Archive for the ‘SP500’ Category

New Highs for the S&P 500
The S&P 500 continues to climb a wall of worry, despite temporary setbacks on concerns about the Fed’s announced tapering exercise, and then the Federal government shutdown and debt ceiling bruhaha. The Congressional mud-wrestling match about the budget and debt ceiling helped to cancel out immediate concerns about tapering, which the Fed put on hold in lieu of the Congressional budget and debt ceiling fight. Once Janet Yellen takes over as Fed chair early in 2014, we could very well hear more about tapering, but for now, investors are playing performance catch-up as we near the end of 2013, as the market cassandras wait in vain for “the” correction/selloff. 
Source: BigCharts.com

Consumer Discretionary, Health Care and Financials Continue to Lead

By S&P sector, consumer discretionary, health care, financials and the industrials have essentially been leading the market throughout 2013, and also led the latest upleg to new market highs. An improving housing market and balance sheet restructuring are supporting the financials and the consumer discretionaries, while the regulatory market is a tailwind for health care, and companies are widely expected to begin utilizing significant cash balances on the fifth anniversary of the global financial crisis.

Source: BigCharts.com

Fund Flows Returning to Euroland, But Japan Remains Best Performer

The U.S. stock market is not the only game in town, as the Japan market even in USD is still well in front of other developed markets in 2013 despite consolidating since May, and more recently, investor money is returning to Euroland, with France and Germany outperforming the US.
On the other hand, the biggest casualty has been the emerging markets, where an inevitable tapering by the Fed could begin sucking up the excess liquidity that had been driving these markets.

Source: BigCharts.com
Bonds and Commodities, As Well As Emerging Markets, Are the Losers
The biggest loser in terms of global fund flows and asset allocations is US treasuries, which of course had been the biggest beneficiaries of “haven” fund flows during the worst of the 2008 financial crisis, and the decades-long ultra loose monetary policy. It is now fairly obvious to all that the secular peak in bonds is past. The only issue is how far and how fast will long-term bond yields back up to levels that discount positive inflation plus a degree of sustainable economic growth. On the other hand, the USD index is largely flat over the past 52 weeks and basically a neutral factor for non-US investors. 
Source: BigCharts.com

However, the excess liquidity that was sloshing around in the commodities markets and gold to hedge against a possible collapse of the Euro and secular debasement of major currencies are no longer then. Implying that gold may also have already seen the peak of this major commodity cycle.

Source: BigCharts.com
The implications of the above are that investors should continue to go with the flow, which means to overweight developed market equities versus emerging markets, bonds and commodities. 
Japan Has Been Consolidating, But Continues to Maintain an Upward Bias
As Shinzo Abe and a revived LDP burst back into the forefront of Japanese politics, Japanese equities surged as, a) hedge funds piled into the short yen, long Nikkei 225 trade, and long-only managers scrambled to restore Japanese equity positions back to neutral weightings, i.e., about 8% in global portfolios and 20% in international portfolios. 
The Nikkei 225 however peaked in May along with a peak in speculative short JPY positions and the weakest retracement point in JPY/USD exchange rates. While speculators continue to bet heavily against JPY as indicated by the elevated level of shor JPY commitments of traders, JPY has yet to convincingly breach 100 JPY/USD for a second time as yet, and thus the currency has over the past several months been a drag on Japan’s stock market performance. 
The immediate upside bogey for the Nikkei 225 continues to be the 15, 627.26 high set in may, and while trading volumes have trailed off noticeably since this high, the market is trading toward a break-out of a clear apex that points to an upside, not a downside, move that could well take out the May high, clearing the way for a challenge of the 18,000+ highs hit during the Koizumi years. 
Source: OptiCast.co.jp

While Japan’s business sentiment is improving along with the GDP and component numbers, there is still a degree of caution regarding the immediate aftermath of the 3% point hike in the VAT next April, specifically regarding how much demand during the April-June 2014 quarter was front-loaded prior to the VAT hike. Ostensibly, the JPY5 trillion fiscal package timed to match the introduction of the VAT hike will ameleorate the demand backlash, and December worker bonuses are another dampening factor.

Considering the close link to JPY/USD during this rally, however, a convincing move to weaker than JPY/USD 100 is probably a pre-requisite for this move.

Source: BigCharts.com

Big Ticket Good News; The 2020 Olympics and a New Resort Casino Segment

In terms of big ticket good news, Japan’s winning of the 2020 Olympics had no appreciable favorable impact on stocks prices as a whole, despite noticeable speculative activity in perceived beneficiaries. For one, the speculation in real estate stocks was dampened by concern that the VAT hike will cool real estate demand.

However, there is another possible big ticket good news item, which is the impending approval for
casino operations in Japan. Since Tokyo won the right to host the 2020 Olympics, campaigns pushing for the creation of casinos in Tokyo and elsewhere in Japan have been gaining momentum. Investors are also very interested in whether the government will legalize casinos as part of its Abenomics economic policies. 

The IR (Integrated Resorts) caucus, a special-interest group made up of lawmakers from the Liberal Democratic Party, New Komeito, the Democratic Party of Japan, the Japan Restoration Party and others, envision the creation of integrated resorts comprising casinos, hotels and convention halls. The current impediments are a criminal law banning gambling and concerns that casinos would contribute to the deterioration of public order. Current Gov. Naoki Inose is a fervent supporter of the idea. But Tokyo assemblymen and local politicians say there is notable criticism from constituents who complain that the government should not be promoting gambling. Japan would also need to establish a strong, independent regulatory authority modeled on Nevada and Singapore’s gaming commissions, and that is what has been included in the government’s policy outline for legalizing, regulating and licensing gambling.

Legislators have submitted to current session of parliament, which runs through December, a bill that would allow authorized companies to operate “resort complexes” consisting of casinos, hotels and other facilities in government-designated areas.Casino development is also included in the ministerial council’s draft action program. One of the top candidate sites for the country’s first casino, is the Rinkai Fukutoshin (the Odaiba,Aomi and Ariake areas) waterfront in Tokyo, the area expected to provide the venues for the tennis and volleyball competitions during the 2020 Games.

Foreign interests like Macau’s casino king Stanley Ho have been lobbying multiple cabinet members in Japan for the legalization of casinos, promising investment of $5 billion if Melco Crown Entertainment gets permission to build. Wynn Resorts’ investment in a Japan casino would be over $4 billion, say sources, and MGM Resorts International,Las Vegas Sands Corp would be there with checks in hand as well, for locations in Tokyo and Osaka. The investment in integrated entertainment resorts alone could rival current estimates of the benefit of the 2020 Olympics. Analysts estimate a market consisting of two resort-scale casinos, one each in Tokyo and Osaka, could generate US$10 billion – US$15 billion (JPY1 to JPY1.5 trillion) in gaming revenue out of the gate, which likely would catapult the market to the second-largest in the world after Macau.

The trading by investor type data show that foreign investors remain the only consistent net buyers of Japanese equities, albeit at a more subdued pace. Over the past month, there has been some profit-taking in the banking sector (where the most foreign buying has been seen during the rally), trading companies and airlines.  Conversely, money has been flowing into Japan’s manufacturing sector and services, relative late-comers versus the sharp early gains seen in, for example, real estate. 
By Nikkei 225 constituent, the emerging winners are second-tier and late-coming manufacturers. The major electronics firms continue to noticeably lag, due to the structural nature of their problems that have not gone away just because of a modest weakening in JPY/USD. 
Nikkei 225 Winners & Losers

Keep an Eye On Foreign Investor Disillusionment With Abe’s Third (and fourth?) Arrows
Last year, piling into Japanese stocks when the Nikkei was below 9,000 was a no-brainer. Now, there is increasing evidence of more selectivity. For example, Coutts & Co., the wealth management unit of Royal Bank of Scotland, is cutting holdings of Japanese shares on concern Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won’t pass the structural reforms needed to boost the economy. They fear Abe will squander the early decisiveness of the Bank of Japan. With a sales tax increase looming in April and another in the pipeline, they fear Abe is failing to deliver on reform measures that would ease the burden of the levy.

So far, such shifts are but a trickle and in general a minority view. But as previously shown, given the still high outstanding short yen speculative positions, it wouldn’t take much to spool the JPY shorts, which as was seen in May could be the catalyst for a significant short-term selloff in Japanese equities. 

For now, however, we seen the Nikkei 225 as basing for a break-out to the upside rather than the downside. 

