Archive for the ‘Great Rotation’ Category

Eurocrisis: Its Baack!
While it never really went away, Italian voters put the Eurozone’s problems on the front pages again after anti-austerity parties appeared on track to win a majority of seats in the Italian parliament, vastly complicating efforts to forge a government able to carry through EU-imposed reforms. This plus a looming US sequestration forced investors to take another look at risk as US stocks attempted to reach pre-crisis highs. The sharp surge in the S&P 500 VIX volatility index shows just how much of a negative surprise the Italian elections were. With one Mario (Monti) gone, investors are beginning to wonder if the other Monti (Draghi) can pull another rabbit from the ECB’s hat to quell Eurozone concerns. The Italian elections sent EUR plunging against USD and JPY, triggering profit-taking in US stocks, and threatening to derail the weak JPY-driven rally in Japan stocks.
 
Investors may now take a step back to see just how much the Italian elections hurt the bailing wire and duck tape countermeasures that had so far kept a lid on Euro-crisis, and just how much economic pain the US sequestration political boondoggle in the US causes, and just how serious the Fed is taking concerns about the future risk of normalizing its over-swollen balance sheet. 
As we pointed out in market sentiment indicators flashing yellow/red, sentiment indicators were already signalling that US stocks were due for a correction, with increasingly nervous investors waiting for an excuse to take profits. For the time being, however, bulled-up investors are mainly viewing the new developments as a somewhat welcome a “speed bump” pause in the stock rally, i.e., a chance for those who missed most of the move since last November to participate in the rally. How long this “buy on weakness” depends on how resilient stocks are over the next few weeks.
 
