MARKET FLASH:

"It seems the donkey is laughing, but he instead is braying (l'asino sembra ridere ma in realtà raglia)": si veda sotto "1927-1933: Pompous Prognosticators" per avere la conferma che la storia non si ripete ma fà la rima.


mercoledì 13 giugno 2018

"No One's Ready For The ECB" - The Eurozone's Coming Debt Crisis

The European Central bank has signaled the end of its asset purchase program and a possible rate hike before 2019. After more than 2 trillion euro of purchases and zero interest rate policy, it is overdue.

The massive quantitative easing program has generated very significant imbalances and the risks outweigh the questionable benefits.

The balance sheet of the ECB is now more than 40% of the Eurozone GDP.

The governments of the Eurozone, however, have not prepared themselves at all for the end of stimuli.

Rather the contrary.

The Eurozone states often claim that deficits have been reduced and risks contained. However, closer scrutiny shows that the bulk of deficit reductions came from lower cost of debt. Eurozone government spending has barely fallen, despite lower unemployment and rising tax revenues. Structural deficits remain stubborn, and in some cases, unchanged from 2013 levels.

The 19 eurozone countries have collectively saved 1.15 trillion euros in interest payments since 2008 due to ECB rate cuts and monetary policy interventions, according to Handelsblatt. A reduction in costs against the losses of pensioners and savers.

However, that illusion of savings and budget stability can rapidly disappear as most Eurozone countries face massive maturities in the 2018-2020 period and wasted precious years of quantitative easing without implementing strong structural reforms. Tax wedge rose for families and SMEs, while current spending by governments barely fell, competitiveness remained poor and a massive one trillion euro in non-performing loans raised doubts about the health of the European financial system.

The main eurozone economies face more than 2.1 trillion euro in maturities between 2018 and 2021. This, added to lower tax revenues due to the slowdown and rising spending from populist demands creates an enormous risk of a large debt crisis that no central bank will be able to contain. Absent of structural reforms, the eurozone faces a Japan-style stagnation or a debt crisis.

The ECB warned in 2014 that "many euro area countries did not take advantage of the favorable economic conditions prior to the crisis to build up a fiscal buffer for future downturns". This is happening again, but much worse, as average debt to GDP has soared to almost 90% and government spending to GDP also remains above 40% with zero interest rates and massive asset purchases. The reality is that the ECB is left without tools to tackle a new crisis through money supply and rate cuts.

Where should bond yields be if the ECB was not the largest purchaser of Eurozone bonds? We do not know for sure, as there is no discernible secondary demand at these levels. At the peak of QE in the US, the Federal Reserve was never 100% of net issuances of treasuries. Today, the ECB program is more than three times the net issuances. This means we have no clue of what is the real market demand for eurozone sovereign bonds and what yields would be demanded by investors.

What we know is that yields would be massively higher. A minimum of 120 basis points above current yields would be needed to reflect the inflation expectations and bring yields closer to the curve.

Of course, the Eurozone nation would not feel the whole increase in expected yields. At the peak of the Euro crisis, Spain's average cost of debt was 3.4% or almost 300 basis points below where yields rose. But the return of yields to normalized levels will likely affect confidence as the placebo effect of QE vanishes and reality returns.

No single country in the Eurozone except Germany, maybe The Netherlands, is ready for the end of QE.

Eurozone governments have spent all the benefits of QE in higher current spending and kept structural deficits. The entire improvement in net interest expense has been squandered in higher bureaucratic spending.

Now the tide is turning. Even if the ECB decides to delay the end of QE, the reality is that sovereign yields and credit default swaps have been quietly rising. Not just due to the Italian crisis, but due to the evidence of unsolved issues coming back to the surface in Europe.

The worst part of this is that governments in Europe will likely decide to increase taxes to try to tackle rising deficits coming from the evidence of the Eurozone slowdown in lower revenues and the end of zero-interest-rate policies in expenses.

The combination of the already clear slowdown with higher tax wedges, stubbornly high spending and rising deficits and rates can be a perfect storm for Europe that will likely bring back the ghost of the crisis.

Europe decided to tackle the crisis hiding imbalances under a massive wave of liquidity and governments abandoned all reforms to bet it all on monetary policy. Now, the reality is likely to show its face abruptly. And none of the governments in Europe is ready, because they are not even aware of the extent of the problem.