Stock Rally Runs Into A Storm of Uncertainty
The S&P 500 just ended its worst month since May 2012, but considering all the coming storm of uncertainty, it could’ve been worse. The DJIA, SP500 and Russell 2,000 have dropped below 50-day moving average support, as have the consumer discretionary, consumer staples, financials, healthcare, industrial, technology and utilities sectors within the S&P 500. The only indices/sectors still holding their 50-day MAs are NASDAQ, energy and basic materials.
Source: Yahoo.com
Source: Yahoo.com
Euroland stocks, where investors had begun to look for relative performance, are down 3.3% on the Eurostoxx 50 in recording its 2nd worst week in 11 months. EUR also had a bad week USD dropping back below 1.32. Interesting was the noticeable selloff in “less risky” core markets like Germany and France, while smaller markets like Belgium and Austria have managed to stay above their 50-day MAs. Spanish and Italian sovereign bond spreads jumped nearly 20bps, while Portuguese bonds were the hardest hit as Europe’s VIX spiked. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Source: 4-Traders.com
Emerging equity markets were already in a funk, as Brazil, India, Malaysia, Mexico and South Korean markets have already seen dead crosses between their 50 and 200-day MAs. Even once red-hot Japan (in USD-denominated EWJ MSCI Japan) has been unable to hold above its 50-day MA after attempting a rebound from a May hedge fund profit taking selloff. 
Source: Yahoo.com
What’s Bothering Stock Prices
What’s bothering stock prices? Basically, a significant increase in investor uncertainty, which they usually hate more than bad news, which can be better discounted than uncertainty. 
1. The first uncertainty was Fed chairman Ben Bernanke’s signaling of the Fed’s intention to taper back its “unlimited” QE program. The Fed appears heavily leaning toward implementing a tapering soon despite investor doubts about the sustainability of the US recovery, which could be further threatened by another fight over the US debt ceiling and military action in Syria. 
2. The second is another looming partisan fight over an extension of the US debt ceiling. There has been much confusion in the past several months relating to the US debt ceiling, and specifically the fact that total debt subject to the limit has been at just $25 million away from the full limit since late May. To avoid disruptions to the Treasury market, Congress will probably need to raise the deadline by mid-October. 
3. The third is “imminent” US military intervention in Syria. Secretary of State Kerry’s hard-hitting speech and reports that US action was “imminent” triggered rising crude oil and gold prices, while President Obama’s decision to back off and wait for US Congressional approval to act caught traders wrong-footed. The unrest, meanwhile, has proved a magnet for militant Islamists, including al-Qaeda affiliates and Iranian-backed Hezbollah. Refugee outflows, the threat of weapons proliferation, and widening sectarian rifts have stoked fears that the civil war may engulf the wider region. 
Reflecting this upsurge in uncertainty, the VIX has spiked, albeit well below what could be considered “panic” levels. Depending on how disruptive each of these on-the-immediate time horizon factors are, the current consolidation in global equity markets could linger, taking price levels back to intermediate-term support levels (e.g., 200-day moving averages) even if the long-term recovery trend is not broken, or even lower if the more bearish implications of each factor prevail. 
However, the looming Congressional fight over the budget ceiling and whether or not the US “punishes” Syria for using chemical weapons are inherently short-term market uncertainties, as is, to a lesser extent, the Fed’s tapering back of QE. Each factor of course has its cassandras warning of “dire consequences”. In the end, however, the outcomes, i.e., a shallow or more serious market correction, will depend on how sustainable the recovery in global balance sheets, economic activity and corporate profits is. 
Source: StockCharts.com
Crude Oil and Gold Corollary to Increased Market Volatility
The corollary to the uptick in S&P 500 volatility has been in the crude oil and gold markets. Crude prices (Brent) have rallied about 20% from April, while gold has rallied about 17% from late July lows, i.e., before the general perception that a US attack on Syria was perceived as “imminent”, on growing concerns about supply disruptions from Iraq, Libya and Nigeria from strikes and protests that have affected major oil terminals. Oil trading well above $100/bbl of course will act as a tax on the economies of nations most dependent on oil imports, including China and Japan.
Source: 4-Traders.com
Following a plunge in gold price that had some (including ourselves) declaring that the secular bull market in gold was “over”, gold has rallied some 20%, but is still well below the level seen before a selloff sent prices plunging 28% between January and April 2013. If direction of real interest rates is still basically upward, we still see little probability of new highs in gold, even though the recent market uncertainty has hedge funds and other speculators in late August at the highest levels in six months. 
Source: 4-Traders.com
More of the Same the Next Few Months 
Given that the Fed’s tapering, the debt ceiling fight and the Syrian question cannot be solved overnight, it looks like investors will be stuck with an increased level of uncertainty for the next few months, which implies continued consolidation in equity markets, somewhere between 50-day MAs and 200-day MAs. For the S&P 500, a pullback to its 200-day MA would bring the index back to the 1,550 level, or another 5%, following varying degrees of further consolidation in global equity markets. 
Assuming that the secular market trends established since March 2009 remain in place, the following table of 200-day MA levels and current prices indicates that the potential downside risk in an extended correction is greater for the NASDAQ, consumer discretionary, healthcare and Japanese equities, versus upside potential in US long bonds and gold…while crude oil could see a tumble, not a rally. Enhanced returns would be possible in the short-term by shorting the NASDAQ, consumer discretionary, healthcare and Japanese equities while going long long bonds and gold. Once the correction is over, however, these trades would need to be reversed. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Central Banks Increasingly Between a Rock and a Hard Spot on QE Wind-Down 
Investors remain under the impression that central bank quantitative easing is what has kept financial markets buoyant, papering over still-serious structural economic issues that are the legacy of the 2008 financial crisis. To a certain extent, this is true for financial markts. That quantitative easing is a “free lunch” way to increase wealth, however, is a magnificent illusion, at least as regards the two mandates of the U.S. Federal Reserve, a) employment and b) price stability. 
Even the IMF warns that a withdrawal from “endless” QE without a) a significant back-up in bond yields and b) a corresponding bond/equity market correction could be very tricky. As soon as central banks signal they are readying to halt QE (as the Fed has done), bond prices are “likely to fall sharply” as investors head for the door. The backup in rates could force central banks to push up rates even further to prove they have not lost control of inflation, i.e., more fuel on a market correction fire. The IMF warns, “The potential sharp rise in long-term interest rates could prove difficult to control and might undermine the recovery (including through effects on financial stability and investment). It could also induce large fluctuations in capital flows and exchange rates.” 
Further, even research by the San Francisco Fed indicates that “Asset purchase programs like QE2 appear to have, at best, moderate effects on economic growth and inflation; the key reason being that bond market segmentation is small. Moreover, the magnitude of LSAP effects depends greatly on expectations for interest rate policy, but those effects are weaker and more uncertain than conventional interest rate policy. This suggests that communication about the beginning of federal funds rate increases will have stronger effects than guidance about the end of asset purchases.” 
Total Credit Market Debt Makes the (Economic) World Go Round, Not QE 
Thus withdrawal from QE will be tricky for financial markets, while even more QE means minimal impact on the real economy at best and a growing risk of other moral hazard bubbles that will have to be dealt with. How disruptive this attempted withdrawal will be hinges on the movement in total credit market debt, which is the real driver of modern economies, and consists of both private and public sector credit growth. Immediately after the 2008 financial crisis, credit availability from the financial sector’s shadow banking system shrank, taking the economy with it. This shrinkage (plus other private sector balance sheet adjustments) was eventually covered by the public sector, allowing for growth, albeit at weaker-than-normal-recovery levels. 
IF the pick-up in private sector credit creation is strong enough, the economy should continue to grow even as the Fed–whose QE-driven credit creation impact was doubtful at best–begins to scale back. 
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
The QE Tide is No Longer Lifting all Financial Market Boats
In early 2009, financial markets were crashing, world trade was virtually at a standstill and the global financial crisis had blown massive holes in financial institution balance sheets, as well as the portfolios of most investors. 
Central banks led by the Federal Reserve pulled out all the stops, rushing headlong into unprecedentedly unconventional monetary policy (quantitative easing, QE) to establish a backstop to keep the global financial system from imploding, and governments began writing fiscal checks like crazy to stop-gap the sudden lack of private sector demand.
The desperate monetary measures worked. From the depths of the global sell-off in March 2009, financial markets snapped back like an over-stretched rubber band. But as central banks attempted to transition their emergency monetary policy into a viable replacement for increasing fiscal retrenchment, they found themselves throwing more and more money at the problem (lack of private sector demand and deflationary pressures) but seeing less and less results.
Over four years since the big crash, financial markets are now in flux, with some establishing new post-crisis rebound highs (like the S&P 500), and others crashing from post-crisis rebound highs to new lows (like copper). Emerging markets, once seen as the new driver of post-crisis global growth, are now sputtering. The Eurozone is barely stable and could be the best candidate for a Japan-style decade of malaise. Gold, and major industrial commodities may have already seen the peak of this supercycle. Even equities, the now-preferred asset class, could see more return on capital and return of capital-endangering cross-currents. 
Crude Oil Rallies

The Egyptian army has suspended the constitution and removed President Morsi. Egyptis back to where it was it was two years ago. The Arab world political powderkeg has again exploded; high proportions of young people and high proportions of youth unemployment – are making for explosive levels of discontent from Moroccoin the west to Syria and Yemen in the east. Turkeystands at the cross-roads.
The resurgence of geopolitical risk has spilled over into the crude oil market, causing crude oil to break to the upside above $100/bbl. But crude oil prices were on the rise before the latest set of protests in Egypt broke, as cyclical factors have begun to turn in its favor.  Price declines have pushed producers to involuntarily cut production, while spare capacity remains tight.

As prices were already coiling to move higher, the resurgence of political unrest in the Middle East could propel crude prices to over US$130/bbl, representing fairly quick 30% upside. 

Sources: 4-Traders.com, StockCharts.com
But This Rally Is Not Helping Industrial Commodities: Bottom Falling Out of Copper Prices
Bad news from China, heretofore the primary source of new demand, has triggered a crash in copper prices to new post crisis lows. Miners say China is not Copper’s only problem. A plethora of events have hit copper prices the past month, from a sluggish China, comments by Fed regarding a slowdown of bond-buying and a weaker manufacturing environment. Some mining analysts are suggesting Copper’s supercycle could well be entering the secular decline phase. Deutsche Bank and Macquarie expect copper supply between 2013 and 2015 to exceed demand by an average of roughly 500,000 metric tons a year—higher than the surplus in 2009, when the average price fell 26%. The medium-term headwind is better economic prospects in the U.S. and Fed tapering that should support a stronger USD, capping copper’s marginal costs in dollar terms, and therefore prices.
Copper, already down a massive 54% from 2011 highs, could, as indicated by point & figure charting, collapse another 50%, even though a short-term bounce from already severely oversold levels is inevitable–i.e., if you want to try and catch the falling knife, be our guest. 
Sources: 4-Traders.com, StockCharts.com
Gold Collapse a Different Dynamic than Copper, But Nevertheless a Collapse
Gold has also collapsed, while the dynamic for gold is quite different than for copper. Historically, negative real rates have been a key driver of secular bull markets in gold. Negative real rates nullify the standard gold criticism that it doesn`t pay a yield. 
Gold is recently rallying on, a) selling pressure on USD, b) haven demand from political turmoil in the Middle East. However, this bounce could be transitory. While already collapsing to USD1,200/ounce from USD1,900/ounce, point & figure charts indicate 20% more potential downside. 
The Great Rotation from Bonds to Stocks is a Work in Progress
Bonds perform best in times of deflation/disinflation, where weak economic conditions mandate that the central banks maintain an easy money stance. But bonds are extremely sensitive to inflation expectations and Fed policy. When investors still believed Bernanke’s promises of “unlimited” QE and there was little confidence in a sustainable US economic recovery, 10yr treasury yields were hitting new lows, of 1.4345% in the autumn of 2012. As confidence in the US economy returned as Congressional hot wind about debt ceilings passed, just a hint from Chairman Bernanke about a possible gradual unwinding of QE was enough to send 10yr yields shooting upward 123bps from the 2012 lows to 2.6647%. 
Thus the ostensibly good economic news (housing on the mend, consumers spending, etc.) and hints of a shift in Fed policy were enough for a 25%-plus selloff in 30yr bond prices from mid-2012 highs, while the point & figure charts indicate another 10%-plus downside is possible. Here again, any opportunities should basically be trading turns, while the prior secular trend is clearly turning. 
Sources: Yahoo.com, StockCharts.com
There is Also Increasingly Selectivity in the Preferred Asset; i.e., Equities
Looking at the alarming sell-offs in commodities, gold and bonds, the obvious implication is that equities have become the preferred overweight asset. Here again, however, there is increasing divergence between the loser and winner markets as well as loser and winner sectors, which leads some to suggest that any major regime change (i.e., from a deflationary environment to inflationary environment), while favoring equities “for the long term”, will inevitably involve an interim correction for all financial assets, including equities–even if there is no re-collapse into the dark days of the 2008 global financial crisis.
The table below charts the year-to-date performance of major assets. While negative performance for holders, the over 40% spurt in 10yr treasury yields, as is keeping with the long-term history, has been very positive for the Nikkei 225. The surge in these two instruments is followed by USD gains against JPY and then the S&P 500, the gains for which have come despite the spurt in treasury yields. On the other end of the spectrum (the losers) is gold, emerging market equities, copper and the Shanghai equity market, in that order. While there will be inevitable backing and filling, we believe the general direction as shown YTD is the “true” market trend–meaning investors will continue to favor; Japanese equities, USD, and S&P 500, while shying away from gold, bonds, emerging market equities and China equities in particular.  
Source: BigCharts.com
Fed Tapering, If the Fed is Right about US Growth, is Good for Japan
In the four years from the depths of the global financial crisis, Japan’s fiscal and monetary mandarins have been a day late and a dollar short in attempting to address the problem. Now, this is, as is widely perceived, changing with the advent of Abenomics. But the easy money, i.e., where just the whiff of major change is enough to drive asset prices, has already been made in Japan as well.
JPY/USD, the key metric since Abenomics burst on the scene late in 2012, has already depreciated some 30% since early 2012, triggering a near-doubling of the Nikkei 225 before short-term, but heavy, profit taking set in. The top in the Nikkei 225 was established as Haruko Kuroda was named as the next BoJ governor, and announced his “everything including the kitchen sink” shock and awe quantitative easing program. Problem is, Kurodo is finding it difficult to come up with an equally impressive follow-on to his first act. A tapering Fed versus a “peddle to the metal” BoJ means a more substantial US-Japan bond yield spread that will a) continue to exert downward pressure on JPY versus USD and b) support further gains in the Nikkei 225. 

Deep-Seated Doubts About the BoJ’s 2% Inflation Target 

Rather than keeping a tight lid on JGB yields, the BoJ’s bond-buying program triggered a substantial amount of unwanted volatility into the JGB market, and yields temporarily doubled to 1% before settling down, understandibly spooking the very domestic bond investors that have allowed Japan to enjoy record low rates despite a soaring government deficit. At the same time, Japan’s largest pension funds see history as being against the BoJ as it undertakes unprecedented asset purchases in pursuit of a pledge to overcome 15 years of deflation. They are therefore in no hurry to shift assets out of bonds into equities. 

Abe and His LDP Colleagues are no Ideologs 

During the prolonged recession, Japan lost some US$500 billion in gross national income, equivalent to the disappearance of an economy the size of Norway or Poland. Prime Minister Abe is a pragmatist. He recognizes that there is no magic bullet to instantly fix Japan’s long term, structural challenges. He is certain, however, that targeting specific ‘catalysts’ with decisive and ambitious policies can create a broader knock-on effect on the economy than a patchwork of smaller, modest ones. These “decisive and ambitious” policies to re-invigorate Japan’s economic engine include,
  • Reverse a deep-seated “deflationary mindset”
  • Increase participation by women in the workforce
  • Open up’ Japan and its markets to more foreign trade (economic partnerships, etc.)
  • Attract more foreign investment (e.g.‘National Strategic Special Zones’)
  • Make re-development of urban areas easier (e.g., relax construction regulations)
  • Implement more structural regulatory reforms (e.g., electric power)
Such goals have been stated and plans implemented many times before with little lasting impact, primarily because of inbred resistance from factions within the ruling part itself, and deeply embedded resistance from domestic vested interests, such as the electric power industry, and last but not least, the simple inability to maintain a stable government long enough to see implementation through. 
Tokyo Black Swan: BoJ Loses Control of the Bond Market
As Ben Hunt via the John Mauldin newsletter, from a behavioral finance perspective, the narrative that “gold is money” has been replaced by the narrative of central bank omnipotence, where central banks have the ability to control market, if not economic, outcomes. In other words, the old Wall Street admonition, “Don’t fight the Fed” is alive and well, and stronger than ever. 
This common acknowledgement that central banks have the (omnipotent) ability to control outcomes is diametrically opposed to the narrative that economic events will spin out of the control of central bankers, precluding some big monetary policy mistake that cannot be fixed without re-conceptualizing the global economic regime and triggering hyperinflation, collapse of the Euro, etc., etc. This means the greater the strength of the omnipotent central banker narrative, the weaker the commitment to gold as an alternative currency. 
However, while the efficacy of the omnipotent central bank narrative is strong with regards to the Federal Reserve, it is much less so with the ECB, and even less so with the BoJ, as evidenced by the dramatic increase in JGB volatility. Consequently, while the majority of investors would strongly contest the notion of the Fed losing control, there is a real probability , albeit small, assigned to the notion that the BoJ could lose control.

