Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Dollar Mixed Amid Risk-On Impulses

by Marc Chandler

The US dollar is narrowly mixed in response to the potential compromise on Syria and firmer Chinese data.    The combination of the election outcome and much higher than expected inflation is altering the expected policy mix in Norway and lifting the krone 0.8% against the dollar.  It is the strongest of the major currencies today.    The Australian dollar has been lifted to almost $0.9300 since, the highest since late July.   The risk-on impulses are weighing on the yen, against which the dollar is trying to establish a foothold above JPY100.  The other major currencies are mixed.  

Meanwhile, the beleaguered Indian rupee and Indonesian rupiah jumped 1.4% and 1.3% respectively, and the MSCI Emerging Market equity index is up almost 1.5% to bring the 10-day advance to 9% and the highest level since mid-June. 

China reported August industrial output, retail sales and fixed asset investment. Each rose sequentially and more than expected.  This helps solidify the sense that the Chinese economy has stabilized and serves to ease concerns of a head landing.   The 10.4% (year-over-year) is the strongest since March 2012.  The 13.4% increase in retail sales is the strongest of the year.   Fixed asset investment rose 20.3% which is the highest in 3 months.  

On the other hand, there appears to have been a resurgence of China's shadow banking sector.  Aggregate financing jumped CNY1.57 trillion in August and snaps the downtrend that had been in place since the start of Q2.   This was not so much the result of increased yuan loans from Chinese banks.  Yuan loans rose CNY711 bln (form CNY700 bln in July).  The gap between the new yuan loans and the aggregate financing, a measure of the shadow banking, surged to nearly CNY860 bln from about CNY108 bln in July. 

Norway and Sweden surprised but in opposite directions.  Sweden's industrial output and orders data were reported well below expectations.  Industrial production contracted by 0.4%, whereas the consensus had forecast a 0.5% increase.  The 0.3% increase in orders was half of what market expected.  Recall that last week Sweden reported a 0.2% decline in service output in July.   This is not the kind of news that the Riksbank expected or wanted to see, but it is too early to spur much speculation of a rate cut in Q4. 

Norway's surprise came from an firmer inflation figures.   Headline CPI slipped 0.1%, not the 0.4% the consensus expected and this saw an unexpected increase in the year-over-year rate to 3.2% from 3.0%.  The underlying rate also rose to 2.5% from 1.8%.  This not only means that the central bank is firmly on hold at next week's meeting, but also injects risk that the rate path is increased. 

France had its own surprise today. The market had expected a 0.5-0.6% increase in July industrial output.  Instead, it slumped 0.6%.  It is the third consecutive decline and brings the year-over-year rate to -1.8% from 0.1% in June.  Manufacturing output contracted by 0.7% (after -0.4% in June).  Transportation equipment was especially hard hit, felling 6.7%. 

Several other euro area countries have reported industrial output figures.  Despite the fact that the July euro area manufacturing PMI rose above 50 in July for the first time in two years, the euro zone's industrial output likely fell in July.  Those figures will be reported on Thursday. 

Although the euro is marginally lower today, it is holding on to the lion's share of yesterday's gain. Initial support is seen in the $1.3190-$1.3210 area.   With Italian Q2 GDP revised to -0.3% from -0.2%, the uncertainty around Monte dei Paschi, and a delay in the Senate panel vote on Berlusconi's public tenure have served to push Italian 10-year bond yields above Spain's for the first time since last March. 

There are no market moving US or Canadian data today.  The surge in Canadian building permits (July) reported yesterday was highly concentrated in commercial properties suggesting no knock-on effect on today's report of August housing starts. 

See the original article >>

What caused the belly of the treasury curve to become more volatile?

by SoberLook.com

While yields on treasury notes and bonds have risen across the board in 2013, the jump in rates has been uneven. The 5-10-year rates - the "belly" of the curve - have increased materially more than other maturities.

Furthermore, the volatility of rates across the different maturities has also been exhibiting a similar pattern, with the yields in the belly of the curve becoming substantially more volatile.

But it hasn't always been this way. The chart below shows how the 7, 10, and 30-year volatility evolved over time.