The knee-jerk reaction so far has been classic risk-off, i.e., stocks fell, USD rose, EUR fell and sell-off in JPY temporarily reversed as US bond yields up-ticked and even Gold got a bid. As the short JPY technically was also over-extended, an unwinding of speculator short JPY positions could see JPY test JPY90/USD resistance, thereby stunting the Nikkei 225’s sharp rebound, at least for the time being. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Warnings of Dire Consequences of Massive Government Debt and Swollen Central Bank Balance Sheets
Lurking in the background is a big picture concern. The West faced a 1931 moment in late 2008. The cost of avoiding a 1931 moment has been soaring government debt and economies that are too weak to support growing entitlement costs, which in the U.S. are expected to grow to $700 billion over the next four years, according to hedge fund legend Stanley Druckenmiller. While Druckenmiller believes there is still time to tackle the U.S. debt issue, he warns that if it is not dealt with in the next four or five years, “we’re going to wake up, interest rates are going to explode and the next generation is going to have a tough time.” 
The irony is that the U.S. is the least dirty shirt in the closet. Even former EU commissioner Frits Bolkestein is among a crowd of investors convinced that a break-up of the sovereign debt-challenged Euro was inevitable, and speculators mercilessly pounded Greece, Spain, Italy and other southern European bonds until Mario Draghi put the hounds at bay by promising to “do whatever it takes” to save the Euro. Japan has long been on the short list of countries expected to see fiscal crisis for several years now, ostensibly as they have already crossed the debt spiral rubicon, according to absolutely convinced hedge fund managers like Kyle Bass. 
Scare Stories are Currently Not Affecting How Investors are Making Asset Allocation Decisions 
But even Druckenmiller admits the debt problem doesn’t change how investors currently make asset-allocation decisions. “(Because) the Fed printing $85 billion a month, this is not an immediate concern…but this can’t go on forever.” That said, most professional investors are having trouble assimilating such imminently reasonable scenarios with soaring stock markets, the performance in which they ostensibly get paid. Consistently profitable hedge fund maven Ray Dalio says 2013 is likely to be a transition year, where large amounts of cash—ostensibly previously parked in safe havens—will move to stock and all sorts of stuff – goods, services, and financial assets. 
At the same time, these same investors have little real confidence in the economic recovery upon which rising financial assets are supposedly predictated, and have wavered between “risk on” and “risk off” on several occasions since the March 2009 post crisis secular low in stock prices. On the past two occasions, the prospect of central banks backing away from extraordinary monetary policy has been enough to send them scurrying back into risk off mode, only to venture out again as central banks again re-assure that they are on the case. 
Nevertheless, supported by Fed assurances of “unlimited” QE, ECB assurances that they will do whatever it takes, and the prospect of the BoJ joining the full-scale balance sheet deployment party, US stock prices are near pre-2008 crisis highs hit in 2007, and growing investor complacency saw the S&P 500 VIX volatility (fear) index recently hitting its lowest point since May 2007. 
But Complacency Makes Some People Nervous… 
But investor complacency itself is cause enough to make some investors worried. After the S&P 500 VIX volatility index hit its lowest point since May 2007, investors were temporarily spooked last week by indications in the FOMC minutes that “many participants…expressed some concerns about potential costs and risks from further asset purchases.” The balance sheet risk issue first surfaced in the December FOMC, but was papered over by the launch of a $45 billion program to buy longer-dated TBs, and the continuance in the January meeting of $85 billion of purchases until the labor market improved “substantially” in the context of price stability around the 2% level. 
…And FOMC Fretting about Fed Balance Sheet Risk is Downright Disturbing 
Thus while hard money proponents have long warned of “wanton” and “dangerous” money printing, even FOMC members are beginning to fret about the growing risk its swollen balance sheet poses in the inevitable process of normalizing the size and composition of its balance sheet. 
In other words, the really tricky part for stock markets is when central banks are confident enough in the economic recovery, ostensibly an “all clear” sign to investors worried about the sustainability of the recovery,  to attempt normalizing their balance sheets. 
Nearly everyone recognizes that the first round of global QE prevented/forestalled financial collapse. But successive rounds of QE have demonstrably diminishing returns versus growing risks of swollen central bank balance sheets, a tidbit that financial markets are so far blithely ignoring. Specifically, the three key issues underlying the debate about burgeoning government debt swollen central bank balance sheet are: 
a) How long the fiscal path of governments can be sustained under current policies. 
b) If governments cannot or will not service this debt, central banks may be ultimately forced to choose between inflation spiral-inducing debt monetization, or in idely standing by as the government defaults. 
c) Central bank balance sheets are currently extremely large by historical standards and still growing, and the inevitable process of normalizing the size and composition of the balance sheet poses significant uncertainties and challenges for monetary policymakers. 
The 90% Solution and Debt Sustainability 
Even Paul Krugman cannot deny that excessive government debt has consequences. Reinhart and Rogoff (2012) documented that levels of sovereign debt above 90% of GDP in advanced countries lead to a substantial decline in economic growth, while Cecchetti, Mohanty and Zampolli (2011) found a threshold of around 85% for the debt-to-GDP ratio at which sovereign debt retards growth. Such data were the inspiration for “new normal” scenarios, which posited that potential economic growth would semi-permanently shift downward following the 2008 crisis as economies delivered. 
Furthermore, debt default is a clear and present danger. Greenlaw, Hamilton, Hooper and Mishkin (2013) as well as other studies observe that, since the more government debt is held by foreigners, the greater the political incentives to default on that debt, and therefore the greater perceived risk of this debt, which raises borrowing costs. Further, higher overall foreign debt—both public and private—also makes it more difficult for a country to continue making interest payments on sovereign debt, thus increasing perceived risk and the interest rate demanded for this risk. Current-account deficits are also highly significant; i.e., a country that increases its current-account deficit to GDP would be expected to face higher interest rates demanded for holding sovereign debt. 
The bottom line of such research is that, the larger the debt to GDP, the harder it is for a country to “grow” out of its debt, while high levels of sovereign debt held by foreigners in combination with high and consistent current account deficits greatly increases the risk of triggering a fiscal and/or currency crisis. The “great divide” in economic thinking is what should we be doing about it now. The Keynesians say continue throwing fiscal spending at the problem, and worry about the debt after the economy recovers. The monetarists say keep pushing on extraordinary monetary policy. The hard money traditionalists say both policies are a prescription for a renewed, deeper crisis, and that we only have a few years to act to reduce debt. 
