Archive for the ‘JGBs’ Category

Abenomics is apparently unfolding as predicted by Shinzo Abe himself. The LDP sweeps back into power in the December 16, 2012 Lower House elections, the newly installed Abe Cabinet outlines a “three arrow” scenario, chooses a new BoJ governor that is not afraid to try aggressive policies, and who immediately uncorks the boldest BoJ actions perhaps in the Bank’s history, the LDP cements its majority with another landslide win in the Upper House elections in July 17, 2013, and the Abe Administration is now tackling an inevitable hard-wired VAT hike, amidst evidence that Abenomics is beginning to change inflationary expectations as well as economic growth expectations. 
As surprised foreign investors/traders digested the implications of Abenomics and an extremely aggressive BoJ, the narrative was that these actions would dramatically weaken JPY, especially as it appeared Japan’s balance of payments had now turned to structural deficit after some 40 years of chronic surpluses.
Source: 4-Traders.com
But the selloff in JPY vs USD appears to have lost essentially all of its momentum after quickly retracing some 56% of the appreciation from a 2007 low of around JPY124/USD to the JPY76/USD level immediately after the 2011 Tohoku earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster. JPY/USD is now languishing below the psychologically important JPY100/USD, and has reversed only 56% of the 2008 financial crisis appreciation. Even the LDP landslide election win in the July 2013 Upper House elections barely moved the needle. 
Bulk of Investment Fund Flows Remain Inward, Not Outward 
At first, there were expectations of a rush of funds from domestic institutions into foreign bond markets. That is not happening to a significant extent. The corollary expectation was that domestic institutions would shift portfolios from JGBs to equities. That has not happened to a significant extent either.
Source: Ministry of Finance

Meanwhile, foreign investors continue to pile into Japanese equities at a record pace, a pace that surpasses even the huge inflows seen between 2003~2007 with the Koizumi reforms, although the peak in these purchases has already passed, and European investors have already begun to take some profits.

Source: Ministry of Finance

Even a More Aggressive BoJ Policy Cannot Compete with the Fed’s Debt Monetization 
Even though the BoJ’s QE in terms relative to Japan’s economy is some 3X as large as the Fed’s “unlimited” QE, the liquidity overflow into foreign markets is much more limited, partially because JPY is not as widely accepted in global trade and financial instrument settlements, or even central bank foreign currency assets. Thus while the BoJ’s asset purchases are unprecedented for Japan, they pale in comparison to the sheer size of the Fed’s USD85 billion per month asset purchases that has the Fed already owning over 30% of the US treasury market.

Under more “normal” circumstances, the main driver of USD/JPY exchange rates is the yield differential between US and Japanese bond yields, such as the 2-year and the 10-year yield spread. Historically, USD/JPY has been more sensitive to the 2-year US-Japan bond yield spread, but since the Fed and the BoJ have their boots firmly on the shorter end of the curve, USD/JPY has recently disconnected from the spread differential on the shorter end of the curve. And while the 10yr spread has widened, it is still not enough to really push yield-hungry domestic institutions into foreign bonds, considering the forex risk. The last time USD/JPY was at JPY120 or weaker, the spreads were more like 250~350 bps.

Source: Amsus, Nikkei
Source: Amsus, Nikkei
Thus, as long as the Fed still has to carefully negotiate tapering to avoid upsetting the market recovery applecart, US bond yields remain anchored at levels that are insufficient to really drive a weaker JPY, regardless of how aggressively the BoJ pushes on their string. 
Ongoing Uncertainty About the Third (and Fourth) Arrows of Abenomics 
Initially, foreign media at least saw it as crucial that Abe pushes ahead with plans to raise a controversial consumption tax, from 5% to 8% in 2014…the major assumption being that Japan’s economy would be in a sustaintable recovery path by then. Ostensibly, the July election means “all systems go” for Abenomics, as the ruling coalition (LDP and Komeito) now has a majority in both houses of parliament. But while the Finance Ministry and its head spokesman, Taro Aso, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, would like to commit to the tax increase as soon as possible, Abe and his advisors are more cautious, wanting to make sure the recovery has roots before implementing a tax hike that could deep six any consumption recovery. 
Secondly, investors and businesses, while liking what they see so far about Abenomics, are still unsure whether Abe will seize the opportunity to transform the world’s third largest economy, or defaults (because of various barriers within and without his own party), to the same path as predecessors, and reform efforts fizzle. The history of Japan’s reform efforts is riddled with false starts and failures, whereas the Abe Administration brings a consistency of fiscal and monetary policy in Japanese politics not seen in the modern era. Even the reformer Junichiro Koizumi (2003~2005) did not have as supportive a central bank as Abe apparently has, whereas the Koizumi Administration did enjoy a booming global economy for Japan to lever off of. 
As far as domestic investors and businesses are concerned, Japan’s economy is only beginning to show green shoots of recovery, and while there is hope that Abenomics will revive the economy, most domestic institutions and companies would like to see solid evidence that the recovery has taken root before the government rushes to raise taxes. This is because, at least in recent history, Japan’s economy has only managed to put in a couple or maximum four quarters before again sputtering. 
Consequently, there is still insufficient evidence of a) a sustainably strong US recovery, b) positive bond yield rises, i.e., because of rising demand and not fear of tapering, and c) an expanding US-Japan bond yield spread to drive a significantly weaker JPY/USD rate. 
There’s Even a Not Zero Probability of Renewed Selloff
If the Fed bumbles its tapering strategy, we could see a sharp short-term run-up in US bond yields and significantly higher volatility in the US equity and bond markets, which of course would negatively impact global markets, including Japan. Despite the sharp selloff from a rebound high in May, the Nikkei remains the best-performing equity market YTD and thus represents a potential source of liquidity should high volatility and profit-taking hit global markets, ostensibly triggered by a US selloff. Even without a bungled US montary tapering, the Nikkei could be blind-sided by a renewed run-up in JPY given that Japanese stock prices remain extremely sensitive to currency movement.
As is shown in the chart below, the bears that shorted the Nikkei in May made a quick buck, while the Nikkei is still susceptible to profit taking, as it is bumping up against what is a 20-year resistance line, as pointed out by Chris Kimble of Kimble Charting Solutions. Thus if you still are a buyer of Abenomics, you nevertheless need to be prepared for some market volatility and even some selling. 
Source: Yahoo.com
The Gold Bubble Pops

When a financial market “bubble” first collapses, there is often no immediately compelling reason.     The real reasons/rationalizations for the collapse come afterwards. Gold’s last bubble was in 1980 when it hit $800/ounce in nominal terms, and $2,187/ounce in 2009 US dollars. While the entire bull market lasted some 11 years, when gold moved over $700, it stayed there just a couple of weeks before plunging to the $300~$500 range. 
Source: True North, via Seeking Alpha
On Monday, gold futures for June delivery closed at $1,361 an ounce on the Comex in New York , a drop of more than $200 in two sessions, and the fall of 13% since April 11 was the biggest two-session decline since 1980. The dream of $3,000/ounce or even $2,000/ounce, so prevalent not so long ago, is over. In other words, the great bull market in gold is over. The GLD ETF briefly was the world’s biggest ETF, with assets north of $77 billion in August 2011, topping the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) for a time. Recently, the GLD ETF has suffered such intense differential selling pressure that its custodians have been forced to dump enormous quantities of physical gold. This is because GLD shares are dumped at a quicker pace than gold’s own selloff, creating an excess supply of GLD shares, forcing GLD administrators to  buy up this excess supply, and raising cash to do this by selling gold bullion. According to Zeal LLC, the recent “correction” in GLD’s holdings forced it to dump a staggering 169.8 tons (5.5 million ounces) of gold bullion simply to keep GLD shares’ price tracking gold! There are only two gold-mining companies in the entire world (Barrick and Newmont) that produce that much gold in a whole year. 

Source: 4-Traders.com; 
While Some Suspected Trouble Ahead for Gold, No One Knows How Far its Going Down Now
One of the first investment banks to officially turn bearish, SocGen declared the gold era was over and set an end 2013 target of USD1,375, near the time that Citigroup declared the end was nigh for global oil demand growth (on substitution natural gas for oil combined with increasing fuel economy). Goldman set a year end target of USD1,450 and said it could go lower, then nailed the selloff with  a “short gold” recommendation a week before gold really tanked. What did Goldman know that others didn’t? 
Bloomberg Businessweek attributed the rapidly fading interest in gold to the realization that inflation was under control and falling despite “totally irresponsible” monetary policies that were rapidly eroding the value of fiat currencies. The JPMorgan Chase global consumer price index (covering more than 30 countries and 90% of global output) showed inflation peaking at 4% in 2011 and falling steadily since, while February 2013 prices were up only 2.5%. Bloomberg in another article blamed the selloff on, a) optimism that a U.S. recovery will curb the need for stimulus and b) the prospect that beleaguered members of the euro zone might be forced to sell gold to raise part of the funding, and there are much bigger holders in that category than Cyprus. Citigroup offered that the selloff was related to a break in technical levels and the general improvement in global risk appetitite. Business Insider argued that gold’s collapse “vindicates the economic ideas of the economic (Keynesian, monetarist) elites. BigPicture blogger Barry Ritholtz opined that “Gold is the ultimate greater fool trade, with many of its owners part of a collective belief theory rife with cognitive errors and bias”, that after a 14-year monster rally. 
But these explanations smack of rationalization, not an analysis of what really triggered the selloff. 
Has investor risk appetite and confidence in global economic growth and declining financial sector risk improved that dramatically in the last few weeks? Did investors wake up one morning and suddenly realize there was no global inflation? Only a short while ago, gold was touted as set to rebound with the BoJ’s massive QE program and the inevitable response by other central banks. Europe remains in the intensive care unit, despite the protestations of its leadership and the indications of its nepotistic bond markets. Monetary operations have enhanced liquidity, but have done little-to-nothing to solve the real issue – which is insolvency. 

Gold bugs of course remain bullish on gold to the end, insisting the selloff was soley in the paper gold market while pointing out there is a shortage of physical gold, and insisting that investors shouldn’t be concerned about the “temporary” pressure on gold. But since last Friday, someone has wanted to dump a large position of gold very badly. 

Someone who writes under the name George Washington on the Zero Hedge site quoted London bullion dealers observing that the gold futures market in New York on Friday last week saw a massive 3.4 million ounces (100 tons) worth of selling in the June futures contract, that was soon followed by 10 million more ounces (300 tons) of selling in the next 30 minutes of trading that looked suspiciously like short selling. Conspiracy theorists think the Fed was manipulating the gold market, claiming the 500 tons of naked shorts last Friday were instigated by the Fed. 

Brokers (Goldman, etc.) were reportedly warning their clients the word was out that hedge funds and institutions were going to be dumping gold. Others blamed the Japanese. 
End of the Commodity Supercycle?
In fact, no one knows for sure, and that is what is disturbing. Rapidly rising bullion prices were ostensibly a manisfestation of loss of confidence in the dollar as well as other fiat (paper) currencies, and a reflection of expectations for even more fiat currency depreciation, as well as fears that the Eurozone would simply fall apart. As the BoJ uncorked its massive QE, gold was supposed to take off again. But the ECB’s balance sheet is now actually shrinking, and the Fed is talking about possible exit strategies–possibly leaving the BoJ as the last to the party. Gold actually may be reading the dotted line in the chart below going down, not up
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
Its not only gold, but the whole commodity complex. The CRB commodity index peaked in 2007 on booming global trade after a 2-year, 65% blowoff, then crashed when the global financial crisis hit. Commodity prices then rapidly re-inflated on massive QE, liquidity provision from central banks to a secondary peak in 2011, ostensibly on the assumption that all of this money printing would inevitably unleash inflation, but is now some 40% below the 2007 high. 
Source: 4-Brokers
“Dr.” Copper Rally Fizzles
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that two major commodities-trading firms have amassed much of the world’s copper supplies in their warehouses, partly by paying to divert shipments away from other storage hubs, traders and analysts say. Copper prices are near 8-month lows and more losses are expected. Until the latest selloff, prices were down around 6% YTD as inventories have steadily climbed while demand in China has been disappointing. The Thomson Reuters GFMS sees copper dropping to as low as US$6,500/t in 2013 as high warehouse inventories and weak demand from Europe and China pin down prices. So much for copper calling a major recovery in the global economy. 
Source: 4-Brokers
Crude Oil Too
As previously mentioned, Citigroup has already declared the end was nigh for global oil demand growth on the substitution of natural gas for oil combined with increasing fuel economy.  Like the GLD ETF, selloffs in the copper and oil commodity investor ETFs will force further selling of the underlying commodity. 
Source: 4-Traders
What Does Commodity Selloff Tell Us About the Real Economy and/or Stock Prices?

The experience of most investors today (with the exception of  Japanese investors for the past 20 years) is within an environment of inflation and growth, and they naturally believe that long-term bond yields have a positive correlation with commodity prices because of what commodity prices are signalling about future inflation. They have also been conditioned to believe that bond yields and stock prices are positively correlated
Neither however has been true since before the financial crisis. 
1) Commodity Prices and Long Term Bond Yields
From 1980 until the spring of 2002, 10-year Treasury bond yields had a positive correlation with the CRB index. Since 2002, however, there has been a dramatic divergence between Treasury yields and commodity prices. The general assumption heretofore is a) that the 1980~2002 bonds/commodities relationship is valid, and b) the divergence is unsustainable. The assumption was that bond yields must eventually rise to meet the “real trend” in commodity prices, as commodity prices are a leading indicator of inflation, and bond yields discount both expected growth and expected inflation. 
But the recent selloff in commodities is strongly suggesting this assumption is wrong, and that any notion that the massive QE being practiced by the developed country central banks is inflationary is equally wrong-headed. As Cullen Roche of Orcam Financial (and other modern fiat monetary system theorists) has consistently maintained, QE is essentially just an asset swap that changes the composition of private sector financial assets, and doesn’t increase net financial assets in the private sector. While QE has had some impact on artificially lowering rates and a significantly positive psychological impact on stock prices, QE in and of itself does not cause inflation. If this is true, commodity prices are now marking to bond yields, not the other way around.
Source: Yahoo.com
2) Bond Yields and Stock Prices
How about the relationship between stock prices and bond yields? Until around 1985, long-term bond yields in the U.S. were positively correlated with stock prices. After 1985, however, stock prices have become negatively correlated with bond yields. As the SP 500 renews its pre-crisis highs, long-bond yields continue to decline, meaning bond prices and stock prices are both rising as inflationary expectations wane. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Since bond yields discount both expected inflation and GDP growth, the current US 10-year bond yield of 1.71% would seem to be essentially discounting, a) no inflation and under 2% GDP growth, or b) minimal inflation and GDP growth of just +/-1%, while the US stock market appears to be discounting much higher GDP or at least corporate profit growth. If 2%+ US economic growth is actually a myth and does ever collapse, look out below for stock prices, as investors wring out unrealistic growth expectations from stock prices in a manner similar to what has happened in Japan over the past decades. 

