On
the Verge of Chaos
By John Mauldin
Nov 24,
2014
“Great
powers and empires are, I would suggest, complex systems, made up of a very
large number of interacting components that are asymmetrically organized, which
means their construction more resembles a termite hill than an Egyptian
pyramid. They operate somewhere between order and disorder – on “the edge of
chaos,” in the phrase of the computer scientist Christopher Langton. Such
systems can appear to operate quite stably for some time; they seem to be in
equilibrium but are, in fact, constantly adapting. But there comes a moment
when complex systems “go critical.” A very small trigger can set off a “phase
transition” from a benign equilibrium to a crisis – a single grain of sand
causes a whole pile to collapse, or a butterfly flaps its wings in the Amazon
and brings about a hurricane in southeastern England.
“Not
long after such crises happen, historians arrive on the scene. They are the
scholars who specialize in the study of “fat tail” events – the low-frequency,
high-impact moments that inhabit the tails of probability distributions, such
as wars, revolutions, financial crashes, and imperial collapses. But historians
often misunderstand complexity in decoding these events. They are trained to
explain calamity in terms of long-term causes, often dating back decades. This
is what Nassim Taleb rightly condemned in The
Black Swan as “the narrative fallacy”: the construction of
psychologically satisfying stories on the principle of post hoc, ergo propter hoc.
–
Niall Ferguson, “Complexity
and Collapse”
I
see a bad moon arisin’, I see trouble on the way.
I see earthquakes and lightnin’, I see bad times today.
I see earthquakes and lightnin’, I see bad times today.
I
hear hurricanes ablowin’, I know the end is comin’ soon.
I fear rivers overflowin’, I hear the voice of rage and ruin.
I fear rivers overflowin’, I hear the voice of rage and ruin.
Don’t
go ’round tonight, well, it’s bound to take your life.
There’s a bad moon on the rise.
There’s a bad moon on the rise.
–
“Bad
Moon Rising,” John Fogerty, Creedence Clearwater Revival, 1969
As a
college student, I reveled in the sounds of the Creedence Clearwater Revival
and its lead singer and songwriter, John Fogerty. Fogerty supposedly wrote “Bad
Moon Rising” after watching the 1941 movie classic The Devil and Daniel Webster. The movie is a
paean to freedom, the American dream, and the ability of a man, even one who
has sold his soul, to find redemption. There is a scene involving a hurricane
that supposedly inspired the song. Fogerty claims that the song was about “the
apocalypse that was going to be visited upon us.” Barry McGuire had sung “Eve
of Destruction” only a few years earlier. A generation that had grown up with
the Cold War, the growing conflict in Vietnam, the Free Speech Movement, and a
nuclear arms race was increasingly distrustful of adults and government. “Don’t
trust anyone over 30” was the maxim first uttered by Jack Weinberg, a leader of
the Free Speech Movement in Berk eley. In a small bit of irony, the founders of
that movement recently gathered to celebrate its 50th anniversary.
As a side note, I find that Boomers are far more susceptible to talking
apocalypse than our kids are.
Well,
it’s a beautiful night here in Dallas, and there is no bad moon rising; but
over in the Land of the Rising Sun, I do see a bad yen falling. As we will see
in a minute, the recent yen price chart looks like a frozen rope (in the words
of Jared Dillian). Understand, my bet (to use the word forecast would imply a
level of precision in modeling that I have not attained) is that the yen goes
to 200 against the dollar, so breaching 120 is not exactly a shocker to me.
What is a little unnerving is the rapidity of the recent move.
In
this week’s letter we’re going to explore some of the ramifications of the
currency war that Japan is precipitating. It is more than just Germany, Korea,
and China having issues and needing to contemplate their own competitive
devaluations. If the yen goes too far too fast, there will be geopolitical
repercussions far beyond the obvious first-order connections. As Fogerty ended
his song:
Hope
you got your things together.
Hope you’re quite prepared to die.
Looks like we’re in for nasty weather.
One eye is taken for an eye.
Hope you’re quite prepared to die.
Looks like we’re in for nasty weather.
One eye is taken for an eye.
I’ll
try to see if I can help you “get your things together” … and help you prepare
your hedges. We may indeed be in for nasty weather.
