Thursday, March 27, 2014

Why a New Depression Would Be Good For Us

by Bill Bonner

Driving Cattle

Today, we go even farther into the unknown … beyond eventually and past sooner or later … to what happens next. Specifically, we don’t think central bankers are going to take the end of the world lying down. They’ve got tricks up their sleeves. These are not new tricks. They’ve been used many times in many different forms. But they’ve never been used on the scale we now foresee.

But before we begin guessing, let us tell you a bit about what is really happening here at Finca Gualfin, our ranch here in northwestern Argentina. Three days ago, Jorge – the farm manager – came to us with a problem:

“SeƱor Bonner, we found two calves dead. They looked fat and healthy. I’m afraid it is a disease called la mancha. I saw it many years ago. Healthy young cows just all of a sudden fall down and die. It almost wiped out our herd.”

We still don’t know what la mancha is. But it is evidently not something to trifle with. Word went to Salta, a city about six hours away, that we had an emergency. A veterinarian advised us to inoculate the whole herd. Within hours, the medicine was on a bus bound for the hamlet of Molinos, about an hour and a half from the ranch.

The next morning, all the hands were turned out – including your editor. We mounted up and headed out to the campo – an immense valley of some thousands of acres. Our job was to sweep the valley of all the cows … driving them to the main corral, where they would be vaccinated.

The operation took three days. Your editor was probably more of a liability than a help. Driving cattle is not as easy as the local gauchos make it look. More on this later …

When the Debt Bubble Pops

Meanwhile, away from the ranch …

The end of the world comes when the debt bubble pops. But before we get there, we will see more attempts by central banks to keep the debt bubble expanding. From Richard Duncan, author of The New Depression: The Breakdown of the Paper Money System

“Given that the Fed has been driving the economic recovery by inflating the price of stocks and property, it is unlikely to allow falling asset prices to drag the economy back down any time soon. To prevent that from happening, it looks as though the Fed will have to extend QE into 2015 and perhaps significantly beyond.”

So far, so predictable. But there is a “sooner or later” for QE, too. There will come a time when the world can take no more debt… and at that point, the debt bubble will finally blow up. Then we get the equal and opposite reaction. Asset prices that have been inflated by debt will be deflated by debt de-leveraging. A depression will most likely follow.

This is not a bad thing… not at all. Contrary to popular opinion, crashes and depressions do not destroy wealth. They merely tell you that the wealth you thought you had really didn’t exist. As long as the EZ money flows freely, mistakes remain invisible. Rotten companies are kept alive. Bad speculations seem to pay off. Debts that can never be paid are still serviced. Stocks with little or no earnings shoot up.

Then when the bubble explodes the mistakes become painfully obvious. Phony gains return from whence they came. Investors reprice assets at more realistic levels. (After first going to unrealistically low levels and presenting opportunities for patient investors with plenty of cash on board).

Only then, when the economy has been thoroughly thrashed can it get up, dust itself off and get back to work. But central bankers are not likely to let it happen. They’ve made their careers by pretending to improve the economy. When the bust comes they will swing into action with more quack cures.

That is when we arrive at the second stage of the coming debt deflation. It is when we will wish we had bought more gold … more real estate … more old cars and new potatoes.

Most likely (but this is not guaranteed) central banks will find new and bolder ways to get money into consumers’ hands. (Remember Ben Bernanke’s “helicopter” speech?) This will be followed by a crisis of a different sort: high levels of consumer price inflation.

Put on your seat belt. It’s gonna be one helluva ride.

The above article is from Diary of a Rogue Economist originally written for Bonner & Partners. Bill Bonner founded Agora, Inc in 1978. It has since grown into one of the largest independent newsletter publishing companies in the world. He has also written three New York Times bestselling books, Financial Reckoning Day, Empire of Debt and Mobs, Messiahs and Markets.