There was an inflection period early this summer, when the 7-year yield volatility spiked above all the rest. What caused this adjustment? Some of this of course is the selloff related to the Fed's treasury holdings. With fewer purchases of certain bonds, the demand is expected to decline, pushing yields higher.
But there is another explanation. Back in June we discussed the so-called "convexity hedging" (see post). When rates began to rise, MBS durations extended, as mortgage refinancing slowed. And as rates kept increasing, higher coupon MBS became more vulnerable to extension risk. Those with a 4.75% mortgage could still refinance earlier in the summer, but the window on that mortgage closed quickly. MBS holders who saw no need to hedge in the past couple of years had to start shorting treasuries to match their increasing portfolio durations. And intermediate-term treasuries have been the choice hedging instrument. Note that a 30-year treasury is not a good hedge for a 30-year mortgage because the probability of homeowners holding on to their mortgage to maturity is quite low - a shorter instrument is therefore required.
The spike in MBS volatility early in the summer (chart below) increased hedging activity, disproportionately raising the volatility (and yields) of the belly of the treasury curve. This hedging is what created the inflection in the chart above.

See the original article >>

UK Bubble Trouble and Chinese Confidence

By tothetick

Britain has been popping the champagne corks over the economic recovery that has been announced and the bubbly has been flowing. They might want to leave the EU but, they still import more champagne than any other country. But it’s not only more champagne being glugged down, but also more sparkling wines than anyone else that will be imported by 2016. The Brits down over 126 million bottles of the stuff every year.

Drunken stupor or do they have another reason to celebrate?
UK
  • George Osborne, the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer believes that there is every reason to get the bunting out and start another street party these days as construction activity is at its highest growth rate for six years.
  • The Purchasing Managers’ Index for the construction sector of the economy stands at 59.1 for August.
  • Manufacturing PMI stood at 57.2 for the same period and that was the best figure recorded for nearly three years now.
  • In April Gross Domestic Product was estimated to turn out to be at around the 0.5%-mark for this year.
  • Now, it seems that after the upturn over the summer months
  • The upswing in the UK economy may have been fuelled by the frenzied buying that took place after the birth of the royal baby and the hot weather that brought the sun-basking Brits out in droves to catch the sun.
  • Now Gross Domestic Product is set to expand by at least 1.5% for this year.

But the UK shouldn’t be celebrating just yet! There’s a housing bubble that is forming and it is ready to explode yet again in repetition of the start of the global financial crisis. At least, we can safely say that they have already done the dress-rehearsal and so anything that busts in the UK these days they may just be prepared for. Or will it be the final curtain?

Interest rates are historically low and the various schemes that have been introduced by the British government are fuelling the ability to buy for first-timers. There is a growing risk that the housing bubble is expanding more and more and that it can do nothing but burst. Employment has not been fuelled by injection of money into the economy at all and so the housing bubble will become largely unsustainable. Growth in the UK is still not enough to enable the economy to get back on its feet.

The UK might have cause for concern over its housing bubble, but China is also a worry in that it is overly confident to believe that its housing market is invincibly strong.

China

China’s 3rd richest man, Wang Jianlin believes that tapering by the Federal Reserve (if and when it happens) will have no effect on the property market in the People’s Republic of China. He believes that the Chinese economy does not move in motion with the rest of the global economy and that because profit for the real estate industry in China are above that being experienced in the rest of the world any rise in interest rates after tapering will have no effect or a limited one. Profits averaged out in China for the property developers at around 34% for the first six months of this year. The second half year is expected (as always in the sector in China) to be better than the first.

But it seems surprising that China believes that it is isolated from the rest of the world’s economies and that it doesn’t move in step with what is happening. Is that the reason why the Chinese economy is no longer experiencing the good level of growth that it had in the past?

  • However, the recent figure released yesterday hint at the fact that the Chinese economy is set to expand in the second half of 2013.
  • Industrial output increased by 10.4% for August year-on-year figures.
  • Retail sales hiked by 13.4% for the same period.

Jianlin has a net worth of $8.6 billion and is in the real estate business. He is the 128th richest person in the world. In 2012 his company Dalian Wanda opened 12 five-star hotels around the world and also 17 shopping plazas.