Chinese Shadow Bank Lending Unexpectedly Crashes, Sending Total Credit Creation To Two-Year Low

According to most flow-tracking economists (and not their clueless, conventionally-trained peers) when one strips away  the noise, there are just two things that matter for the global economy and asset prices: central bank liquidity injections, and Chinese credit creation. This is shown in the Citi charts below.

And if indeed it is just these two variables that matter, then the world is set for a turbulent phase because while global central banks liquidity is set to reverse a decade of expansion, and enter contraction some time in Q3 as the great "liquidity supernova" begins draining liquidity for the first time since the financial crisis...

... the latest Chinese credit creation data released on Tuesday, added significantly to the risk of a "sudden global economic stop" after the PBOC reported that in May, China's broadest monetary aggregate, the Total Social Financing, just posted it smallest monthly increase since July 2016, confirming that Beijing's shadow deleveraging campaign is accelerating and gaining even more traction, even if the threat of a global deflationary spillover is rising by the day.

A quick look at the numbers reveals that there was not much of a surprise in traditional new RMB loans, which rose RMB1150bn in May, slightly below consensus RMB1200bn, growing 12.6% yoy in May.

However, it was the sharp, unexpected plunge in Total social financing growth, which attracted attention and which rose only RMB 760.8bn in May, almost half the consensus print of RMB1300bn, and sharply below April's RMB1560bn increase.

Of the main TSF components, the drop in shadow bank lending was particularly sharp:this has been the area where Beijing has been most focused in their deleveraging efforts as it's the most opaque and riskiest segment of credit. And, as the chart below show, the aggregate off balance-sheet financing posted its biggest monthly drop on record in May.

As Bloomberg's Fielding Chan noted, in contrast to the sudden collapse in shadow banking liabilities, bank loans were relatively stable, even though the expansion in outstanding credit slowed further, implying a slightly heavier drag on growth.

Indeed, the lass granular M2 reading also posted a growth slowdown, rising only 8.3% in May, unchanged from April, and below the 8.5% consensus estimate.

Commenting on the ongoing slowdown to China's credit creation, Goldman said that May money and credit data are the result of a tug of war between two forces:

  • On the one hand, the PBOC adopted a looser monetary policy stance, which provided more ample liquidity to financial institutions.
  • On the other hand, the financial regulators kept tight controls, which depressed non-RMB loan credit supply, while the recent surge in corporate defaults probably made financial institutions more cautious as well. ril.

Still, while previously Chinese credit had an marked, if delayed, impact on the economy, the relationship between monetary variables and real activity variables has become unstable over the past 2 years, as Morgan Stanley noted recently. This has been affected by a number of factors such as: stronger exports and consumption, both of which are less debt dependent than investment; rapid financial innovation in terms of payment and deposit systems; and the changing structure of credit, which has different impacts on the "real economy".

Given all these changes, Goldman notes that it's hard to know the right level that is consistent with the desired level of activity growth. The government has adopted a "tweak as you go" policy. The level of broad credit growth is likely to be viewed as being at the low end of the suitable range, and authorities may take some measures to prevent it from falling to a lower level, especially given the ongoing trade dispute is already posing downside risks to growth. Such measures could include further RRR cuts.

Alternatively, how much longer can China, and the world, keep ignoring the all-important slowdown in Chinese credit? To be sure, the economy has been surprising resilient this year, buoyed in part by solid global demand. Bloomberg's view is that growth will slow in 2H, as headwinds from credit, slowing exports, and a cooling property sector become stronger.

Meanwhile, the push to curb credit growth even as risks from trade tensions with the U.S. rise suggests strong determination to deleverage the economy.

Finally, the risk is that China hikes too far as it keeps in line with the Fed's own rate hikes: we expect that PBOC will increase its interest rate by 5bps later today, as well as tighten its reverse repo and MLF facility, after the Fed hikes by 25bps. How much higher can China afford to rise rates, and slow its economy, as it tries to prevent capital flight toward the US. We will find out as soon as the market realizes that between central banks and China, there is virtually no new liquidity creation.

Ben : The US Economy Is Going To Go Off The Cliff In 2020

It looks like Ben Bernanke is a Bridgewater client.