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The Ukraine, IMF Aid and Economic Sanctions

by Pater Tenebrarum

IMF Reform Postponed Over Ukraine

In order to more quickly transfer the funds of Western tax cows to the Ukraine,  the US senate has apparently decided to drop an IMF reform clause from the aid bill. According to the FT, the IMF chief, Ms. Lagarde, was less than happy about this development:

“The measure would have shifted $63bn towards fulfilling US obligations to the IMF under a new system that increases the body’s lending capacity and gives emerging markets a bigger say. The reforms were agreed by the G20 in 2010, but cannot take effect unless the US approves them.

The Obama administration and congressional Democrats felt the Ukraine crisis offered an opportunity to force the issue, given that Ukraine was likely to benefit from access to IMF funds. However, Republicans held their ground, warning that the stand-off could drag on for weeks unless Democrats backed down.

This reality prompted Democratic leaders in the Senate to concede defeat and relent on their demand, on the grounds that further delay in aiding Ukraine would send a “dangerous message” to Russia. “It’s impossible to know whether events would have unfolded differently if the United States had responded to Russian aggression with a strong, unified voice,” said Harry Reid, Senate majority leader.

The decision by Senate Democrats was greeted with dismay at the US Treasury and the IMF. “We are deeply disappointed by the news that Republican opposition has forced the Senate to remove the IMF quota and governance reforms from the Ukraine assistance package,” a Treasury spokeswoman said. “Despite this setback, we remain committed to providing the IMF with the resources it needs as well as updating the Fund’s governance to reflect the global economy.”

Meanwhile, Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director, said she too was “deeply disappointed that the necessary legislative steps have not been taken by the US Congress to allow these important reforms to be implemented without further delay”. Ms Lagarde said she hoped the US authorities would give the matter “the high priority it deserves”.

(emphasis added)

In a separate statement, Ms. Lagarde also mentioned that there is actually no hurry to decide on IMF assistance to the Ukraine and that the government in Kiev is exaggerating the urgency (the IMF's experiences with the Ukraine are decidedly 'mixed'. Reform promises were not kept).

“The head of the International Monetary Fund said on Friday that there was no need to "panic" in terms of delivering economic aid to Ukraine, as she cast doubt the nation would need as much immediate help as its new leaders claim.

"We do not see anything that is critical, that is worthy of panic at the moment," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde told reporters. "We would certainly hope that the (Ukrainian) authorities refrain from throwing lots of numbers which are really meaningless until they've been assessed properly."

Ukraine's government coffers have been depleted by huge debt repayments, efforts to protect its currency and high energy costs. The country's new leaders, appointed after President Viktor Yanukovich was ousted last weekend, say they need $35 billion over two years to avoid default, and may need $4 billion immediately.

Yanukovich, fearing a political backlash, avoided unpopular economic policies recommended by the IMF, such as letting the hryvnia currency float and phasing out costly energy subsidies. He managed to secure a $15 billion aid package from Ukraine's former Soviet master Russia last year, but only $3 billion has been disbursed and the rest is in doubt. Yanukovich's government fell after weeks of street protests against his government and closer ties with Russia.

Now, support from the Washington-based IMF is seen as critical to shore up Ukraine's collapsing finances and get its economy on the right track. The United States and European Union say they are willing to provide funds alongside an IMF program. Russia also supports the Fund's involvement.

An IMF team is set to arrive in Kiev early next week to collect information and start working on a loan program. "I think it's highly premature to assess financial needs, numbers here, numbers there," Lagarde said after meeting with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier. "We need to rely on facts, we need to rely on the situation as it is."

(emphasis added)

We are not surprised that 'Russia also supports the fund's involvement'. Russia is going to save a big chunk of money compared to its previous arrangement with the Yanukovich government and is currently probably quite happy to let the West foot the bill.

Currencies – Hryvnia Crashes All Over Again, Ruble Recovers a Little

What is however most interesting is the market reaction to these latest developments. When it became obvious in late February that the Ukraine would eventually get a lot of money from the IMF and the EU (reportedly the EU wants to throw about $15 billion into the black hole), the Ukrainian hryvnia strengthened considerably from its initial crash, while the Russian ruble continued to weaken. This has recently changed however – the hryvnia is back in full-scale crash mode, while the ruble has begun to strengthen somewhat:

Hryvnia

The hryvnia crashes all over again, in spite of news of imminent IMF aid – click to enlarge.