So, will the UK see it’s bubble burst and will the Chinese isolate themselves from tapering?

Whatever happens dress-rehearsals are all well and good, but something always goes wrong on the opening night of the play and these events are not going to be an exception. The UK will suffer from the consequences and the housing bubble can only go so far. Patching the tears in the seams is not going to do any good right now. Maybe the growing imports of champagne and sparkling wine will have one saving grace. The Brits will certainly be able to drown their sorrows by turning to the demon drink.  What will the Chinese be supping on when there bubble burst?

See the original article >>

Syria 101: The Ultimate Infographic

 

See the original article >>

Is The New York Fed Blaming "Beers" For The Tulip-Mania Bubble?

by Tyler Durden

In yet another in our series of taxpayer-funded Federal Reserve research that has achieved so much over the years, the New York Fed blog has released its perspectives on the Tulip-mania bubble of 1633-37. Hot on the heels of SF Fed's Williams comments that bubbles can only be seen in rear view mirror and then of course - and that there's always an exogenous factor to blame' - in the case of tulips, the New York Fed cites "beers" as the catalyst since 'shares' were exchanged in pubs... Ironically then, it seems even 380 years ago, the only thing that mattered was liquidity.

Via Liberty Street Economics blog,

Crisis Chronicles: Tuilp Mania, 1633-37

As Mike Dash notes in his well-researched and gripping Tulipomania, tulips are native to central Asia and arrived in the 1570s in what’s now Holland, primarily through the efforts of botanist Charles de L’Escluse, who classified and spread tulip bulbs among horticulturalists in the late 1500s and early 1600s. By the early 1630s, the tulip was a fixture in Dutch gardens. But Tulip Mania didn’t begin until the summer of 1633, when a house in Hoorn was exchanged for three rare tulips and a Frisian farmhouse was traded for a number of tulip bulbs. The lure of profit enticed novice florists to enter the tulip trade with minimal investment and small parcels of land, harkening back to the days of farmers taking up coin clipping during the Kipper und Wipperzeit. In this edition of Crisis Chronicles, we exchange the trading floors of today for the alcohol-fueled exchanges of the past as we dig up Tulip Mania.

The Plague and Tulip Mania
A number of factors contributed to the conditions that caused Tulip Mania. To start, the coin debasement crisis of the 1620s was followed by a period of prosperity in the 1630s. This prosperity coincided with an outbreak of the plague, which caused a labor shortage and increased real wages and surplus income. At the same time, there was a strong belief that social mobility was a Dutch birthright and that there was money to be made in every profession.

        Prior to the 1630s, tulip bulbs were only physically traded among growers in the summer, when they could be safely pulled from the ground, in what evolved to be an informal spot market for individual commodities where cash and real assets traded hands. By the 1630s, the market for tulips began to grow as florists started buying and selling tulip bulbs still in the ground using promissory notes. The notes provided welcome credit and liquidity to help finance planting and limited credit risk to a known borrower with the borrower’s bulbs as collateral. However, the notes created a limited opportunity to inspect bulbs or to see them flower, provided no guarantee of quality, nor proof that the bulbs actually belonged to the seller, or even existed. Because delivery of the bulb was often months away, this financial innovation ultimately encouraged speculation as florists bought and sold promissory notes, which were in turn resold, creating a futures market. A legitimate need for financing real assets led to a financial market in which people with no stake in the actual underlying bulbs could participate. As Dash points out, it was “normal for florists to sell tulips they could not deliver, to buyers who did not have the cash to pay for them and who had no desire to plant them.” Such a financial market served the liquidity and credit needs of growers and florists, but it also led to highly leveraged speculation by those who could borrow to finance their investments with little of their own capital at stake. Promissory notes quickly transformed from a credit and liquidity mechanism to an instrument of speculation.

Beers Instead of Beurs Fuel the Market
Bulbs were traded not at the exchange buildings in Amsterdam, the beurs, but rather in local pubs where each trade was celebrated with a toast. The in het ootje method of trade required the seller to pay a commission independent of the seller’s acceptance or refusal of the bid (typically the equivalent of a round or two of drinks), which placed a premium on accepting a decent bid, further fueling the market.