Recall that earlier in the May 31 "Daily Observations" letter to select clients, authored by Bridgewater co-CIO Greg Jensen, the world's biggest hedge had an ominous, if not dire appraisal of the current economic and financial situation facing the US, and concluded that "We Are Bearish On Almost All Financial Assets"

While Ray Dalio's co-Chief Investment Officer listed several specific reasons for his unprecedented bearishness, noting that "markets are already vulnerable as the Fed is pulling back liquidity and raising rates, making cash scarcer and more attractive", pointing out that "options pricing reflects little investor demand for protection against the potential for the economy to bubble over and also shows virtually no chance of deflation, which is a high likelihood in the next downturn", what really spooked Bridgewater is what happens in 2020 when the impact from the Trump stimulus peaks, and goes into reverse. This is what Jensen wrote:

"while such strong conditions would call for further Fed tightening, there's almost no further tightening priced in beyond the end of 2019. Bond yields are not priced in to rise much, implying that the yield curve will continue to flatten. This seems to imply an unsustainable set of conditions, given that government deficits will continue growing even after the peak of fiscal stimulation and the Fed is scheduled to continue unwinding is balance sheet, it is difficult to imagine attracting sufficient bond buyers with the yield curve continuing to flatten."

The result was the hedge fund's now infamous conclusion:

"We are bearish on financial assets as the US economy progresses toward the late cycle, liquidity has been removed, and the markets are pricing in a continuation of recent conditions despite the changing backdrop."

Today, none other than former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke repeated the same assessment almost verbatim in explaining his own suddenly quite dire outlook on the economy.

Bernanke, the same man who once charged a room full of bankers $250,000for the sage projection that interest rates would never normalize during his lifetime, now believes the US economy, which in May entered the second-longest period of expansion in modern history...




... is headed for a "Wile E. Coyote" moment in 2020, just in time for Trump re-election, according to Bloomberg.

Speaking at the American Enterprise Institute, Bernanke echoed Bridgewater's biggest concern about the sugar high facing the US economy for the next 18 months, saying that the stimulative impact from Trump's $1+ trillion fiscal stimulus "makes the Fed's job more difficult all around" because it's happening at a time of very low unemployment; it also means that the more supercharged the economy gets thanks to the fiscal stimulus, the greater the fall will be when the hangover hits. 

"What you are getting is a stimulus at the very wrong moment," Bernanke said Thursday during a policy discussion at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank. "The economy is already at full employment."

Stealing further from the Bridgewater note, Bernanke said that while the stimulus "is going to hit the economy in a big way this year and next year and then in 2020 Wile E. Coyote is going to go off the cliff, and it's going to look down" just when the US economy collides head on with what Bridgewater called "an unsustainable set of conditions."



The irony here is delightful: after all it was Ben Bernanke who consistently blamed Congress for not doing enough to jumpstart the economy during his time in office - a core topic of his 2015 memoir "The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a Crisis and Its Aftermath"; it is the same Bernanke who three years later is now blaming the President and Congress for doing too much. Here is the NYT on the very topic:

Congress is largely responsible for the incomplete recovery from the 2008 financial crisis, Ben S. Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman, writes in a memoir published on Monday.

Mr. Bernanke, who left the Fed in January 2014 after eight years as chairman, says the Fed's response to the crisis was bold and effective but insufficient.

"I often said that monetary policy was not a panacea — we needed Congress to do its part," he says. "After the crisis calmed, that help was not forthcoming."

And now that Congress has more than done its part, Bernanke predicts collapse in under 2 years.

The even bigger irony of course is that the real reason for the upcoming collapse has little to do with Trump whose $1 trillion stimulus is a drop in the bucket compared to the doubling of the US debt under the previous administration and the $20 trillion liquidity injection by Mr. Bernanke and his central banking peers since the financial crisis which have left the world and its capital markets in what Deutsche Bank has described as a metastable condition.

But, with a convenient scapegoat currently in the White House, the Fed - and certainly the one person who assured that the bursting of the current asset bubble will be nothing short of spectacular, Ben "subprime is contained" Bernanke, will be more than happy to place all the blame for the upcoming economic crash on who else, Donald Trump.

Said otherwise, unlike his successor Janet Yellen, who famously said after leaving office that she believes there won't be another financial crisis in her lifetime, Bernanke just predicted that the entire economy will nosedive in just two short years - far less than the 10 years of additional uninterrupted expansion recently forecast by the CBO.

Chart



The Congressional Budget Office projects that growth will slow to 1.8% in 2020; meanwhile based on recent statement, the Fed believes Trump's stimulus will cause the economy to "symmetrically" overheat and push inflation, as measured by the PCE Price Index, past the central bank's 2% target, prompting the Fed to hike rates potentially as much as 3.5%-4.0%, or the number that Bernanke said would never be reached in his lifetime.

One Bloomberg reporter pointed out the irony in Fed officials blaming the Trump tax cuts for doing too much to bolster the economy.