Ruble

The ruble's short term trend appears to be slightly changing for the better – click to enlarge.

Economic Sanctions

The fact that the ruble is strengthening a bit is especially interesting considering that the Ukraine aid bill will also contain further sanctions against Russia. Meanwhile, US companies that export to Russia have already seen orders drying up, as Russian companies look for sources that are less likely to be cut off by sanctions. To be sure, direct trade between the US and Russia is quite small, but it was growing strongly, nearly doubling since 2010. Companies that benefited from this growth in trade can wave these benefits good-bye now. Sanctions always tend to hit those hardest who have the least to do with the events that prompted the sanctions:

“U.S. exports to Russia reached $11.2 billion last year, or just 0.5% of total U.S. exports, but they've nearly doubled since 2010.

Rising tension between the two countries is prompting some Russian businesses to pull back. Also, since January, the ruble has fallen in value against the dollar, making U.S. goods more expensive in Russia.

Paulson says his company sold face shields valued at $500,000 to Russian police departments last year — about 10% of all his exports and 2.5% of his total sales. But he says the firm had to painstakingly build relationships and clear bureaucratic hurdles to win that business and has been hoping to sell a new product line — face shields for electronics uses.

"We see (Russia) as a tremendous growing market for our business," he says.

Radi Al-Rashed, CEO of International Chem-Crete Co. of Dallas, says that two weeks ago his dealer for Russia and Ukraine placed on hold a $432,000 order for the company's product, which is used to prevent airport runways and roads from freezing.

"We worked hard for two years to increase our exports and now we have this crisis and…we don't know what's going to happen," Al-Rashed says. A sharp drop-off of his Russian sales could cut revenue by about 20%, he estimates.”

One reason why we picked out the above excerpt is that one cannot stress often enough that 'countries' do not trade with other. People do – therefore, economic sanctions always hit the livelihood and prosperity of individuals that happen to reside in the countries concerned – and it is never just a one-way street either. No doubt many Russians will also feel the pinch, either directly or indirectly – but the actual object of the sanctions, Vladimir Putin, is not hurt by them at all. On the contrary, his political popularity has shot upward like a Soyuz rocket. Considering president Obama's approval rating has recently hit a new all time low, we can state that Western politicians can only dream of such approval ratings at this juncture. Regardless of whether one thinks Putin 'deserves' to be punished, this isn't going to do it.

“The approval rating of Russia's president Vladimir Putin has soared 15 points since January 1 to 75.7% of Russians supporting him. Putin's political opposition was already pretty dispirited, but the Crimean annexation has permitted Putin to crush the opposition in polling.”

Frankly though, who cares? For the average citizen these things are largely irrelevant. We only mention these poll results because they underscore that economic sanctions as a rule end up punishing the wrong people, precisely because economic relations are never between disembodied 'countries' but always between concrete individuals.

Ukrainian Politics

What happens to the IMF and EU funds that will be sent to the Ukraine remains to be seen. We continue to hold that the country's economy cannot be improved by handing money to the government. Soon there will be elections in the Ukraine, and thereafter it will be possible to better assess the political situation, but it is already clear that the new government will face the same economic pressures the Yanukovich government faced as well.

What is unknown at this point is how much electoral support the extreme right wing parties will enjoy this time around (their support was in a strong upward trend previously) and how kleptocratic the new government will turn out to be. In order to improve the Ukraine's economy, reforms will be needed that may well be unpopular (inter alia the removal of price controls).

Primarily though the country needs to establish a trustworthy institutional backdrop, a climate in which property rights are adequately protected and no longer subject to the whims of a corrupt political class. It is to be wished that the Ukrainians succeed in this and it must be conceded that it would never have happened under Yanukovich.

There is however no reason whatsoever to believe a priori that anything will materially change, considering the history of Ukrainian governments to date (as things stand, kleptocratic governments have been led by both Western and Eastern Ukrainian parties). Arseny Yatsenyuk appears to be a well-meaning and somewhat colorless technocrat, and as such may well turn out to be different from his predecessors – but it is not clear how big his electoral appeal will be.