Investors, whose careers have been based on the maxim that “price is truth”, say this heavy intervention has already seriously skewed the market pricing mechanism, It is also gut-level clear there are limits to how much fiscal spending governments and how much balance sheet deployment central banks can continue in the face of massive and growing debt. Problem is, no one knows exactly where these limits are. The only certainty is the extreme aversion to finding out; on the part of governments, central bankers and investors. Ostensibly, central banks could continue printing money and expanding their balance sheets indefinitely, but there is a good reason for the historically strong adversion to full-scale debt monetization by central banks, and that is again fiat currency debasement and runaway inflation. 
How Damaging the Risk of Fed Balance Sheet Losses? 
A recent paper by Greenlaw, Hamilton, Hooper and Mishkin (2013) stimulated debate in the Federal Reserve about the risk of losses on asset sales and low remittances to the Treasury, and how this could lead the Federal Reserve to delay balance sheet normalization and fail to remove monetary accommodation for too long, exacerbating inflationary pressures. 
Monetarists argue that losses on the Fed balance sheet are an accounting irrelevancy. 
While the value of bond holdings in swollen (USD 3 trillion) bond holdings in central bank balance sheets would get crushed along with bond-heavy financial institution portfolios, ostensibly reversing current unrealized gains of some USD200 billion to an unrealized loss of USD300 billion. The Fed’s contributions to the Treasury, which have reduced the annual deficit by some 10% over the past few years, would fall to zero. Monetarists claim the magnitude of such a change (USD 80 billion) ostensibly would not be that big a deal. An accounting “asset” could simply be created equal to the annual loss, in the form of a future claim on remittances to Treasury. 
Thus far, the Federal Reserve’s asset purchases have actually increased its remittances to the Treasury, at an annual level of about $80 billion from 2010 to 2012. These remittances are any rate are likely to approach zero as interest rates rise and the Fed balance sheet normalizes. But Bernanke and other central bankers are not monetarists, and what matters is what the central bankers think. 
In recent public remarks, Governor Jerome H. Powell quotes historical precedent in playing down these risks. Federal debt as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) increased significantly on two prior occasions in modern history–during the Great Depression-World War II era and, to a smaller extent, the two decades ending in the mid-1990s. In each case, fiscal policy responded by running sustained primary surpluses and reducing debt to levels below 40% of GDP. Thus the party line is, “the foundation of U.S. debt policy is the promise of safety for bondholders backed by primary surpluses only in response to a high debt-GDP ratio,” While this is the principal reason why the federal debt of the United States still has the market’s trust, no one wants to contemplate the consequences of the US Treasury or the Fed losing the market’s trust. 
Growing Probability of a 1994 Bond Scenario? 
When Druckenmiller says, “we’re going to wake up, interest rates are going to explode and the next generation is going to have a tough time,” he is talking about a sharp backup in bond yields, aka the so-called 1994 scenario, or worse. Ostensibly, any whiff of inflation would cause a bond market rout, leaving not only escalating losses on the Fed’s trillions of USD in bond holdings, but also wrecking havoc with private sector financial institution balance sheets. The longer the Fed keeps pumping away under QE, the greater the ostensible risk. Under Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, yields on 30yr treasuries jumped 240bps in a nine-month time span, that is seared into the memories of bond-holders. Talk of a “Great Rotation” from bonds into equities elicits the same painful memories. 
Great Rotation as a Process Rather than an Event 
Current market signals in the U.S., U.K. and Japan bond markets do not suggests that these countries are near the point of losing the market’s confidence, or that the bond market is “smelling” something afoot. More reasonable sounding scenarios come from people like veteran technical analyst Louise Yamada, who like Ray Dalio see a potential turning point comparable to 1946 when deflation was defeated and the last bear market in bonds began. Her point, which by the way we agree, is that the Great Rotation is likely to be a slow process, characterized by a “bottoming process in rates, or a topping process in price”. 
Alarmists Can’t Have it Both Ways 
The alarmist scenarios are internally inconsistent. On the one hand, they insist that the Fed’s (and other central bank) unconventional policies are not working to restore sustainable growth, and that central banks in desperation at the prospect of potential sovereign default, will be forced into full-scale debt monetization. On the other, they warn of a bond market rout, ostensibly on a recovery sufficient for these same central banks to attempt to “normalize” their balance sheets and a “great rotation” from bonds into equities, which is a big “risk on” trade if there ever was one. 
Worry About the U.K. First…. 
If investors closely examined the academic work on past periods of excess sovereign debt, they would be more worried about a fiscal crisis/currency crash in the U.K. rather than Japan. The punch line of said research is, to repeat, that debt-to-GDP over 90% chokes off economic growth, which certainly happened in Japan, but is now happening in the UK, Euroland and the US. The larger the debt to GDP, the harder it is for a country to “grow” out of its debt, while all-out austerity only ensures a more rapid deterioration in debt relative to the economy, and all the more central bank money printing to stave off the ravaging effects of this austerity—true for both Euroland, the UK and the US. 
Further, high levels of sovereign debt held by foreigners in combination with high and consistent current account deficits greatly increases the risk of triggering a fiscal and/or currency crisis. This factor is not relative to the case of Japan, where foreign ownership of debt is minimal and the current account deficit is a very recent phenomenon. 
JPY and GBP are currently the favorite currencies to short among currency traders. While the Japanese government has gained more notoriety for reflationary “Abenomics” and their wish to see JPY much cheaper, the UK authorities are if anything just as keen to see GBP much cheaper. While not as obvious about it, UK fiscal and monetary authorities are just as keen to see a weaker pound sterling. Ben Broadbent, yet another former Goldman Sachs banker and BoE Monetary Policy Committee member, stated that a weak pound will be necessary for some time to rebalance the economy towards exports. FT economist Martin Wolff observed, “sterling is falling, Hurray!”.  BoE governor Mervyn King proposed 25 billion pounds of further asset purchases, but was voted down. Not to be deterred, in February he said the U.K.’s recovery may require a weaker pound, right after a G7 statement to “not engage in unilateral intervention” on currencies. Governor King has also stated that countries had the right to pursue stimulus, regardless of the exchange rate consequences, while brushing off the potential negative side effects on inflation. In fact, the only difference between Japan’s and the UK’s efforts to depreciate their currencies is that the UK is more adept at sending the signal.
In terms of actual central bank action, the UK since 2010 has been expanding its balance sheet at a much more rapid rate than both the Fed, the ECB and certainly the BoJ.
Source: Japan Investor, respective central banks
Big Market Reaction to UKDowngrade by Moody’s
While the USD and JPY barely twitched when the respective countries’ sovereign debts were downgraded by rating agencies, the negative reaction in GBP was very noticeable, and GBP is now just as much a target of currency shorts as JPY is. While the dour economic mood in Tokyo has lifted dramatically with Abenomics, Moody’s sees continued weakness in the U.K.medium-term economic outlook extending into the second-half of this decade, given the drag on growth from the slow growth of the global economy, and from ongoing domestic public and private sector deleveraging, despite a committed austerity program. Indeed, the UKgovernment’s ability to deliver savings through austerity as planned is now in doubt. 