When POTUS was on the campaign trail he said the U.S. economy was all a big bubble being propped up by the Fed's low interest rates, and now of course the Fed is saying it's all a big bubble being propped up by the POTUS tax cuts

Bernanke was followed at the AEI discussion by former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh and current harsh Fed critic who has repeatedly, and correctly, accused the Fed of blowing what may well turn out to be the final bubble. Currently an economist at Stanford University, Warsh who was once seen as the top contender to replace Janet Yellen, said he would speak loosely from his prepared remarks and joked: "I am not going to speak as loosely as Ben did when he made the Wile E. Coyote reference and what happens to the economy in 2020." Because to the central bankers the bursting of the multi-trillion bubble they helped create and the tragic consequences it will have on the economy is just that: a joke; The only "good news" is that they will at least get to blame everything on Trump.


China Trade War Is Back: Trump To Slap Beijing With Tariffs On Friday As Negotiations Collapse


The ceasefire in the US-China trade war is over.

As Fox News reported late on Tuesday, Trump rejected Beijing's trade negotiation olive branch, saying that the proposed $80BN in agriculture purchase commitment from China was insufficient, and resetting bilateral trade talks back to square one.

In related news, Politico reports that Trump is expected to impose tariffs on Chinese goods as soon as Friday or next week, "a move that is sure to further inflame tensions andspark almost immediate retaliation from Beijing." As discussed previously, on Friday the administration is planning to publish a final list of Chinese goods that will take the hit.

Trump's China trade advisor, Peter Navarro, said on Tuesday that the president is planning to impose tariffs on a "subset" of Chinese imports that the administration included in an original list of roughly $50 billion in targeted products in April. Navarro's comments suggest the Trump administration will move forward with tariffs but that it could impose penalties on a smaller group of products than those included on the original list of about 1,300.

After the public had a chance to weigh in, the original list is expected to remain largely intact but will be slightly reduced from what was first proposed, according to two sources briefed on the plans.

According to the report, Trump's aggressive stance calls into question the future of talks between the two trade powers, which took a friendly turn in the weeks leading up to the North Korea summit as the U.S. sought China's help, but have since deteriorated again.

To an extent that is understandable: China was seen as playing a key role in getting North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to the table with Trump, who has consistently linked his trade demands to Beijing's willingness to help on North Korea; now that the summit is over and the wheels are turning, Trump no longer needs China's aid.

And, sure enough, after the summit, while Trump defended his personal friendship with Chinese President Xi Jinping and said he would call the Chinese leader, he also said Beijing has not done an adequate job closing its border to trade with North Korea in recent months, which Trump seemed to blame for rising U.S.-China trade tensions.

"Which is a shame. But I have to do it. I have no choice. For our country, I have to do it," Trump said at a press conference in Singapore, possibly referring to tariffs.

"I came away thinking that he was suggesting in the press conference in Singapore that although Xi Jinping was a close friend [and] that he'd provided help on North Korea, that the president had no choice but to turn up the heat on China," said Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

That's precisely what is happening, but that's not all.

As we reported yesterday, Congress is aggressively pushing back against the White House recently backing off on the ZTE seven-year ban, further complicating efforts to reach a deal with China. The Senate is expected to consider must-pass defense legislation this week that includes an amendment effectively rejecting the decision to roll back sanctions on ZTE.

In fact, as the WSJ reportsthe ZTE deal "appeared to teeter on the brink of demise" as senior Republican senators signaled that President Donald Trump was unlikely to block a congressional effort to derail a deal he brokered to resuscitate the Chinese telecommunications giant.

According to the report, the president hasn't issued tweets urging Republicans to stand down, and lawmakers detect no backlash building within Congress against the move to unravel the White House agreement.

"I don't think the president cares about ZTE," Sen. Bob Corker (R., Tenn.) told reporters. "Someone told me that he gave [GOP lawmakers] a wink and a nod and told them he didn't care. I don't know if that's true or not, but I think he did what he did for the Chinese leader but he doesn't really care what Congress does."

Meanwhile, as we noted last night, ZTE shares resumed trading in Hong Kong on Wednesday morning after a halt of almost two months, plunging over 40% in the opening minutes — their biggest drop in history, wiping out nearly $8 billion in market value — as investors rushed to distance themselves from the troubled company.

Trump had spent the previous week in closed-door meetings trying to sell Senate Republicans on the deal, which coincided with his effort to build goodwill with Chinese President Xi Jinping ahead of this week's talks with North Korea about denuclearization. And in a briefing late on Monday with GOP senators, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross again tried to get lawmakers to drop their resistance to the ZTE agreement.