Meanwhile, another leaked phone call shows that some of the Western Ukraine's major political figures are indeed largely defined by their hatred for Russia – below are a few quotes from a conversation between 'gas princess' Julia Tymoshenko and Ukrainian MP and former government official Nestor Shufrych:

“Ukraine's former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko was plunged into fresh controversy on Tuesday after Russian television broadcast a tape where she is heard urging the "wiping out" of Russians over Moscow's seizure of Crimea.

"I am sorry that I am not able to be there and am not in charge of these processes, they wouldn't have had a fucking chance of getting Crimea off me."

This really crosses all the boundaries," Tymoshenko is heard to say in the leaked phone call posted on YouTube and broadcast extensively on Russian television Monday. "One has to take up arms and go wipe out these damn 'katsaps' together with their leader," the voice said in Russian, without mentioning Putin by name. The word "katsap" is a derogatory Ukrainian term for Russians. "I would have found a way to finish off these bastards," the 53-year-old leader of the 2004 pro-democracy Orange revolution was heard as saying.

"I am hoping that I will use all my connections and will get the whole world to rise up so that not even scorched earth would be left of Russia." Discussing the fate of Ukraine's eight million ethnic Russians with Shufrych, Tymoshenko was also heard as saying that they should be "nuked".

(emphasis added)

Is it any wonder that there are animosities between ethnic Russians in the East and the Western nationalists? Imagine you are an ethnic Russian living in the Crimea of elsewhere in the Eastern Ukraine – wouldn't you wish to be outside the orbit of a powerful politician who thinks you 'should be nuked'? We have of course little doubt that if one were to listen to conversations between people opposing the nationalists, their sentiments about their opponents wouldn't sound much different.

That Western powers believe they should make this conflict their business is however likely yet another in a series of foreign policy blunders of recent years (depending on one's definition of 'blunder'. We can e.g. not rule out that the destabilization of the Middle East is a deliberate strategy). What can already be stated with certainty is that is will be extremely costly, regardless of the ultimate outcome. Costly mainly for tax payers of course, not for the people strutting on the international stage who are 'throwing their weight around' in 'our' name.

Yulia-Tymoshenko-and-Vlad-001Back when they were still buddies: the 'gas princess' shakes hands with 'Vlad the Terrible' on a Russian-Ukrainian gas deal under which the Ukraine received gas at a  special discount. Allegedly, she skimmed off a lot of money for herself in the process.

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Picture Perfect Head and Shoulders

by Marc Chandler

This Great Graphic was created on Bloomberg.  It is the euro against the Australian dollar.  There appears to be a textbook illustration of a head and shoulders pattern.  The euro closed below the neckline yesterday at A$1.50 and has seen some follow through action today. 

From the head to the neckline is about 8 Aussie cents.  That suggests a measuring objective of near A$1.42.  However, the next immediate target is A$1.4730, a retracement objective of the Nov-Jan euro rally.   It is not uncommon for the market to retest the neckline after violating it, but this looks to be a clean break. 

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Expect Volatility from Grain Stocks Report

By: Fran Howard

Get ready for significant volatility following USDA’s quarterly Grain Stocks report released Monday, March 31.

"Four out of the past seven Grains Stocks reports showed limit days," says David Hightower, president and cofounder of the Hightower Report. Hightower was the commentator on a pre-report CME Group webcast.

Analysts expect March 1 quarterly grains stocks of 7.1 billion bushels, down 32% from last quarter’s 10.426 billion but 31% higher than last year’s 5.4 billion bushels. The range of estimates stretches from 6.861 billion bushels to 7.54 billion.

With the hog, cattle and dairy industries very profitable right now, Hightower expects demand for corn from the feed sector to increase.

"Corn is already cheap," Hightower says.

Allendale, a brokerage firm in McHenry, Ill., expects corn stocks of 6.995 billion bushels, which implies a 3.431 million bushel usage for the second-quarter of the marketing year, the third highest ever for that quarter.