The balance of private sector bank current accounts held at the central bank is projected to decline JPY18.3 trillion yen in July, accounting for bank notes and treasury funds. On the other hand, net issuance of government securities are seen topping JPY16 trillion despite the BoJ’s JPY7.5 trillion/month purchases, or the equivalent of 70% of government bond issuance. This is sapping funds from the market, despite the BoJ’s pledge to double the monetary base by the end of next year. Even factoring the bank’s expected buying, the current-account balance would still decline by roughly JPY10 trillion.
Can the BoJ pull it off? concerns aside, it is advantage Abenomics, as there is evidence of improvement in Japan’s economy and of positive price movement as opposed to more deflation. Recent price data for May show prices have “improved” to flat instead of ongoing declines. Business and consumer sentiment have steadily improved since Kuroda’s April 4 announcement. Firms expected a decrease in capital spending for fiscal 2013 in the BOJ’s March tankan, but firms in the June survey projected an increase. while the shipment index of capital goods, a leading indicator, showed an increase in May.
With JPY/USD weakening below the psychologically important JPY100/USD and signs of economic recovery, the Nikkei 225 is back above its 50-day MA and never really tested its 200-day MA despite a very nasty interim correction. The point & figure chart is indicating limited immediate upside potential of roughly 5%, implying we may not see new rebound highs until after the July upper house elections and a fleshing-out of Abe’s “third arrow” of initiatives to revive Japan’s potential growth. Any meaningful consolidation in US equities will of course act as a “risk-off” drag on Japanese equities as well, but rising US 10yr bond yields, as we have shown, is actually a positive for the Nikkei 225. 
Source: Yahoo.com, StockCharts.com
JPY/USD has tested JPY94/USD and successfully held, while JPY100/USD is becoming support instead of resistance. The point & figure chart indicates there is still significant weakening potential of 37% in JPY/USD, meaning the “short JPY/long Nikkei” trade is alive and well after a brief shake-out. 
Source: 4-Traders.com, StockCharts.com
U.S.: Making Mountains Out of Molehills?
The past couple of weeks have seen a shift to risk off and an unwinding of carry trades triggered by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s infamous “taper” comments. The following chart comparing the S&P 500 and Bloomberg’s U.S. economic surprise index (hat tip: Zero Hedge) shows the growing disconnect from March of this year onward between economic expectations and stock prices—i.e., U.S. stock prices were reaching new highs while the macro index was hitting new lows. Thus a “mark to economic reality” for US stock prices was overdue before Chairman Ben’s comments. The only investors that should have been “shocked” by the move in US stocks recently are those who had heretofore been waiting for a meaningful correction but already caved in and bought the market…just before Chairman Ben set traders scurrying to unwind positions. 
However, the equity market’s sanguine reaction to worse-than-expected Q1 GDP data does indicate a) underlying confidence in the US economy’s ability to continue recovering and b) that the factors supporting stock prices are not all central bank cool aid. Despite the inevitable backing and filling, the trend in the S&P 500 is still up. With the point & figure chart of the 30-year bond indicating some 8% more downside for 30yr treasuries, the point & figure chart for the S&P 500 is indicating something more like total downside risk of some 11% to 1,500, i.e., not a new secular bear market. Assuming the S&P 500 corrects to its current post-crisis recovery trend line, it is obvious there is still some more short-term downside risk in stock prices….but not, as yet, evidence of a serious cracking of US stock prices.
Hat Tip: Zero Hedge
Bonds Were Beginning to Selloff Before Chairman Ben’s Infamous “Tapering” Comments
30yr US treasury prices already peaked mid-year at the height of risk aversion in 2012. Since then, the 30yr TB has sold off nearly 13%. Since the early 2012 low of 135.38 is not apparently holding, the Point & Figure charts are indicating another 12% or so of downside risk. Weighing on bond prices is a) better confidence in the sustainability of the US economy (housing, employment, etc. improvement), and b) the possibility that the Fed begins backing off earlier than latter, and c) waning concerns about the strength of the global economy. 
From a long-term perspective, the writing is on the wall for bonds, US treasury prices are clearly breaking down. The issue then becomes if the unwinding of the great bond rally becomes a gradual selloff or a full-scale rout. Since long bond prices were already consolidating before any hint of Fed tapering, we would guess that the the “good” upward pressure on bond yields, i.e., improving economic expectations, as well as reduced global tail risk are not insignificant factors in current bond yields.
On the other hand, since the repair process in the Eurozone and Japan significantly lags that of the U.S. and growth in the emerging markets is less than stellar, inflationary expectations remain, in Fed-speak, “well-anchored”. 
Hat Tip: StockCharts.com
Historically, rising rates have not always meant falling stock prices. In the great run-up of bond yields culminating in the oil crisis peak, the worst damage to stock prices (then, a secular bear market) was as bond yields rose from 4% to 8%. Thereafter, however, stock prices entered a 28-year bull market even as yields were spiking to 16%–implying that the mix of economic factors is just as important or perhaps even more important than interest rates alone. 

Hat Tip: The Big Picture
Watch the Global Canaries in the Coal Mine 
From a tail risk perspective, investors are less afraid of the impact on US equities from an easing of the Fed’s heavy $85 billion/month boot on the US bond market than they are of, a) the potential downside in bond prices, b) renewed crisis in the Eurozone and c) a sputtering Chinese economy. Thus compared to other financial markets, the correction in US stocks so far is a tempest in a teapot because US stocks remain the best game in town, or alternatively, the least dirty shirt in the closet to those of a more bearish persuasion.  
Globally, the real canaries in the equity coal mine are the Eurostoxx Banks index (as an indicator of renewed Eurozone sovereign debt crisis risk) and the Shanghai Composite (as an indicator of the state of the Chinese economy). The Eurostoxx Bank index is in the process of confirming 2012 lows, while the Shanghai Composite has collapsed to a new low. 
Both of these indices remain in long-term bear markets after a brief but sharp bounce in 2009. The Eurostoxx Bank index, which has surged some 75% as sovereign bond yields in the troubled southern Eurozone nations plunged on assurances by Mario Draghi and the ECB that they would do whatever it takes to “save” the Euro, has quickly given back over 20% of the recent high above 127. However, the index remains well above the 2012 low, although it is in the process of testing downside resistance. On the other hand, the rebound in the Shanghai Composite from the 2012 low has been much more anemic as the Chinese central bank struggles to contain a property/housing bubble, and the interbank liquidity squeeze has sent the Shanghai Composite plummeting below its 2012 low. The renewed selloffs in both indices bears close watching, because a dramatic slowdown in the China economy and renewed crisis in the Eurozone are something that “got your back” Chairman Ben cannot help you with.
Hat Tip: 4-Traders.com
The Implications for Other Emerging Markets and Commodities are Not Good 
The implications of renewed lows in both of these indices are already being discounted in the commodity and emerging markets, both of which are more sensitive to risk asset flows. This can be seen in the breakdown of support in both Copper and the EEM MSCI Emerging Market ETF. While the recovery in the US housing market should be good news for copper, everyone knows that demand from China has been the incremental driver of demand for copper and other major commodities. Emerging markets in Asia are of course closely tied with slowing import demand from China, whose real GDP growth is looking much less than the headline 7% or so quoted by most public and private sector economists. 
It is too early to tell if trying to catch these falling knives will yield short-term results, while the road back to prior highs is becoming more difficult with each day. Hear again, US equities remain the default choice.
Hat Tip: 4-Traders.com, BigCharts.com
Investors Can No Longer Hide Out in Gold 
Gold (especially paper gold) as an alternative currency and safe haven is rapidly losing its luster, as the relative attractiveness of the yellow metal dramatically shifts as real interest rates turn positive and the serious “infernos” around the world (e.g., Eurozone crisis, etc.) begin looking more like brush fires. 
Gold bugs and precious metals analysts will give you all sorts of technical reasons why gold prices are about to bottom, but (paper) gold prices have plunged through 1,550 and 1,350 support like hot butter, and while dramatically oversold short-term (and thus susceptible to short-term bounces), the dramatic rally since 2009 is clearly over, with previous calls for $2,000 or $3,000/ounce now looking like a pipe dream. 
We see driver of lower paper gold prices as being fairly straightforward, i.e., positive real interest rates, and believe those who are in paper gold as an “investment” are in for more pain. On the other hand, the strong underlying demand for physical gold as an emergency fund is stronger than ever. 