Then there is the UK’s total debt position. Including financial sector debt, UKdebt to GDP is over 900%, which makes Japan’s 600%-plus look relatively mild in comparison, and the US 300%-plus look rather small. Higher overall foreign debt—both public and private—also makes it more difficult for a country to continue making interest payments on sovereign debt, thus increasing perceived risk and the interest rate demanded for this risk. Like the US, UK national debt has increased sharply because of, a) the recession, b) an underlying structural deficit, and c) costs of a bailout of the banking sector.
So far, the UK’s current debt position is that it hasn’t led to a rise in government bond yields, because pound sterling looked absolutely safe compared to a very shaky Euro. The Centre for Policy Studies argues that the real national debt is actually more like 104% of GDP, including all the public sector pension liabilities such as pensions, private finance initiative contracts, and Northern Rock liabilities. The UK government has also added an extra £500bn of potential liabilities by offering to back mortgage securities, where in theory they could be liable for extra debts of up to £500bn.
High Foreign Ownership of Debt 

While the Bank of England owns nearly 26% of this debt, a big chunk, nearly 31% is owned by foreigners. But by far the biggest component of UK external debt is the banking sector. While the debt in the banking sector reflects the fact the UK economy is very open with an active financial sector and free movement of capital, the nationalization of some of the U.K.’s biggest financial institutions has shown that these debts in a pinch have a high probability of becoming government debts through nationalization. John Kingman, boss of UK Financial Investments, has stated, “No one can say a system is mended when the bulk of bank lending is dependent on huge government guarantees and where the government is the main shareholder.” BoE governor Mervyn King has also stated that ongoing Eurozone crisis is a “mess” that poses the “most serious and immediate” risk to the UKbanking system,
External debt to GDP alone is some 390% of GDP for the UK. and nearly four times that of Japanin absolute value.  Further, Japan is the world’s largest net international creditor and has been for nearly 20 years, while the U.K. is a net international debtor. While USD is still the prominent reserve currency for central banks (at some 62%), GBP and JPY are essentially the same (at 4%-plus), meaning there is no special inherent support for GBP from central banks like USD, EUR or German mark.  