Gold Selloff Bearish for Nikkei 225, Bullish for JPY
Japan’s Nikkei 225 has historically displayed a positive correlation with gold prices and an even tighter positive correlation with US 10-year bond yields. Here again, we are seeing a growing divergence because of “artificial” policy initiatives, as Abenomics has dramatically depreciated JPY while US bond yields remain subdued. 
Source: Yahoo.com
The Nikkei 225 has recently been moving in lock-step with JPY/USD, even though the focus of the actual Japanese stock buying has been on domestic reflation plays, not the exporters. The rout in gold has quickly pushed JPY/USD three yen stronger than the recent low of just under JPY100/USD, which had paused on a warning from the US Treasury department that Japan abstain from “competitive devaluation” of JPY. 
Source: Yahoo.com
As long as the Japanese government and BoJ are aggressively working to reflate Japan and weaken JPY, the slippage in the traditional JPY/USD driver, i.e., the spread between 2-year Japan and US bond yields and JPY/USD, is likely to persist. Whether the BoJ’s actions can weaken JPY back to 2007 levels (around JPY124/USD) however remains to be seen given increasing concern about a competitive devaluation of JPY. 
While economic historians are still arguing about just what part of Koreikyo Takahashi’s policy mix (i.e., fiscal expenditures, BoJ purchases of JGBs and currency weakening) in what Ben Bernanke praised as brilliant, we posit that what worked the most in both Takahashi’s and FDR’s efforts to reflate Japan’s and the US economy in the 1930s was a substantial depreciation (40%) of the currency, which in both cases amidst the gold standard economic “religion” at the time considered unmitigated blasphemy. 
Domestic Bond Investors are Confused: Does the BoJ Really Want to Keep Rates Low or Boost Inflation to 2%? They are Having Trouble Getting Their Head Around Both
Japanese bond investors are also very confused about what Kuroda’s 2% inflation commitment really means for JGB yields. “Essentially we now have a national policy that says investors should buy risk assets by borrowing cheaply. So if you think interest rates will be higher two years from now, you would have some hesitation in buying anything longer than five years,” said Hidenori Suezawa, chief fixed income strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities as quoted through Reuters. Japanese bond investors“simply cannot grasp what the BOJ is getting at,” said Katsutoshi Inadome, fixed income analyst at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities, also via Reuters. Assuming Japan can achieve 2% inflation and stimulate Japan’s economy to achieve 2% growth, JGB yields should ostensibly rise to around 4% if investors really believed the BoJ can pull it off. Since this would essentially blow up Japan’s public finances, the BoJ has committed to buying essentially 1.5% of Japan’s GDP in JGBs indefinitely to prevent JGB yields from discounting this possibility. 
What’s the BOJ’s priority? Keeping rates low or boosting inflation to 2%? If it is the latter, buying five-year bonds yielding 0.2% would be a disaster for domestic investors. This uncertainty and lack of confidence is what is causing a sharp surge in government bond market volatility.

Tokyo Quickly Regains Composure After US Selloff

Despite waking up to bad news of a significant US selloff and a sharp reversal in JPY/USD overnight, the Tokyo market quickly regained its composure, with the Nikkei slipping only 0.4% and JPY/USD re-weakening. With Abenomics now in full force, Japanese stocks are much less susceptible to overseas market volatility. Any short-term correction (and not a collapse) in US stock prices will be viewed as a chance to add some more exposure to Japanese equities.

Our concern however is that the domestic reflation plays have already surged in parabolic fashion to the Koizumi reform highs, whereas we do not see the Nikkei 225 as being able to seriously breach the prior 18,000+ plus Koizumi high (in 2007) without evidence that a restructuring/re-invention wave is underway in Japan’s economy, as we see restructuring/re-invention as the real driver of sustainable growth in Japan going forward. In other words, the first two “arrows” of Abenomics, i.e., bold monetary policy and more active fiscal policy, as basically buying time for structural reforms to adjust Japan’s economy to a new world order.   


The BoJ’s “Shock and Awe” Unconventional Monetary Policy Experiment
Despite new LDP prime minister Shinzo Abe and his “Abenomics” road show creating a high expectations hurdle for his newly installed BoJ team, new BoJ governor Kuroda has come out swinging with “shock and awe” monetary policy that sent already rock-bottom 10yr JGB yields plunging from 55bps to 34bps, and the Nikkei 225 surging 6.75% to its highest level since September 2008. Kuroda’s BoJ has gone boldly where no BoJ governor has gone before (the infamous Koreikyo Takahashi as finance minister in the 1930s was able to browbeat the BoJ at the time to underwrite his reflation scheme), after decades of half-hearted BoJ tinkering to fend off political pressure. This is the ultimate test of monetary activism that will go down in history, regardless if ultimately a success or a disaster. The BoJ wants to “drastically change the expectations of markets and economic entities”, and jerk Japan’s economy out of a deflation rut its been for nearly 15 years.
To achieve its 2% inflation in 2 years target, the BoJ will
  • Shift to monetary base control from uncollateralized overnight rates in growing the monetary baseJPY60~JPY70billion per year. 
  • Increase JGB purchases along the curve to 40-year notes by JPY50 trillion per year, to JPY270 trillion by 2014. 
  • Increase ETF and J-REIT purchases, but abandon the prior asset purchasing program
  • Suspend the bank note principle, where new money created is limited to outstanding notes and coins in circulation.
The BoJ is now committed to doubling Japan’s monetary base, its holdings of JGBs all along the curve to 40yr notes, and ETFs, in two years. The average remaining maturity of JGB purchases will more than double to about seven years. The comparative scale of this move is monetizing at a rate of around 75% of the Fed in an economy that is one-third the size of the U.S., in essentially printing 15% of its GDP each year in new money. The monetary base will rocket from 29% to 56% of GDP by 2014. The pace of bond purchases will rise to JPY7.5 trillion yen a month.

Source: Bank of Japan
Uber-Bears More Strongly Convinced this Will End Badly
Japan uber-bear Kyle Bass of course is warning this “Giant Experiment,” will cause Japan to implode under the weight of their own debt much faster than previously. But even he is exorting, “if you’re Japanese, spend! …. (if don’t take your money out of the country), “borrow in JPY and invest in productive assets,” which of course is the whole object of the great Abenomics experiment exercise. George Soros chimed in with, “What Japan is doing right now is actually quite dangerous because they are doing it after 25 years of just simply accumulating deficits and not getting the economy growing,” …”So if what they’re doing gets something started, they might not be able to stop it. If the yen starts to fall, which it has done, then people in Japan think it’s liable to continue, and may become like an avalanche”. 
The IMF in its own bureaucrat speak has also warned of this risk, (despite being readily able to fund its debt to date) “the market’s capacity to absorb new debt is likely to diminish as the population ages and risk appetite recovers. Without a significant policy adjustment, the stock of gross public debt could exceed household financial assets in around 10 years, at which point domestic financing may become more difficult. Over the near term, domestic and external risks include, a) a decline in the supply of funds for financing JGBs as private spending picks up, b) an increase in market volatility could also push banks to shorten the maturity of their JGB holdings or reduce their JGB exposures to limit losses. As for external risks, the high correlation between yields on JGBs and other sovereign debts pose the risk that a sudden rise in global risk premia could spillover and affect the JGB market. In sum, a sustained rise in yields could dramatically worsen public debt dynamics, and threaten financial stability.
Source: BarChart
Source of Domestic JGB Demand: Huge Financial Surpluses in the Corporate Sector
The flip side of ballooning government debt has been an equally large financial surplus in the private sector as companies retrench and hoard cash. To us, the first sign of serious trouble in Japan’s JGB market could be companies drawing down excess funds to fund increased business activity and capital expenditures, thus forcing the financial institutions at where these excess funds are parked to liquidate JGBs. 
Historically, this has had only modest impact on pushing up yields, but Japan is now much more leveraged with government debt. 
Short JPY, Long Japan Stocks Still Works
The biggest money maker for hedge funds and speculators since November of last year has been the short yen/long Japan stocks trade, which has produced a combined 60%-plus gain (+40% for the Nikkei 225, -20% for FXY) but the hedge funds will tell you there is much more to go with this trade, as the BoJ is just getting started. One reason is that the domestic institutions have been selling Japanese equities, while Japanese corporates have been buying JPY.
Source: Yahoo.com
 MMT’ers: Countries That Hold Debt in their Own Currency Can’t Go Bankrupt
MMT’ers (Modern Monetary Theorists) like Cullen Roche, even though they may not like the Japan trade, still insist the whole insolvency scare thing is senseless, because even Austrian economists can tell you that a nation with a printing press and debt denominated in its own currency isn’t going to go bankrupt. 
Black Swans (Tail Risks)

As we have said many times, Abenomics and BoJ shock and awe entail potentially big risks for Japan, while we believe they have no choice but to try anything to revive Japan’s economy and turn the good ship Japan away from its slowly evolving debt spiral. The tail risks include,
1) Kyle Bass is right and the reflation effort merely accelerates the day of financial crisis reckoning
 Japan experiences a fiscal crisis and JPY collapses, possibly triggering a new global financial 
 crisis.
2) The BoJ huffs and puffs, but nothing happensWhile Paul Samuelson infamously said, “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon,” others insist that just printing money has never created inflation, unless there is excess money. The evidence is that the BoJ has already expanded its balance sheet to roughly 33% of GDP, but has had no appreciable impact on inflation. The Swiss National Bank has a balance sheet worth some 85% of GDP, but no positive inflation since 2011. After nearly a quarter century of poor economic performance and a deeply embedded deflation mentality, the real question should be how the banks, who actually credit credit/money supply, react. If they merely let the money sit in BoJ reserve balances (hoard it), there is no economic impact and the BoJ is still in a liquidity trap. This is what happened between March 2001 and March 2006, when the BoJ first implemented and invented “QE” (quantitative easing). Try as they might, academics have found no significant impact except for a slight downward bias in long JGB yields. Then, the Japanese banks were ostensibly hoarding cash to shore up decimated balance sheets. Now, Japanese bank balance sheets are relatively healthy. Surveys show consumers do have positive inflation expectations, but for the wrong reasons, i.e., the things they have to buy are rising in price (electricity rates, etc.), while the discretionary items they are deferring purchases on are falling in price. Seeing no solid evidence of reflation, foreign investors now piling into Japanese equities head for the exits

3) Japanese banks merely take the BoJ money and lend it overseasIf, as was pointed out via FT Alphaville Japanese banks take this money and lend it overseas, the effect would work to weaken JPY but the monetary stimulus would be felt overseas, not in Japan. Since the BoJ would still be buying truckloads of JGBs, however, the downward pressure on long rates would remain, but since rates are already at rock-bottom levels, an incremental change in and of itself would not move the domestic fund demand needle. Seeing no solid evidence of reflation, foreign investors now piling into Japanese equities head for the exits

4) Increased JGB volatility triggers a VaR shockSome like Zero Hedge have made a big deal of the post announcement market snap-back in JGB yields, but JGB yields had already collapsed from 1.77% in 2009 to a new historical low. Given the very active trading around such a big event that compelled the CME to raise margin requirements to avoid over-leveraged speculation, this could merely be clearing, re-positioning of speculative positions. Since the global financial crisis, JGB futures have gained some 11%, which combined with a massive gain in JPY versus USD of some 47%, has produced a very decent 58% return. The great capital gains in JGBs to date, plus high expectations for aggressive BoJ action, were a big reason why risk-adverse domestic institutions were actually selling Japanese equities and piling into bonds ahead of their March 2013 fiscal year end. As the IMF has warned, however, too much JGB volatility could trigger domestic JGB selloffs like the “VaR shock” in 2003, where market volatility triggered risk hedging among Japan’s banks that tripled JGB yields from 0.45% to 1.6% in just three months. Japanese banks however have already been stress-testing their substantial bond portfolios. This would produce only a short-term, sharp back-up in JGB yields. 

Focus Remains on Domestic Reflation Plays

While the weak JPY is a windfall for Japanese exporters, global demand remains spotty at best, a good deal of exports are actually JPY denominated, and Japanese exporters have been able to significantly hedge their JPY/USD exposure.

Over the past three months, the Topix has gained nearly 17%, lead by nearly 40% surges in rubber products, real estate, warehousing/logistics and land transportation, which excluding rubber products are about as domestic demand dependent as it gets. The high beta broker/dealers and the banks are also up well over 20%, but the gains have recently mitigated vis-a-vis the late-comers.

Source: Tokyo Stock Exhchange
In terms of Nikkei 225 constituents, the stock of electric power zombie TEPCO has surged to lead the pack, followed by 2nd tier car company Mazda, two 2nd tier real estate companies, Sony?, more real estate companies, and now some big department store chains. For old Japan hands, its beginning to look like the good old “bubble” days, when latent asset plays were the force du jour. The department store stocks have perked up on evidence that surging stock prices are stimulating sales of luxury goods. 

Before this rally is over, essentially every constituent in the Nikkei 225 will get its turn to dance as index buying lifts essentially all boats. 
Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange
As of the final week of March (the end of the fiscal year), domestic financial institutions continued to heavily dump Japanese stocks, but the Nikkei 225 has soared despite this on massive foreign net buying. Thus Japanese equity prices remain and should continue to be driven by foreign buying or lack thereof.  From this perspective, who cares what domestic institutions think?

US-based investors caught up in the sudden storm of activity in Japanese equities can of course just go out and buy the MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ) or buy the few ADRs tradeable in the U.S. This group had previously been lagging the Topix by a significant margin, but generally over time track the Topix fairly closely. 

