,  such as Greece,  but Italy or Japan are too big to bail;   2) hyperinflate – print money to pay maturing debt obligations and finance budget deficits.  An aside:  the Bulgarian central bank did this in 1996 resulting in hyperinflation, which peaked at a monthly inflation rate of 242%  in February 1997.   I was in the Bulgarian central bank in the fall of 1996, when a senior official looked me in the eye and said, [Gregor],  we will not let the government default on its treasury securities.”  I knew what was to come; and 3)  default and restructure.

Like the Russians,  the decision to hyperinflate, default, or go begging to the IMF, is a political one.  Russia saw that a high percentage of holders of its local currency debt was held by foreigners,  hedge funds such as David Tepper.

Tepper says that losing 29% ($80 million) on Russia when Russia defaulted after an IMF deal “the biggest screw-up in his career”.  – Ivanhoff Capital

The Russians made a political choice to default and inflict the pain on foreigners rather their domestic population through hyperinflation.   What was interesting is Russia continued to pay their dollar-denominated euro bonds, which had a relatively low debt service burden compared to the maturing GKOs.  The Russian government effectively carved out and gave implicit seniority to a specific component of their debt structure.  Totally contrary to what MMT predicts will happen, i.e.,  print money to pay the local debt and default on the hard currency external debt.

The major industrialized countries have gotten away with massive money printing and central bank financing not only of their sovereign governments but even some private corporations as well.

central-bank-bond-holdings_jan7

Good things don’t last forever.

As interest rates rise and are normalized,  highly indebted countries could enter a vicious cycle on the fiscal side,

Our current debt may be manageable at a time of unprecedentedly low interest rates. But if we let our debt grow, and interest rates normalize, the interest burden alone would choke our budget and squeeze out other essential spending. There would be no room for the infrastructure programs and the defense rebuilding that today have wide support.

It’s not just federal spending that would be squeezed. The projected rise in federal deficits would compete for funds in our capital markets and far outrun the private sector’s capacity to save, to finance industry and home purchases, and to invest abroad.

Instead, we’d be dependent on foreign investors’ acquiring most of our debt — making the government dependent on the “kindness of strangers” who may not be so kind as the I.O.U.s mount up.  –

We think foreigners will not be that “kind” to the U.S. in the new hardball world of  Trumplandia as the risk of trade wars and deglobalization increases.  Run, don’t walk, to read Martin Wolf’s latest,  The long and painful journey to world disorder.

Furthermore, given the Trump fiscal policy, which will significantly reduce net public savings and is highly dependent on big increases in private investment and consumption for growth, further reducing net private savings,  the U.S. current account balance, by definition, will deteriorate markedly over the next several years.   Thus, there will be yuuuuge competition for the world’s foreign savings to finance the larger U.S. current account deficits.  In this world, if realized, real interest rates will head north in a hurry.

Remember the National Accounting Identity,

(S-I) + (T-G) = (X-M)

 (S-I) is the ‘private savings balance’ or the difference between private sector savings (S) and investment (I); (T-G) is the ‘government balance’ or the difference between tax receipts (T) and all government expenditure (G); (X-M) is the difference between exports (X) and imports (M) and is usually called the simple ‘current account balance’.  –

As the tide of easy money recedes,  we have a queasy feeling we’ll be seeing a lot of schlong over the next few years as the markets find out who has been swimming naked.

And, always, keep this in mind:

“In economics, things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.” – Rudiger Dornbusch

Fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy night.    Stay tuned!

 

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On This Day In History – March 11

Birthdays

  • 1596 Isaac Elsevier, book publisher
  • 1870 Louis Bachelier, French mathematician (d. 1946)

TIH_Bachelier_Mar11

  • 1903 Dorothy Schiff, American owner and publisher (NY Post), born in NYC, New York (d. 1989)
  • 1903 James Franklin Hyde, American inventor who created silica, born in Solvay, New York (d. 1999)
  • 1916 Harold Wilson, British Prime Minister (Labour: 1964-70, 1974-76), born in Huddersfield, England (d. 1995)
  • 1931 Rupert Murdoch, Australian-born American media mogul (NY Post, News of the World, FOX-TV), born in Melbourne, Victoria

Events

TIH_Goths_Rome_Mar11

  • 1744 English auction house Sotheby’s holds its first-ever auction (of books) in London
  • 1789 Benjamin Banneker and Pierre Charles L’Enfant begin to lay out Washington, D.C.
  • 1862 Abraham Lincoln removes George McClellen as general-in-chief