Corn prices could drop following the report, but the long-term demand picture for corn is strong, says Hightower. The ethanol industry is making money and exports are expected to increase

"If new-crop stocks build to over 2.42 billion bushels, we will become the gas station to the world," he adds.

Bean Stocks Dwindling

Soybean prices have been nearly as volatile as corn following recent Grain Stocks reports.

"We are expecting a bullish report but the volatility could be very significant," says Hightower.

Soybeans stocks are expected to be slightly smaller than a year ago at 989 million bushels but down 54% from last quarter’s 2.148 billion. The range of estimates for soybeans stocks as of March 1 is 955 million bushels to 1.087 billion.

Last year, July soybeans spiked to $16.30 in an effort to ration demand, but planted acreage was lower last year than what analysts anticipate for this year. And South America’s soybean crop is also larger this year than last.

Allendale puts soybean stocks as of March 1 at 981 million bushels, which is just slightly lower than the average trade estimate.

Wheat stocks are also expected to drop substantially from year-ago levels. The average trade estimate for wheat stocks as of March 1 is 1.042 billion bushels, nearly 16% smaller than the previous year’s 1.235 billion bushels and 29% lower than last quarter’s 1.463 billion. The range of estimates for wheat stocks as of March 1 is 985 million bushels to 1.115 billion.

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Hogs play waiting game, while cattle keeps climbing

By Rich Nelson

Hogs: At this point, we must say this market is entirely a psychology issue. It was noted Tuesday that Friday’s quarterly Hogs and Pigs report will not match any bull’s expectations. The average trade guess is for the hog herd to fall from the Dec. 1 count at 0.7% under last year down to a 5.4% under last year number on March 1. That does not match up with recent slaughter levels that are from 6% to 8% lower than last year.

veryone expects that to fall down to over 10% yr/yr declines by summer. While Wednesday's chart action looks a little better, traders finally rejecting the morning’s sharply lower trade, we would suggest the trade will wait until Friday’s report before deciding if the second gold rush is back on…Rich Nelson

Cattle: Cattle futures gapped higher from Tuesday's afternoon close on the news of those later afternoon $150-$152 sales in the South and $154 in the North. That was a new record. Those new record prices were made despite wholesale beef being almost $3 off last week’s peak from the 18th.
For those asking about how this affects our study from last week, the 15-year average decline from the peak spring high down to the lowest summer low would imply $134 cash coming. That’s not too far off current pricing. August futures are implying $135 at the end of August.

Before we all say this market is properly priced let’s keep in mind that this year’s summer bulge in supplies will be larger than normal. Over the past five months, placements ran 6.6% over last year. For the near future we see a slight increase in supplies next month. The real supply problems will hit this summer. For trading, we are only favoring the sell August/buy December bear spread. We expect to see the August contract to be priced in the $120′s this summer…

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Palladium is Defying Gravity

by Greg Harmon

Palladium broke out above a symmetrical triangle in early March. It stalled when it reached the previous high from March of 2012 and fell back to retest the triangle before moving back higher to new highs. My friend JC Parets (@allstarcharts) was all over this, nice work. It has now fallen back to retest that prior high, but the Hammer candle Wednesday suggests it may be ready to launch toward the target of the triangle break out at 855. I do not know if JC is still long but if he is I wish him luck. Not only because he is a nice guy but because Palladium seems to be the only metal that is acting strong. Gold

pall

broke its downtrending resistance on Valentine’s Day but has been pulling back since St. Patrick’s Day and is back at the break out level looking weak. Is it a coincidence strong into the love holiday and starts to fall on the drinking holiday? Hmmm. Silver is worse peaking in late February and turning what initially looked like a Cup and Handle into a disaster. Then there is Platinum which made a higher high on March 5th and since the Ides of March has been pulling back, accelerating Wednesday. The prior low at 1361 does not seem out of reach. For now Palladium is defying gravity as it holds at higher levels. Will it help the others find support or will it give it up and fall back into the prior consolidation.

goldsilverplat

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