Hat Tip: 4-Traders.com
The Eventual Success of Abenomics Hinges on Structural Reforms 
The LDP (Liberal Democratic Party) winning back power and the bursting of Abenomics on the scene generated a quick nearly 90% gain in the Nikkei 225 from mid-October 2012, as JPY/USD dropped nearly 25% in equally quick fashion. A sharp back-up in JGB yields on high volatility from a new low of around 30bps to over 1% however shook some short JPY, long Nikkei 225 macro traders out and even encouraged some opportunistic futures short selling, and the stock index remains extremely sensitive to JPY/USD, which also saw a sharp short-term snap-back—against the background of continued heavy net selling of Japanese equities by domestic institutions. 
The accelerated downtrend in the Nikkei 225 as Japan was hit by the Great East Japan earthquake/tsunami/nuclear power plant disaster only exacerbated the damage done to Japan’s economy and financial markets by the 2008 financial crisis, delaying recovery well beyond what was happening in the U.S. An ineffectual Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ)-led government only made matters worse. Thus in the very least, the Abe Administration has managed in a few months to repair the damage to stock prices from the Great East Japan disaster by drawing record amounts of foreign buying and giving long-suffering domestic businesses and individuals reason for hope. 
Hat Tip: 4-Traders.com
Domestic Institutions Remain Structural Net Sellers of Japanese Equity 
The sharp reversals in both the Nikkei 225 and JPY/USD indicates that the big money has already been made in the Abenomics trade. The biggest quarterly rally in Japanese stocks in 25 years did not impress domestic institutions, who if anything have been accelerating their unloading of Japanese equities. As of end March 2013, Japan’s insurers, lenders and trust banks pared their holdings of Japanese shares to 28% of total market value, as the share held by foreign investors surged to 28%. Domestic institutions have been net sellers of Japanese equities every week since mid-November 2012 through June 14, 2013. 
Basically, domestic investors aren’t buying Abenomics. Too many past governments have come and gone with grandiose promises that never made much of a dent in Japan’s structural problems. Thus domestic institutions remain very much in a “show me” mode, and structurally constrained from a more constructive “risk-on” mode. Basically, these institutions have little incentive to pursue higher returns (risk) while they have many reasons to avoid risk. Thus their share of total market trading fell to a mere 4.7% last month. On the other hand, individual investors are now accounting for more than 40% of trading volume, making the Japanese stock market one of the most volatile in the developed world. In terms of stock price formation, it is anywhere and everywhere foreign investor driven. 
What this means is that Japanese stock prices are likely to remain volatile, as foreign hedge funds and domestic traders whip around market prices at significant inflection points. Abenomics still has forward momentum, but the “shock and awe” factor has melted away to reveal deep underlying skepticism. 
While Japan’s giant GPIF (government pension investment fund) did hint at higher future allocations to risk assets including equities, new asset allocations announced on June 7 are in line with those as of end December 2012. Basically, it is very unlikely that these institutions will in the foreseeable future ever play a meaningful role as a net buyer of stock. Market volatility has given domestic instituions another excuse to stay away from equities. 
With foreign investors more risk adverse and trimming back on more volatile trades, it is unlikely that a new high in the Nikkei 225 or new lows in JPY/USD will be hit anytime soon. More likely is a fairly well-defined trading range as these markets consolidate the sharp moves of the past six months.
Making the Most of Borrowed Time? 
Despite the recent jitters about Chairman Ben’s tapering comments, the fact remains that the US Federal reserve is still the most trusted central bank among investors in the world, regardless of disparaging comments to the contrary. While the Fed’s tapering comments may have appeared to some to come out of the blue, recent comments by the Bank of International Settlements are probably a good reflection of the debate that is going on within the walls of the world’s central banks. 
Central banks can be commended for having bought the private and public sectors the time need for adjustment from the 2008 financial crisis and worst recession since the 1930s depression years. Since the beginning of the financial crisis almost six years ago, central banks and fiscal authorities have supported the global economy with unprecedented measures. Policy rates have been kept near zero in the largest advanced economies, and central bank balance sheets have ballooned from $10 trillion to more than $20 trillion, and the stimulus has surged 500% since 2000 to $16 trillion. Meanwhile, fiscal authorities almost everywhere have been piling up debt at an alarming rate, which has risen by $23 trillion since 2007. Half a decade ago, most, if not all, of these measures were unthinkable. 
Their preeminence of central bank policy shows how much responsibility and burden central banks have taken on. Problem is, nobody knows exactly how central banks will exit from this unprecedented monetary stimulus, or what they will exit into. What the BIS is sure of is that central bank stop-gap measures are reaching their limits, and are now warning that “more bond buying would (actually) retard the global economy’s return to health by delaying adjustments to governments’ and households’ balance sheets. In other words, the central bankers’ bank is now making the same warnings about excessive monetary policy as QE skeptics have been making for some time. 
According to “Making the Most of Borrowed Time”, by Jaime Caruana, General Manager of the BIS; “Six years have passed since the eruption of the global financial crisis, yet robust, self-sustaining, well balanced growth still eludes the global economy. If there were an easy path to that goal, we would have found it by now.” The conclusion is “central banks need to begin heading for the exits and stop trying to spur global recovery”. 
Why? The bottom line is that monetary stimulus alone simply cannot provide the answer. The roots of the problem are not monetary. Central banks cannot repair the balance sheets of households and financial institutions, cannot ensure the sustainability of fiscal finances, and most of all cannot enact the structural economic and financial reforms; all needed to return economies to real growth paths. To be fair, without these forceful and determined policy responses, the global financial system could easily have collapsed, bringing the world economy down with it. Thus monetary policy has done its part, and real recovery now requires a different policy mix, one with more emphasis on strengthening economic flexibility and dynamism and stabilizing public finances. 
In Addition to a Dysfunctional Money Multiplier and Depressed Velocity of Money, the Keynesian Multiplier is also Dysfunctional 
The chart from GaveKal below shows clearly just how clueless the “don’t worry about the debt, just add more Keynesian stimulus” crowd are. The chart shows that the marginal efficiency of public debt, at least in the US (public spending in emerging markets from a low base usually improves productivity) has been declining structurally since 1981. Further, it seems that this marginal efficiency has now reached a negative level, i.e., more debt is just not going to cut it.
Hat Tip: John Mauldin
Significant Tail Risk? 
The implications of both the BIS observations and the Gavekal points about the Keynesian multiplier are that BOTH fiscal and monetary policy are near their limits in terms of having an actual positive impact on the real economy. Simply stated, the real role being played by central banks is becoming more of a confidence game than statistically demonstrable positive effect. In reality, the pace of repair and reconstruction is now up to the private sector, not government fiscal or central bank monetary policy. Real economies remain burdened with heavy debt loads and impaired balance sheets. While unprecedentedly unconventional monetary policy that has tried to alleviate/prevent the pain of adjustment, the recovery in the real economy continues to significant lag that in the financial markets. 
This “bubble” central bank stimulus bubble component in asset prices implies significant tail risk if investors ever lose faith in the ability of central banks to at least provide a backstop. Should this faith dissipate, it could get ugly very quickly, such as a dramatic surge in financial repressed bond yields causing crippling, systemic losses, amounting to trillions of dollars for bond and stock investors around the globe, to the tune of 8% of GDP (or more than USD1 trillion if yields were to rise by 3 percentage points across the maturity spectrum). In Japan the potential losses would be a mind-blowing 35% of GDP. Losses in France, Italy, and the United Kingdom would range from about 15% of GDP. In the understatement of the century, the BIS concludes, “interest rate increases pose risks to the stability of the financial system if not executed with great care”. 
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has likened monetary policy to landing a jet on an aircraft carrier; i.e., at lot could go wrong between “unlimited QE” and the eventual exit. Bouts of positive correlation of equities, bonds and commodities, suggest that extraordinary monetary stimulus has created bubbles in a broad range of financial assets. Any untoward removal of said stimulus could therefore create a tail event in which prices of all assets dramatically go down. 
Let’s hope that Chairman Ben and other central bankers are humble enough to realize the real short-comings of monetary policy, while at the same time are politically savvy enough to continue playing the confidence game–i.e., being brutally honest and telling investors/businesses that there is nothing further they can do is not the message that should be sent. 

US Stocks Continue to Grind Higher
Despite warnings of “too far, too fast” and “running on fumes”, USstock prices continue to grind higher. In the charts, there are signs of confirmed upside breakouts everywhere. Concerns about 
yet another summer swoon are being dispelled by better-than-expected employment and retail sales, as well as ongoing evidence of recovery in the housing market. 
Further, rather than “going to hell in a hand basket”, the U.S. debt situation is actually improving, and at a significant rate, according to projections by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). “If the current laws that govern federal taxes and spending do not change, the budget deficit will shrink this year to $642 billion, the smallest shortfall since 2008. Relative to the size of the economy, the deficit this year—at 4.0 percent of gross domestic product (GDP)—will be less than half as large as the shortfall in 2009, which was 10.1 percent of GDP.”

Source: 4-Traders.com
Source: Yahoo.com
Long In the Tooth? 
As for claims that the US bull market is long in the tooth, market history shows that the current recovery at just under 4 years is not that long versus historical US bull markets. 
Hat Tip: BigPicture.com

Soaring U.S. Equity Risk Premium 

Based on traditional measures of the Equity Risk Premium (ERP) stocks are about as cheap as they’ve been in 50 years, a function somewhat of ultra-low bond yields. The Liberty Street Economics blog (hosted by the NY Fed) combed academic literature, economists at central banks for their models, most of which predict historically high excess returns for the S&P 500 over the next five years. 
Interim market corrections are inevitable, even in historic bull markets. The lack of any suggestion of “sell in May and go away” can be attributable to, a) no flare-up in the Eurocrisis. Indeed, Southern Europe sovereign bond yields have fallen rapidly and Greece was even upgraded recently by Fitch, b) the Fed’s open-ended QE commitment. In the previous corrections, an approaching end to QE was making investors nervous, c) the ECB and BoJ being fully on board with “whatever it takes” QE, and d) signs of a slow but steady recovery in economic conditions. 
Hat Tip: Business Insider
Eurozone in Longest-Ever Slump 
Eurostat flash estimates show GDP fell by 0.2% annualized in the Eurozone versus an expected 0.1% decline, but compared to -0.6% growth in Q4 2012. YoY, the decline was 1.0%. In core Euroland, France, Italy, Spain GDP were contracting, while Germany was growing at only 0.1%. This is now the Eurozone’s longest-ever slump. 
The good news is that the “crisis premium” has shrunken significantly, judging from 10-year sovereign bond yields. Greece even received a credit upgrade from Fitch. Spain and Italy 10-year sovereign yields have plunged from crisis peaks near 7% to 4.3% and under 4%, respectively. Further, while the economic news from the Eurozone is bad, these economies are not exactly in free-fall. 
Source: JapanInvestor
Eurozone Bank Stocks Still in the Penalty Box 
Yet the Eurozone is far from having solved its problems. The anemic bounce in the Euro Stoxx Banks index indicates there are still substantial balance sheet issues that Eurozone banks need to deal with. According to Ernst & Young, Eurozone banks are just two-thirds of the way through deleveraging; Euro132 billion of further loan-book shrinkage expected in 2013, and non-performing loans are expected to hit a Euro-era high of 7.6% in 2013. The consumer lending squeeze continues, while business lending forecasts highlight the north-south divide. 
Given the above, don’t expect a full-fledged recovery in Eurozone bank stocks anytime soon. 
Source: 4-Traders.com
Slowing Growth in China a Big Weight on Global Industrial Commodities 
Further, China’s economy continues to disappoint. It seems the incoming data from China are dampening hopes of renewed acceleration in China’s economy. 
Hat Tip: FT Alphaville
The Growing Disconnect Between Bouyant Stock Markets and Falling Commodity Prices 
Ostensibly, commodity prices are falling because, a) a weak global economic recovery versus “whatever it takes” monetary stimulus, b) the supply shock created by a surge in North American oil production, c) the commodity-intensive part of China’s growth story is waning and the Eurozone is in recession, d) increasing commodity supply capacity. If there is a link between commodity prices and inflation, waning commodity prices are deflating inflationary expectations, which in turn is affecting “investment” demand for commodities. 
The Great Abenomics Experiment Appears to Gain Economic Traction
Japan‘s Q1 GDP growth beat expectations by growing 3.5% annualized, which was the quickest pace in a year and the best growth number in the G7. Individual spending is picking up as the value of assets, including stocks, rises on the back of the brighter economic outlook. Exports are also recovering. Economists, other observers have turned their attention to PM Abe’s growth strategy, seen as the key to boosting business investment. Abe is scheduled to reveal the third arrow, structural reform, of his three arrow revival plan next month.
But the jury is still out on BoJ governor Kuroda’s 2% inflation target. In Q1, the so-called GDP deflator, a broad measure of prices across the economy, tumbled 1.2 % YoY, the most since the final three months of 2011, underscoring Kuroda’s challenge in eradicating deeply entrenched, chronic deflation in Japan.  The BoJ’s heavy intervention in the bond market has caused a great deal of volatility in bond prices, but with 10-year yields still at a mere 0.86%, the economic impact of a backup in yields, although sharp, is miniscule.
While domestic investors in the main are skeptical of soaring stock prices, now the highest since early 2008 before the global financial crisis, the sharp drop in JPY exchange rates as well as a noticeable improvement in consumer confidence is providing fundamental support for sharp upward revisions in corporate profits. Bloomberg data indicate the 201 companies reporting so far for the quarter through March have seen a 51% YoY surge.
Extreme Moves in JPY and Nikkei 225 Will Inevitably Abate, But That Doesn’t Mean its Over
Given the steep drop-off in JPY versus USD and an equally parabolic move in the Nikkei 225, it would be foolhardy to expect Japanese stock prices to continue rallying at the current torrid pace, and interim corrections are inevitable. For the time being, however, the working assumption is that both the JPY and Nikkei 225 reversals are sustainable for the foreseeable future.
The following chart from Nomura illustrates just how closely correlated the selloff in JPY is with the rally in the Nikkei 225. Other factors at work on stock prices include the BOJ’s decision to be more proactive in purchasing ETFs as part of its asset purchase program, another is the widespread expectation among institutional investors that the Abenomics growth strategies (the third arrow) to be announced around June 14 will be favorable for Japanese equities. The buzzwords high on the list of countermeasures investors would like to hear include, deregulation, easier migration, greater job mobility, corporate tax breaks, efficient  utilization of financial assets, special economic zones, and wage increases. 