Bank of England policymaker Adam Posen in 2010 outlined the very real risk to UK banks from the Euro crisis, as 60% of UK trade is with the Eurozone. The Bank of England has been pushing UK banks to shore up their capital positions, as the indirect exposures to Euro risk were “considerable”, and has been pushing UK banks to cut their exposure to this risk. Outgoing BoE governor Mervyn King went so far as to say the risk was still “severe” in late 2012 in a letter to Chancellor George Osborn, and pushed for further BoE asset purchases, but was voted down.

Thus while the short JPY trade has been front and center on traders’ radar since Abenomics hit the scene, GBP may have more downside for the foreseeable future as investors are reminded that the Euro crisis is far from over. 

Source: Yahoo.com



The Great Rotation is one of the best financial stories ever told, as it refers to a secular shift from cash (MMFs etc.) and bonds into risk assets. 
  • Historically, however, such big picture regime changes have not suddenly run their course in a short period of one or two years, and investor sentiment indicators are pointing to a short-term extreme, leaving room for a 10%~15% correction in stock prices. 
  • As for a great rotation-induced bond market crash, keep in mind that over 60% of US treasuries are held by the Fed and foreign governments (central banks) who are policy driven, and not driven by profits/losses during major market moves. Also keep in mind the Fed has promised “unlimited” bond purchases, ostensibly on the order of USD1.14 trillion.
  • In the so-called currency wars, a more aggressive BoJ balance sheet expansion could leave the ECB holding the short straw and trigger a response if the Euroland situation again tips toward crisis. So far, however, actual Japan-US bond spreads aren’t backing the dropoff in JPY, i.e., market expectations are way ahead of fundamentals, leaving room for disappointment/profit taking. 

Investor Bullishness Has Reached an Extreme
It appears that investor bullishness has reached an interim extreme. The BoA Merrill Lynch Fund Managers Survey taken between 4th to 10th January 2013 showed that investors bullishness surged to the highest level in over 10 years, and the 2nd highest in the history of the survey. ML observed, “Bullish expectations on growth, profits and margins have finally translated into higher equity allocations. A net 51% of investors are overweight equities, the most bullish reading since February 2011.” In February 2011, we all know what happened next, the stock market (S&P 500) peaked in late April and fell nearly 18% over the next three months in a classic “sell in May” growth scare. 

Source: BoA ML, The Short Side of Long
CNN Money’s Fear & Greed index shows similar extreme readings. The current reading of 86 is consistent with a market in which participants are extremely greedy, and when investors are extremely greedy, the capricious Mr. Market usually steps up and gives them some pain, meaning stock prices could over-react in the short-term to virtually any unforeseen negative news.

Source: CNN Money
Finally, there is the S&P 500 VIX “fear index” which of course moves in reverse to stock prices. The VIX, is already back to lows seen several times after and before the 2008 financial crisis, implying the next major move is up, ostensibly on a selloff.