As I
write on a Saturday morning, the yen is 117.8 to the dollar, having fallen
modestly from the mid-118’s yesterday. ShinzÅ
Abe was nominated to be Japanese prime minister for the second time on
September 26, 2012, and it was clear that he would win. He implemented a
program that has since come to be called Abenomics.
Japan
was suffering from a 35% loss of competitiveness vis-à-vis their most important
trading competitor, Germany, because of a rather steep rise in the yen (for
reasons we will examine later). For the first time in generations, Japan’s
trade deficit had gone negative. The interest-rate market was beginning to
bounce around, which was a death knell for Japan. Abe made no bones about it:
he would replace the controlling members of the Bank of Japan with members who
agreed with him that massive quantitative easing should be undertaken.
In
the graph below, notice that as it became clear that Abe would win, on cue the
yen began a nosedive from 75 to the dollar to slightly over 100 to the dollar
and then went sideways for about a year and a half. The Halloween 2014
announcement by the Bank of Japan to double down on its quantitative easing
started the recent frozen-rope-like plunge, taking the yen almost straight down
to 118 and on its way to 120 in very short order. Goldman Sachs has forecast
that the yen will be at 130 by the end of 2015, 135 by the end of 2016, and at
140 by the end of 2017. That rhymes with the prediction of my friend Kiron
Sarkar, whose target is 125 in the first half of 2015.
Make
no mistake: the Japanese are not at all concerned that the yen is going to 130
or 140 or 150. While we tend to see the recent move as precipitous, it may be
helpful to walk in the other man’s shoes, so to speak, and see the currency
move from the long-term Japanese perspective. A little over 40 years ago the
yen was at 350 to the dollar. Less than two decades ago it was at 150. Then it
strengthened all the way to the mid-70s. Even if the yen were to eventually
fall to 200, as I predict it will, that’s not even a 50% reversal.
Japanese
industry has had to suffer the yen’s rising almost fourfold over the last 40
years. If the dollar were to rise as much, there would be much weeping and
wailing and gnashing of teeth, and the usual suspects in the Senate would be up
in arms about currency manipulation. Japanese businesses just cut costs and
improved quality and competed heads up. Oh yes, it’s been nasty for the last
two decades as their nominal GDP has been flat, but their corporations are
still some of the most competitive in the world. You put a currency devaluation
wind at Japanese corporations’ backs and watch how competitive they become. Cue
serious worry from businesses located in Germany, Korea, and China.
For
new readers, let me briefly describe what is happening in Japan. Japan’s
debt-to-GDP ratio is roughly 250%. If interest rates were to rise by 2%, it
would take 80% or more of their tax revenues just to pay the interest. That is
not a working business model. Therefore they can’t allow interest rates to
rise. The only way they can accomplish that is for the Bank of Japan to become
the market for Japanese government bonds (JGBs). And that in fact is what has
happened. When the Bank of Japan momentarily withdraws from the ten-year JGB
market, nothing trades. The Bank of Japan is the market today.
The
strategy for dealing with the Japanese debt is threefold:
- They
have to create a positive nominal GDP, which means they need at least 2%
inflation and 2% real growth. They have had neither for over 20 years, so
this is not going to be easy. They have tried “modest” amounts of
quantitative easing in the past. The only way they can create inflation is
to undertake massive
quantitative easing through monetary printing. However, if
you do that, you are in effect going to lose control of the value of your
currency. It’s one of the basic laws of economics: you can control either
price or quantity but not both.
- They
need to move an enormous amount (70%?) of that debt onto the balance sheet
of the Bank of Japan, thereby effectively erasing it. To point out that a
move like that has never been successfully executed in the history of the
world, or at least not without significant economic upheaval, is not
stretching the point. The Japanese are embarking upon one of the greatest
economic experiments in human history. They are doing experimental surgery
on their economic body without benefit of anesthesia. See the note below
on the willingness of the Japanese population to endure pain.
- They
need to slowly balance their budget so that at some point far off in the
future they will be able to actually allow interest rates to float at a
level where they will be able to manage the debt, which means they have to
run a primary surplus (at a minimum) in their budget. Given that they are
running 7% deficits (and have been for some time), that point in time is
well into the future. Abe himself does not project a balanced budget until
2020. And given the nature of the experiment they are conducting, you can
have absolutely zero confidence in any budget projections that far out.
Maybe it happens, maybe it doesn’t.