Hat Tip: FT Alphaville
Abenomics has transformed the Nikkei 225 from an after thought among global investors to the hottest-performing market in the world since Nobember of last year. During this period, it has soared past the performance of the US and Germany, and is trashing its Asian rivals, including the struggling Shanghai Composite and South Korean KOSPI indices. 
As a result, investors with global/international portfolios are still scrambling to get at least a neutral weighting for Japan in their portfolios. Ironically, domestic financial institutions wedded to hard-and-fast asset allocation rules have been dumping Japanese equities almost as fast as foreign investors have been buying…thereby ensuring mediocre performance vis-à-vis their foreign competitors, and they stand to lose more on their significant bond holdings given a more substantial back-up in JGB yields. 
On the other hand, individual investors have also caught Abenomics fever, piling into domestic investment trusts to the point that some of these funds have closed to new capital. The unrealized capital gains on existing holdings of course is a big factor stimulating sales of luxury goods.
Source: Yahoo.com
With the BoJ and the Japanese government in full court press to reflate Japan, we see the rally in the Nikkei 225 continuing for the foreseeable future, as long as a) JPY continues to weaken against its major trading partners, b) the now highly volatile JGB market does not “blow up”. As previously mentioned, investors are now looking toward the third arrow of Abenomics, which is the growth measures, ostensibly including structural reform. Structural reform is where the Koizumi boom ran into some serious flack from entrenched interests, and investors will continue to monitor how much progress Abenomics can actually make on this front, even after the mid-year elections solidify Abe’s and the LDP’s political base even further. 
Topix Sector Rotation
The red-hot real estate sector is beginning to take a breather after driving the Nikkei 225 and Topix higher for the past five months, as are the broker/dealers. While the banking sector is enjoying a major revival in unrealized profits on their portfolio holdings, Kuroda’s aggressive monetary policy is squeezing margins on their loan business, leading to weak earnings reports. Thus Japan’s banks are being hurt, not helped, by Abenomics, at least for the foreseeable future. Substantial holdings of JGBs of course would also be hit hard by a major back-up on volatile bond yields, although the mega banks have been running risk simulations for some time. 
Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange
Just How Much “Fundamental” Support is there for Stock Prices? 
Academics who have analyzed the historical relationship between GDP growth and stock price performance across developed and developing country markets find a very tenuous correlation between GDP and aggregate stock prices that is typically quite low and even negative. O’Shaughnessy Asset Management is among others who say the correlation between aggregate GDP and stock prices is non-existent… EXCEPT that you would historically earned a 21% one-year return if you invested when GDP is less than zero percent! By the same token, investing when consumer confidence is below normal produces average five year annualized returns of 11.5%, but the correlation is zero looking one year out. 
However, a significant relationship can be found between equity returns and expected GDP growth. By the same token, market returns are unrelated to past earnings, but are influenced by changes in expected returns, expected cash flows and expected discount rates. Callagn, Murphy, Parkash and Qian (Journal of Investing, 2009) show stock prices to be a function of long-term earnings forecasts, while stock prices reflect not only the average of the IBES long-term earnings predictions but also some superior forecasting power beyond that aggregated average prediction. 
The bottom line therefore is that stock prices are driven by changes in investor expectations and perceptions of future “fundamentals” (e.g., GDP growth, earnings, discount rates). These changes are hard if not impossible to objectively measure. 
Market Conditions Now are not “Normal” 
Despite the dire warnings of debt deflation cassandras, realistic investors must accept that the Keynesians and monetarists, who generally foresee a 1930s-style slump unless the economy is stimulated out of it, are in charge. Rather than repeatedly pounding the table about the errors of Keynesian/monetarist ways, investors must accept that the world’s central banks will continue pumping dump truck loads of fiat money to ensure their economies do not fall into a deflationary spiral. Basically, the deflationists are forecasting an event that happened five years ago, when the worst fears of a 1930s-style slump was disproved by massive monetary intervention. 
This does not mean the post 2008 slump is over: far from it. But it is more realistic to assume the nightmare cycle of falling asset prices becoming self-feeding and a dash for cash has already been prevented. On the other hand, the massive central bank debt monetization IS eroding confidence in government and ultimately its paper fiat money, and this, we believe, is behind the world-wide rush into physical gold despite the crash in paper gold prices.


Source: 4-Traders.com
No Sell in May and Go Away this Year? 
The news flow about economic growth is not as good as investors were expecting a couple of months ago. Risk markets reacted negatively to the generally weak April global PMIs (purchasing manager indices), particularly those for Germany and China. Instead of triggering a selloff, however, bad PMIs, particularly Eurozone composite PMI where a sub-50 reading indicated a recessionary a drop in activity for the nineteenth time in the past 20 months, only led investors to expect further monetary easing in the Eurozone. 
                            

US business cycle and survey-based surprise indicators have plunged. Further, the lower highs being made in these indicators of the business cycle suggest the spillover effects of QE are also disappointing.

Source: Bloomberg, Hat-Tip: Zero Hedge
Yet Stock Prices Continue to Grid Higher 
Yet investor confidence that the Fed, ECB and the BoJ “have their back” remains strong, despite ample evidence that central banks are still largely pushing on a string in getting massive monetary base money to circulate into the “real” economy, as evidenced by the money multiplier and velocity of money. As we have repeatedly argued, quantitative easing can help keep financial systems/banks afloat in the immediate aftermath of a financial crisis by backstopping bank balance sheets and acting as the lender of last resort. But in a liquidity trap, not only can the Fed not control the money supply (M2) and the money multiplier, it can’t control the velocity of money either. And that means the Fed alone can’t create rising aggregate demand as long as the transfer mechanism (money multiplier) between the monetary base and M2 remains broken/dysfunctional. In this regard, the notion that the Federal Reserve is “printing money” is false, at least as regards “real” as opposed to “monetary” money supply. While the Fed expanded the monetary base (currency (notes & coins) in circulation + commercial bank deposits at the central bank) from $840 billion to $2.93 trillion (+249%), year- over- year expansion of M2 is recently only 6.8%…Ergo, the empirical evidence is clear that high- powered money is not causing a corresponding increase in “real economy” money.

Source: FRED
While a 1930s-Style Debt Deflation Has Been Averted, Has a Japan-Like Malaise Also Been Averted? 
Given massive central bank intervention, the nightmare cycle of falling asset prices becoming self-feeding and a dash for cash has already been prevented. But the jury is still out whether a Japan-like decades-long malaise has also been prevented.


Source: Bank of Japan
Inflation Expectations are Still Falling 
The great rotation from bonds into stocks that was all the rage just a couple of months ago is not. The St. Louis Fed’s 10-year inflation forecast based on the yield spread in 10yr treasuries (nominal) less inflation-indexed notes shows a sharp drop-off, leading to lower, not higher bond yields. The much feared monetary tsunami-inflation link has yet to be seen.


Hat Tip: Capital Spectator
But Government Sector Intervention IS Supporting Positive Total Credit Growth 
Yet while central banks continue pushing on the perverbial string, the U.S. economy IS growing, albeit anemically. The following chart tracks the YoY change in total credit creation in the US. During and after the financial crisis, credit provided by the financial sector plunged, and is still declining YoY. If this were the only source of credit, the US economy would still be in recession. Fortunately, the credit “hole” in the financial sector was plugged by the government sector, allowing positive, but tepid, growth to continue.


Source: FRED
The Fed has been able to influence risk appetite and inflation expectations with QE, and by goosing risk asset prices, has supported the economy through its own version of “trickle down”. On the other hand, total credit IS growing. Thus instead of looking at the monetary base and the money supply, investors should follow the trend in total credit creation as the gauge of real support for the economy.
Source: FRED
Is the S&P 500 and US Stocks on the Verge of a 1970’s Breakout Moment? 
As previously mentioned, stock prices continue to grind higher, to pre 2008 crisis levels. The central bank “puts” undoubtedly have set a floor under downside risk, but is this the only factor driving stock prices? We suspect not. Since the 2009 low, the bears have been consistently wrong. In other words, the stock market is acting like it`s in a secular bull, not bear market. As Ralph Acampora states, “the low, in March of 2009, was a generational low. Part one of a secular bull market, this period that we’re in, is led by investor disbelief and fear.” 
Firstly, as mentioned, there is the renewed growth in total credit. While the degree of recovery is debatable, the surge in housing stocks, the expectation is that housing is on the mend and again positively contributing to growth instead of detracting from it. In addition, Exxon says the energy renaissance in the U.S. will continue and predicts that North America will become a net exporter of oil and gas by the middle of the next decade. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reckons that imported liquid fuels as a share of total U.S. liquid fuel use reached 60% in 2005, dipped below 50% in 2010 and fell further to 45% in 2011, and should further decline to 34% in 2019, while the International Energy Agency (IEA) projects the U.S. could leapfrog Saudi Arabia and Russia to become the world’s biggest oil producer by 2020, and a net oil exporter by 2030. This represents a major watershed event for the U.S. economy. 
The U.S. stock market is already looking much stronger than past modern-era bear markets adjusted for inflation.
Hat Tip: DShort
When Will the Great Japan Trade Run Out of Gas? 
In case you haven’t been paying attention, the Japanese stock market is on an epic run. The Nikkei 225 is up 60% since last November when government officials began hinting at big policy changes that have since come to be known as “Abenomics”. As previously stated, academic research indicates that market returns are unrelated to past earnings/economic performance, which is what most of the economic data and earnings announcements represent, i.e., past performance. The real drivers of stock prices are changes in expected returns, expected cash flows and expected discount rates. 
From the dramatic reaction in JPY exchange rates and Japan equity benchmark indices, you’d think that something had not just changed, but that we’re looking at a new economy entirely. Within the realm of investor expectations, that is exactly what has happened. Bloomberg’s William Pesek and other skeptics are asking “where is the beef?” in Abenomics and points to a disconnect between perception and reality. 
Unfortunately, Mr. Pesek and others don’t get the importance of expectations vis-à-vis reality, aka George Soro’s Theory of Reflexivity. In the modern “financial” economy, changing (this time entrenched) expectations is half the battle. 
In the long 20-year Mother of all Bear markets malaise, Japanese stocks have seen many virulent but brief surges in stock prices, as is shown in the chart below, in of the prior cases, however, the government and BoJ were never able to “permanently” change investor and business expectations, and the economy as well as financial markets repeatedly slipped back into lethargy and lower prices. Even the Koizumi reforms, which produced the best rebound (over 100% in total) to date, eventually fizzled.


Hat Tip: Pragmatic Capitalism
In its latest Japan survey, the OECD forecasts the Japanese economy will grow by about 1.5% annually in 2013 and 2014, and hails Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s three-pronged strategy — bold monetary policy, flexible fiscal policy and a growth strategy – as a plan to end 15 years of deflation and reviving economic growth. 
Yes, Japan’s gross public debt reached 220% of GDP in 2012, the highest level ever recorded in the OECD area, while the budget deficit is hovering around 10% of GDP, and “it remains critically important for Japan to address extremely high and still rising levels of government debt and other challenges posed by its ageing population,” as pointed out by the OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría. The OECD also has also correctly emphasized that Japan needs to use regulatory reform to boost sustainable growth; particularly in the agriculture sector. The OECD believes Japan can create a more competitive agriculture sector by promoting consolidation of farmland to boost productivity, phasing out supply control measures, and shifting to less distorting forms of government support. Other potentially effective reforms include a) promotion of “green” growth and restructuring of the energy sector and b) increased women’s as well as older worker participation in the labor force to maximize its human resources. Reforming the tax and social security system, encouraging better work-life balance, and increasing the availability of affordable childcare would go a long way in this direction. 
Break Above 18,000 Would Represent a Real Change of Trend 
While the Nikkei 225 has already seen a parabolic move off historical lows, it would have to break up decisively through the Koizumi-era high of over 18,000 to represent a real change of direction from the market secular downtrend since the 1989 historical high.

Source: Big Charts, JapanInvestor
Japan “passers” such as Pragmatic Capitalism’s Cullen Roche initially dismissed the BoJ’s no-holds-barred QE as a ponzi scheme, but are now openly wondering, “what if monetary policy is much more powerful outside of a BSR (balance sheet recession) than we presume? By the same token, if the Abenomics bold experiment (which is basically the Fed’s playbook on steroids) actually works, what does that imply for the eventual outcome of the Fed’s monetary blasphemy? 
JPY is Far From All-Out Collapse Territory 
Axel Merk of Merk Investments as well as others (most notably Kyle Bass) insist that the BoJ’s monetary blasphemy and the governments “depression era” fiscal policy will render JPY “worthless”. We would counter that JPY is merely in the process of returning to a pre-financial crisis trading range. 
As seen in the chart below, the snap-back from a historical low versus USD in 1995 was just a rapid, but did not represent a secular trend change. As JPY/USD has yet to even reach prior highs in the late 1990s and early 2000, or even exceed the psychologically important JPY100/USD, it is way to early to declare JPY has permanently collapsed. 
Further, as Stephen Jen of SLJ Macro Partners has pointed out, it is Japanese investors, not global hedge funds, that will determine JPY eventual fate.