Source: BigCharts.com
The optimism is not unique to the U.S., as the MSCI World Index looks poised to challenge its 2007 high. But investors often, wrongly, extrapolate past returns into future return expectations. Does all the current bullishness mean that investors really believe the financial and economic devastation of the 2008 financial crisis is “fixed” and its now back to “regular normal” and business as usual? Or, since asset prices change in response to unexpected fundamental information, are we guilty of being too bearish from licking our investment wounds from the 2008 financial crisis that we cannot see asset prices are discounting good news we don’t know about or perceive yet? It’s probably a combination of both, as the extreme bullishness is a short-medium term perspective. 
Source: The Short Side of Long
Long-Term, The Greatest Financial Story Ever Told is Gradually Falling in Place
Kimble Charting Solutions has looked at the monthly closings of the DJIA going back 100 years. As the Dow is closing the month, its closing price iss within 24 points of the 2007 monthly closing high, i.e., the core U.S. blue chips are not only already closing in on the 2007 closing high, but is at the tope of its 70-year rising channel. Rising support, created by higher lows is squeezing DJIA into a very tight spot, caught in-between long-term support and resist lines, from which a break-out appears imminent. A breakout to the upside will require enough buyers and momentum, a breakout to be viewed as a long-term technical positive. However, DJIA is trading above a trading channel in place since the 1930s, meaning it could also correct down to the lower line of the channel, especially with any serious setback in the still-fragile Euroland debt/bank balance sheet situation and a sputtering U.S. recovery. The Fed, ECB’s and BoJ’s commitments to “unlimited” QE substantially minimize the probability of this happening, but there is more than zero probability that massive central bank debt monetization and currency debasement simply stops working at some point. 
The greatest financial story ever told of course is the secular rotation out of cash (MMF, etc.) and bonds into risk assets, i.e., stocks. Since we have already experienced a near meltdown in the global financial system and survived, the next big wave is the Great Rotation, but it doesn’t all have to happen (and indeed is unlikely to happen) in just one year. Rather, more desireable (and historically realistic) is a gradual shift in funds that avoids creating yet another infernal bubble. 

Source: Kimble Charting Solutions
Shanghai Back from the Dead
While the short JPY, long Nikkei 225 has been the darling of hedge fund managers since October-November 2012, according to the BoA ML survey, global fund managers are especially optimistic abouth China, where, “Growth optimism surged to a 33-month high. Optimism on Chinese growth remains robust. A net 63% expect a stronger Chinese economy over the next 12 months, the second highest reading on record.” This represents basically a 180 degrees shift in investor sentiment over the past year, as many investors a year ago were convinced by hedgies such as Jim Chanos and Hugh Hendry that China was going to hell-in-a-hand basket. Unlike Japan where USD, EUR-based investors will see their JPY-denominated investments be undermined by JPY weakness, they stand to win both in capital gains and currency appreciation in the case of China. 
The recent spurt in the Shanghai Composite, which is more dominated by domestic retail traders, indicates that Chinese investors are also coming around to the idea that China is in for a soft landing, even though there is much repair work that needs to be done on the Shanghai Composite before its all clear skies and fair sailing. 

Source: Big Charts.com
Great Rotation = Bond Market Blowup?
The smart guys in the room, like Goldman Sachs, are growing more nervous about the bond bubble. Regardless of what they are telling clients, the investment bank in the past year has strategically cut the amount of money it could lose if interest rates were to rise. The bank has also upped its own borrowing in order to lock in low interest rates. The two top guys, Lloyd Blankfein and COO Gary Cohn recently warned at the Davos WEO and at a recent conference in New York that many banks and investors might not be prepared for the possibility of a “significant repricing” in the bond market. The moves are reminiscent of those Goldman took in 2006 and 2007 in the run-up to the housing bust, as the firm reportedly made bet against mortgage bonds to profit as the price of housing debt collapsed to protect its B/S even as they touted toxic mortgage-backed securities to investors.
To a certain extent, higher bond yields, as they reflect improving growth expectations, are positive for the stock market. Keep in mind that US 10yr treasuries were trading between 2.5% and 4% yields as recently as 2010 on rising growth expectations, when no one was seriously suggesting a bond market blowup. Also keep in mind that over half of Treasury holders are policy driven and not driven by profits/losses during major market moves. This is because the Fed owns some 15%, while foreign official (central bank) holdings are some 46%, meaning the vast majority of US treasury holdings are unlikely to rapidly dump their holdings just because rates have been rising and prices have been falling in the last three months, even though China’s CIC for example recently voiced their concern about the sustainability of the USD’s value. Of the foreign holders, China and Japan account for almost half (21%+ and 20%+ respectively) of foreign holdings of US treasuries. 
Source: FXStreet
Also keep in mind that the Fed will be buying some USD1.14 trillion of  U.S. treasuries in the QE4-unlimited version. Indeed, the biggest risk is that the Fed becomes so confident in the sustainability of recovery, ostensibly with unmistakable signs of sustainable job growth, it scales back or even ends “open-ended” quantitative easing within the next couple of years. A close look at the prior seven major tightening cycles in the U.S. since the early 1970s suggest that the 10yr bond yield will remain “docile” throughout 2013 and even most of 2014. On the Great Rotation scenario, Wall Street is still officially divided. Citi’s Tobias Levkovich believes the Great Rotation scenario is bunk at least for 2013 and much of 2014, while BoA strategist Michael Hartnett believes the Great Rotation has arrived, as does Bridgwater’s Ray Dalio, although he apparently sees a less bond-market-threatening shift, at least not like the 1994 debacle.