However, now that Trump had his moment in the history books with his North Korea summit - whether it is successful or not - expect the old, trade belligerent Trump to make a triumphal return, and the trade war with China to return front and center in the next few days.

The Fed Is Not On Our Side

Going to make today's post short and sweet.

Recently the market has gotten somewhat excited that the Federal Reserve might slow down the rate of Federal Funds tightening. This has been the result of three developments:

  1. A few speeches from FOMC Board members that indicated the Federal Reserve was concerned about the flattening yield curve, and that the Fed's goal would be to ensure it doesn't invert.

  2. A recent phenomenon where the effective Fed funds rate is trading at a higher spread to IOER (interest on excess reserves).

  3. The increasing troubles in certain emerging market countries as US dollar liquidity has tightened.

Between these three concerns, the market has built a "dovish hike" into today's FOMC announcement. Many participants believe the Fed is more likely to slow the pace of tightenings as opposed to increasing it.

Well, sold to them.

I am not claiming to know what the correct policy should be, but I am confident that Jerome Powell's Federal Reserve will not alter course for any of these three reasons.

The Federal Reserve will hike at least every other meeting until something breaks. Full stop.

Powell will not reduce this pace because the 5-30 spread is hitting new lows. Nor will he care about the effective Fed Funds spread over IOER. And finally, the Federal Reserve has a mandate to set policy for the USA and will not alter course because of emerging market wobbles.

Additionally, there have been stories indicating the Federal Reserve is considering holding press conferences every meeting as opposed to every second one. Although there are plenty of good reasons to change this policy, I believe that Powell is worried he will have to raise rates at a quicker pace in the future.

Let's face it, on the metrics that matter to the Federal Reserve (employment and inflation), the signals are all pointing to an economy that needs higher rates.

I know true Fed-watchers will tell me that initial claims and CPI are not preferred Federal Reserve indicators, but that's splitting hairs.

The truth of the matter is that the US economy is doing well. In fact, beneath the hood, it might even be booming.

We are so far away from the Federal Reserve slowing down the rate of hikes. The economy is doing well. Stocks are on their highs. Unemployment is hitting new lows. Inflation is ticking at cycle highs. If anything, I expect the Federal Reserve to increase the pace of tightenings - not the other way round.

I am not sure what this will mean to asset prices, but be careful in assuming the Fed is on financial markets' side...

Capital Flight To Germany In Full Swing

Capital flight to Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland is in full swing. These sums cannot be paid back.

I have commented on Target2 liabilities before.

Perhaps a Mish-modified translation from the Welt article Imbalance in the Euro System Reaches a New Record will ring a bell.

The central banks of Germany's euro partners Italy, Spain and France owe the Bundesbank almost a trillion euros . This is a new high. - more than ever before. Tendency continues to rise. There is no security for this money.

Read that last line again and again until it sinks in. Italy is €464.7 billion in the hole. Spain is €376.6 billion in the hole.

Creditors owe Germany, the Netherlands, and Finland over €1.157 trillion.

In May, Italian liabilities increased by almost 40 billion euros.

"Capital flight to Germany is in full swing," says Hans-Werner Sinn, longtime head of the Ifo Institute and one of the most prominent economists in the Federal Republic.

Originally, Target2 was designed to facilitate cross-border transactions within the eurozone. The system achieved this goal. From the point of view of critics, this means that the Deutsche Bundesbank provides long-term unsecured and non-interest-bearing loans to the central banks of other eurozone countries , especially the central banks of southern countries Italy, Spain and Portugal.

Fundamental Eurozone Flaw

Target2 is a fundamental problem of the Eurozone.

  • The ECB guarantees these loans.

  • As long as they are guaranteed, then hells bells, why not make more loans?

Germany Will Pay

Germany will pay one way or another. Here are the possibilities.

  1. Germany and the creditor nations forgive enough debt for Europe to grow. This is the transfer union solution.

  2. Permanently high unemployment and slow growth in Spain, Greece, Italy, with stagnation elsewhere in Europe

  3. Breakup of the eurozone

Those are the alternatives.

Germany will not allow number 1. It is unreasonable to expect number 2 to last forever. The only door left open is door number 3.

The best move would be for Germany to leave the eurozone. Germany is in the best shape to suffer the consequences.

Unfortunately, the most likely outcome is a destructive breakup of the eurozone, starting in Italy or Greece.