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
The following table shows which Japan ADRs are available and what their vital stats look like. The vital stats of course do not reflect the growth, margin, etc. improvements now being discounted into virtually all Japanese stocks. 
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
Why All the Market Gurus Got The US Rally Wrong 
The most striking feature of the US stock market’s steady march to new historical highs is that it has dramatically proven most of the so-called smart guys wrong, many of which were right about the 2008 financial crisis and the dangers of toxic US housing market derivatives. Since the recovery began with the bottoming in stock prices in March 2009, the “smart” call has been to doubt the recovery in stock prices and to insist that surging stock prices were merely a central bank-instigated scam. 
Yes, the world is awash in government debt, Euroland is facing a lost generation of unemployed youth in southern Europe and austerity is not fun. 

Austerity is not Fun

Business Insider called out some very well known and often quoted market gurus for their bearish (and very wrong) market calls in 2009-2011, which included the widely read John Mauldin (March 2009), Noriel Roubinini, Bob Janiuah (Nomura), Doug Kass (Seabreeze), Robert Precter (October 2009), Joseph Stiglitz (October 2009), Jeremy Grantham (October 2009), Gary Shilling (October 2009), Bill Gross (October 2009), Mohamed El Erian (December 2009), Albert Edwards (December 2009), Richard Russell (January 2010), George Soros (June 2010), Bill Fleckenstein (July 2010), David Rosenberg (September 2010), John Hussman (October 2010), Walter Zimmerman (December 2011). Jonathan Golub (UBS, December 2011), David Kostin (Goldman Sachs, December 2011), and Marc Faber (August 2012), Most of these gurus made their reputations making gutsy bear calls. Having made their reputations on bear calls, it has been hard for them to change their stripes. Consequently, it probably won’t be this bunch that gets it right this time. When these guys flip and become bullish is when to get worried that the market has topped. 
On the other hand, Warren Buffet’s shareholder letter in 2012 had a spot-on call, e.g., forget about gold and buy US cropland and industrial stocks. Specifically, he said, for $9.6 trillion, you could buy all the gold in the world, and it would fit into a nice cube inside of a baseball field diamond. Or for that money, you could buy all US cropland (400 million acres) + 16 Exxon Mobils, and still have another $1 trillion in pocket money left over. 
The first tenant that all the smart guys forgot was the old market adage “don’t fight the Fed”. The Fed, the ECB, the BoE and to a lesser extent, the BoJ have remained committed to providing whatever support investors thought was needed to support financial markets in the name of supporting teetering financial systems and weak economies. In other words, a) the Euro union has not (yet) collapsed or broken up, (b) China has not seen a hard landing, (c) Japan’s debt mountain has yet to trigger a fiscal crisis, (d) the U.S. economy has not lapsed back into recession. Yet many continue to believe that three major blocs of the developed world are careening toward a debt-fueled crisis that cannot end well. 
The Rodney Dangerfield of Bull Markets: Absolutely No Respect 
Bond yields in the core of Europe, Japan and the US have not only been stable, but have delved new lows, and the DJIA has renewed a new historical high. Perhaps it’s time to stop listening to these polyannas and re-assess what financial markets are trying to tell us, and to listen more to those few who are now suggesting a market melt-up, like Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research, who describer the rally as “the Rodney Dangerfield of bull markets,” “It’s got absolutely no respect, and yet, here were are taking out the all-time highs.” Actually, US stock prices, despite the political circus in Washington over the debt ceiling, may actually just might be trying to discount big changes for the better in the U.S. economy. 
1) The US housing market recovery is gathering steam. Even the stock glut is clearing. Inventories were down 25.3% from January 2012. At the current pace of sales, inventories would be exhausted in 4.2 months, 
2) The windfall from shale oil and natural gas development. The Federal Reserve Beige Book cited shale development is cited seven times as an unimpeachable strong growth sector of the U.S. economy. 
The OECD’s composite leading indicators (CLIs) for January show signs of stabilizing economic outlooks in most major economies. In the United States and the United Kingdom, the CLI continues to point to economic growth firming. In China and India, signs of a turning point are more marked than in last month’s assessment. The CLIs for Italy, Germany, France and the Euro Area as a whole point to a stabilization in growth prospects. Five years after the global financial crisis, investment banks like Societe Generale are beginning to suggest that 2013 will be a breakout year for the US economy, when investors realize the U.S. economy is finally breaking away from the “new normal” and the days of QE are numbered. 
The new market highs are being driven by the “old economy”. While the S&P 500 has yet to renew 2007 highs, the DJIA has, led by the Dow Transports. Further the Russell 2000 index of small cap stocks has surged ahead of the tech-heavy S&P 500, suggesting broadly based movement in the grass-roots economy. Thus it would appear to be only a matter of time before the S&P 500 
Source: Big Charts.com
Source: Big Charts.com
For the man/woman on the street, however, all of this is esoteric, and has absolutely nothing to do with their daily lives. From the following metrics that directly affect people’s lives and livelihoods in the U.S., it is a wonder that consumer sentiment is as good as it is. Income is down, unemployment is up, there are more people on the edge (food stamp recipients, personal bankruptcies, home foreclosures), housing prices are down but so is interest on savings while gasoline prices are up. Thus the 90%+ that have yet to see any benefit from this emerging recovery can be forgiven for remaining generally dour about their lot, and for listening to the smart guys dissing the rally. 
Source: JapanIinvestor
S&P 500 Remains Dominated by Technology, Finance and Health Care

The recent lag in technology as epitomized by Apple’s sagging stock price is a major reason the S&P 500 has not kept pace with the Dow Transports or the Russell 2,000. For the SP 500 rally to continue, the index needs support from its three major sector components, i.e., technology (18% of market cap), financials (16%) and health care (12%), i.e., from two of the sectors most responsible for the “double bubbles” (IT/Internet and Housing). From our side of the pond, a stock like Apple (aapl) still has much room to fail in terms of deflating growth expectations. Just look how poorly Microsoft (msft) has performed in comparison, not because it has become a debt-ridden zombie, but merely because it became a “normal” company with normal growth and mistakes as well as victories. Conversely, a stock like Citigroup (C) has consistently lagged the market because of still-heavy legacy burdens from the 2008 financial crisis, and investors have only recently warmed up to Citi’s recovery prospects, while the stock still carries a significant growth discount (low P/E multiple) and balance sheet uncertainties (PBR under 1.0X). 

Sources: Lipper, Compustat, Goldman Sachs, 
Hat Tip: Big Picure
These Same Smart Guys Continue to Trash Japan
For those that believe a global debt crisis is inevitable, the level of denial in Japan is majestic. They continue to shake their heads in disbelief that Japan can continue to borrow with no consequences with debt 240% of GDP. Why haven’t investors already lost patience/faith in the government and the BoJ? Even investors who are open-minded or even bullish on the recovery potential of Japan have been guilty in the past of jumping the gun and declaring a recovery when there in fact was none. 
Unfortunately, no one has a convincing answer for Japan’s mountain of debt. All that is certain is that Japan hasn’t blown up its finances yet, and is probably unlikely to for the foreseeable future. 
Not only have JGB yields remained subdued in the face of almost certain reflation, more government deficit spending and a much more aggressive BoJ, the prognosis is that 10yr JGB yields could actually test a new historical low of 0.43% over the next several months. 
Domestic Institutions Have a Different Agenda than Foreign Investors
The reason is that domestic institutions with a different agenda than foreign investors are the real driver of JGB yields. The Japan Securities Dealers Association’s (JSDA) statistics (excluding short-term securities) reveals a striking volume of JGB buying by trust banks in long and super-long JGBs in January–in sharp contrast with the sluggish activity of other investors. Domestic institutions are taking advantage of the weakening yen and the rally in global stocks to take profit on foreign assets and shift these funds to domestic bonds. Japanese trust banks bought a net ¥2,439.2bn ($26bn) of JGBs in January, the highest net total since April 2009, while they sold a net ¥1,051.0bn in foreign securities for the highest single-month net selloff since 2005. 
The movement of Japan’s trust banks is counter-intuitive given current the current consensus for a weaker JPY and Japan reflation that ostensibly would push up JGB yields. But Japan’s trust banks and public pension funds follow a mechanistic asset allocation regime that dictates periodical re-balancing of portfolio weights to pre-set allocation targets, regardless of what prevailing market sentiment may indicate. Consequently, while foreign investors are shorting JPY and going long the Nikkei 225, domestic investors are selling foreign assets and shifting funds into JGBs.
Sources: Nikkei Amsus, Japan Investor
The problem is that, at some, point, the movement in stocks has to find some agreement in what is happening in the bond market. Normally, a major drop-off in bond yields is followed by a selloff in stock prices, because falling bond yields is primarily a reflection of darkening sentiment regarding economic growth and corporate profits. This time, the Abenomics reflation story is already brightening investor and business sentiment, yet bond yields continue to fall. 
A 25%~30% Decline in Japan’s Effective Exchange Rate Will Significantly Raise Japan’s Export Competitiveness
As regards the JPY/USD exchange rate, however, what’s more important than the actual level of bond yields is the gap between US and Japan bond yields. Here, we see a noticeable widening of US-Japan bond yields is supporting the weak move in JPY, meaning there is more than just hot air (Abe verbage) supporting the selloff in JPY. 
Nikkei Amsus: Japan Investor
While much of the media and the Street talk of nothing but JPY/USD exchange rates, but the more important exchange rate is the real effective (trade weighted) JPY exchange rate. The surge in this rate from 25-year lows after the 2008 financial crisis is what hurt export profitability the most. Abenomics however has pushed Japan’s effective exchange rate weaker at even a more rapid pace than the JPY/USD nominal exchange rate. 
Some overseas investors see the weaker JPY creating a serious problem for Japan because of its increased dependence on imported energy, but as was seen between 2004 and 2007, the dramatic decline in the effective exchange rate created a much bigger benefit to Japan’s economy from increased export competitiveness than it was negative from the standpoint of increased cost of imported energy. We believe investors will be surprised by how competitive Japanese companies have suddenly become with this 27%~30% decline in Japan’s real effective exchange rates
Source: Bank of Japan

Foreign Institutions Still Very Underweight Japan

As is seen in the chart below, Japan has been outperforming the US and EAFE markets for the past 3 months. Regardless of what John Mauldin or Kyle Bass thinks of Japan’s stock rally, foreign institutions increasingly will be compelled to bring in some cases what had been zero Japan or very underweight Japan weights in their international and global portfolios back at least toward neutral by the outperformance of the Topix or MSCI Japan benchmark indices if this out-performance continues, as they try to match or beat their benchmark bogies. 
As exemplified by the reported $1 billion George Soros made shorting JPY, the fast money jumped in quickly, shorting JPY and going long the Nikkei 225. This time, the smart guys were spot on ,despite taking their lumps in gold and in being too cautious about US stocks. 
Source: MSCI
So far, however, it appears (from the CFTC commitment of traders) they in the main are maintaining most of their short JPY positions despite massive paper profits. Notice in the chart however that there is a lag between the sharp sell-off in JPY/USD and the buildup of these short positions. From the previously mentioned large selling of foreign securities by Japanese institutions, it appears that this repatriation back into JGBs significantly accelerated JPY/USD selloff momentum. If this is true, the pace of JPY/USD weakening could weaken considerably going forward, even if the general trend is toward further weakening. 
Source: Oanda
While the rally in the Nikkei 225 since November 2012 has been extremely sharp (+42% from a November 2012 low), it is basically little more than a blip on the long-term monthly chart, and nowhere near the degree of recovery seen in the US stock market, which is back to an historical high. Just getting the Nikkei 225 back to the June 2007 high represents further upside of over 50%, while getting the Nikkei 225 to recover just under half the market capitalization lost since December 1989 implies an 88% surge. Thus if there is anything of any medium-term merit to Abenomics, Japanese stocks have significant upside potential indeed. 
Source: Yahoo.com
No Domestic Institutional Participation so Far
Just getting back to the June 2007 high will require participation from domestic investors. While foreign investors were buying some JPY3, 834 million net of Japanese equities since week 2 of November 2012, domestic institutions and individual investors were dumping their holdings of Japanese stocks to the tune of some JPY1,651 million. It is not hard to imagine where the Nikkei would be today if there was also participation from domestic investors. 
So far, there has been little discernable movement toward raising targeted domestic equity weights in Japanese institutional investor portfolios. Indeed, it has been the opposite, i.e., lowering target domestic equity weights. However, the GPIF has come out and said that Abenomics has forced them to re-think their domestic equity weightings and in particular the potential risk of their massive JGB holdings. 
The now deeply entrenched deflationary mindset that has set in Japan won’t be eradicated that easily, and it is likely that the recovery rally in Japanese equities will be well on its way before the domestic institutions seriously consider a significant shift back into Japanese equities. Thus for the time being, foreign investors and to a much lesser extent, domestic individuals will have to do the heavy lifting in pushing the Nikkei 225 and other benchmark Japan equity indices higher. 
In looking at the best-performing Topix sectors over the past 6 months, broker/dealers, real estate, and (real estate proxy) warehousing/logistics have dominated, i.e., the classic bubble-era champions. Performance of the large-cap banks, a foreign investor favorite because of cheap valuations (i.e., low P/E multiples, less than 1 PBRs and relatively high dividend yields), has been average to above average. 
Sources: Nikkei, Japan Investor
By Nikkei 225 constituent, the top performing stocks since the rally began have been a combination of second-tier automobile firms (Mazda, Fuji Heavy), broker/dealers (Nomura, Daiwa), second-tier real estate companies (Tokyu, Heiwa), and steel companies (Kawasaki, JFE), with a couple of shipping companies thrown in. On the other hand, with the exception of Sharp, who has been in play with foreign capital, stocks in Japan’s electronics sector who would ostensibly benefit from a weaker JPY have not fared as well (Yokogawa El, Nikon, Kyocera, DN Screen, etc.). 
Consequently, the real plays in this rally have and will likely continue to be reflation plays

Sources: Nikkei, Japan Investor
Have Central Banker Priests of Money Gone to the Dark Side?
Jens Weidmann and the boys at the Bundesbank must think their priests of money central bank peers have gone to the dark side, preaching the blasphemy of ever-escalating debt monetization, now called “quantitative easing”. Germany’s Bundesbank has become essentially the only central bank in the world that has not embraced quantitative easing, continually warning at every opportunity that rampant and gratuitous debt monetization with fiat money has become addictive as a drug, and like any drug overdose, can be fatal. 