If
you live in Japan, you really should be taking precautions. If you don’t live
in Japan, you should be anticipating what this is going to do to you. This is
not Zimbabwe or Argentina printing money; Japan is important to the global
economy. What they do affects everything.
With
the recent increase in quantitative easing, the Bank of Japan is now monetizing
more than double the amount of the deficit that the government is producing.
That means they are slowly moving the debt onto the books of the Bank of Japan,
perhaps in the range of 7 to 8% per year. If they can actually begin to reduce
their fiscal deficit, then, at the level of quantitative easing they are
currently doing, the amount of actual debt monetization will begin to rise
slowly, to perhaps as much as 10%, rising to 15% a year over the very long
haul. This would get them to the point where they could withdraw from their QE
program and allow the market to set interest rates.
This
is something you must understand: this process is going to take many, many,
many years. They are not going to stop quantitative easing next year or the
year after or the year after that. If they don’t get the inflation they need,
we will get another “shock and awe” announcement from Haruhiko (“just call him
Colin” [Powell]) Kuroda,
which will have every bit as much impact as the original shock and awe campaign
did in Iraq in 2003. And while it won’t be as physically destructive, let us be
clear: this is central banks at war. And there will be collateral damage. And
most central banks, especially those of the emerging markets, only have a knife
to bring to a gunfight.
Why
would the Japanese people tolerate the value of their currency dropping by more
than half, increasing the cost of energy and other imports? The answer to that
is a point that my friend Louis Gave makes time and time again, as he did in a
missive this week:
With
Japan in the middle of a triple-dip recession, and Japanese households
suffering a significant contraction in real disposable income, it might seem at
first that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has chosen an odd time to call a snap
election. But that conclusion would ignore the two iron-clad rules of investing
in Japan that we never tire of repeating:
Rule
#1: Never underestimate the amount of pain that the Japanese will willingly
bear, as long as the pain is taken together, and is seen to be borne for the
good of the community.
Rule
#2: Never underestimate the willingness of Japanese policymakers to test Rule
#1.
I’ve
been on the phone a lot this week talking with economists and analysts trying
to figure out some of the immediate impact of Japan’s moves. Jack Rivkin (at
Altegris and one of the smartest observers of the economic scene I know)
pointed me to a blog
post from his old friend Bob Barbera (another brilliant economist and an
alumnus of Lehman Research). Jack thought so much of Barbera that while he was
running Lehman he fired a very famous economist (whose name will go
unmentioned) in order to hire Barbera. Barbera argues rather forcefully that
the outperformance by Germany vis-à-vis the rest of Europe is an illusion based
upon fortuitous economic circumstances that are getting ready to change. He
argues that there is no German exceptionalism. The article provides such
important insights that I’m going to quote liberally:
The
German economy, in stark contrast to most of the rest of Europe thrived,
2010-2012. German successes emboldened their policymakers. Merkel, her finance
minister and a succession of Bundesbank members all sternly lectured their
European partners. Embrace Germany’s magical approach, or continue to suffer,
has been the message. The good news for the rest-of-Europe is that Germany’s
mansion on the hill has always been a sand castle. Two tsunami waves are about
to hit. And Germany’s economic exceptionalism will be swept away in 2015.
Everyone
agrees that Germany’s strength is tied to its export machine. To understand how
Germany did so well 2010-2012 one needs to appreciate that two powerful
developments in Asia gave Germany a giant gift over the years immediately after
the Great Recession – and that gift is now being taken back. The first and most
obvious? China embarked on a frenzied infrastructure and real estate build out,
in an effort to insulate itself from the contractionary forces that the Great
Recession foist[ed] upon the world. This created a booming market for German
capital goods exports. The second, and often overlooked, is the insane
appreciation of the Japanese yen. The global financial market collapse
engendered a powerful unwind of the so-called carry trade. As yen denominated
debts were paid off, the yen rose by an astounding 35% versus the U.S.
dollar and the euro!
In
combination these two developments created a bonanza for German exporters. A
market for their capital goods was booming. And their biggest competitor in
that market, Japan, was suffering from a near 35% loss of competitiveness, due
exclusively to the swing in their bilateral exchange rate. And as a bonus?
Germany’s motor vehicle exports to the U.S. compete mightily with Japan’s car
offerings. In the U.S. as well, Germany saw their competitive position leap, as
the yen soared versus the euro. In combination, these developments allowed for
a storyline of wunderkind German exporting companies, thriving due to home
grown virtues.