        The mania climaxed in January 1637, which marked the greatest influx of new florists. Many of these novices leveraged savings and mortgaged their goods or tools to take part in the bulb trade, just as we saw farmers turn to coin clipping during the Kipper und Wipperzeit. The absolute speculative peak is believed to be an auction on February 5, 1637, which raised 90,000 guilders. To put this in perspective, the wealthiest merchants of the day might’ve accumulated wealth of half a million guilders.

Some Florists Pull Back
With no predictability or stability in the bulb market, the market was unsustainable. By late January 1637, isolated florists sold their holdings and failed to reinvest. Other florists took notice. By the first week of February 1637, the boom ended with a crash that began at an auction in Haarlem. The first offer of bulbs at auction didn’t receive bids. The price was lowered, still with no bids, then lowered again. The once-plentiful liquidity provided by outside speculators dried up nearly instantaneously. With the auctioneer unable to find a price at which bulbs would sell, the panicked withdrawal of purchasing speculators spread to panicked “fire sales” by leveraged speculators who had bought bulbs on margin and needed to sell. “The market for tulip bulbs simply ceased to exist,” as Tulipomania reports. When bulbs could be sold, it was for 1 to 5 percent of the previous value.

Collapse Leads to Grudging Compromise
The spontaneous development of an extremely leveraged futures market certainly wasn’t new—futures markets date back to Mesopotamia, but it was the fertilizer that grew the tulip bulb trade from market, to bubble, to bust. When the bubble burst, some highly leveraged florists who had paid only small deposits still owed bulb owners huge sums of money. With the collapsed market, florists hoped to pay nothing. On February 23, growers proposed to the courts of the United Provinces that florists buy the bulbs at 10 percent of the agreed-upon selling price. After a lengthy deliberation, the courts banned tulip cases and asked that all disputes be handled at the local level. With no collective bankruptcy protections or procedures to guide resolution, growers and florists were forced to settle their disagreements individually.

This futures market for tulip bulbs was volatile and poorly regulated—more weed than flower. Rights of ownership were unclear, as growers and florists sought resolution from the tangle of transactions. And if just one florist in the chain was insolvent, the entire chain collapsed. Since the enormous interconnected claims were handled outside the courts, there was little legal protection for creditors or debtors and no clear legal status to settle the claims. That’s why even fire-sale prices of 1 to 5 percent of initial prices, driven down by desperate sellers (debtors) fearing bankruptcy, didn’t stick. Nor did the buyers get stuck with paying 10 percent of the agreed-upon prices, as had been proposed to the courts. Without enforceable debt claims or sales prices, the tulip bulb crisis ended in grudging compromise between individual growers and florists with massive write-downs of debt. However, the disruption and losses to growers, florists, and speculators were largely contained among market participants. The tulip market and the players in it weren’t interlocked with the banking sector or other credit providers. There was no lasting spillover to the real economy and no real market or legal reforms emanating from the crisis.

Lessons for Regulators
It’s interesting to compare Tulip Mania with more modern debt crises, where asset classes have strong legal protections for creditors with interconnected claims. Take securitized mortgage-backed assets, for example. In a typical crisis, market seizure initially leads to potential fire-sale prices that may wipe out debtor financial institutions. Official sector support steps in to curtail full financial contagion and systemic collapse, thus limiting spillover to the real economy. Individual debtholders (households), however, typically aren’t considered contagious or systemic to the financial system. But with no efficient private sector debt write-down mechanism at households’ disposal, there’s a greater chance for household debt to trigger a large negative spillover to the real economy.

      Post-crisis, regulators and lawmakers have indeed focused much needed attention on enhancing consumer protections, including introducing a private sector debt write-down mechanism via the recently extended Home Affordable Refinance Program and providing opportunities for improved access to refinancing opportunities for underwater mortgages, as described in a recent Liberty Street Economics post. One of the most talked-about methods of tempering speculation in the housing market, where by nature purchases are highly leveraged, is to promote strong lending practices by seeking risk retention on the books of the mortgage originator. Regulators have recently sought to “crowd in” private capital according to the “originate-to-distribute” securitization model by raising government-sponsored-enterprise (GSE) guarantee fees. As Congress prepares to enact further GSE reforms, tell us which mortgage market improvements you think would be most impactful.