For the other central bankers, led by the Fed, this move to the dark side is a desperate response to fiscal paralysis, dangerously fragile financial systems and malaise-ridden economies; i.e., an aggressive bet that monetary policy remains a viable force.These central bankers have ventured out on the limb of “unconventional” monetary policy to the nth degree in first ensuring the viability of the financial system, but increasingly to trying to revive economies. Naturally, they trot out research that shows QE is having a positive impact. Research by economists at the Fed last year estimated its first two rounds of asset purchases reduced unemployment by 1.5 percentage points and staved off deflation. The Bank of England estimated in July that 200 billion pounds ($311 billion) of bond buying between March 2009 and January 2010 raised UK GDP by as much as 2 percent and inflation by 1.5 percentage points.

As former Bank of England’s Danny Gabay told Bloomberg, everything in central banker eyes is a monetary problem…“What we have now is a monetary problem, so it’s time for a monetary solution,..It’s tough to make monetary policy effective, but it’s the only way.” “Old school” central bankers like Mervyn King (BoE), Jean-Claude Trichet (ECB) and Masaaki Shirakawa (BoJ) that question how much more monetary policy can achieve, and insisting monetary policy alone is no “panacea.” are being ignored.

No Currency Wars, Just a Symptom of Increasingly Desperate Stimulus Measures

The respected, conservative Economist magazine outright dismisses the current buzzword “currency wars” to describe what is happening, because weak currencies are merely a symptom of so far ineffective but increasingly desperate central bank efforts to revive economies stumbling under an ever-growing albatross of government debt. The recent round of GDP growth numbers underscores the continued fragility of the recovery, with Japan recording its third quarter of minus growth, and GDP being noticeably weak in Euroland, even Germany; underscoring the cold hard fact that all that QE is just about the only thing standing between investors and renewed recession. Ergo, investors remain particularly keyed on central banker machinations.

Source: Natixis, HatTip: Business Insider
Note: US GDP, Source: Brad DeLong

1 Trillion USD Coin Madness 


Everyone of the current generation has heard scare stories of the dangers of unmitigated fiat money printing since John Law invented the Mississippi scheme in the early 1700s. Over the past 100 years, Germany of course has seen first hand the devastating effects of hyperinflation or quintuple-digit inflation caused by unmitigated debt monetization during the Weimar Republic of the 1920s. What is really scary is US economists recently (half) seriously debating the merits of a USD 1 trillion platinum coin. In 1923, a 1 trillion mark Zeigenhain German Gutschein coupon was actually issued.
As with their predecessor French elite in the early 1700s, governments who, like France after Louis XIV’s death in 1715 found their finances “in a state of utmost disorder”, have fallen for central banker fiat money schemes such as John Law’s bank of Law scheme (later erected into the Royal Bank of France) to inundate their countries and indeed the world with paper fiat money.
To hard money proponents and the average person on the street, nations financing their own debt by simply printing more fiat money is essentially a Ponzi Scheme, the natural progression ostensibly of which is to issue ever-increasing amounts of new money is issued to pay off prior debt holders, the eventual result being an eventual collapse of the currency that devalues all wealth based on that currency, including all financial asset wealth.

All That Increased “Cash” On the Sidelines is the Flip-Side of Government Debt

On the surface, the pain from the 2008 financial crisis and Great Recession was rather mild compared to the 1930s, at least for the top 10%. The following chart from McKinsey Global Institute shows global financial assets have increased some $16 trillion from the 2007 peak, and have rebounded some $37 trillion from the trough in 2008. A closer look however shows that the increase has come from public debt securities ($16 trillion) and non-secured loans ($8 trillion), while stock market capitalization is still $13 trillion below its 2007 peak. In other words, all that debt being issued by governments has become someone’s financial asset, and that the surge in financial deficits in the public sector is behind the financial surpluses (excess financial assets) in the private sector. 
Hat Tip: Business Insider
Then Why Isn’t Gold Already At $3,000/Ounce?
As everyone knows, the US has been the most chronic currency debaser over the past 40 years, with the trade-weighted USD depreciating well over 30% since 1970. Despite this, USD has remained the primary currency for global trade and central bank reserves. Since USD is essentially a key component of the global money supply, any attempt by the Fed merely to reign in the growth of greenbacks negatively affects the global economy. In other words, if the Fed were to adopt a real “beggar thy neighbor” currency policy, it would be to reign in what hard money proponents consider rampant debt monetization

As the global financial meltdown morphed into a Eurozone meltdown, the US Fed was joined by the ECB, the BoE and now the BoJ in the race to debase, not as a policy per se, but as the result of desperate measures to revive their economies. Seeing nothing but endless QE on the horizon, hedge funds and large institutions were convinced that all this fiat money printing would push gold to $3,000 or even $5,000 per ounce, and gold for a period went almost parabolic.

Yet the smart money (like George Soros and Louis Moore) is now dumping its gold holdings and Bloomberg is saying that hedge funds have cut their bets on gold by 56% from highs in October as gold prices consolidate, ostensibly on increased confidence in the economic recovery. Technically, gold could drop below $1,600 as it has broken below key medium-term support levels, despite continued buying by the world’s central banks, ostensibly to keep something that is not rapidly debasing in their reserves.

Thus the rapid appreciation (i.e., parabolic move) in gold over the past five years vs the major currencies seems to be behind us, Given the proclivity of  central banks to flood the markets with newly printed script at the first signs of economic weakness. it is still very much in doubt that the secular bull market in gold versus all major fiat currencies since the early 70s is over. However, a break below 1,600 could signal a medium-term correction to as low as 1,100, especially if central banks begin backing off the QE accelerator and real bond yields began to back up.

It would probably take a serious setback in what progress has been made in the Eurozone debt crisis, or as some suggest, a crisis in Japan’s debt problems, to set gold surging again.

                                    Source: Galmarley.com

MMT Theorists: Simply Printing Money Does Not Lead to Hyperinflation

As for unmitigated mone printing causing hyperinflation and therefore a melt-up in gold prices, James Montier and MMT’ers (modern monetary theorists) insist hyperinflation is“not just a monetary phenomenon, as money supply is endogenous (and hence that interest rates are exogenous), and that budget deficits are often caused by hyperinflations rather than being the source of hyperinflations. This is because money (credit) is created almost entirely by private sector banks, not central banks.

As a result, the government’s loss or even reduction in the power to tax the output base is the real foundation for many hyperinflations. Thus in the case of an extremely advanced nation (such as Japan) with a powerful productive base and a sovereign that can tax that output, the odds of a hyperinflation (ostensibly from a currency collapse) are extremely low, barring the presence of such factors as a) large supply shocks (like during wars), b) big debts denominated in foreign currencies, or c) runaway cost of living, wage price inflation. Montier’s conclusion is that those forecasting hyperinflation/collapse from aggressive central bank money printing in the US, the UK and Japan are suffering from hyperinflation hysteria.

Source: Wall Street Journal

Indeed, the movement in US 10yr bond yields suggests ongoing deflation, not inflation, with growth expectations incorporated in these yields having yet to recover from the 2010 and 2011 “growth scares”, as long-bond yields are still lower than they were even one year ago. The need for central banks to introduce successive QE stimulus strongly suggests the developed economies remain in a classic liquidity trap.

The Next Trigger for a Stock Market Correction

Given the above, the BoA Merrill Lynch and other surveys suggest that investors have for the time being over-done their optimism, with the February ML survey showing four consecutive months of rising sentiment about the global economy. These investors continue to perceive value in equities despite the strong rally since June of last year, as most remain convinced that bonds are due for a tumble, with 82% saying bonds are overvalued. Other market sentiment indicators also point to short-medium-term over-enthusiasm for equities.

The VIX has plunged from the last growth share, which admittedly was overdone in the VIX as the selloff was not as severe as the VIX’s reaction. While the balance of market commentators (i.e., investors, traders interviewed by the financial press) now say stocks are “over-done” for the time being, but with the same breath say they want to jump in again with any sign of weakness. What this means of course that stock prices will not correct as much as many who have missed most of the latest up-leg would like to see.

Source: Yahoo.com

Investors were also non-plussed by the latest round of disappointing economic news, partially because these are backward looking indicators, but also because anyone who does not understand that the price of every stock and every bond is being artificially altered by the fact that interest rates are being heavily manipulated by major central bank QE consistently has underestimated the staying power of this market recovery.

BoJ Will Have to Continue Battling Weak Euro Growth, Continued Fed QE to Keep JPY Weakening

Hedge funds have piled into the short yen trade convinced that JPY may well have crossed the rubicon. But hedge funds have already made a ton of money on the short JPY trade, with George Soros alone reportedly making a cool USD 1 billion. The plunge in JPY has also recently slowed by more dovish Japanese comments ahead of the G-20 meeting, which are of course politically motivated to ameleorate criticism at the conference. G-7 officials have muddied the “verbal intervention” waters by issuing a currency statement, “clarifing it” it and then criticizing the clarification. Japan’s government (and JPY bears) were relieved when the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank governors avoided specifically going after Japan’s reflation efforts as currency manipulation. Instead, the pledged “to monitor negative currency spillovers to other countries caused by monetary policies implemented for domestic purposes, and to refrain from competitive devaluation.” Meanwhile, the G-20 also put off plans for new austerity-inducing debt-cutting goals.

As seen below, the Bank of Japan’s asset purchase program was already on track to purchase a cool JPY101.1 trillion (over 20% GDP), but investors/traders were largely ignoring this until new PM Abe began talking about even more aggressive BoJ action. After some uncertainty about whether the G20 would take Japan to task for the rapid JPY depreciation since late October 2012, investors/speculators took the mild  G20 statement as tacit approval for further weakening of JPY, and giving encouragement to those predicting an eventual fall in JPY/USD to 200~300/USD. But these bears are basically talking their book. Ex-Soros Advisor Fujimaki (who says JPY400/USD is possible), makes his living advising Japanese clients to move their money offshore. BNP Paribas economist Ryutaro Kono, who sees a Japan fiscal crisis in 2015, was passed up for consideration for a BoJ post.

Source: Morgan Stanley

Source: XE.com

Speculative Short Positions Already Beginning to Unwind

The CFTC net open short position of non-commercial traders already peaked on 24 November 2012 after reversing sharply from a net long position peak on 21 August. Given the massive gains, traders are now taking profits, with the net short position now down some 20%, and the hot money is now looking for an excuse to lock in gains. Consequently, we view it unlikely that short traders can repeat these gains over the next couple of months. Indeed, the true test of weak JPY sustainability will be how JPY/USD trends as these short positions are cleared, as the shelf life of such overhangs of long-short positions have historically lasted only about six months.

Source: Oanda

What investors/speculators can expect is, 1) more currency volatility, 2) more interest rate convergence as central banks succumb to the Fed’s “whatever it takes” approach, which implies continued downward, not upward pressure on rates. As a result, the so-called “great rotation” could be much more prolonged than those recommending you dump all your bonds would have you believe. Technically, the JPY sell-off has breached its first target (the 92 handle), with the next target just under 95, and currency markets should remain extremely sensitive to US, Japan and Eurozone comments about JPY or factors that would affect central bank stance, interest rates, etc.

Bond Yields at Some Point Will Have to Get in Sync with Currency Market

The JPY selloff to date has come mainly from the concept, not the fact. If the BoJ fails to deliver what is already discounted in JPY/USD price, there is room for a significant setback. Even investment banks like HSBC argue the currency market is “attaching a probability to excess success”.

While strong “behavioral bias” from over a decade of falling JGB yields may have domestic investors still (undeservedly) tilted strongly to JGBs over equities, the fact is that JGB yields are not signing off the same song sheet as JPY/USD, and, we believe, not merely because of the prospect of aggressive BoJ JGB purchases. Indeed, the latest drop in JGB yields could be more attributable to the disappointing third quarter of declines in Japan’s GDP. We are in complete agreement with JP Morgan’s Kanno that a weak JPY and more aggressive BoJ won’t be enough to provide Japan’s economy with enough velocity to escape from its decades long slump without some ‘ole Junichiro Koizumi-style structural reforms. Thus domestic investors will have to be shown that Abenomics is for real, that the new BoJ policy board is completely on board with Abenomics, and that Japan’s economy is really pulling up before they really commit, despite the GPIF now beginning to consider the price risk in their extensive JGB portfolio from Abenomics.

Hat Tip: FT Alphaville
Japan Crisis Begins with a Collapse in JPY?

While most mainstream strategists and economists that follow Japan closely continue to downplay Kyle Bass’s widow-maker trade, as previously outlined, the scenario does have its fans, especially among the fast money crowd. Last October, Atlantic magazine called the Japan debt problem “The Next Panic”, suggesting Japan could be the next Black Swan event that really derails the central bank money printing-driven recovery. As Mark Twain said, “it ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble, its what you know for sure that just ain’t so”.  “Everyone” overseas is convinced the Japan debt situation is a bug in search of a windshield,  and that the crisis in Japan will most likely come from a collapse in confidence in JPY.

However, Japan does not fit the pattern of countries that have had fiscal/currency crises, a) because the vast bulk of the debt is owed to its own people and b) Japan (still?) remains the largest net creditor nation. Japan’s rapidly growing elderly hold the bulk of their savings in cash and bank deposits. The banks and financial institutions in turn hold the bulk of government debt, with the Bank of Japan becoming an increasingly large factor in JGB demand. If Japan is going to default, it will more likely “soft” default against its own citizens in a form of financial repression. Japan’s savers could also effectively lose their savings through high inflation,but as James Montier has pointed out, central bank money printing alone is unlikely to cause this.

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. 