TIH_Mar11_Lincoln

  • 1892 1st public basketball game (Springfield, Massachusetts)
  • 1917 British forces occupy Baghdad, the capital of Mesopotamia, after Turkish forces evacuated
  • 1918 Moscow becomes capital of revolutionary Russia
  • 1935 Hermann Goering officially creates the Luftwaffe (German Air Force)
  • 1954 US Army charges Senator Joseph McCarthy used undue pressure tactics
  • 1966 Military coup led by Indonesian General Suharto breaks out
  • 1967 Pink Floyd releases 1st single “Arnold Layne”
  • 1971 Jim Morrison leaves for Paris to reorient himself emotionally and creatively and to avoid the jail sentence given to him in Miami. He will never return to the US
  • 1985 Mikhail Gorbachev replaces Konstantin Chernenko as Soviet leader

TIH_Mar11_Gorby

  • 1988 British pound note ceases to be legal tender, replaced by one pound coin
  • 1997 Beatle Paul McCartney knighted by Queen Elizabeth II
  • 2006 Michelle Bachelet is inaugurated as the first female president of Chile
  • 2011 9.0 magnitude earthquake strikes 130 km (80 miles) east of Sendai, Japan, triggering a tsunami killing thousands of people and causing the second worst nuclear accident in history
  • 2018 China’s National People’s Congress approves removal of term limits for a leader, will allow Xi Jinping presidency for life 
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Week In Review – March 8

Summary

  • Big rally in DM bond markets as ECB throws in the towel and sees gloom ahead and the very weak nonfarm payroll number on Friday
  • U.S. credit gave some back last week
  • Dixie ready to breakout
  • EM FX hit again, led by Latin majors
  • Most equity markets down moderately with the NIKKEI leading, down 2.67 percent
  • Russell down 4.26 percent.  Watch this schpace
  • Grains, led by Wheat continue to get crushed.  Market seems to be anticipating big trade conflict coming

Commentary:   Once again, Mr. Market sets a huge bull trap after last week’s close above the key level of 2800 and rejected the rally at 2816.88 just 6 bps below the high of the recent bear market.   The S&P closed the week below its 200-day moving average with the key level to the downside is now 2713.88.  The 200-day at 2750 needs to be reclaimed quickly.

Trade will be front and center as the rumors that a deal is now not so near even as POTUS tweets a big spike in the stock market coming with a good deal.  Reports now are that Xi canceling plans for his visit to Mar-a-Lago at the end of March as he is worried Trump may walk just as in Vietnam with Kim Jung-un.   Our “Mad King” risk asserting itself.   There is no plan, no strategy,  no Art of the Deal.  This whole exercise is turning into a giant farce.

What we are watching this week. The UK Brexit vote set for Tuesday, if it fails, follow-up votes on Wednesday and Thursday.   Looking to buy cable weakness unless the no deal vote passes on Wednesday, which is highly unlikely.  The Thursday vote will be to delay the March 29 Brexit, increasing the probability of a second reffie.

The first tranche of the US budget will be released Monday.  Expect deep cuts programmed for non-defense spending, which will face yuuge oppo from the Dems.  The budget is going nowhere.

Top energy executives meet in Houston for CERAWeek for their annual five-day conference, which could provide some insight for the sector in the coming year.

Bank of Japan to maintain its short-term interest rate target at minus 0.1 per cent and 10-year bond yield around zero percent at the end of its two-day monetary meeting on Friday.

Economic data:  German industrial production and trade balance figures for January on Monday, looking for the latest sign of a slowdown in Europe’s biggest economy.  US  producer price indices for February on Tuesday and industrial production on Friday.   China’s industrial production on Thursday.

Happy hunting, folks.

 

S&P

Inflation Is Bad For All Assets

WIR_Chart_1_Bond

 

Week_2019_ETFs

Week_Table

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The Politics of Semantics

Semantics

Are you surprised in our “post-truth” world the 2020 Presidential election is going to be framed by one word,  “Socialism?”

What exactly is socialism?

Bernie Sanders likes to call himself a democratic socialist but immediately identifies with the Scandinavian countries,

“When Bernie is asked, ‘Are you a socialist?’ he doesn’t deny it, and he immediately talks about Scandinavia. He uses them interchangeably. But if you look at his history, he knows the distinction,” Schwartz said.  – Politifact

Has Bernie Mislabeled Himself? 

Yet Bret Stephens, the conservative New York Times columnist, in his Friday column had this little gem,

…Nordic countries like Denmark (often mislabeled “socialist”)  – Bret Stephens, March 8th

But then Stephens goes on to say this in the very same article,

Few support the socialist agenda of Senator Bernie Sanders – Bret Stephens, March 8th

So what is Bernie?  A Nordic capitalist or a Nordic socialist?

Guess your choice depends on your politics, no?   Stephens is either ignorant or logically inconsistent or…   you decide.