Thus shorting treasuries and going “all in” equities has short-medium term risks as well

Currency Wars vs the Big Mac Index
Japan announced that, as of January 2014, it will begin an open-ended, unlimited QE program to monetize Japanese debt (they are currently buying 36 trillion yen a month, or about $410 billion) and attempt to generate the magical 2% inflation target, thereby pulling Japan out of its structural deflation spiral.
While Germany, South Korea, the U.S. auto industries whose export competitiveness has benefitted at the expense of Japan since the 2008 financial crisis are warning of an escalation in developed market currency wars, the Economist’s infamous Big Mac Index index actually shows JPY as over 10% undervalued versus USD, while China’s Yuanis 30%+ undervalued and India’s Rupeeis over 50% undervalued versus USD. On the other hand, Norwayand Sweden’s currencies are around 50% overvalued, while EUR is also slightly overvalued vs USD. 
In reality, Japan’s BoJ is merely attempting to catch up to the surge in other major central bank balance sheets, who have been monetizing debt like crazy. The currency with the short straw is expected to be EUR, and if continued economic weakness in Euroland forces the ECB to respond, a currency war could break out in earnest, bringing JPY back to square one and well away from the 30% + depreciation needed to recover a significant amount of export competitiveness lost to South Korea and China, for example. 

Meanwhile, the Fed is already committed to “unlimited” QE, the Street expects the Fed to purchase USD1.14 trillion assets by Q1 2014 (i.e., a 30%-plus B/S expansion) , whereas the BoJ’s more aggressive program ostensibly won’t start until 2014, meaning for the rest of this year, the Fed will continue printing money a lot faster than the BoJ. Further we believe a move to a new trading range between JPY95 and JPY100/USD would merely bring JPY back to a trading range prevailing before the Great East Japan Earthquake, which the JGB (Japan Government Bond) market could easily handle without blowing up. Indeed, policy makers as well as investors would get spooked if JPY shot through JPY110 like hot butter, eliciting fears of a serious JPY crash–something that no one except perhaps Kyle Base would welcome. 
Source: The Economist Big Mac Currency Indices
JPY300~JPY400/USD: “Pie-in-the-Sky” JPY/USD Projections