Source: 4-Traders.com
All that Japan really needed to revive its export competitiveness was a 30% currency depreciation, such as was enjoyed by its rival South Korea, whose exports and companies suddenly appeared unassailably competitive versus Japan following a 30% depreciation in the Won. 
Revived export competitiveness notwithstanding, investors are rushing into domestic reflation plays, with surging high beta broker/dealers and real estate stocks leading, and the export sectors to follow after global demand more clearly recovers.
Abenomics vs Koizumi Rally

Source: TSE, JapanInvestor



To Those Who Don’t Get the US Rally are Missing the Big Picture
Grant Williams of Mauldin Economics doesn’t get the bull run in the S&P 500. “ I must be missing something because, try as I might, I am having a hard time understanding the bull case right now. It seems to be predicated largely on the thesis that we should buy things ‘because they are going up”. In our view, anyone who believes that US stock prices are being solely supported by Ben Bernanke and the Fed, or that investors are buying stocks “just because they are going up” is missing the big picture. 
The “big secret” is that US stock prices are reflecting what’s happening in the real economy, at least the US economy. One clear indication of this is that the S&P 500 for years has closely tracked initial jobless claims, as pointed out by Business Insider. The improvement in the red line in the chart is why many of the “smart guys” got this rally wrong. As far as stock prices are concerned, the direction is just as or more important than the absolute level. Thus jobless claims are at a five-year low means stocks are at a five-year high. 
Hat Tip: Business Insider
Cyclically Adjusted Market Multiples Suggest Modest, Not Dramatic Gains
Can US stock prices again easily double from here over the next 12 months? Not likely, Investors should not get too enamored of the USeconomic recovery story, as the pace is still well below what a “normal” recovery looks like, and valuations are a bit pricey. The Shiller P/E ratio, i.e., the 10-year average earnings cyclically-adjusted price-earnings ratio is at 22.6X, which at above the long-term average of around 15, suggests US stocks are relatively expensive, even factoring in historically low interest rates. 
The good news is that current valuations are not yet high enough to completely preclude a modest annual return of several percentage points over the next five years, compared with a current real US long-bond yield of minus 0.5%. Thus while Fed accomodation will remain an important factor,and stock prices will inevitably see periodic corrections or “reality checks”, this is the next secular bull market, however far it might take us. 
Hat Tip: Business Insider
 Commodity Prices Reflect a More Troubled Global Picture
As Pragmatic Capitalism points out, if excess liquidity were all that was driving stock prices, commodity prices should also be rallying. But they are not. The effect of QE on commodities appears to have waned and vanished with successive rounds of QE, from runs of some 25% during each of the first two phases, to minus 7% on the CRB index since QE3. Since only the USequity market in particular seems to be responding to this stimulus, Cullen Roche asks, “Could it simply be that there are other real fundamental drivers of (US) stock prices at present, i.e. corporate profits being driven in part by huge government deficits, and that the QE “effect” is all in our heads?” 

Hat Tip: Pragmatic Capitalism
Indeed, Kimble Charting Solutions points out that two commodities at the heart of global demand, i.e., Dr. Copper and crude oil, are currently at a delicate juncture technically, and could break down through their recent flag patterns, sending the market message that the global economy is slowing down, not about to see a surge. In addition to the strong USD, investors continue to worry about a hard landing in China, which of course has been the primary source for new copper demand over the past few years. 

Source: 4-Traders.com

Flipside of Flagging Commodity Prices is a Revived USD


Despite all of the complaints about a weak recovery, soaring debt, a dysfunctional Congress, etc., etc., the fact is that the US economy looks comparatively healthy compared to its developed nation peers. Surging US energy production has allowed the US to pare its current account deficit as consumption has flattened out. Since the US is becoming a net exporter of energy, the negative correlation between USD and oil prices is structurally shifting. Going forward, Europe and Japan will have to bear the brunt of costs associated with competition with China, India and other emerging nations for imported energy, while the US if anything will benefit. A stronger USD and enhanced US competitiveness will help reduce volatility from the US business cycle and make US assets even more attractive. 
We believe investors continue to under-appreciate the power of the US energy revival. In addition to the economic contribution from the Bakken formation, tapping California’s vast shale reserves could create nearly 3 million jobs by exploiting the substantial potential of the Monterrey Shale, which contains more than 15 billion barrels of oil, or some two-thirds of the United States’ shale oil reserves, and alone could boost US per capita GDP by some 2.5%, not to mention dramatically improving California’s fiscal woes. 

Since commodity prices are in the main quoted in USD, the strength of USD is in many respects the flip side of weaker commodity prices. Just a few months ago, everyone hated USD, while before the Cyprus debacle, it was a foot-raced between JPY and GBP for most hated major currency. The Cyprus debacle will only add further impetus to the USD rally, as CFTC commitments of (speculative traders) show more piling on of long USD positions. 

Hat Tip: Business Insider

Eurozone Mess Is Certainly One Source of Ongoing Global Demand Drag

The on-again, off-again Eurozone mess is certainly one source of global demand drag as well as financial market uncertainty. Given the disjointed, disparate nature of Eurozone fiscal and economic management, the default is ever-escalating brinkmanship to address the crisis du jour, even without furthering stressing an already fragile and highly leveraged Euro banking system, which the ECB and IMF decided to do with the proposed haircut on Cypriot bank deposits.

More bailouts and austerity as the quid pro quo for these bailouts are causing unemployment in Euroland to soar, pushing ever nearer to more social unrest. If the Cyprusdebacle causes more bank runs across Europe expect the unemployment situation to worsen even further, pushing the southern Eurozone states further toward depression. 

Hat Tip: Azizonomics

The JPMorgan global manufacturing PMI fell to 50.8 in February from 51.4 in January as Eurozone’s manufacturing sector remains in deep contraction with Spain and France getting worse.  

Note: Crisis in Cyprus– Bad Precedents, But Does It Really Matter?

Blackrocks’s Larry Fink “doesn’t really care” about Cyprus, saying “It has some symbolism impact on Europe, but it’s not a really major economic issue.” Basically, the (short-term) negative impact on the markets was the surprise factor and the fact that invesors have gotten too complacent about “Black Swan” tail risks. This from someone who has so far been correctly bullish on US equities. Like many investors, he sees the Euro credit crisis as still in the early innings, with more brinkmanship and flare-ups to come. Renewed concerns about Spain and particularly Italy would be taken more seriously, while “the work done in Spain and Italy over the last year is very good. Spain for example now has a current account surplus. 

China’s Delicate Balancing Act

While the much-feared hard landing for China never came, China’s new leadership will have their hands full trying to maintain a delicate balancing act of maintaining high enough growth to quell the worst of social unrest while trying to reign in a persistent property bubble, without pricking the bubble and triggering massive non-performing loans, something that historically has proven impossible to do. Next to Eurozone sovereign deflation and a US fiscal crisis, the BoA’s latest survey indicates global fund managers are increasingly worried about a China hard landing is now the third biggest tail risk–while Japan’s so-called sovereign debt time bomb didn’t even make honorable mention. 


Hat Tip: Business Insider

Aside from the disappointing February PMI, the US Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index (LEI) for China was flat at a 1.3% increase in January and February, while the six-month average LEI growth has weakened. The latest flash PMI, while apparently an improvement, has also been played down as distorted by Chinese New Year noise. The drivers of China’s growth remain fragile, and recent improvements in consumer expectations are not likely sustainable in the face of rising inflation. Investment activity, which is also underpinning the current growth rebound, is heavily credit dependent and could be affected by changes in monetary policy in the wake of the leadership transition. As the BoA survey shows, investor growth expectations for China have recently fallen to the lowest level since October 2012.

The China government continues to struggle with property prices, which have resumed their climb. The ISI Price Diffusion Index has risen sharply over the past year, indicating that liquidity continues to flood these markets. Economists at the ISI Group as well as other China watchers are definitely concerned. The problem is not just rogue property developers, as local governments are very dependent on land sales for income. Some 14.1% of all outstanding bank loans are to local government financing vehicles, versus 6.2% to property developers. Moody’s Investor Services says China’s local-government financing vehicles face greater risk of default, as regulators warn 20 percent of their loans are risky.


All of this is feeding an alarming expansion in China’s shadow banking system, where nearly half of all new credit is supplied by non-banks through the off-balance sheet vehicles of regular banks, up from only 10% a decade ago. To most global fund managers, this is looking like another bug in search of a windshield. This continued concern about a debt Black Swan is of course a major factor hindering China stock prices, which remain well below two-year previous levels, and have recently taken another dive. Once considered the canary in the global equity market coal mine, China stocks have noticeably de-linked particularly from the “strength to strength” US market.

Source: Yahoo.com

Abenomics Continues to Power Forward in Japan


Japan remains the big turnaround story, and could remain so for the rest of 2013 and perhaps well into 2014. Encouraged by high voter approval ratings and the desire for the LDP to win in this year’s elections, the Abe Administration continues to press forward with its “three arrow” reflation strategy. 

As promised, Abe’s choice of a new BoJ governor and two deputy governors was approved by Japan’s Diet and installed. For those doubting the BoJ’s new-found resolve to eradicate deflation and instill inflationary expectations, the Bank has re-appointed Masayoshi Amimiya, the architect of Japan’s QE and deeply involved in the creation of the BoJ’s asset buying program. Amamiya has been called back from Osaka to head up the powerful Monetary Affairs Department, sending a signal of a significant shift in BoJ policy and governor Kuroda’s intetion to “act with speed”. 

Over the next 10 years, Abe and the LDP plan to allocate USD2.4 trillion into public-works programs. The 2011 earthquake signaled the critical need for disaster prevention infrastructure. The LDP aims to rebuild bridges, public buildings, dams, and tunnels to withstand earthquakes. It also will continue to focus on rebuilding roads, bridges and tunnels that the 2011 earthquake and tsunami leveled. Since the previous government’s stimulus bungled these efforts, plenty remains to be done. As we have pointed out before, the modernizing Japan’s agricultural sector has been shown to have the highest economic multiplier.

For now, JPY weakness remains the primary driver for stock prices, which have shrugged off recently bad trade numbers and other potential negatives as long as JPY weakness continues. Further most investors are ignoring those hedgies and economists who continue to insist that Abenomics won’t change Japan’s looming singularity.

Everyone is aware that a significant rise in JGB yields rise from current levels would quickly make Japan’s government debt unsustainable, yet JGB yields have recently fallen again to 2003 levels, defying the conventional logic, and particularly those who believe Abenomics will only hasten the debt singularity. Yes the clock is ticking, as Japan will run out of sufficient savings to buy the whole issue of JGBs by 2016 as the share of government debt to total currency and deposits will soon reach close to 100%. JGB bear hedge funds continue to believe the markets will price in the endgame before it happens….but it hasn’t happened yet.

No Secular Bull Market Yet

This notwithstanding, while the Nikkei 225 has surged some 51% from deeply over-sold territory in a post Great East Japan earthquake/disaster economy in June 2012, it is still 44% away from breaching a June 2007 high of 18,138–i.e., the index has broken up out of a post 2010 cyclical (post earthquake disaster) bear market, but has yet to significantly recover from the global 2008 financial crisis, and would need to breach something like 15,000 to signal a fundamental break out of the “mother of all bear markets” 23-year bear market.

To break out of the 23-year secular bear market will probably require more than an aggressive BoJ; i.e., some evidence that serious structural change is underway that reverses the significant drag of an aging population and smothering government debt.  It will take months—even years—to see how all this plays out, and investors will become increasingly sensitive to the structural reforms issue as stock prices approach previous highs. 

PM Abe has positioned the next 5 years as a”emergency structural reform period”, and so far has wasted no time pushing forward with his agenda, with the benefit of 20:20 hindsight of the failure of his first stint as prime minister. IMF division chief for Japan, Stephan Danninger, suggested that any proposed reform strategies need to include a number of key elements, including

1) Further Japanese integration with Asia, including participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

2) Measures to encourage higher labor participation—especially by women and the elderly, but also through immigration.

3) Domestic market reforms aimed at increasing competition and productivity, including the promotion of inward foreign direct investment.

4) More risk-based allocation of credit to encourage sustainable growth.

The IMF reckons that implementation of a comprehensive package of measures to promote growth could increase long-term real growth by about 1 percentage point. How successful Abenomics is will depend ultimately on overcoming the political obstacles facing implementation.

For the time being however, we are assuming the upside potential for the foreseeable future in the Nikkei 225 is the 18,138 high hit in June 2007. 
US-Japan Yield Gap Pointing to JPY/USD Weaker than JPY100/USD
The US-Japan 2yr yield gap, which has historically had the highest correlation with the JPY/USD rate, is now the widest since 2008, when JPY was trading well above JPY100/USD. The upward slope in this gap suggests JPY depreciation has much more to go, as the Abe Administration has lined up his BoJ ducks and new BoJ governor Kuroda has recalled a key QE and asset purchase program man.
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
Japan Stock Focus Remains on Reflation Plays
Over the past six months, the high beta broker/dealers have substantially outperformed the Topix, followed by a surge of some 70% for the real estate sector and a warehousing/logistics (a real estate, latent assets proxy) of just under 60%, clearly showing that reflation, in terms of financial assets (stocks) and property, remain the best games in Tokyo, and the focus on reflation plays should continue for the foreseeable future, as Japan’s export numbers remain weak. 
The driver remains substantial foreign buying, while domestic financial institutions remain almost as large net sellers ahead of the March-end financial year. If anything, domestic financial institutions are buying JGBs, as evidenced by new lows in JGB yields. The swing support for Japan equities is broker/dealers building prop positions to facilitate foreign investor demand, and corporate buybacks. 
Source: Nikkei Astra, Japan Investor
Within the Nikkei 225, the best performer is a second-tier car company, Mazda, but second-tier real estate and broker/dealers remain well-represented. Despite plans to build a massive sea wall to ostensibly protect essentially all of the coast line in Mie Prefecture, Tohoku and surrounding prefectures, cement companies like Sumitomo Osaka remain among the poorest performers, and some stocks have actually declined during the massive rally. 
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
Eurocrisis: Its Baack!
While it never really went away, Italian voters put the Eurozone’s problems on the front pages again after anti-austerity parties appeared on track to win a majority of seats in the Italian parliament, vastly complicating efforts to forge a government able to carry through EU-imposed reforms. This plus a looming US sequestration forced investors to take another look at risk as US stocks attempted to reach pre-crisis highs. The sharp surge in the S&P 500 VIX volatility index shows just how much of a negative surprise the Italian elections were. With one Mario (Monti) gone, investors are beginning to wonder if the other Monti (Draghi) can pull another rabbit from the ECB’s hat to quell Eurozone concerns. The Italian elections sent EUR plunging against USD and JPY, triggering profit-taking in US stocks, and threatening to derail the weak JPY-driven rally in Japan stocks.
 