 
The 2012 phenomenon was a range of escatological beliefs that cataclysmic or transformative events would occur around 21 December 2012, ostensibly because the Mayan long count calendar ended on that date. These doomsday predictions had people so worked up that NASA was hundreds of calls a day, to the point they felt compelled to post a video on the NASA site to quell fears and debunk the myth, despite the fact that professional Mayanist scholars had state all along that predictions of impending doom were no where to be found in any of the extant classic Maya accounts, and that the idea that the Long Count calendar ends in 2012 misrepresented Maya history and culture. 
A similar mania has gripped the financial world, and that is the so-called fiscal cliff, a phrase introduced by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to describe the potential fiscal drag in 2013 from the expiration of Bush tax cuts, payroll tax cuts, Alternative Minimum Tax patches and spending cuts from last summer’s debt ceiling agreement. The U.S. Congressional Budget Office has projected that the country will fall into a recession if legislators allow all changes to go through, and Wall Street investment houses followed through with projections that the US economy could shrink as much as 4.5% if the U.S. Congress sat back and did nothing. 
Investors further read and hear of an imminent fiscal disaster from the rapid build-up in US deficits following the 2008 financial crisis. From the movement in the financial markets, however, it looks as if we will usher in 2013 with no major blowups, and could even see a year of decent economic recovery and general recovery in risk assets. 
Armageddon Averted
In all probability however, fiscal Armageddon has already been averted. After the Lehman Brothers in September 2008 nearly triggered a global financial meltdown, both the U.S. Fed and Treasury intervened heavily, the ostensible objective being to stabilize the system and circuit-break the self-reinforcing fear that was already rippling through the global financial system. To sell it to Congress and the public, the Obama Administration, the Treasury and the Fed also threw in the mission of getting banks to loan out money they received, and helping to stabilize the battered housing market. In terms of its stated objectives, TARP, it is widely recognized that TARP did help prevent financial Armageddon, while it failed in stimulating bank loans to the more deserving businesses and in stabilizing the U.S. housing market. But saving the global financial system was not without costs, as some (particularly politicians) claim. Further, TARP does not include the $187.5 bailout of mortgage finance GSEs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Even with $50.5 billion in dividend income, taxpayers are still out of pocket $137 billion from that rescue.
Source: CNN
But the original TARP criticisms fell far wide of the mark. Firstly, while tagged as a $700 billion program, only around $466 billion was actually dispersed. Secondly, just under $370 billion has been generated in direct government revenues from the program, including asset sales, capital gains, dividends, interest income and warrant premiums. Thirdly, the “too-big-to-fail” banks have already repaid their loans, and the Treasury Department has sold its remaining stake in AIG. Re-listed General Motors (GM, says it was buying back 200 million shares from the government. The US treasury still owns about 26% of the company, and would need about $53.00/share for these to break even, versus a recent quote of $25 +/share, for an unrealized loss of just under $14 billion. Thus by late 2012, TARP losses have been paired down to just under $14 billion, including $6 billion for programs to prevent foreclosure that were never meant to be paid back. In October, the Congressional Research Service was forecasting losses for the whole auto industry bailout of around $7.3 billion. However, a Center for Automotive Research (CAR) study reported that the automobile industry as a whole generated $91.5 billion in state and local tax revenue and $43 billion in federal tax revenue in 2011. As of October 2012, the Congressional Research Service was estimating $24 billion in costs, while the latest Office of Management and Budget estimates were for $63 billion in costs. 
Even Neil Barofsky, the original Special Inspector General and an outspoken critic of the bailout, has conceded that a lot of money has been paid back. “The loss will be much smaller than anyone thought in 2009.” 
Central Banks Still Backstopping Financial Sector and Governments 
Given a financial crisis of the scale seen in 2008, three groups needed to significantly adjust, i.e., a) the financial sector needs to recognize losses and recapitalize, b) both debt-ridden households and corporations need to deleverage, and c) governments went deeply into debt trying to keep economies from falling into recession/depression amidst private sector deleveraging. 
The financial crisis created a vicious cycle, where each sector’s burdens and efforts to adjust worsen the position of the other two. Central banks are caught in the middle, and are being pushed by governments and investors to use what power they have to contain the damage; pushed to directly fund the financial sector, and pushed to maintain extraordinarily low interest rates as well as quantitative easing to ease the strains on fiscal authorities, households and firms. This intense pressure puts the central banks’ price stability objectives, their credibility and, ultimately, their independence, at risk. 
For fiscal and monetary policy makers it was and is therefore critical to break the vicious cycle, thereby reducing the pressure on central banks. But this is much easier said than done. Private sector banks, the real creators of money in an economy, need to be speedily recapitalized and rebuild capital buffers. Financial authorities must implement financial reforms and extend them to shadow banking activities that prior to the crisis played a major role in credit creation, and limit the size and significance of the financial sector to the extent that a failure of one institution does not trigger a financial crisis. Revitalizing banks and reducing their relative size to the economy breaks the vicious cycle of destructive interaction with other sectors and clears the way for the next steps—fiscal consolidation and deleveraging of the private non-financial sectors of the economy. A move back to balanced economic growth will only be possible once balance sheets across all sectors are repaired. 
Souce: Bank of International Settlements
No Return to the Pre-crisis Economy, With or Without Stimulus? 
However, pervasive balance sheet repair takes years, if not decades. Regardless of whether TARP eventually is a net plus for government revenues, investors and economists all recognize that there will be no quick return to the pre-crisis economy, with or without additional stimulus. Great Recessions do not happen every decade — this is why they are called “great” in the first place. After the great 2008 financial crisis, the arteries of the global monetary system are now clogged with debt used to stabilize the situation, Since it simply cannot all be serviced or repaid, it won’t be. Further, the sheer size of the debt is choking off economic growth. Thus the pressure on central banks to provide monetary stimulus, ease fiscal strains while also easing funding strains is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. 
The following graph shows public debt to revenue for major economies. With public debt now at 750 times revenue and still rising, it is eminently obvious that particularly Japan cannot simply grow its way out of debt with any sort of realistic growth rate assumption (e.g., 3%~4% P.A.).
Source: Ithuba Capital
Wanted: A Post-Keynesian and Monetarist Approach
In terms of fiscal policy, the Keynes economic doctrine of demand management has made a striking comeback, after more than 30 years of intellectual eclipse from the mid-1970s to 2008—led by the likes of Larry Summers, Paul Krugman and Ben Bernanke. However, others like Jeffery Sachs are now suggesting that Keynesian policies such as a) big fiscal packages, b) record low interest rates, and c) “unlimited” QE, while ostensibly appropriate for recessions/depressions, may be the wrong tools to address deep structural change—i.e., these Keynesian policies are fighting the last war, whereas the new path to growth could be very different from even the recent past. 
Indeed, we may be fast approaching the tail end of a 40-year experiment in fiat money and the mother of all credit-fueled expansions that began when President Nixon severed the link between gold and the US dollar in 1971. Last week the US Federal Reserve yet again announced more QE through the purchase of $45 billion of US Treasuries every month. Between this program and the Fed’s QE 3 Program announced in September, the Fed will be monetizing $85 billion worth of assets every month; $40 billion worth of Treasuries and $45 billion worth of Mortgage Backed Securities, ad infinitum as the Fed tries to counter a dysfunctional U.S. Congress allowing the U.S. economy to fall over or slide down the fiscal cliff/slope. 
Thus investors have been reduced to central bank watchers looking for the next liquidity fix. What is disturbing, as was pointed out by the Zero Hedge blog, is the similarity between the stock market so far in 2012 and what happened to stocks when faced with a similar “debt ceiling” issue in 2011. The inference of course is that, contrary to consensus, stock prices are still not seriously discounting the risks to 2013 economic growth from the fiscal cliff and/or the ensuing austerity.
Source: Zero Hedge
A benign outcome from Democrat and Republican last-minute fiscal cliff negotiations of course would ensure a firm floor under stocks prices, being that these prices are strongly supported by renewed Fed QE balance sheet expansion
Bottom Line, QE Does Not Equal Runaway Inflation
Central bank balance sheet policies have supported the global economy through a very difficult crisis, but at what costs and risks of massive balance sheet deployment? Doesn’t this pose the risk of an eventual blow-up in inflation? Not according to the Bank of International Settlements. This is because these central banks are still largely pushing on a string. The relationship between increases in central bank balance sheets and base money has been rather weak for both advanced and emerging market economies since 2007. The correlation between central bank asset expansion and broad money growth has been even weaker; in advanced economies, and is even slightly negative. This reflects instability in the money multiplier (broad money over monetary base) over this period. Similarly, the correlation between the change in central bank assets and consumer price inflation has been virtually zero. In sum, bloated central bank balance sheets do not seem to pose a direct inflation risk, but there is a noticeable link to the value of that country’s fiat currency.
US Stock Market Volatility Yes, Serious Selloff, No 
As a result, it would probably take a particularly negative “no action whatsoever”, or worse, serious austerity as an outcome of a fiscal cliff deal, to trigger a significant selloff in U.S. stock prices, which investors are correctly assuming is highly unlikely, as any sharp selloff would act like a sharp pencil in the backs of U.S. politicians reminding them of what is at stake in terms of the financial markets. What financial markets are basically signaling to investors is that progress continues to be made in breaking the vicious debt deflation cycle, as long as the central banks remain committed to backstopping the adjustment process. While admittedly a simplistic view, a simple comparison of current S&P 500 levels and the prior 2007 high indicates the U.S. has repaired roughly 90% of damage wrought by the 2008 financial crisis. 
Source: BigCharts.com
It is interesting to note that 10Yr treasury yields have also bottomed despite the Fed’s renewed purchases of treasuries, given a quick 7% depreciation in USD (in terms of the UUP ETF), and the long-treasuries chart indicating a significant back-up in yields as possible, to 2.25%~2.50%, in fairly short order. Rising treasury yields imply growing inflation expectations, ostensibly arising from improved expectations for U.S. economic growth in 2013, not the recession that everyone is warning about when discussing the fiscal cliff. On the other hand, the financial media is reporting that investors/traders see U.S. bond yields as at or near the highs of a range investors see persisting into next year. 
The initial estimate of US GDP growth in Q3 (July, August, and September) was an underwhelming 2%. Since then, the numbers have been revised up, and then revised up again. While short of what can be considered a “robust” recovery, the 3.1% percent GDP reading is the best since the end of 2011, and the second-best quarter of the last three years. In Q2, real GDP increased only 1.3%. It remains to be seen just how much the psychological damage done to business and consumer confidence from the fiscal cliff debacle impacts the real economy.
Source: BigCharts.com
S&P SPDR Sector Performance: XLF is a Rally Bellwether 
The renewed vigor of the rally in the S&P 500 has been largely supported by the S&P 500 financials (XLF SPDR) as the bellwether for both Eurozone debt/banking crisis risk and U.S. economic growth expectations. As long as the XLF is matching or beating the S&P 500, perceived financial risk is low and investor attitude toward risk continues to improve. Conversely, should the S&P 500 see a significant selloff, it will most likely be led by the financials. 
The following chart shows the relative performance of the S&P 500 sector SPDRs since before the prior bubble, i.e., the IT bubble. In terms of relative performance, the financials “bubble” puts the prior IT bubble to shame, and underscores just how important the financial sector has become not only to the U.S. stock market, but to its economy as well. Thus in the U.S. at least, Wall Street is intricately connected to Main Street
The U.S. financial sector in turn has been backstopped by a sharp rally in the Eurostoxx Banks Index of some 56.8% from a late July low, on a clear commitment by the ECB to do “whatever it takes” to save the Euro. Even more dramatic has been the plunge in Greek sovereign bond yields from 35% to just over 10%, even though Greece was considered an irrecoverable basket case. The hedge funds that were brave enough to buy Greek bonds for just such a trade have so far been well-rewarded.
Source: Yahoo.com, Japan Investor
Source: 4-Traders.com
Greek 10Yr Bond Yield: Bloomberg
Gold versus US Treasuries: A Reversal from More Deflation to Rising Real Yields 
The other strong indicator of improving confidence in the economy and rising inflation expectations is the selloff in gold. While investors ostensibly find it difficult to determine a “fair” price for gold because it pays no yield and offers no earnings, it can be demonstrated that price of gold does respond to the trend in real interest rates, i.e., gold rallies when real interest rates are declining toward zero and especially rallies when real rates are below zero. Thus the recent price action in gold also reflects investor expectations that the foreseeable trend in real interest rates is more likely to be of rising real rates, i.e., a reversal from deflationary renewed lows. Long bonds (TLT ETF) have actually been outperforming gold (GLD ETF) since April of this year. 
The 30-year US Treasury bond tells us that the expected return over the next 30 years is a real return of 0.4 percent (2.8% yield minus a break-even inflation of 2.4%). This cannot last in a world of forced inflation via infinite monetary printing and a possible downgrade of the US if it fails to implement structural fiscal reforms. The Federal Reserve is expected to keep rates low for longer but in 2013 this could be challenged by the zero interest rate policy which forces investors to leave fixed income to attain any yield. 
With global bond markets worth some USD 157 trillion versus stock market capitalization of USD 55 trillion (McKinsey & Company), there is three dollars in fixed income for every one dollar in stocks. Thus every 10 percent reduction in mutual fund holdings of bonds moved to the equity market would produce 30% of net inflows into stocks, leading not only to higher US rates, but also creating one of the greatest stories ever told in the equity market.
Source: Yahoo.com
Source: Wealth Daily
China’s Soft Landing 
After months and months of debate, it now appears that China’s economy is not collapsing, but rather settling into a slightly slower, but still brisk pace of growth. Chinese GDP growth for 2012 of 7.7% to 7.8% is now looking very doable, just above former Premier Wen Jiabao’s target of 7.5%. After 9.2% growth in 2011, the first two years of the decade are averaging 8.5%, and 7.1% for the rest of the decade now seems very doable. With a trade surplus a quarter below its peak, stabilized housing prices, consumption rising as a share of GDP, and inflation below target, the situation in China looks decidedly benign as the government works to shift economic growth more toward domestic consumer demand. 
The narrower FXI China ETF of 25 blue chips has been reflecting this revisionist view among foreign investors for some time (i.e., September), while the Shanghai Composite—much more influenced by domestic individual investors trading more on rumors than fundamentals. At some point, higher stock prices will shake out even the most adamant China bears, which could well exacerbate the upward move.
Source: Yahoo.com
Macro Fundamentals Now Show Japanese Equities in a Much More Favorable Light 
Since the Nikkei 225 has historically had a good positive correlation with U.S. 10-year bond yields and the JPY/USD exchange rates is highly correlated to the spread between US and Japanese 2-year as well as 10-year bond yields, rising US bond yields offer good macro (top-down) support for rising Japanese equities. 
Since the onset of the 2008 financial crisis, Japanese equities have woefully underperformed other developed market equities, seriously hobbled by a) structural rot in Japan’s domestic economy, b) an incessantly high JPY, that c) is seriously harming both the volume and profit margins of exports, which have become the primary engine of extremely cyclical growth in Japan’s economy.
Source: Yahoo.com
The above chart dramatic long-term underperformance of Japanese equities, which are still in the mother of all bear markets. The only flash of hope during this period was the brief period when the unconventional, reformist-minded Junichiro Koizumi was in power, as represented by the cyclical rise in Japanese stock prices between 2003 and 2007 when foreign investors came to the view that Japan was “back”.
This secular bear market has essentially all but completely wrung growth expectations out of stock prices. As a result, valuations of Japanese equities have been very cheap for some time, with a median forward P/E multiple of 18.6X but no less than 2,364 individual stocks trading between 4X and 12X earnings, a median dividend yield of 2.15% while 1,456 stocks trade at dividend yields between 3.5% and 5.0%, and a median price/book ratio of 1.49X, while 2,300 stocks trade at PBRs between 0.3X and 0.9X book value.
The problem was, it was hard to see any catalyst that could allow investors to capitalize on what had become a value trap. As global investors were very underweight Japanese equities, Shintaro Abe’s aggressive statements about a weaker JPY, a more aggressive BoJ and specific price targets were just the potential catalyst that foreign and domestic institutional investors were desperate for. As Mr. Abe’s LDP took the recent elections by a landslide, foreign investors are now keyed on, a) a weaker JPY and b) a more aggressive BoJ.  
While the surging Nikkei 225 is looking over-extended short-term, there is potentially much more return available over the next six~twelve months. Assuming JPY does weaken to JPY90/USD or more, and the US-Japan bond yield spread continues to widen, the Nikkei 225 has the potential to challenge its post-2008 financial crisis rebound high of 11,286 (+11%), and even its pre-crisis May 2008 high of 14,338 (+41%) if the Abe Administration does indeed instigate a real recovery in Japan’s economy
Abe “Magic” a Convenient Catalyst to Recognize Improving Macro Market Fundamentals
While most investors readily recognized that Japanese equities were cheap, the biggest impediment was that most investors could not see any fundamental change that would act as a catalyst to unlock this apparent value; only inept political bungling by the ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), growing friction with China that was hurting trade, and continued over-valuation of JPY. 
However, rising US long-term yields provide a favorable macro backdrop for a rally in Japan’s Nikkei 225, which historically has exhibited a fairly high positive correlation with U.S. 10-year treasury yields, ostensibly because rising treasury yields tend to lead to wider spreads between U.S. and Japan long bond yields, which in turn is highly correlated with a weaker JPY. So far, Shintaro Abe has only provided a catalyst for hope, with his speeches about a weaker JPY, inflation targeting and a more aggressive BoJ on the campaign trail leading up to December 16 general elections hitting all the right buttons with foreign and domestic institutional investors.
Going forward into 2013, investors will continue to key on the BoJ. BoJ Governor Shirakawa’s term is up at the end of March, 2013, as is two other policy board members. Topping the short list of possible new BoJ governors is Kazumasa Iwata, who has publicly advocated BoJ should purchases of Y50tn worth of Eurozone government bonds with a view to weakening the yen as a natural extension of the central bank’s current asset purchase program. New prime minister Abe has also appointed Yale economics professor Koichi Hamada as a special adviser to his cabinet. Hamada has also advocated the purchase of foreign currency bonds as well as of longer dated Japanese government bonds. Thus outgoing governor Shirakawa is now extremely isolated politically, and the Abe Administration has one of the best chances in decades to ensure the appointment of not one but three BoJ board member reflationists.
For the Hope Rally to Morph into a Fundamental Recovery Rally, Abe Must Walk the Talk
But the litmus test for sustainability in the budding Japan stocks rally is, a) expanding US-Japan bond yield spreads supported by rising economic growth/inflation expectations in the U.S., b) faster growth in the BoJ’s balance sheet than either the ECB or the Fed, and c) a transformation from deflation to inflation expectations in Japan. 
Abe was advised by LDP peers such as his new finance minister and ex-prime minister Taro Aso to steer clear of more controversial issues and to just concentrate on the economy for the time being, and it appears that is what Abe is doing.
Abe’s erely managing to stay in office for his full four year term would greatly stabilize policy management. After having abruptly resigned as prime minister with less than a year in office five years ago, he will be under pressure to shed the stigma as a fragile leader by steadily showing progress on a number of fronts and maintaining the support of his political party and the voting public for at least one full term. This alone would be quite an accomplishment considering that Japan has seen seven prime ministers in the last six years.
In addition to a much more aggressive BoJ, the effectiveness of Abe’s economic policies will be greatly affected by the functionality of a re-instated Council on Fiscal and Economic Policy and the “headquarters for Japan’s economic revitalization” that Abe plans to set up. Early steps to create forward momentum in restoring Japan’s economic engine would go a long way in helping to address a plethora of thorny issues Japan faces, including a monstrous government debt burden, a creaking social welfare and pension system, territorial disputes with China, the highly contentious TPP negotiations and the consumption tax hike issue.
Yet while the LDP-New Komeito coalition has won a super majority in the Lower House, it is still the minority political group in the Upper House, meaning a split Diet. Like his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, he will need to heed and marshal voters, business and investors to make his case within his own party and with opposition parties to overcome the debilitating political gridlock that characterized the brief leadership of the country under the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ). Fortunately, with the DPJ party in almost complete disarray and other political opposition splintered among many smaller new political parties, the heretofore main opposition DPJ is in no state to seriously impede Diet business.
Biggest Risk is a Dramatic Reversal in Inflationary Expectations
The currency and stock markets have reacted positively to Abe’s promises to a) instate an inflation target of 2%-3% by the BoJ, b) get the BoJ to purchase construction bonds to c) fund an immediate JPY10 trillion fiscal stimulus package and up to JPY200 trillion of fiscal expenditures over the next 10 years to revitalize Japan’s rusting infrastructure,
So far, these are merely campaign promises.
The biggest risk is that these reflation attempts are too successful, causing a dramatic shift from a chronic deflationary mindset to one of excessive inflation expectations, but in the current environment of deflationary expectations, not only in Japan but in the Eurozone and the U.S. as well. Rising inflationary expectations could trigger a lose in confidence in Japan’s bond market, triggering a serious blowup in bond yields that would a) dramatically weaken JPY and b) create big potholes in the balance sheets of Japan’s JGB-laden balance sheets. In the worst case, Abe and the LDP could merely return to the old LDP playbook of wasteful fiscal expenditures while avoiding unpopular but essential economic reforms, i.e., a repeat of the 1990s insanity, where, with the exception of the Koizumi-led reform years, the LDP kept repeating the same mistakes, each time hoping for a different outcome.
Such an approach will only not work, but would merely accelerate Japans fall over its own excessive debt fiscal cliff. Extremely low and stable interest rates on JGBs will end sooner or later, and the new government needs to recognize that it will only be buying time unless the thorny structural issues are addressed head-on. JGB yields have already bounced on the expectation of more stimulative economic policies, but have a long, long ways to go before crossing the rubicon, as again-in-recession Japancontinues to suffer from debilitating excess domestic capacity. Thus Abe effectively has only one choice, and that is to push forward in reflating and revitalizing Japan’s economy.  
Exporter Breakeven JPY/USD Exchange Rate Still Around JPY85/USD
The breakeven exchange rate for Japanese exporters has dropped dramatically from just under JPY115/USD circa 2003 to around JPY85/USD by late 2011, but is still above actual exchange rates, meaning the Abe-instigated selloff in JPY has so far merely pushed the JPY/USD rate back toward, but not significantly above the breakeven exchange rate.
A selloff to around JPY95/USD would create a significant positive windfall for Japanese exporter corporate profits in FY2013 and provide a very welcome upside earnings surprise, although stock prices of Japan’s exporters discount exchange rates in real time. A weaker JPY would also very likely prevent a further mass exodus of production capacity by Japan’s automobile section—still its most competitive and influential to the domestic economy in terms of ripple effects on the steel, plastics and chemicals, electrical equipment, and ceramics industries.
A Significantly Weaker JPY Will Alleviate, But Not Solve Japan’s Global Competitiveness Deficit
Economic development is a process of continuous technological innovation, industrial upgrading, and structural change driven by how countries harness their land, labor, capital, and infrastructure. For the last twenty years, all but a few Japanese companies and certainly all of Japan’s public institutions have steadfastly resisted the tsunami of globalization sweeping over Japan. Public organizations and the organizations of many corporations are unchanged from the emerging, high growth era of the 1970s.
Even Japan’s largest firms have muddled along with woefully out-dated business models, group-think insider boards of directors and generally poor corporate governance. While much of the developed world now seeks diversity in corporate boards that is more congruent with the sex and nationality of their employees, the global structure of their businesses and the demands of their institutional investors, Japanese companies still have an average of only 2 outside directors of dubious independence on their generally bloated insider boards, and have dramatically fewer outside directors than their peers in Hong Kong, Singapore or South Korea.
 Integrated Electronic Firms as Symbols of the Problem
Japanese electronic firms used to be on the leading edge of evolutionary and revolutionary new product development, as evidenced by Sony’s Walkman audio player, flat screen TVs, the VTR, CD ROMs and high definition (analog) TV and NTT’s iMode mobile phones. More recent attempts however such as Blue Ray discs have been hobbled by the lack of standard formats and commercial flops such as 3D TV.
As global demand shifted from the developed nations to emerging markets, Japanese electronic companies found that their products in many cases had too sophisticated designs that priced these products out of the reach of a growing aspirational middle class, while their high end product strategies were blindsided by new “outside the box” products that redefined mature product areas, such as Apple’s iPod, iPhone and iPad. This relegated Japanese firms to establishing assembly operations offshore in cheap labor countries, mainly China, while Japan’s exports shifted to niche components and sub-assembly products that were mere cogs in a regional supply chain.
An incessantly higher JPY and cutthroat price competition at the lower end “volume zone” cut heavily into profitability, forcing repeated bouts of restructuring that stunted new product development and capital expenditures, causing major integrated electronic firms to fall farther and farther behind in dynamic new industry segments.  At the same time, Japanese firms have been particularly inept at developing the consumer/user friendly software and applications make computers, new 3G/4G phones and other electronic products so appealing.
As in the aerospace industry, Japanese electronics firms were never able to establish and grow profitable foodchains/architectures such as the once all-powerful Windows/Intel or the Apple iPod/Phone/Pad empire, as the “soft” portions of the foodchain where the real money was made was always outsourced.
Significantly Weakening JPY May be Easier Said than Done, and if too Successful, Could Create a Global Crisis
JPY has been in a secular bull market versus USD since Nixon severed the USD link to gold and Japan allowed JPY to float. Over the past 20 years, annual growth in the supply of JPY or Japan’s monetary inflation rate, has averaged only 2% PA, and is presently near this long-term average. This means JPY, over the past two decades, has by far the slowest rate of supply growth of the major currencies, ergo, JPY has been in a secular bull market simply because there has structurally not been enough JPY supplied to meet demand for the Japanese currency. As a result, JPY has gained the reputation of a “hard” currency and safe haven despite a dramatically deteriorating public debt position, supported by Japan’s position as a net creditor nation with a structural current balance of payments surplus. 