        In a future post on the British credit crisis of 1772, we’ll touch on another example of how a credit crisis can lead to a debt crisis—this time with a spillover to the real economy.

....ZH: and because we couldn't resist "What's better than roses on your piano?" ... "Tulips on your organ"

See the original article >>

Monday, September 9, 2013

The Complete German Election Preview: The Worst Case Scenario

by Tyler Durden

The 2013 German federal elections may bring about pretty complicated results. With Merkel's junior coalition partner's (FDP) support dropping below the mandated 5% to enter parliament (according to polls), as Deutsche Bank notes, there is no point in working through the numerous possible coalition scenarios and options. In that case, the task of governing Germany and providing joint leadership in European affairs will become much more complicated than it used to be in normal times of a clear-cut victory for one camp. All inter-camp coalitions may well have a built-in tendency towards paralysis and require special political tricks that allow the partners to show their true colors in clearly circumscribed policy issues while not rocking the boat. A few years from now, September 22, 2013, might be remembered as the day when German politics finally became normally complicated, as in other countries, too. There are two major political narratives that appear dominant currently.

Via Deutsche Bank,

In normal times, a popular leader, an all-time employment record and the traditional conservatism of the German electorate ought to suffice to keep a conservative chancellor in power. A recent poll by the Institut für Demoskopie Allensbach found that respondents did not think the election would matter much, a big majority expected a victory for Merkel (63%) and only one-third of respondents favoured a change in government. For the Social Democrats to win, it often takes deep-seated dissatisfaction of the electorate with the conservative incumbent, a generally strong desire for substantial policy change and an SPD candidate who possesses most outstanding leadership qualities. In the last century, it usually took a shift of the Liberals to the SPD caucus, too. That has happened every twenty years or so. Staying in power for another term is usually possible.

Yet why are the 2013 elections not a foregone conclusion? What’s wrong with 2013? Why should we bother at all about what some observers call a “non-event”? The answer is much more nuanced than one might think. It is not the impact of the financial crisis that is shaping German politics directly these days, even though different policy responses to the crises dominate the party platforms and the ideas driving them.

Why 2013 is quite special

The 2013 elections might be quite special in that longer perspective, once again. The change in electoral law will make the German system much more like a strict proportional system in which additional mandates of one party due to the first vote being much stronger than the proportional second vote (Überhangmandate) will be fully offset (Ausgleichsmandate). Therefore, the combined second vote of the centre-right political camp is the crucial factor to watch. While this number hovered above 50% from 1953 to 1990, it decreased to 41% in 1998 but recovered to some 45-46% in the 2002 and 2005 elections and to 48.4% in 2009. Based on current polls, some seven to nine per cent of the vote may be for parties which will not likely pass the 5% threshold and thus not be represented in parliament. This implies that 45.5-46.5% of the combined vote may this time suffice for a majority in parliament.

...

Clearly, the trend towards a multi-party system with five/six major parties (counting CDU and CSU as separate parties gives us the number of six) and at least two small new parties – Pirates and the AfD (Alternative for Germany) matters.

Until 1982, there were only three parties, until 1998 the Greens became number four, since 1998 the Left Party has been represented in most parliaments with the exception of the 2002-05 legislature.

...

If the AfD were to enter parliament, it would probably attract voters from the centre-right camp in no small measure. This could directly reduce the Liberal vote to below five per cent or erode enough of the centre-right camp to drive it below the majority threshold. If the AfD enters parliament, any coalition will likely have to come close to a combined vote of 47.5% or more. If the election result of the centre-right camp were to be worse than the current polling by more than two percentage points, the options for forming a new government would dramatically narrow down to one or two mathematically and politically feasible options.

Who will run Germany next?