Investors may now take a step back to see just how much the Italian elections hurt the bailing wire and duck tape countermeasures that had so far kept a lid on Euro-crisis, and just how much economic pain the US sequestration political boondoggle in the US causes, and just how serious the Fed is taking concerns about the future risk of normalizing its over-swollen balance sheet. 
As we pointed out in market sentiment indicators flashing yellow/red, sentiment indicators were already signalling that US stocks were due for a correction, with increasingly nervous investors waiting for an excuse to take profits. For the time being, however, bulled-up investors are mainly viewing the new developments as a somewhat welcome a “speed bump” pause in the stock rally, i.e., a chance for those who missed most of the move since last November to participate in the rally. How long this “buy on weakness” depends on how resilient stocks are over the next few weeks.
 
The knee-jerk reaction so far has been classic risk-off, i.e., stocks fell, USD rose, EUR fell and sell-off in JPY temporarily reversed as US bond yields up-ticked and even Gold got a bid. As the short JPY technically was also over-extended, an unwinding of speculator short JPY positions could see JPY test JPY90/USD resistance, thereby stunting the Nikkei 225’s sharp rebound, at least for the time being. 
Source: Yahoo.com
Warnings of Dire Consequences of Massive Government Debt and Swollen Central Bank Balance Sheets
Lurking in the background is a big picture concern. The West faced a 1931 moment in late 2008. The cost of avoiding a 1931 moment has been soaring government debt and economies that are too weak to support growing entitlement costs, which in the U.S. are expected to grow to $700 billion over the next four years, according to hedge fund legend Stanley Druckenmiller. While Druckenmiller believes there is still time to tackle the U.S. debt issue, he warns that if it is not dealt with in the next four or five years, “we’re going to wake up, interest rates are going to explode and the next generation is going to have a tough time.” 
The irony is that the U.S. is the least dirty shirt in the closet. Even former EU commissioner Frits Bolkestein is among a crowd of investors convinced that a break-up of the sovereign debt-challenged Euro was inevitable, and speculators mercilessly pounded Greece, Spain, Italy and other southern European bonds until Mario Draghi put the hounds at bay by promising to “do whatever it takes” to save the Euro. Japan has long been on the short list of countries expected to see fiscal crisis for several years now, ostensibly as they have already crossed the debt spiral rubicon, according to absolutely convinced hedge fund managers like Kyle Bass. 
Scare Stories are Currently Not Affecting How Investors are Making Asset Allocation Decisions 
But even Druckenmiller admits the debt problem doesn’t change how investors currently make asset-allocation decisions. “(Because) the Fed printing $85 billion a month, this is not an immediate concern…but this can’t go on forever.” That said, most professional investors are having trouble assimilating such imminently reasonable scenarios with soaring stock markets, the performance in which they ostensibly get paid. Consistently profitable hedge fund maven Ray Dalio says 2013 is likely to be a transition year, where large amounts of cash—ostensibly previously parked in safe havens—will move to stock and all sorts of stuff – goods, services, and financial assets. 
At the same time, these same investors have little real confidence in the economic recovery upon which rising financial assets are supposedly predictated, and have wavered between “risk on” and “risk off” on several occasions since the March 2009 post crisis secular low in stock prices. On the past two occasions, the prospect of central banks backing away from extraordinary monetary policy has been enough to send them scurrying back into risk off mode, only to venture out again as central banks again re-assure that they are on the case. 
Nevertheless, supported by Fed assurances of “unlimited” QE, ECB assurances that they will do whatever it takes, and the prospect of the BoJ joining the full-scale balance sheet deployment party, US stock prices are near pre-2008 crisis highs hit in 2007, and growing investor complacency saw the S&P 500 VIX volatility (fear) index recently hitting its lowest point since May 2007. 
But Complacency Makes Some People Nervous… 
But investor complacency itself is cause enough to make some investors worried. After the S&P 500 VIX volatility index hit its lowest point since May 2007, investors were temporarily spooked last week by indications in the FOMC minutes that “many participants…expressed some concerns about potential costs and risks from further asset purchases.” The balance sheet risk issue first surfaced in the December FOMC, but was papered over by the launch of a $45 billion program to buy longer-dated TBs, and the continuance in the January meeting of $85 billion of purchases until the labor market improved “substantially” in the context of price stability around the 2% level. 
…And FOMC Fretting about Fed Balance Sheet Risk is Downright Disturbing 
Thus while hard money proponents have long warned of “wanton” and “dangerous” money printing, even FOMC members are beginning to fret about the growing risk its swollen balance sheet poses in the inevitable process of normalizing the size and composition of its balance sheet. 
In other words, the really tricky part for stock markets is when central banks are confident enough in the economic recovery, ostensibly an “all clear” sign to investors worried about the sustainability of the recovery,  to attempt normalizing their balance sheets. 
Nearly everyone recognizes that the first round of global QE prevented/forestalled financial collapse. But successive rounds of QE have demonstrably diminishing returns versus growing risks of swollen central bank balance sheets, a tidbit that financial markets are so far blithely ignoring. Specifically, the three key issues underlying the debate about burgeoning government debt swollen central bank balance sheet are: 
a) How long the fiscal path of governments can be sustained under current policies. 
b) If governments cannot or will not service this debt, central banks may be ultimately forced to choose between inflation spiral-inducing debt monetization, or in idely standing by as the government defaults. 
c) Central bank balance sheets are currently extremely large by historical standards and still growing, and the inevitable process of normalizing the size and composition of the balance sheet poses significant uncertainties and challenges for monetary policymakers. 
The 90% Solution and Debt Sustainability 
Even Paul Krugman cannot deny that excessive government debt has consequences. Reinhart and Rogoff (2012) documented that levels of sovereign debt above 90% of GDP in advanced countries lead to a substantial decline in economic growth, while Cecchetti, Mohanty and Zampolli (2011) found a threshold of around 85% for the debt-to-GDP ratio at which sovereign debt retards growth. Such data were the inspiration for “new normal” scenarios, which posited that potential economic growth would semi-permanently shift downward following the 2008 crisis as economies delivered. 
Furthermore, debt default is a clear and present danger. Greenlaw, Hamilton, Hooper and Mishkin (2013) as well as other studies observe that, since the more government debt is held by foreigners, the greater the political incentives to default on that debt, and therefore the greater perceived risk of this debt, which raises borrowing costs. Further, higher overall foreign debt—both public and private—also makes it more difficult for a country to continue making interest payments on sovereign debt, thus increasing perceived risk and the interest rate demanded for this risk. Current-account deficits are also highly significant; i.e., a country that increases its current-account deficit to GDP would be expected to face higher interest rates demanded for holding sovereign debt. 
The bottom line of such research is that, the larger the debt to GDP, the harder it is for a country to “grow” out of its debt, while high levels of sovereign debt held by foreigners in combination with high and consistent current account deficits greatly increases the risk of triggering a fiscal and/or currency crisis. The “great divide” in economic thinking is what should we be doing about it now. The Keynesians say continue throwing fiscal spending at the problem, and worry about the debt after the economy recovers. The monetarists say keep pushing on extraordinary monetary policy. The hard money traditionalists say both policies are a prescription for a renewed, deeper crisis, and that we only have a few years to act to reduce debt. 
Investors, whose careers have been based on the maxim that “price is truth”, say this heavy intervention has already seriously skewed the market pricing mechanism, It is also gut-level clear there are limits to how much fiscal spending governments and how much balance sheet deployment central banks can continue in the face of massive and growing debt. Problem is, no one knows exactly where these limits are. The only certainty is the extreme aversion to finding out; on the part of governments, central bankers and investors. Ostensibly, central banks could continue printing money and expanding their balance sheets indefinitely, but there is a good reason for the historically strong adversion to full-scale debt monetization by central banks, and that is again fiat currency debasement and runaway inflation. 
How Damaging the Risk of Fed Balance Sheet Losses? 
A recent paper by Greenlaw, Hamilton, Hooper and Mishkin (2013) stimulated debate in the Federal Reserve about the risk of losses on asset sales and low remittances to the Treasury, and how this could lead the Federal Reserve to delay balance sheet normalization and fail to remove monetary accommodation for too long, exacerbating inflationary pressures. 
Monetarists argue that losses on the Fed balance sheet are an accounting irrelevancy. 
While the value of bond holdings in swollen (USD 3 trillion) bond holdings in central bank balance sheets would get crushed along with bond-heavy financial institution portfolios, ostensibly reversing current unrealized gains of some USD200 billion to an unrealized loss of USD300 billion. The Fed’s contributions to the Treasury, which have reduced the annual deficit by some 10% over the past few years, would fall to zero. Monetarists claim the magnitude of such a change (USD 80 billion) ostensibly would not be that big a deal. An accounting “asset” could simply be created equal to the annual loss, in the form of a future claim on remittances to Treasury. 
Thus far, the Federal Reserve’s asset purchases have actually increased its remittances to the Treasury, at an annual level of about $80 billion from 2010 to 2012. These remittances are any rate are likely to approach zero as interest rates rise and the Fed balance sheet normalizes. But Bernanke and other central bankers are not monetarists, and what matters is what the central bankers think. 
In recent public remarks, Governor Jerome H. Powell quotes historical precedent in playing down these risks. Federal debt as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) increased significantly on two prior occasions in modern history–during the Great Depression-World War II era and, to a smaller extent, the two decades ending in the mid-1990s. In each case, fiscal policy responded by running sustained primary surpluses and reducing debt to levels below 40% of GDP. Thus the party line is, “the foundation of U.S. debt policy is the promise of safety for bondholders backed by primary surpluses only in response to a high debt-GDP ratio,” While this is the principal reason why the federal debt of the United States still has the market’s trust, no one wants to contemplate the consequences of the US Treasury or the Fed losing the market’s trust. 
Growing Probability of a 1994 Bond Scenario? 
When Druckenmiller says, “we’re going to wake up, interest rates are going to explode and the next generation is going to have a tough time,” he is talking about a sharp backup in bond yields, aka the so-called 1994 scenario, or worse. Ostensibly, any whiff of inflation would cause a bond market rout, leaving not only escalating losses on the Fed’s trillions of USD in bond holdings, but also wrecking havoc with private sector financial institution balance sheets. The longer the Fed keeps pumping away under QE, the greater the ostensible risk. Under Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, yields on 30yr treasuries jumped 240bps in a nine-month time span, that is seared into the memories of bond-holders. Talk of a “Great Rotation” from bonds into equities elicits the same painful memories. 
Great Rotation as a Process Rather than an Event 
Current market signals in the U.S., U.K. and Japan bond markets do not suggests that these countries are near the point of losing the market’s confidence, or that the bond market is “smelling” something afoot. More reasonable sounding scenarios come from people like veteran technical analyst Louise Yamada, who like Ray Dalio see a potential turning point comparable to 1946 when deflation was defeated and the last bear market in bonds began. Her point, which by the way we agree, is that the Great Rotation is likely to be a slow process, characterized by a “bottoming process in rates, or a topping process in price”. 
Alarmists Can’t Have it Both Ways 
The alarmist scenarios are internally inconsistent. On the one hand, they insist that the Fed’s (and other central bank) unconventional policies are not working to restore sustainable growth, and that central banks in desperation at the prospect of potential sovereign default, will be forced into full-scale debt monetization. On the other, they warn of a bond market rout, ostensibly on a recovery sufficient for these same central banks to attempt to “normalize” their balance sheets and a “great rotation” from bonds into equities, which is a big “risk on” trade if there ever was one. 
Worry About the U.K. First…. 
If investors closely examined the academic work on past periods of excess sovereign debt, they would be more worried about a fiscal crisis/currency crash in the U.K. rather than Japan. The punch line of said research is, to repeat, that debt-to-GDP over 90% chokes off economic growth, which certainly happened in Japan, but is now happening in the UK, Euroland and the US. The larger the debt to GDP, the harder it is for a country to “grow” out of its debt, while all-out austerity only ensures a more rapid deterioration in debt relative to the economy, and all the more central bank money printing to stave off the ravaging effects of this austerity—true for both Euroland, the UK and the US. 
Further, high levels of sovereign debt held by foreigners in combination with high and consistent current account deficits greatly increases the risk of triggering a fiscal and/or currency crisis. This factor is not relative to the case of Japan, where foreign ownership of debt is minimal and the current account deficit is a very recent phenomenon. 
JPY and GBP are currently the favorite currencies to short among currency traders. While the Japanese government has gained more notoriety for reflationary “Abenomics” and their wish to see JPY much cheaper, the UK authorities are if anything just as keen to see GBP much cheaper. While not as obvious about it, UK fiscal and monetary authorities are just as keen to see a weaker pound sterling. Ben Broadbent, yet another former Goldman Sachs banker and BoE Monetary Policy Committee member, stated that a weak pound will be necessary for some time to rebalance the economy towards exports. FT economist Martin Wolff observed, “sterling is falling, Hurray!”.  BoE governor Mervyn King proposed 25 billion pounds of further asset purchases, but was voted down. Not to be deterred, in February he said the U.K.’s recovery may require a weaker pound, right after a G7 statement to “not engage in unilateral intervention” on currencies. Governor King has also stated that countries had the right to pursue stimulus, regardless of the exchange rate consequences, while brushing off the potential negative side effects on inflation. In fact, the only difference between Japan’s and the UK’s efforts to depreciate their currencies is that the UK is more adept at sending the signal.
In terms of actual central bank action, the UK since 2010 has been expanding its balance sheet at a much more rapid rate than both the Fed, the ECB and certainly the BoJ.
Source: Japan Investor, respective central banks
Big Market Reaction to UKDowngrade by Moody’s
While the USD and JPY barely twitched when the respective countries’ sovereign debts were downgraded by rating agencies, the negative reaction in GBP was very noticeable, and GBP is now just as much a target of currency shorts as JPY is. While the dour economic mood in Tokyo has lifted dramatically with Abenomics, Moody’s sees continued weakness in the U.K.medium-term economic outlook extending into the second-half of this decade, given the drag on growth from the slow growth of the global economy, and from ongoing domestic public and private sector deleveraging, despite a committed austerity program. Indeed, the UKgovernment’s ability to deliver savings through austerity as planned is now in doubt. 