Source: Speculative Investor
While Japan’s monetary inflation exceeded 10% PA during the 1980s boom years, growth collapsed in 1990-1991 with the crash in the stock and property markets. Conversely, US monetary inflation surged after the 2008 financial crisis as the Fed flooded the financial market with USD swaps to keep the global financial system afloat. Thus even the most aggressive BoJ (where “aggressive” is very much against character) would struggle to supply enough monetary inflation to offset the tsunami of greenbacks. The BoJ stands accused of doing too little too late to combat deflation and reflate Japan’s economy with a weaker JPY, but since the 2008 crisis, they haven’t stood a chance of depreciating JPY against the onslaught of currency debasement by the ECB and the Fed.
How Much Can the BoJ’s Balance Sheet be Realistically Expanded without Consequences?
The rapid ageing of Japanese society is a widely known phenomenon. Total population has recently started to fall, and the working age population had already started to fall around 1995 by the middle of this century, thus population shrinkage, particularly in the working population, is expected to be quite dramatic. With the working age population shrinking, unless technology allows a smaller workforce to produce more output per head, Japan’s GDP without a policy offset could essentially trend sideways to slightly minus. With Japanhaving one of the most rapidly graying societies in the world, nominal GDP should become the focus rather than real GDP, as GNP includes financial income from the rest of the world, and is a better reflection of the “feel” of the economy among people on the street.
One of Saxo Bank’s 10 Outrageous Predictions for 2013 has the BoJ formalizing nominal GDP targeting and ballooning its balance sheet to almost 50% of GDP to spur inflation and weaken JPY. But the question of just how far the BoJ can expand its balance sheet without triggering a bond rout is a very valid question. As of January 2012, major developed country central bank assets as a percent of IMF forecast nominal GDP showed that the BoJ’s balance sheet was already well over 30% of GDP, versus under 20% for the Fed, The BoJ’s balance sheet to GDP has already surpassed the 30% peak seen during 1995~1996 when the BoJ first experimented with full-scale QE. While high versus other developed nations, however, China takes the prize for having the largest central bank balance sheet to GDP by a mile.

Further, when converted to USD and shown in absolute USD amounts, it is very evident that the BoJ had fallen way behind China, the ECB and the Fed in terms of the sheer comparative volume of QE, and thus the relative supply of JPY (degree of debasement) has been much lower, making JPY much stronger relative to other fiat currencies.

Source: James Bianco
Continued Investor Faith in the Efficacy of Monetary Countermeasures is Key

If global investors were to lose faith in the efficacy of global quantitative easing, risk appetite could significantly retrench, vaulting JPY to the fore again for a time as the world’s strongest currency due to deflation and repatriation of investments, and the rapid unwinding of carry trades. In this case, JPY could surge to JPY60/USD and other JPY crosses head even more violently lower, possibly triggering a fiscal crisis in Japan that would force the LDP government and the BoJ to reach for even more radical measures to weaken JPY and reflate Japan’s economy amidst a renewed global financial crisis.

Shinzo Abe has already decided to scrap the country’s spending cap for the annual budget, previously capped at a measly JPY71 trillion, excluding debt-servicing costs, and JGB yields have already seen a noticeable uptick, with the biggest 5-day run-up in 10yr JGB yields in over 13 months. As the following chart shows, Japan’s 30-year bond yields have already reacted to a structural shift in Japan’s balance of trade from surplus to deficit by breaking out of a downtrend in place since early 2008, while the uptick in 10-year yields is still barely perceptible and still 125 bps below the 2007 high. Thus the BoJ and the Abe Administration have much heavy lifting ahead of them in convincing investors that Japan is really committed to reflating Japan’s economy, and the gap between the sharp Nikkei 225 rebound and still-low JGB yields reflects the current gap between bond and equity market investor expectations, as the Nikkei 225 has so far reacted primarily to the recent selloff in JPY.