Further, the hedgies and “smart” investors should be careful about what they wish for in forecasting a crash in JPY to JPY300 or even JPY500/USD. Such a crash implies Japan basically collapsing into a banana republic of excessive debt gone sour and fiscal collapse. Since domestic investors are by far the major holders of this debt, it is they who would take the hit, particularly large banks and other Japanese financial institutions. 
The IMF, the Bank of England and major Japanese banks themselves have warned of the balance sheet risk from holding some JPY40 trillion worth of JGBs. The IMF estimates that a 100bps jump in JGB yields would represent a 26% shock to regional banks’s Tier 1 capital, while major banks could withstand a “moderate” JGB shock. The Bank of England, however, has estimated that the Japanese banks’ JGB holdings represent 900% of Tier 1 capital, versus 25% for U.K. banks and 100% for U.S. banks. Given some other shock to the banking system, the Japanese government would be hard-pressed to backstop the system owing to the effects of its own position on bank balance sheets. 
These short sellers talk as if a fiscal collapse in Japan is an “opportunity” instead of a systemic risk to the global financial system. If big holes are blown in the balance sheets of Japan’s major financial institutions, one of the first places they will turn to for instant liquidity is US treasuries, meaning US treasury prices could also tank as JPY surges through Japanese financial institution repatriation of overseas funds. Thus as was seen during the height of the Euro debt crisis, a debt crisis virtually anywhere in the world has wide-spread and deep reprecussions, meaning the portfolios of JGB and JPY short-sellers could get heavily whacked even as these investors make quick money on their short JGB & JPY trades, not to mention the losses to sovereign wealth funds and central bank holders of JGBs. All-in-all, it is an outcome that policy makers around the world would like to avoid as much as an implosion of the Euro. 
Much Expectation Has So Far Seen Minimal Action
As I have frequently pointed out and my former ABN AMRO colleague Chris Wood has highlighted, the rapid plunge in JPY/USD has so far not been confirmed by an expanding expansion in the US-Japan 2-year bond yield spread. Chris suggests the JPY has much further to go if a “Bernanke wannabe” like Kazumasa Iwata becomes the new BoJ governor in Q2, 
Our reading is that the gap suggests market prices have already discounted traders’/investors’ vision of how Abenomics and a more aggressive BoJ policy plays out, leaving a lot of room for short-medium term disappointment, unless of course the new “Bernanke wannabe” BoJ governor decides to implement “unlimited” QE in 2013 instead of 2014, as was indicated by current governor Shirakawa, as the Fed’s buying of some USD1.14 trillion ostensibly represents a 30% expansion in their balance sheet; something that the BoJ must exceed in terms of change rate to ensure JPY depreciation has legs.  
Source: Chris Wood, CLSA
Expect to See Many More Earnings Upgrades from Japanese Companies
With JPY/USD already back to the JPY92 level, the Yen is again trading weaker than the aggregate average breakeven level for Japan’s exports as indicated in BoJ surveys, which is JPY85/USD. Goldman Japan is already forecasting a 14% increase in Japan corporate profits based on JPY88/USD, and as ever JPY10 of weakness raises Japan corporate profits by 6%~8%, growth could accelerate to over 20% if JPY averages 100-plus. 
Japan Tobacco (2914), Asia’s largest listed tobacco maker, has already raised its profit forecast as the weaker yen boosts the value of its overseas earnings, and we expect to see a lot more upgrades as 2013 progresses. Consequently, stocks with the most to gain from a weaker JPY like car maker Mazda (7261), struggling electronics major Sharp (6753), steel makers JFE (5411) and Kobeko (5406), bearing maker NTN (6472), as well as high beta broker/dealers like Nomura (8604) and Daiwa (8601)  have led the 30%-plus rally in the Nikkei 225 from October 12/13 2012 lows in surging over 80% in less than four months. 

Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor
The surge in Japanese stock prices is of course being driven by foreign investors, who were net buyers by JPY2.893 trillion from the October lows, pushing market prices higher despite net selling by domestic institutions of JPY1.786 trillion and individuals of JPY1,013 trillion. While not yet “all-in”, broker/dealer prop trading added JPY111 billion of net buying, helping to tip the balance in the bulls’ favor. Meanwhile, the few losers included grounded Boeing Dreamliner battery maker GS Yuasa (6674), and overseas plant equipment majors JGC (1963) and Chiyoda Corp. (6366) that were directly affected by the terrorist takeover of a gas facility in Algeria. In addition, with the export stocks soaring, investors are abandoning pure domestic demand stocks whose costs will rise with the weaker JPY, including the beer makers Asahi (2102) and Kirin HD (2503). 
Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, Japan Investor, JPY billion
We expect domestic institutions to continue selling through February and March ahead of fiscal year-end book closings as this is the first chance they have had to book profits on their holdings in a long time. Whether domestic institutions really believe in Abenomics and new BoJ leadership will become apparent from their Q1 FY2013 (April~June), when traditionally they have deployed their new year’s asset allocations.