But
the world has radically changed over the past year. More to the point, both of
the powerful currents supporting German growth have changed direction and the
Tsunami is about to hit. How so? China’s construction boom was meant to be a
bridge. A three year commitment, to allow healthy developed world growth to
resume, and thereby engender a resumption of growth for China’s export machine.
China thought they were building a bridge. As it turns out, they have been
building a pier. Investment excesses in China now require a sharp curtailment
of growth. German exports to China are bound to fall. In addition, Japan, after
suffering brutal economic performance at the hands of a soaring yen, is on a
mission to sharply devalue its currency. The yen/euro cross peaked at 1.05, in
late 2012. At that level the yen had appreciated by 35% versus the euro. Late
2012 through mid-2013 the yen plunged amid the first round of aggressive bank
of Japan QE, erasing the lion´s share of the climb. And over the
past few weeks, with the BOJ surprise announcement of a second larger
commitment to QE, the yen has resumed its swoon versus the U.S. dollar. And it
is threatening to move lower still versus the euro.
Thus
Germany now faces a world in which its locomotive, China boom, has been
derailed. And its competitive edge has been blunted by a plunge for the yen. It
could well be that Germany, in the quarters immediately ahead, will
underperform the rest-of-Europe. Spanish and Italian exports to China are quite
small. And Italy and Spain do not see Japan as a major competitor for markets.
The
End of German Sanctimony?
What
might this portend for European policy? Angela Merkel has stood her ground on
the value of fiscal austerity. Bundesbank and finance minister proclamations
call into the question the legality of a more substantial version of European
QE. Belt tightening exhortations warmed the heart of folks in the hinterland –
amid good German growth and with the jobless rate at an astoundingly low 5%.
How firm will German officialdom sound, if German economic circumstances go
south? Perhaps Germany will finally sound more like its southern neighbors,
when its economy begins to look similarly distressed.
This
week we saw Mario Draghi finally lose the inexplicable timidity he has shown in
not instituting a European version of quantitative easing. (For whatever reason
my speech recognition software always wants to interpret Draghi as “Druggie” –
maybe because he’s getting ready to push €1 trillion into the European blood
system?)
I
maintained in Code
Red that as the yen fell Germany would eventually have to allow
the European Central Bank to monetize, or they would see their export economy
fall apart. Goldman Sachs now forecasts that the euro will be at $1.15 to the
dollar by the end of 2015 and then weaken to parity by the end of 2017. It is at
$1.24 today. Back in 2002, when the euro was at $.88, I was forecasting that
the euro would rise to $1.50 and then fall all the way back to parity over a
decade or more. And while my forecast is not quite as precise as Goldman
Sachs’, we are on the same page.
The
Chinese central bank cut its interest rates this week in what will be a process
of continual cutting, as they have to respond to the fall of the yen. My friend
Joan McCullough speculates they would be better off going the route of Mexico
in 1994 and simply devaluing their currency, catching everybody off guard and
making it too late to exit. Whatever the process, this is going to create
massive problems in China, which we have touched on in past letters and which
my associate Worth Wray will deal with in depth next week.
The
Bank of Korea recently cut its benchmark interest rate and lowered its economic
forecast. Central banks all over Asia as well as the rest of the world have got
to be having long meetings trying to decide their policy options. While the
situation varies from country to country, most have no good choices, and that’s
before the unintended consequences kick in. I would really like to be a fly on
the wall at the monthly meeting and dinners of the major central bankers in
Basel at the Bank for International Settlements. Besides good food and wine, I
would expect there would be some low-key fireworks served with the main course.
What
we see starting is a cascade of competitive devaluations by central banks all
over the world. This is like some old grade-B Japanese movie where Godzilla
wreaks havoc. Eventually we’ll have sequels in which Godzilla is portrayed as
the good guy and battles all sorts of other monsters from around the world. Cue
the Chinese dragons and European bears. King Kong anyone?
As
cynical as I am, and as much as I read, I manage to find new things that both
surprise and disturb me on a regular basis. Joan McCullough sent me a link to a
very insightful piece that appeared in the Financial
Times a few weeks ago, which commented on the speech by Federal
Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer at the recent IMF meeting. Ousmène
Mandeng writes in an opinion piece entitled “The
Fed has built a thorny central bank divide”:
Top
Federal Reserve officials were careful to be seen to be understanding of the
plight of lesser central banks during the International Monetary Fund’s
meetings in Washington last month.