Source: FX Street
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
Foreign Buying Will Again Fuel the Rally
Since domestic financial institutions will be positioning their portfolios for the closure of accounts for FY2012 at the end of March 2013, the rally in Japanese stocks through the end of the year and into the first quarter of 2013 will have to be almost exclusively driven by foreign investors, and moreover in sufficient enough quantity to offset a noticeable drag from net selling by domestic institutional investors trying to book gains before the end of the accounting year.
Since Abe’s bullish comments triggered a JPY selloff in mid-November, foreign investors have already been net buyers of Japanese equity by some JPY1.13 trillion, while domestic individuals and institutions have sold some JPY1.09 trillion of Japan equity.

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
 Sectors Leading Japan’s Rally
The rally in Japan is being driven by the high beta broker/dealers and the steel Topix sectors, while the airlines, other products (like Nintendo) and mining sectors have noticeably lagged. While the banks have been leading in the U.S., stocks in Japan’s banking sector are so far showing only an average rebound, perhaps because they are already widely held in many foreign portfolios. 

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
The best performing Nikkei 225 stocks year-to-date are dominated by second-tier city banks (Shinsei, Aozora), broker/dealers (Daiwa, Nomura), and the real estate stocks(Tokyu, Sumitomo, Heiwa, Tokyo Tatemono, Mitsui Fudosan), all of which have offered year-to-date returns in excess of 40%.

Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor

Japan Passing

Posted: November 1, 2012 in BOJ, Japan Stocks, JGBs, JPY, Nikkei 225, Topix

A recent article in the Washington Post was titled, “A declining Japanloses its once-hopeful champions.” The once-common species has been virtually wiped out. The group has turned gradually into non­-believers, with several of the last hold­outs losing faith only recently, as Japan has failed to carry out meaningful reforms after the March 2011 triple disaster. Here’s a rogue’s gallery of what’s wrong with Japan.
 
 Horrible Demographics. Japan’s population of 127 million, already hugely skewed towards the unproductive and costly elderly (e.g., average female life expectancy is 86 years) is set to shrink by 800,000 every year between now and 2060 or to 32% of its 2010 level.
Horrible Debt Position. Public debt is 239% of GDP, and taxes cover just about half of total government spending.The government has just launched an eighth round of quantitative easing in an attempt to weaken the yen, but Japan’s GDP, once nearly 20% of the global economy, will be down to less than 5% by 2042.

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics
Inept, Gridlocked Political Leadership. Japanis, as one reporter termed it, “a nation of individual quiet lions led by political donkeys”. Japan’s workers are a hard-working, dutiful, courteous, resourceful and steadfast people who deserve better leaders, but keep in mind that it is they who elect these leaders, at least indirectly.
Timid Central Bank Monetary Policy. While the Bank of Japan was actually the first to introduce quantitative easing (QE) and zero interest rate (ZIRP) policies a decade ago, Japan’s central bank has not been as aggressive as its U.S.or ECB peers in utilizing its balance sheet to weaken JPY. It continues to disappoint foreign and domestic investors with incremental, reactionary rather than proactive monetary policy. That is no match for the trillions of USD being marshaled by the Fed.

Gravity-Defying Yen Strength. The Japanese yen has been appreciating steadily since 1971, when Richard Nixon severed the last remaining link of the US dollar to gold. The yen has continued to appreciate because, a) Japan has remained a net creditor nation based on a heretofore chronic balance of payments.
Given the above, Japan’s GDP growth has remained extremely volatile, with sustainable growth being 1% or less. Since 2008, Japan’s GDP growth has swung from +1.3% to -3.9%, and has recently basically been trending flat. 

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics

Hat-Tip: Trading Economics

Scheloric Ex-National Champions. All the above has resulted in sclerotic ex-national champion corporations with in-bred, risk-adverse leaders. Corporate management in general lacks the will and vision to take risks and fundamentally re-think their businesses, whereas Japan’s success was founded on single-minded mavericks, often engineers who were willing to go against the grain, take risks and stick their necks out, like Honda’s Ichiro Honda, Panasonic’s Konosuke Matsushita, or Sony’s Akio Morita. Consensus-insisting (group think) refusal to take hard decisions is fatally weakening them, as structural reforms (retrenchment) has been only a short-term fix. For example, Japan’s national champions in the electronics sector between 2000 and 2010 saw electronics production in Japan shrink by 41% and exports by 27%, as Japan’s global market share fell by nearly half to 10% by 2009, whereas South Korea’s rose to nearly 10%. Over the past two years, such former bluechips as Sharp (Tokyo: 6753), Sony (Tokyo:6758) and Panasonic (Tokyo: 6752) have lost so much money as to threaten their very existence and earn them previously unheard-of nnear “junk” credit ratings like Baa1; versus a cash position that was so strong in the mid-1980s to earn nicknames like Matsushita (Panasonic) Bank
Given the strong yen and other high operating costs in Japan, Japan’s industrial production is basically in secular decline with industry after industry being hollowed out as companies move production facilities overseas in a vain effort to maintain international competitiveness. The Ministry of Finance’s corporate survey shows minimal top-line sales growth even from the depressed post-Tohoku earthquake-tsunami-nuclear catastrophe levels. As a result, corporate profits have become extremely volatile as sales muddle along just above or below corporate break-even levels.
Source: Japan Ministry of Finance
No Appetite for Stocks Among Domestic Investors. Japan’s individual investors as well as investing institutions have little appetite for stocks preferring instead to keep excessive cash balances and preferring bonds (JGBs) and/or higher-yielding overseas investments over domestic equity. Because of a rapidly aging population, Japan’s largest (as well as the world’s largest) public pension fund, the Government Pension Investment Fund, is seeing its pension assets declining at a rate of JPY6~JPY8 trillion a year, forcing them to sell equities and bonds for pension payouts, and forcing their domestic asset managers to become secular net sellers of Japanese equities.

Given the above, it is not surprising that Japanese equities continue to seriously underperform the U.S. and other developed equity market peers, as foreign investors come around to the view that Japan is not just in a prolonged slump, but also in what may be an inescapable decline. The following chart of the EWJ MSCI Japan ETF relative to the SPY S&P 500 ETF clearly shows just how massive this relative under-performance has been over the last several years, despite periodic “contrarian” calls that now is the time to buy undervalued Japan, most recently immediately after the Tohoku catastrophe. Those who bought the “Japan reconstruction” story are now regretting it. 

Source: Yahoo.com
Steady Erosion in Market Capitalization. Relative performance is not the only issue. As a result of the steady erosion in Japanese stock prices, some 1,270 of a total 3,600 listed Japanese companies (or nearly half) have market capitalizations of JPY5 billion (USD62.5 million) or less, which would be considered a micro-cap company and off the investible universe radar screen of most overseas investors. Further, fewer and fewer investing institutions now offer Japan-specific mutual funds or institutional portfolios; instead offering “international” (ex-US) and “global” (with US) portfolios in which the exposure to Japanese equities is well below 10%, as the benchmark weight for Japanese equities in a MSCI EAFE-benchmarked portfolio is around 8%. Thus typical EAFE or Global portfolios will hold only 100 Japan equity names or less. The major exceptions to this general rule are the Chinese sovereign wealth funds (China Investment Company and SAFE Investment Company) who hold mainly a Topix-index-based portfolio of Japanese stocks, and who have been heavy buyers near previous market bottoms.
Hat Tip: Trading Economics
Small Cap Value Still Rewarding Those With the Patience to Find Them
But the bleak top-down view of Japan however masks some seriously undervalued, overlooked and unloved small cap companies that most investors just don’t have the time to investigate. There are a few funds however like the Fidelity Low-Priced Stock Fund (FLPSX) that are full of such bargain basement Japanese small caps, and who have managed to keep up with the S&P 500 by focusing on small-cap value stocks, whereever they can be found,  
Source: Yahoo.com



Euroland Economic Data Still Glum

Despite continued investor hope that the ECB will backstop financial and sovereign debt risk in the Eurozone, the economic numbers for Euroland continue to look pretty glum. Markit’s latest Eurozone PMI  (hat tip: FT Alphaville) shows the Eurozone sinking further into decline at the start of the fourth quarter, with combined output in the manufacturing an service sectors dropping the fastest since June 2009–i.e., more economic contraction. PMI indices in the Euro periphery are particularly ugly. 

Eurozone bank balance sheet deleveraging of course has been a major drag, but progress is evidently being made. Barclays reckons there is still about USD1.04 trillion of deleveraging left among the major European banks they cover, but nevertheless significant progress versus the USD2.4 to USD4.0 trillion being discussed last year. However, all key measures of Eurozone money supply contracted in September and private credit fell at an accelerating pace, much like what happened in Japan in early 1990, suggesting Euroland is on the verge of a deflationary spiral and a possible lost decade (s), as the perception is that the twin problems of bail-out fatigue in the North and austerity fatigue in the South are slowly getting worse, not better.

U.S. Q3 Impact on Financial Markets Fizzles

In the U.S., the S&P 500 and gold are now lower than when the Fed announced “unlimited” QE3, suggesting the Bernanke Put has lost its mojo and investors doubt whether even more QE will have much traction in goosing U.S. economic growth as well as corporate profits. According to Bloomberg, the $4 trillion-a-day foreign- exchange market is also losing confidence in central banks’ abilities to boost a struggling world economy. More professional investors, like David Eihorn, are coming to the view that too many jelly donuts (QE) is actually harmful, not beneficial.

Source: BigCharts.com
Yet according to the following chart from Morgan Stanley, stocks prices in the current cycle as measured relative to bonds and the G7 leading index are expecting a recovery that has yet to manifest itself in the OECD G7 leading indicators, ergo, stocks are increasingly vulnerable to bad news, and too many investors still expect bad news, although they are currently along for the market rally ride. Earnings growth in the third quarter likely turned negative for the first time in over three years while stock prices are back to December 2007 levels.

Are Investors Behind the “Normalization” Curve?
However, the economic data has been better than the bearish expectations. The Citigroup Economic Surprise Index for the Group-of-10 countries, which measures when data is beating or trailing the forecasts of analysts, climbed to a seven-month high of 18.4 last week, from this year’s low of minus 56.2 on June 26. The caveat is that this uptick could be more attributable to the Fed’s announcement of QE3 than any “real” improvement.

Are investors missing the big picture forest from looking too closely at individual trees? What do the big picture economic cycle theories say? The Business Insider Blog has taken a look at the various long-term economic cycle theories. The Kondratieff Long Waves approach suggests we are currently in a blank period and at least 30 years away from the next economic expansion, while the Schumpeter Cycle suggests we’re on the downswing from the most recent innovation cluster. Both however are too long-term for most investors to pay much attention to. On the other hand, the Kitchin Cycle indicates prices are in an upswing period, the Juglar Cycle indicates we’re at the beginning of an upswing in capital investment, and the Kuznets Cycle, based on current high income inequality, suggests that the U.S. should be at a new stage of development.
At least one strategist, i.e., Hajime Kitano, head of JPMorgan’s Japanese Equity Strategy, suggests that if the S&P 500 VIX volatility index stays subdued near current levels next week, it will mark a “phase change” for markets – i.e., a transition from a period of crisis into “normal time,” as the VIX is the last of the three indicators to confirm that markets have moved from “crisis” to “normal time.” According to Kitano, if the VIX index remains at its current level (16.6) next week, furthermore, its 52-week moving average will fall below the July 2011 level to its lowest point since February 2008. If the VIX index’s 52-week moving average falls below the long-term average (20.3) and the most recent low (19.1 in July 2011) this time, he sees a change of phase from crisis to normality.
Two Potential Game Changers; The Next Secular Recovery in U.S. Housing and the U.S. Surpassing Saudi Arabia as the World’s Largest Energy Producer
While there has been a lot of detailed discussion about what could go wrong, i.e., breakup of the Euro, hard landing in China, fiscal cliff in the U.S., etc., investors could be behind the curve regarding the favorable impact of two megatrends in the U.S. economy, i.e., a bottoming/recovery in U.S. housing and the U.S. becoming a major energy producer. 
Come-Back in US Housing

For all the continue bad news about the U.S. housing sector, the three big housing stocks (DR Horton, Toll BrothersLennar and PulteGroup) have actually been on a tear, surging some 120% from 2011 lows and leaving the S&P 500 rally in the dust. According to major homebuildings, the U.S. housing market has realized a meaningful increase in the volume of new home sales for the first nine months of 2012. In September, Americans bought new homes at the fastest pace in two years, another sign the industry whose decline was at the heart of the recession is coming back.  The major homebuilders of course are hopeful that housing could again help drive the economy forward and accelerate the pace of a recovery, and the industry is responding to increased sales by hiring additional workers and purchasing more building materials. They apparently are increasingly optimistic that the combination of ever higher rental rates, record low interest rates and limited housing supply can continue to support improved housing demand.

Source: BigCharts.com

Deutsche Bank economists believe the U.S. deleveraging cycle is past the midway point which suggests that the recent gains in household debt profiles should be a positive development for the U.S. economy going forward.
“Household debt as a percentage of nominal GDP peaked at 97.5% in Q2 2009 and in absolute dollar terms, household debt peaked in Q1 2008 at $13.8 trillion. Since then, debt outstanding in this sector has declined -6.3% (-$880 billion) and at 83% it now stands at its lowest share of GDP since Q4 2003 (82.9%),  they note. “Provided that income growth improves, households may actually begin to modestly increase their absolute amount of debt. Further, debt in proportion to other measures should continue to decline and may in fact reach more “normal” levels within the next few years assuming modest assumptions.”