There is no point in working through the numerous possible coalition scenarios and options. On policy grounds, a CDU/CSU – SPD “Grand Coalition” government would be feasible but it is being very firmly dismissed by the SPD, still. Also, a coalition of CDU/CSU and Greens might be considered. All other options are almost too theoretical to mention. In any case, considering the primary political purpose of the next coalition will be the most important consideration that will take hold after September 22 if a simple continuation of the current coalition or a clear-cut shift to a SPD-Green government is not feasible. There are two major political narratives that might work.

Narrative number one works like this:

Germany must remain the economically strong stabiliser of the euro area, it needs more public investment and some additional targeted transfer payments financed out of budget surpluses if they materialize. The coalition sticks to a balanced budget and does its homework on setting up a new fiscal framework for the federal level and the states which is due in 2020, anyhow. The political climate for deep reforms of either social security systems, labour markets and education does not yet exist – this is politics for the next election. The parties cannot agree on new taxes (apart from a FTT) and will address some shortcomings in the labour market. This narrative could be told by both the CDU/CSU and the SPD. They could bring a collection of seasoned politicians into the cabinet. All truly controversial issues would be shelved, and the energy portfolio would be jointly managed. The real policy alternatives would be tabled in 2017 again. The SPD could once again try proving that it is ready to govern and would look optimistically towards running in 2017 with a new candidate and more luck. The CDU could cope and by and large pursue its objectives, albeit with a lot of compromises.

Another Grand Coalition would have an easier time with the Bundesrat, too, in which the SPD runs states that have a total of 30 votes out of 69 and in which it is the junior party to the CDU in even more states that have a total of another 18 votes. CDU/FDP jointly have 21 votes in the Bundesrat right now. If there are no changes to conservative governments in Bavaria (elections on September 15) and Hesse (on September 22), this would remain the case for quite some time. On European affairs, some pretty significant differences on details of the banking union and growth-promoting policies at the European level would have to be hammered out.

The drawback is insufficient political distinction for both major parties and a potential next round of bad luck for the SPD at statelevel elections and/or the federal level given the greater prominence of the Chancellor in such a government.

The second narrative would be that all politically easy solutions do not work right now, which is why something new has to be tried.

CDU/CSU and Greens agree to bridge the gap between their camps and allow some greening of the economy within the tight constraints of balanced budgets, no new taxes and no significant regulation or deregulation of the economy at large. On European issues, the Greens would try pushing in federalist directions but the conservatives would call the intergovernmental shots. The real difficulty of getting there is the repositioning of the Green Party to the left of the SPD on many classic tax-and-spend and regulatory issues which is upheld by party resolutions. Joining a government with the CDU/CSU would be pretty controversial for the party against that background.

If this coalition were not to work well, then the exercise could be terminated at will early on. Building such a coalition would not be that difficult as the Greens would roughly replace the Liberals, with some reshuffling of portfolios. However, on important issues consensus would have to be sought with the Social Democrats in particular to achieve majorities in the Bundesrat. Of course, the price of “yes” votes from SPD-led governments in the Bundesrat would be predictably higher if the SPD were not part of a federal government. Whether and how the politics of such a split system would work is impossible to predict. It might work in narrowly circumscribed instances such as euro area policies, the energy turnaround or enhanced investment in education and transportation. The drawback would be insufficient transparency and political accountability in such a multi-layered system.

The 2013 federal elections may bring about pretty complicated results. In that case, the task of governing Germany and providing joint leadership in European affairs will become much more complicated than it used to be in normal times of a clear-cut victory for one camp. All inter-camp coalitions may well have a built-in tendency towards paralysis and require special political tricks that allow the partners to show their true colours in clearly circumscribed policy issues while not rocking the boat. A few years from now, September 22, 2013, might be remembered as the day when German politics finally became normally complicated, as in other countries, too. It might, albeit indirectly, be a consequence of small shifts in the party system in response to the euro crisis. Even rock-solid political systems do not live on political islands.

If the current coalition does not have a majority in parliament, building a new government will be quite difficult and depend heavily on the specific outcome. A CDU/CSU-Green coalition or another Grand Coalition of CDU/CSU and SPD might be the only options in town. On many policy issues, difficult compromises would have to be found. On European issues, only slight changes in the policy positions on banking union and other issues would be plausible.

See the original article >>

Follow Us