However, they may have unintentionally made things worse. By confirming their reluctance to assume greater
international commitments, they underlined the divide between central banks
that have access to the Fed’s dollar swap facility and those that do not – in
other words, between those with and without a Fed backstop.
In
an environment of record-low government bond yields, an indication of a
scarcity of safe and liquid assets, it is likely to make a big difference
whether or not a country has access to an unlimited source of dollar liquidity.
Fed Vice-Chairman Stanley Fischer focused on the international transmission of
monetary policies and the Fed’s responsibility to the global economy. This
appears to have been in response to repeated complaints, in particular from
emerging markets, that highly accommodative monetary policy has caused a surge
of capital inflows to their economies and made them unduly vulnerable to sudden
reversals. The Fed acknowledges there may have been adverse spillovers from
changes in its policy stance (such as the “taper tantrum”), and that a
normalisation of monetary policies may bring further volatility.
There is therefore a considerable premium on access to dollar liquidity. Mr. Fischer merely offered that the Fed will “promote a smooth transition by communicating our assessment of the economy and our policy intentions as clearly as possible”. At the same time he stressed that the Fed is not a “global central bank.”
There is therefore a considerable premium on access to dollar liquidity. Mr. Fischer merely offered that the Fed will “promote a smooth transition by communicating our assessment of the economy and our policy intentions as clearly as possible”. At the same time he stressed that the Fed is not a “global central bank.”
The Fed is effectively a global central bank, but only
for some.
Recognising the importance of adequate dollar funding beyond its borders, the
Fed extended temporary dollar liquidity facilities to 14 central banks during
2008, including to the central banks of Brazil, South Korea, Mexico and
Singapore. Those expired in February 2010. In May 2010, amid renewed short-term
dollar funding strains, the Fed reauthorised dollar liquidity swap lines with
the central banks of Canada, the euro area, Japan, Switzerland and the UK; in
October 2013, the Fed converted those into standing arrangements. This suddenly
established a segmented dollar liquidity sphere.
Fischer’s
remarks echo a similar speech from a few years back by Ben Bernanke, which a
number of the world’s emerging-market central banks interpreted as saying,
“Kiss off. We have our own problems to worry about.”
(My
co-author Jonathan Tepper and I laid out the very scenario that is playing out
today in Code Red.
In it we predicted that the developing currency war would start with Japan. We
had laid out the rationale for that theme four years ago in our book Endgame, but then we were
focused on Europe. Both books will help you understand the current environment.
Seriously, I make very little when you buy a book on Amazon, but a lot of
people think Code
Red is a perfect primer for understanding our times. If nothing
else, go buy a cup of coffee at Barnes & Noble and read the two chapters on
Japan.)
The
upshot of Fed policy is that we are likely to see a continued move into the
dollar as a safe-haven currency, causing the dollar to strengthen against other
emerging-market currencies and creating problems for dollar-denominated debt
around the world. Shades of 1998. The demand for dollars at a time when the
Federal Reserve is putting fewer dollars into the system (appropriately so) is
only going to increase volatility in the currency markets.
But
a global currency war is just the most obvious impact of what the major central
banks of the world are doing.
Okay
class, for those who want a little extra credit, I’m going to give you some
extra reading and viewing. Lacy Hunt encouraged me to listen again to our
friend Niall Ferguson’s speech entitled “Empires
on the Edge of Chaos” (Note: the introduction is 10 minutes long and can be
skipped. You know who Niall is. And there is considerable Q&A at the end,
so the speech itself is roughly 40 to 45 minutes. But the Q&A has lots of
laughs, which makes it worth it.) Or you can read this
article by Niall in Foreign
Affairs, which has much of the same content.
I
want to repeat the two quoted paragraphs that opened this letter, along with
one more from the Foreign
Affairs article.