I had a political science professor, a conservative if you can believe it,  who used the term, “semantic fascism.”  I sense we are going to see a lot of it — on both sides — as the presidential campaign heats up.

Why, Lord, can’t we just stick to the issues?

The Rise Of Market Socialism

While we are on a roll let us rant against the rise of  “market socialism,” which we think is one of the worst of its kind.    Using the government to nationalize or socialize the losses and privatize the profits of the private sector is a genuine disgrace.   This was on full display during the 2008-09 financial crisis,  much of which was a “necessary evil” to save the system from going down, but also significantly contributed to the 2016 political Black Swan.

Now, whenever the S&P500 falls, say, 5 percent the new “Market Socialists,”  led by POTUS, Jim Cramer, and the clowns paraded on CNBC scream for a Fed bailout.   The use of monetary policy to support and drive up asset values is a major factor in the country’s growing wealth disparity and why much of the younger generation has been priced out of the housing market.  The political blowback is going to be yuuuge when this is all done.

A more dangerous result, however, is that the stock market may have morphed into the economy.  That is the economy no longer drives the stock market but the stock market drives the economy.  The stock market is the economy.  Triple yikes!

When Markets Fail

Don’t get us wrong.  We are all about markets here at Global Macro Monitor.  We are free traders and believe prices are the best mechanism to allocate resources.  We also recognize markets often fail and government has a role to play in the economy.

It’s just we don’t believe the government should always run to intervene when markets fall.

Moreover, we are keenly aware the world is not perfect, nor black and white, we really don’t have truly free markets, that public policy is often held hostage to the highest bidder, and crony capitalism is ubiquitous and increasing.   We have a utilitarian bent and pragmatic angle on all things economic and are not held hostage by any certain ideology. If helping workers on a meaningful scale who have been hurt by free trade helps save the world trading system, for example, by all means, let’s get it freaking done!

The only policy that left- and right-wing populists can agree on to address economic decline is trade protectionism, which will make the world poorer – Raghuram Rajan

Energy Of the New Members

Nevertheless, we are truly enjoying watching the energy of the young members of Congress.  And especially how some in the middle and right get so worked up about their “aspirational overreach.”

Relax.  Though we do believe the country is moving left but not as far as the alarmists would have you to believe.

And that’s the point, isn’t it?  The new Congress reflects where the country is moving and that AOC is not the voice of all of the new members.

The Clash Of Generations

We also understand the righteous anger and empathize with these young members of Congress.  The hand they have been dealt by the older baby boomers is atrocious:  large public debts, underfunded pensions, shrinking job opportunities, skyrocketing college tuition, and a shitload of carbon in the air, which our futilitarian friends argue is beyond the tipping point.   We have been writing about this coming “clash of generations” for years.

Give them time.  They will find their way.  America’s dominant ideology has always been not to have one, but one of pragmatism.  We don’t think that has been entirely lost.

My father, or was it, Churchill, once said,  “if you are not a socialist [that term again!] at 25-years old,  you are hard-hearted. If you are socialist at 45-years, you are hard-headed.

At the end of the day, taxes are most likely going higher, especially on the one percenters, and social spending is going higher over the next several years.  Tomorrow’s budget release aside.  It is the preference of the younger  body politic   and why the Republicans found it impossible to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, their top 2016 campaign promise,  even as they controlled all three Houses of the legislative and executive branches of the federal government.

The public debt is also going much higher, until, that is, there is some sort of market disruption, which is inevitable as we experienced in Q4 2018 where the stock markets cannot tolerate higher interest rates.

I recently heard a quote, can’t recall where and who it was attributed to, which nicely sums up our current debate: “if you want to live like the Swedes, you will be taxed like the Swedes.”   Kind of a takedown of sorts of our brothers and sisters of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), which is experiencing its own smackdown and yuuge pushback from Larry Summers to Larry Fink.

The New Socialist Realism

Let’s conclude with an interesting but related aside.

I snapped this picture tonight of a mural on the side of a BJs Restaurant.  For those who have studied socialist realism art,  the mural looks like it could have come right out of Stalin’s Soviet Union or Mao’s China.   Nice blend of capitalism and socialism or socialist [that word of again!] culture,  don’t you think?

BJs

 

Collective Farm

The post is dedicated to my good friend JP.