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

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

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

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

Source: Yahoo.com



As every experienced investor is aware, what is important to stock prices is not what’s already in the mix, i.e., discounted in the stock price, but how additional information on the “fundamentals” changes the prevailing market perception. In other words, it`s not the fundamentals per se, but how these fundamentals are perceived as changing with additional market information.
As we enter the second month of 2013, equities have had the best start in two decades, Japan’s Nikkei 225 has logged the best January in 15 years after rallying 22.9% in 2012, and the GSCI spot commodities index is in the longest rally since 1996, while US, Japanand other market bond prices fall. Pleasantly surprised investors and corporate leaders are growing more confident. The economic news is now perceived as “universally” good, and corporate leaders are increasingly confident.
As we pointed out last week, however, this sudden rise in confidence and risk appetite, which is already looking historically overdone, could well see a short-term peak. What exactly will be the trigger is anyone’s guess, but it could be anything that causes investors to re-consider their currently sanguine global economic recovery scenarios, and/or their Great Rotation thesis. 


We would also like to take a different slant on the policy debate raging between, a) the perceived need to immediately reign in dramatically growing debt and b) the opposite argument that there is too much focus on debt and austerity is premature, and is largely lumped by political party in the US between the Republicans and the Democrats as their wrangle over the debt ceiling, and by Germany (the Bundesbank) versus its heavily indebted Southern European neighbors. This is because we believe both arguments are too simplistic and loaded with political hyperbole.

Credit Growth Now Equals GDP Growth
Our approach begins with a statement, which is, a) credit growth drives economic growth, b) private sector banks control credit, and c) the concentration of the banking sector in the modern economy is historically unprecedented, as evidenced by the fact that the 2008 financial crisis had a dramatically negative effect on the global economy, ostensibly because of the implosion of private sector credit growth, particularly in the so-called shadow banking sector.
For those who believe the solution is simply more debt, credit-driven growth was already reaching its limits long before the financial crisis hit. As the boom continued, more debt dollars were needed to generate a unit of GDP growth, i.e., the phenomenon was experiencing diminishing returns. Back in the late 1940’s and 1950’s, the ratio was more like 1:1, i.e., it took about a one dollar increase in debt to generate a one dollar increase in growth. Through the most recent decade, the ratio became more like 5:1, i.e., debt had to grow five times faster just to maintain the same level of GDP growth. With the benefit of 20:20 hindsight, this was clearly unsustainable, as the amount of debt eventually required would expand into infinity.
Shadow Banking Is Now an Integral Part of Total Credit Creation
The explosion of a “shadow banking system” outside the traditional banking system and the control or even awareness of the central banks meant that central banks and regulators were in the dark about just how much credit was actually being created. The “shadow banking system” can broadly be described as “credit intermediation involving entities and activities outside the regular banking system”, and according to (conservative) Financial Stability Board data, surged before the crisis from $26 trillion in 2002 to $62 trillion in 2007, while other estimates put the total in hundreds of trillions of USD.
It was this same shadow banking system that greatly exacerbated and indeed triggered the 2008 financial crisis as banks refused to deal with each other. Because the SBS had grown to 27% of total financial intermediation (credit creation) in 2007, and over 100% of aggregated OECD GDP, its dysfunction nearly caused a fatal heart attack for the global economy. Consequently, in order to prevent the crisis from spiraling out of control into a 1930s depression, it was imperative that the shadow banking system, as well as the conventional banking system, remained viable, but this fact was not well explained by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson or others at the height of the financial crisis, perhaps because they did not understand it well themselves.     
Even after the crisis, the “shadow banking” system remains an integral part of the global financial system and therefore total credit creation. While assets in the system declined slightly in 2008, they rebounded to over $67 trillion in 2011, and continued to account for some 25% of total financial intermediation, as its size relative to the traditional banking system remained about half as large as the formal banking system.
Indeed, non-bank financial institutions (OFIs, other financial institutions) remain the largest sector in the US financial sector, accounting for 35%, according to the Financial Stability Board. NBFIs are also large relative to the entire financial sector in the Netherlands(45%), Hong Kong (35%), the Euro area (30%), and Switzerland, the UK, Singapore and South Korea (at around 25% each). In other words, any policy maker who tries to address economic issues without considering the shadow banking system is missing a crucial piece of the puzzle. 
Keynesian Economics: The Public Sector Need to (Temporarily) Offset Shrinking Private Sector Credit Demand
As previously stated, credit growth has become the main driver of economic growth, while central banks, namely the Fed, before 2007 at least, effectively abdicated the creation of credit to private sector banks, resulting in the US banking sector (formal and shadow) reaching the highest level of concentration in history before the crisis. After the crisis, however, assets in the shadow banking system went into a tailspin, exerting a heavy weight on the real economy. 

In the early stages, the freezing up of the shadow banking system as banks refused to deal with doubtful counterparties was the immediate problem. It was therefore necessary for both the central bank and the government to step into the breach to a) ensure sufficient liquidity and the functioning of the global financial system, and then b) work to offset the economic drag from declining credit availability in the private sector, aiming at BOTH the shadow banking system and the formal banking system. In recognition of the shadow banking system’s crucial role, the Fed provided unprecedented support for the shadow banking system by supplying virtually unlimited USD swaps to foreign (European) banks drowning from a lack of USD funds, and opened up the discount window to broker/dealers. The USgovernment (Treasury) took the very unpopular step of bailing out AIG and the very shadow banking entities that were at the root of the crisis in the first place.
The following table from the Fed’s Flow of Funds credit market outstanding statistics and Deloitte’s Shadow Banking index the areas where balance sheet restructuring hit the real economy the hardest. Since the shadow banking system consisted of agency MBS (mortgage-backed securities), securities lending, Repos, CDO (credit derivatives), and MMMF (money market mutual funds), the dramatic shrinkage in ABS issuer credit market debt outstanding is the most indicative of the shrinkage in SBS credit. Further, the data also show that the increase in Federal Government Debt credit has offset the shrinkage in private sector credit, with the exception of 2009 and Q2 2011.

Source: US Federal Reserve, Total Credit Market Debt, USD Billions, Prior Period Change

 In aggregate, the Deloitte data show clearly that the negative economic impact of the shrinkage in Shadow Banking Assets, which they measure at 30% more than formal banking assets at the peak, was the major culprit in the shrinkage of credit, while traditional banking assets have shown a moderate expansion since 2009. In short, as long as a) the Federal Government/Federal Reserve continues expanding its credit provision and b) the formal banking system’s credit expansion is offsetting the shadow banking system’s shrinkage, the real economy expands, albeit at a pace much slower than a “normal” expansion.
 While real domestic credit growth tends to be highly synchronized with real GDP growth, it also appears to lag slightly behind turning points in real economic growth, i.e., we may actually see a turn in real GDP growth before we see the turn in real credit growth. Moreover, the experience of the Great Depression was that the post Great Depression recovery was a “credit-less” recovery, proving that even an economy as big as the U.S., while painful, can wean itself from excessive dependence on credit (debt) for growth. However, the fact that the U.S. financial sector in the 1930s was nowhere near as large relative to GDP as now and that there was no shadow banking system, a major shrinkage in both is an unknown that the US Fed and Treasury would rather not have to face in restoring the U.S. economy to sustainable growth.
Experience of the 1930s
During the Great Depression (from 1929 to 1933), money and credit in the U.S. collapsed in a magnitude broadly similar to the collapse seen in economic activity over  (the peak YoY nominal contraction in M2 peaked at 20%, while the peak decline in nominal bank loans was 25%, both in 1932, or 3 years after Black Monday). The cumulative contraction in credit relative to pre-Depression levels was almost 50%. During the subsequent recovery, money and credit followed divergent paths. While money grew in line with economic activity, the level of credit bottomed out at a later stage and did not increase until the second half of the decade, making the post-Great Depression recovery a “credit-less” recovery. Annual credit growth did not turn positive until 1936 – or three years after the end of the Great Depression.


Sources: BEA, Bureau of Labor, NBER, IMF
Experience of Japan’s 1990 Bubble Collapse 

In Japan’s bubble collapse, while modest compared to the Great Depression, the bottom in the contraction of private sector credit was not seen until 2002, or some 12 years after the stock market and property markets crashed, as private sector banks continued to extend credit to “zombie companies” to hide their non-performing loans (NPLs), and were not forced to address these NPLs until 1997, or some seven years after loans started going bad. In Japan, credit growth did not turn positive until late 2005, or three years later, while nominal GDP remained depressed throughout the 1990s through 2003—despite massive fiscal stimulus and unprecedented monetary stimulus–because real balance sheet deleveraging did not begin until after 1997.
Sources:IMF
Source: Japan Investor, various LDP governments
The “Average” Banking Crisis Has Lasted Four Years
Based on Reinhart and Rogoff’s data on historical banking crisis, the 23 OECD countries have seen 24 banking crises that on average have lasted four years. Using this four-year average, the 2008 financial crisis ostensibly would have ended in 2012. The crucial question is, however, is the 2008 financial crisis different in that it was a global banking crisis of a scale not seen since the 1930s? If 2013 does indeed become the pivotal year in the post 2008 financial crisis that investors are currently expecting, the 2008 global financial crisis will in retrospect be something more like the “average” financial crisis as described in the Reinhart and Rogoff data, and not the “new normal” or other darker scenarios painted by those who remain structural bears four years after the crisis. 
The Litmus Test: Indigenous Sustainability
Yet the real litmus test for this recovery will be the ability of the formal banking system to drive a sustainable recovery without the goosing of readily available credit provision by the shadow banking system, and the balance sheet deployment of the Federal Reserve. Historically, as the Great Depression has shown, the U.S. economy has been able to recover without more of the “hair of the dog that bit them”, i.e., a credit-less recovery, but relative to the modern economic structure, that was a different time. To us, the next big turning point could be when the Fed is confident enough to attempt to wean the financial markets from expectations of “unlimited” QE and virtually infinite easy money policy. If the financial markets and the economy can absorb the Fed’s withdrawal from extremely aggressive monetary policy to a “neutral” policy, we will have indeed entered the next secular bull market.