Great
powers and empires are, I would suggest, complex systems, made up of a very
large number of interacting components that are asymmetrically organized, which
means their construction more resembles a termite hill than an Egyptian
pyramid. They operate somewhere between order and disorder – on “the edge of
chaos,” in the phrase of the computer scientist Christopher Langton. Such systems can appear to operate
quite stably for some time; they seem to be in equilibrium but are, in fact,
constantly adapting. But there comes a moment when complex systems “go
critical.” A very small trigger can set off a “phase
transition” from a benign equilibrium to a crisis – a single grain of sand
causes a whole pile to collapse, or a butterfly flaps its wings in the Amazon
and brings about a hurricane in southeastern England.
Not
long after such crises happen, historians arrive on the scene. They are the
scholars who specialize in the study of “fat tail” events – the low-frequency,
high-impact moments that inhabit the tails of probability distributions, such
as wars, revolutions, financial crashes, and imperial collapses. But historians often misunderstand
complexity in decoding these events. They are trained to explain calamity in
terms of long-term causes, often dating back decades. This is
what Nassim Taleb rightly condemned in The
Black Swan as “the narrative fallacy”: the construction of
psychologically satisfying stories on the principle of post hoc, ergo propter hoc.
Defeat
in the mountains of the Hindu Kush or on the plains of Mesopotamia has long
been a harbinger of imperial fall. It is no coincidence that the Soviet Union
withdrew from Afghanistan in the annus mirabilis of 1989. What happened 20
years ago, like the events of the distant fifth century, is a reminder that
empires do not in fact appear, rise, reign, decline, and fall according to some
recurrent and predictable life cycle. It is historians who retrospectively
portray the process of imperial dissolution as slow-acting, with multiple
overdetermining causes. Rather,
empires behave like all complex adaptive systems. They function in apparent
equilibrium for some unknowable period. And then, quite abruptly, they
collapse.
The
single most commented-upon letter that I have written was called “Fingers
of Instability.” Longtime readers know it well, and I would suggest new
readers take the time. It contains extremely important concepts for
understanding why financial markets can advance smoothly for so long, and then
all of a sudden there is chaos. The fingers of instability distributed
throughout the sand pile of the global economic system end up getting triggered
by some event that may in itself be quite minor. Yes, there are many factors
contributing to an unstable global sand economic pile (think massive global
debt, wanton overleverage, mischievous central banks with immoderate views of
their importance, etc., etc.), but it only takes that fateful final grain of
sand, dropped on just the right spot in the pile, to bring the whole thing
cascading down.
What
Niall is talking about is something that goes far deeper than another financial
crisis like the one we recently experienced. What he is pointing out is that
countries in financial distress are more constrained than normal in their
actions. They have less ability to respond to crises. And some countries in
crisis react in very unpredictable ways. Let’s talk about a second-order
problem stemming from the fact that Japan is doing what it feels is necessary
to keep from suffering a deflationary collapse. Understand, I’m not being
critical of the Japanese for taking the actions they have, because I simply
don’t know what other choice they have. That’s what makes their situation so
difficult.
Japan’s
major economic competitors – Germany, Korea, and China – will all have to respond,
or their businesses will lose competitive advantage. Okay, we have seen
large-scale currency movements all our lives. We adjust. That’s what businesses
do.
Except,
China and Russia have just signed an agreement for Russia to export rather
massive amounts of energy to China, and they will take payment in yuan rather
than dollars. A yuan that is going to be falling in value against the dollar as
China responds to Japan.
In
an ideal world for Russia, the Russian central bank would simply take the Chinese
currency and add it to their reserves. But that would trigger a rather large
“oops” that was not in the equation when they signed that deal. The yuan they
are going to get is going to be losing value on the international market, and
Russia is going to need hard currency (i.e. dollars) to pay down its large
dollar-denominated debt and buy equipment to maintain and increase its ability
to produce energy. And that equipment is generally sold in dollars and not in
renminbi.
Couple
that situation with the real potential for oil to go below $70 and Russia would
have significant budgetary problems. And as David Hale pointed out recently in
a private letter, if the US and Iran actually settle their differences over
nuclear armaments later this month and sanctions are lifted, that could bring
another 1–1.5 million barrels of oil a day onto the world energy markets. (He
suggests it would have the same effect as a $400 billion global tax cut.)
Mexico is committed to increasing its output, as are other countries, including
the US. Sub-$70 oil is not out of the question, and in a global recession we
could touch $50 easily. And while that would be good for consumers everywhere,
it would certainly put a strain on Russia and other oil-producing countries. In
fact, the scenario portends a major crisis for Russia.