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The Haines Bottom – March 9, 2009

Man, I miss that guy…

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Sector ETF Performance – March 8

ETF_Day

ETF_Week

ETF_Month

ETF_YTD

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Global Risk Monitor – March 8

RM_2

RM_2

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Meet The Mets

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Ten Plus Great Weekend Reads – March 8

 

WIR_Chart_1_Mar8

  • Chinese stocks tumble as ECB and China data spark concerns – FT
  • Why bulls on Wall Street are becoming an endangered species – FT
  • Here’s why recent stock gains could be just a bear-market rally – MarketWatch
  • Man credited with calling the 2008 crisis says the next 20 years in the stock market will ‘break a lot of hearts’ – MarketWatch
  • Death of Bond Volatility Has Pimco Fearing for Europe’s Future – Bloomberg
  • China’s trading day is starting to influence global markets – Economist
  • Why Stock Investors Shouldn’t Watch Business TV – Fortune
  • Hiring Growth Slowed in February as Employers Struggled to Find Workers – WSJ

 

WER_Chart_4

  • How Hot Is Your City’s Job Market? – WSJ
  • Tech Is Splitting the U.S. Work Force in Two – NY Times
  • Prices of prime properties around the world are falling – Economist
  • Global Economy Slows, Pushing Europe’s Central Bank to Make a Surprise Move – NY Times
  • Pesos to the people AMLO splashes the cash in his first 100 days – Economist
  • Venezuela’s long and winding road to debt restructuring – FT Alphaville

 

Trade_deficit

 

  • ‘We need it now’: U.S. farm country pins hopes on China trade deal – Reuters
  • Trump’s Imperial Overreach on Trade – Project Syndicate
  • ECB to Launch New Stimulus in Major Policy Reversal – WSJ
  • The Problem With Xi’s China Model – Foreign Affairs

 

WIR_Chart_2_Mar8

  • Five Things We Learned About China’s Economy at Xi’s Policy Summit – Bloomberg

Bonus

  • Bloomberg Billionaires Index: The world’s 500 richest people – Bloomberg
  • The Richest Woman In The World – Forbes
  • Kylie Jenner, social media’s first billionaire youth star – FT
  • Carl Icahn’s Comeback: The Raider Rebounds After A Tough Stretch – Forbes
  • After Hedge Funds’ Mediocre Year, Investors Still Want More – Institutional Investor
  • Leaving Wall Street Behind: Five Former Traders On Starting Over – Forbes
  • 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2019 – MIT Tech Review
  • Whoever Predicts the Future Will Win the AI Arms Race – Foreign Policy
  • The Stigma of Choosing Trade School Over College – Atlantic
  • Why is the far right obsessed with gold? – New Statesman
  • The New Deal Wasn’t What You Think – Atlantic
  • The Top 25 Songs That Matter Right Now – NY Times Magazine
  • Stop asking ‘how are you?’ Harvard researchers say this is what successful people do when making small talk – CNBC
  • Remembering Dan Jenkins, the Most Influential Sportswriter Ever – Sports Illustrated

 

PS. In Theory: The Rise of Monopsony

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On This Day In History – March 8

Birthdays

  • 1702 Anne Bonny, Irish pirate (date of birth is approximate), born in Kinsale, Ireland (d. 1782)
  • 1841 Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr, US 59th Supreme Court justice (1902-32), born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1935)

TIH_OWH_Mar8

  • 1936 Gabor Szabo (any relation to the great Wall Streeter, Andy Szabo?), Hungarian jazz guitarist (Perfect Circle)

Trade_deficit_2

  • 1939 Jim Bouton, pitcher (NY Yankees)/author (Ball Four), born in Newark, New Jersey

Events

TIH_Henry8_Mar8

  • 1531 Henry VIII recognized as supreme head of Church in England by the Convocation of Canterbury
  • 1702 Queen Anne becomes Queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland upon the death of King William III
  • 1817 The New York Stock Exchange is founded

TIH_NYSE_Mar8

  • 1838 US mint in New Orleans begins operation (producing dimes)
  • 1854 US Commodore Matthew C. Perry‘s second trip to Japan
  • 1884 Susan B. Anthony addresses U.S. House Judiciary Committee arguing for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution granting women the right to vote, 16 years after legislators 1st introduced a federal women’s suffrage amendment.
  • 1913 Internal Revenue Service begins to levy & collect income taxes

TIH_IRS_Mar8

  • 1930 Babe Ruth signs a 2-year contract for $160,000 with NY Yankee GM Ed Barrow, wrongly predicts “No one will ever be paid more than Ruth”
  • 1934 Edwin Hubble photo shows as many galaxies as Milky Way has stars
  • 1962 Beatles, with Pete Best, TV debut (perform “Dream Baby” on BBC)
  • 1971 Joe Frazier ends Muhammad Ali‘s 31-fight winning streak at Madison Square Garden, NYC; retains heavyweight boxing title by unanimous points decision over 15 rounds in “Fight of the Century”
  • 2013 North Korea terminates all peace pacts with South Korea
  • 2018 US President Trump authorizes tariffs on steel and aluminum, excluding Canada and Mexico

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