U.S. Revolution in Energy Production

Investors have also yet to fully appreciate the game-changing impact of a resurgence of the U.S. as a major energy producer. U.S. oil output is surging so fast that the United States could soon overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s biggest producer. Driven by high prices and new drilling methods, U.S. production of crude and other liquid hydrocarbons is on track to rise 7% this year to an average of 10.9 million barrels per day. This will be the fourth straight year of crude increases and the biggest single-year gain since 1951. The Energy Department forecasts that U.S. production of crude and other liquid hydrocarbons, which includes biofuels, will average 11.4 million barrels per day next year. That would be a record for the U.S. and just below Saudi Arabia’s output of 11.6 million barrels. Citibank forecasts U.S. production could reach 13 million to 15 million barrels per day by 2020, helping to make North America “the new Middle East.” Thanks to the growth in domestic production and the improving fuel efficiency of the nation’s cars and trucks, U.S. imports could fall by half by the end of the decade, creating a significant windfall for the economy and the creation of some 1.3 million jobs by the end of the decade (eight years), 

The Hamilton Project estimates the current job gap, i.e., the number of jobs the U.S. needs to create to return to pre-Great Recession employment while absorbing the 125,000 people who enter the job market each month, would take to October 2023 (12 years) to close if the U.S. economy continuously created 208,000 jobs per month, and much less if the two game changers of housing and energy production really kick in. While many in the U.S. remain very pessimistic about the future of the U.S. due to heavy government intervention and debt levels, the U.S. in our view is still one of the most resilient of the developed economies–certainly in better shape than either Euroland or Japan–and could have surprising upside given a come-back in housing and the new dimension of a major energy exporter.  
China Coming Back?
The HSBC Flash PMI for China has risen to 49.1, a 3-month high. While 49.1 is still below the 50 boom-bust line, it would appear the pace of contraction in China is slowing, consistent with the view of some kind of firming or even “green shoots”.  In particular new orders and new export business has up-ticked. This has China stock prices as measured by the MSCI China index beginning to discount recovery.

Hat Tip: Business Insider
China’s exports recently spiked, taking many by surprise. China’s exports in September grew by around 10% from a year earlier – about 2% higher than expected. A great deal of that increase came from iPhones, iPads, Android phones, and other popular electronics orders. Thus the US has once again become China’s largest export market, offsetting weak Euroland demand.

The movement in the FXI ETF of China blue chips also shows a break to the upside, while the Shanghai Composite continues to lag. Confirmation with a convincing break out of the downtrend in the Shanghai Composite would be a stronger signal that China’s economy has indeed bottomed and has reached cruising speed somewhat below the torrid pace of growth seen in past years. The FXI ETF has only 26 China stocks and is heavily weighted toward the financials (55.9% of the index), but if China’s economic prospects improve, the financials will likely perform better. While lagging, the Shanghai Composite recently hit a six-year support line as well as two other support lines,  \and has broken out of its falling channel resistance line, suggesting the rally has further to go.

Source: Yahoo.com

Price is Truth, or At Least the Perception Thereof

The bottom line for investors is to forget the news flow and concentrate on the price action, as the headlines often have little correlation to actual performance, while the true impact of headlines on shifting investor expectations is at the end of the day reflected in the market price. 
Source: Yahoo.com
From the price perspective, the S&P 500 has broken its 50-day moving average, but at the current junction only has immediate downside risk to 1,375.52 (just over 2%), its 200-day moving average, while the point and figure chart also indicates downside risk to 1,380 or essentially the same level. While some are also concerned about the gap between the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transports that hasn’t been this wide in six years, during the two previous instances of a widening gap in the last ten years, the gap was closed by by a rally in the transports within six months.
The financial sector (XLF S&P 500 Financials SPDR) has led this rally just as it did leading up to the April high. As long as the financials are holding up, there is little probability of a big sell-off even if Wall Street’s darling, Apple (AAPL) loses its shine. The financials have held up despite the new estimate of lost earnings due to Dodd-Frank and the bad Euroland economic news, implying that the gradual but steady improvement in bank balance sheet quality is putting a firmer floor on the downside for bank stocks, even if many questions remain about intrinsic growth of the top line. 
Source: Yahoo.com
By the same token, the chronically poor performance of Japan stocks tells you more than you can ever learn from the periodic “revisionists” who claim Japan is now on the verge of a comeback. The fact that Japanese politicians are still at loggerheads over a bill to allow the government to borrow the JPY38.3 trillion (USD479 billion) it needs to finance this year’s deficit clearly underlines the degree of gridlock in Japanese politics.
The inevitability of Lower House elections and of big losses by the ruling DPJ cabinet has investors looking toward the re-emergence of the LDP as a trigger for increased political pressure for more aggressive BoJ monetary policy. The ever-cautious BoJ governor Masaaki Shirakawa is due to step down next April, and unlike Ben Bernanke’s departure from the Fed in January 2014, a new, more conservative government ostensibly led by the LDP could lead to more aggressive measures such as a JPY50 trillion purchase of foreign bonds to stem the ever-rising JPY, whereas a Republican-chosen Fed Chairman could begin reigning in Helicopter Ben’s helicopter money, a further impetus to a weaker JPY. 
Thus the peaking-out of JPY instigated by a shift to risk-on from QE3 and more BoJ asset purchases is getting some boost on the conjecture  of a more aggressive BoJ and a less aggressive Fed in the foreseeable future, widely considered a major pre-requisite for a trade-able rally in Japanese stocks, as the 52-week correlation between the Nikkei 225 and JPY is negative 0.909, compared to positive 0.838 for Emerging Markets, 0.802 for EAFE markets and 0.751 for the China market, the other factors which appear to have the highest 52-week correlations with the Nikkei.  
Source: Yahoo.com
While a weaker JPY will definitely help, the other drag to Japanese stocks has been the deep concerns about growth sustainability as reflected in JGB yields. Any sustainable recovery in stocks  would be definition need to be supported by increased expections for higher growth, not decelerating growth, as is indicated by the depressed level of JGB (government bond) yields. While JPY has begun to level off, there is as yet no clear bottom forming in JGB yields. 
Source: Japan Investor, Nikkei Astra
While more Topix subsectors have been rising than falling over the past month, even the best sector gains have been extremely modest compared to the U.S. and the rebound in selected Euro stocks. On the other hand, air transport (with the re-listing of JAL), steel, broker/dealers, banking, wholesale/trading and real estate have sold off, despite a strong rally in the overseas financial sector, as Japanese companies and investors seriously re-assess Japan’s high exposure to China, where a 1% slowdown in China’s GDP ostensibly produces a 10% hit to Japanese corporate profits. 
Source: Japan Investor, Nikkei Astra
In this light, Japan would also be an obvious beneficiary of a major re-appraisal of China’s economic prospects, albeit in a more cautious mode than China stocks themselves because of simmering political tensions between the two countries. While China’s exports have surprised on the upside of late, Japan’s exports to China and overall have surprised on the downside.
Further, buying Japanese equities on the conjecture of a significant weakening of JPY triggered by a) an LDP win that prompts a more aggressive BoJ stance and b) a U.S. Republican win that puts a crimp in the Fed’s helicopter money policies in our view is skating on very thin assumptions.

Despite sometimes making noise about contrarian bets on European equities, professional investors remain underweight the Eurozone, even though it might surprise most investors to know that of only four developed markets that have performed the US to date in local currency terms are Eurozone markets, namely Austria, Belgium and Germany, and by a handy margin.
Source: MSCI
It may also surprise most investors to know that since early September 2011, the German DAX has been the best performing market, recently beating out the U.S. NASDAQ, while China’s Shanghai Composite has been a major laggard, declining nearly 20% during the period while the DAX was rising well over 20%.
Source: Nikkei Astra
Stock Prices Defying Weakening GDP Indicators
Excluding the Shanghai index, the rally in developed stock markets–centering on the 11% gain in the S&P 500 since June 1 ,2012 appears to be in direct contrast to the top-down economic numbers, which still show noticeable weakness in the global economy, a large part due to the Eurozone, which is again sliding into recession, as is shown in the Markit Eurozone PMI including Germany, whose PMI has also dipped below the 50 boom-bust line. 
Hat Tip: FT Alphaville
The US market (S&P 500, NASDAQ, etc.) has led the developed world equity rally since June, because for all its warts, it is still relatively stronger than economic conditions in the Eurozone and China. But even the US PMI has seen noticeable deterioration of late. 
Hat Tip: Business Insider
If world economic conditions have deteriorated over the past few months, what are investors smoking as stock prices are apparently being bid up in the face of negative news? Global bond yields for the “safe haven” countries and currencies have tanked to new lows, reflecting both a) the glummer economic prognosis and b) the inevitable response by central banks from the Fed, the ECB, the BoE and the BOJ, i.e., more money printing. Thus we are in an upside-down world where “bad” news is actually taken as “good” news that central banks will shower more liquidity on the financial markets. 
Source: Nikkei Astra
Granted, the U.S. economic news is apparently not as bad as was feared just a couple of months ago, judging from the uptick in the Markit flash PMI index for August, which was up  0.50 to 51.90 and suggests the U.S. economic recovery is still intact, and the recent uptick in the Citigroup US economic indicator surprise index. This after demand for U.S. capital goods such as machinery and communications gear dropped in July by the most in eight months, suggesting US manufacturing will contribute less to the economic expansion going forward.
Hat Tip: Pragmatic Capitalism
Hat Tip: The Big Picture
But other traditional indicators of the health of the global economy like “Dr. Copper” show no agreement with the rally in equities. This indicator however is probably distorted by the fact that China, which undoubtedly is going through its own unique set of problems, had accounted for the bulk of new demand over recent history, and is now literally drowning in hoarded copper inventories. The world’s shipping and shipbuilding industries, also historically viewed as bellwethers of global trade, remain in a world of hurt with massive excess capacity and “last man standing” pricing of shipping rates. Again, the weakening China economy has left a larger than life footprint, where a preliminary reading of 47.8 for the August HSBC PMI and Markit Economics compares with July’s final 49.3 figure shows a 10-month string of readings below 50, the longest run of weakness in the index’s 8-year history.
Hat Tip: The Short Side of Long

The China slowdown is heavily reverberating on other countries and trading partners in Asia, with Japan showing an 8.2% decline YoY in exports on a 25.1% plunge in exports to Europe (the largest since October 2009) being compounded by an 11.9% plunge in exports to China–versus a 2.1% increase in imports on significant rises in imported fuel to run non-nuclear electric power generators. Other countries like South Korea and Taiwan are also showing a significant slowing in export demand, despite the significant advantage they have over Japan given the ultra-strong JPY.
Investors Still Hoping that the Central Bankers Can Still Goose Returns
Thus despite growing evidence to the contrary, investors remain fixated on utterances by central bankers, beginning with Ben Bernanke’s remarks at the annual U.S. Jackson Hole meeting of central bankers and economists later this week. In the previous two years, Bernanke has used the Jackson Hole event to flag the Fed’s intention on more easing. For example, “We expect Bernanke to clearly signal that Q3 is in the pipeline and our expectation remains that this will be delivered at the 12-13 September FOMC,” says Societe Generale. 
Despite the inevitable derogatory remarks by the Bundesbank and German politicians to “super Mario’s” telegraphed moves to battle the euro zone’s debt crisis, investors remain hopeful, as they see eventual QE by the ECB as inevitable, despite all the saber-rattling by the Bundesbank. The ECB will nevertheless wait until Germany’s Constitutional Court rules on Sept. 12 on the legality of the ESM permanent bailout fund before unveiling the much-expected “new plan”, and full details could be a month away.  
Even if the Fed and the ECB can manage not to disappoint investors too bitterly with their next moves, we believe market movement in the lead up to these moves over the next couple of months are a classic “buy on the rumor, sell on the news” play. 
Market Volatility Index Suggests the Next Big Market Surprise will be Negative

Further evidence for the “buy the rumor, sell the news” approach is the S&P 500 VIX index, which is again trading at the 15 level. While not yet as low as the 2007 lows, investors still have a lot on their plate even if super Mario can pull off a major coup against the Bundesbank–namely, a full-fledged rout in the Chinese economy, for starters. Further, an all-hands-on-deck ECB, while doing a great deal to fill the current vacuum in meaningful Eurozone action against a  metastasizing debt and banking crisis, only puts the Eurozone where the U.S. is now, i.e., with a stable financial sector but no lasting solution for curing what ails the economy. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Japan’s Recovery is Already Fizzling on a Rapid Slowing of Exports
The ostensible catalysts for foreign investors to capitalize on on-the-surface very cheap Japan equity market valuations, i.e., a Bank of Japan committed and actively battling ongoing deflation as well as working to move JPY meaningfully off historical highs, remains an elusive goal.
However, when viewed in USD, GBP or EUR terms, performance of selected investments in Japan looks very attractive because of the super JPY. For example, JPY is up some 60% vs EUR since 2008, and up some 40% vs USD. If foreign investors had put on the JPY trade by purchasing JGBs, they could have added 9% in capital gains, for total returns of 69% and 40% respectively, compared to a 13% gain in the USD-denominated MSCI index of world equities. If they had chosen instead to put on a Nikkei 225 trade, however, their EUR-denominated return would be a more mundane 20%, while their USD return would be basically flat. 
Source: Nikkei Astra
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
What Keeps the BOJ Up at Night
In reality, foreign investors have been essentially trading the BoJ, piling in when Japanese markets sold off in March 2011 with the Tohoku disaster, taking profits a half-year later, piling in again when the BOJ moved in late 2011, and again in February 2012 when the BOJ surprised with further action. Each time, they have been disappointed by the timidness of the BOJ. In reality, what keeps (or should keep) the BOJ up at night is the prospect that currency traders wake up one day and realize the JPY emperor has no clothes, i.e., that it is not only a “haven” currency, and moreover is at risk of an inevitable effort by the government and the BOJ to inflate Japan out from under a growing mountain of debt. 
Any such scenario would also trigger the long-futile “widow maker” Kyle Bass trade,i.e., short JGBs, which would decimate the balance sheets of Japanese banks almost as badly as Eurozone banks’ balance sheets have been decimated by increasingly toxic sovereign debt. 
The real irony about Japanese equities is that those stocks most likely bought in any BoJ-triggered, knee-jerk “buy Japan” wave are exactly those stocks that should NOT be bought, i.e., the most visible stocks on foreign exchanges, such as Japan ADRs.
Source: Nikkei Astra
Source: Nikkei Astra
Japan’s ADRs Underperform
Normally, the stocks of any country listed as depository receipts on foreign exchanges are the bluechips of that country and the more widely traded/held stocks of that market. In Japan’s case, the dwindling list of Japan ADRs is now populated with “old Japan” companies in dying, seriously challenged industries that have market capitalizations no longer justified by future revenue and profit growth prospects. As a result, buying a basket of Japan ADR stocks will only guarantee that you underperform the market benchmark indices such as the Topix. 
Consequently, if you want to be contrarian to a) differentiate yourself from the competition and b) generate US market-beating alpha, we would suggest taking a hard look at those Eurozone market “babies” that have been thrown out with the Club Med wash.