And
while we’re not as worried about Venezuela or other smaller oil producers,
Russia is a potential problem, simply because it is so unpredictable. As noted
above, the Japanese population is willing to take a great deal of pain. I don’t
think we can say the same thing about the Russians at this point.
There
are some geopolitical thinkers I respect who argue that all this could trigger
a regime change in Russia. And others who argue that it will make Vladimir
Putin even stronger and that he will want to double down on his policy of
destabilizing Ukraine sooner rather than later. Putin does not strike me as
being willing to step aside in the manner of a Boris Yeltsin. I doubt he will
go gently into that good night. He is a wildcard on the geopolitical stage.
Russia
has been willing to let the ruble fall rather precipitously rather than
supporting it with their dollar reserves, which they are saving for other
purposes. Even though the Russian economic situation is deteriorating due to
sanctions, the Russian people have so far seemed to tolerate the downturn. As
noted in last week’s Outside the Box, the West in general and
the US in particular are blamed for Russia’s woes multiple times daily in the
Russian media. Given the unpredictability of the current Russian leadership,
there is simply no way to guess the outcome. That should make you nervous.
The
2008 crisis demonstrated that the global economic system is far more connected
than most imagined. There has been no real deleveraging since that time as
nations everywhere have doubled down on deficits and debt. European banks are
just as leveraged to sovereign debt as they were before the crisis hit.
The
recent Geneva Report on global deleveraging highlighted what the authors termed
the “fragile eight” countries of Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Turkey, India,
Indonesia, Russia, and South Africa as an “important source of concern in terms
of future debt trajectories.” China and the “fragile eight” could find themselves
in the unwanted role of hosts to the next phase of the global leverage crisis,
it warned.
The
accumulation of household, corporate, and government debt in both the emerging
and developed worlds has been made all the more troubling by stubbornly low and
slowing growth rates. The global capacity to take on more debt is rapidly
diminishing because of the combination of low growth and low inflation, if not
outright deflation, that we are beginning to see in major countries.
There
seems to be a stubborn unwillingness on the part of authorities to recognize
the problems that come along with swelling sovereign debt. We are coming ever
closer to the point at which countries are going to have difficulty raising
debt at interest rates that makes sense, absent the ability to create a shock
and awe campaign like Japan’s. And few countries (actually, none come to mind)
have the ability to monetize their debt to the tune of 200% of GDP, as Japan is
setting out to do, without causing a dramatic currency collapse.
I
have this argument all the time with fellow analysts. I get that “austerity” in
a deflationary or even disinflationary environment is not exactly pro-growth.
And if a country’s debt is low and there is growth, then you can get away with
increasing debt. But there is a limit to the amount of debt that a country can
take on, and we are approaching it in country after country. This trend is not
good for global economic growth or stability. The second-order unintended
consequences, such as those Niall describes, are very difficult to contemplate.
The
world is not going to come to an end. I will be writing this letter and
hopefully you will be reading it in 10 years. But economies and markets are
going to get more fragile and volatile in the meantime. This is not the time to
be a full-throated bull in the equity markets. And given the potential dollar
bull market, there is going to be pressure on most commodities. Corporate debt,
especially high-yield debt, is priced for perfection. When I look out over the
horizon, I simply don’t see perfection. At a minimum, you should not be long
high-yield debt. And if you’re running a business, you should get all the debt
you can, even if you bank the cash, at today’s low rates for as long a term as
you can get it. Take advantage of this unbelievably forgiving debt environment.
Let’s
close by singing along with the last few lines of Fogerty’s song again:
Hope
you got your things together,
Hope you’re quite prepared to die.
Looks like we’re in for nasty weather,
One eye is taken for an eye.
Hope you’re quite prepared to die.
Looks like we’re in for nasty weather,
One eye is taken for an eye.
Well,
don’t go ’round tonight,
It’s bound to take your life.
There’s a bad moon on the rise.
It’s bound to take your life.
There’s a bad moon on the rise.
It
may be slightly more hopeful to say, “Hope you got your hedges together, hope
you’re quite prepared for a bear market.” Until next week…
It’s
time to hit the send button.
Have
a great week. And even if you aren’t in the states, get with some family and
friends, enjoy a special meal, and count your blessings.
Your
going to ignore his diet on Thursday analyst,
John Mauldin
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