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Everyone and their brother intuitively knows
that the current government fiscal deficits in the developed world are
unsustainable. They have to be brought under control, but that requires some
short-term pain. Today we look at a rather remarkable piece of research from
the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) on what the fiscal crisis may morph
into in the future, how much pain will be needed, and what will happen if various
countries stay on their present courses. Some countries could end up paying
north of 20% of GDP just on the interest to serve their debt, within just 30
years. Of course, the markets will not
allow that to happen, long before it ever gets to that level. And what makes
this important is that this is not some wild-eyed blogger, it's the BIS, a
fairly sober crowd of capable economists. We will pay some attention. Then I'll
throw in another few paragraphs about Goldman. But first, I want to bring a very
worthy cause to your attention. For my Strategic Investment Conference last
weekend, Jon Sundt and I bought some mighty fine wine for our guests. That of
course, is to be expected. But each of those bottles also bought a wheelchair
for someone in a most needy part of the world. Here's the story. Gordon Homes at Lookout Ridge
Winery in Napa Valley has gotten five cult winemakers to create special wines
for him. These are winemakers whose production is sold out well in advance - they're
the all-stars of wine (like Screaming Eagle). And while they can't sell them from
their own wineries, they blend these special signature wines for Lookout Ridge. Each bottle sells for $100, well
below what it would take to get one of these cult artists' bottles - even if you could get them. And then Lookout Ridge
donates the entire amount to buying a wheelchair for someone who can't
afford one in a less-developed country. Attendees at our conference bought
enough to send 200 chairs to people desperate for mobility all over the world.
Part of it was, I am sure, that it is a very worthy cause, and part of it is
that the wines are damn good. The web page is http://www.lookoutridge.com/lookoutridge/index.jsp.
Click on "wine for wheels" on the top bar, and then on some of the links on the
page that comes up. Look at the smiles on the faces of people who got a chair!
And then order a few bottles. You will thank me when you drink it, and someone
in need of mobility will thank you. Now, on to the letter. There Had to Be a Short Somebody needs to brief Senators before they get
on TV and ask irate questions which demonstrate they have no idea what they are
talking about. Expressing shock that someone was short on the trade in question
shows you don't understand the trade. Let me see if I can offer some clarity. Normally, you think of a Collateralized Debt
Obligation (CDO) as a pool of mortgages. This pool is broken into anywhere from
6 to 15 tranches. The highest-rated tranches get their money back first, and
the rating agencies made them AAA. While the lowest level would be called the
equity portion and be first in line to lose, in theory it paid a very high
yield. It was usually not rated. But the level just above that is BBB (just
barely investment-grade), and that was typically about 4% of the total deal,
but paid a much higher yield than the "safe" AAA portion. Now, here is where it gets
interesting. Investment banks would take the BBB portions of these Residential
Mortgage-Backed Securities, which were not as easy to sell, and combine them in
a CDO, which the rating agencies then rated using models based on data provided
by the investment banks themselves. Since this combining of BBB tranches
supposedly created diversification that the rating firms' models indicated would
drastically limit delinquencies and defaults, the AAA tranche of the CDO was
jacked up to 75% of the total capital structure, with 12% rated AA. Only 4% was
typically considered BBB. So pools of mortgages that probably should have been
rated below BBB were miraculously turned into a CDO with 87% of its capital
structure rated AAA and AA and only 4% rated BBB, with a chunk as equity. (I
wrote about this in January of 2007, based on material from Gary Shilling and
others, plus my own research, although I think I wrote about it in an earlier
letter as well.) Who would buy this stuff? Mostly
institutions that were reaching for yield in what was, in 2007, a very low-yield
world. Yield hogs. And institutions that trusted the rating agencies. But the CDO in the Goldman case was
not this type of CDO. It was hard to find enough BBB pieces to put together a
CDO of the type described above, and the demand was high. Remember, everyone
knew that housing could only go up. So, what's an investment bank to do? They
create a synthetic CDO. Follow this closely. The various investment
banks - it was way more than just Goldman; rumors are it was up to 16 of them -
would construct an artificial CDO fund based on the performance of BBB tranches
in other deals. Let me see if I can simplify this. It is as if I had
a very negative view about a particular industry for which there was no future
or index or liquid security. We could go to an investment bank and ask them to
create a "hypothetical" index that would mirror the performance of this
industry. I would be willing to short that index. But unless the bank wanted to
be long that index, they would have to find a buyer who would take the long
position. Presumably the buyer would have a different view than me. Now, by definition there has to be
a short for the long, and vice versa. This is a synthetic index. It exists only
as a spreadsheet and performs in conjunction with the components it's modeled
upon. Numerous hedge funds did not think
the rating agencies knew what they were talking about when it came to the
mortgage ratings. They also believed we were in a housing bubble. So they went
to a number of investment banks and asked them to construct synthetic
(derivative) CDOs that they could short. And there were buyers on the other
side who wanted the yield, who trusted the agencies, and who believed that
housing could only go up. As to the Goldman deal, the buyers
had to know there was someone short on the other side. By definition there was
a short. Besides, they had a guarantee from ACA on the AAA portion (which of
course went bad, as I wrote about later that year) - there was a guaranteed AAA
yield a few points higher than with normal AAA debt. What could be better?
Except of course that it was too good to be true. Learn a lesson, gentle
reader. Don't reach for yield. The hedge funds that shorted the
synthetic CDOs took real risk. They had to pay the interest on the underlying
tranches to the investors who were long. And if the housing market continued to
rise, and the bubble did not burst, they could easily lose a lot, if not all,
of their money. No one knows when a bubble will burst. The markets can be
irrational longer than you can remain solvent. Let's be very clear. This was
purely gambling. No money was invested in mortgages or any productive
enterprise. This was one group betting against another, and a LOT of these
deals were done all over New York and London. The SEC alleges that there was
material lack of disclosure. I must admit that I would want to know that the
person who was taking the short position had a hand in the creation of the pool
of BBB paper I was buying. And if Fabrice Tourre told someone that Paulson was
$200 million long when they were actually net short, that could be problematic.
Now, if he just said that Paulson bought the equity portion of the synthetic
CDO (there has to be one), that will be a different matter. The prosecutor for the SEC is by
all accounts a very solid and serious person who would not move this case
forward if he did not think they would win. This is not one the SEC will want
to lose. On the other hand, I hope that Goldman takes this to the Second Circuit
Court of Appeals (the final decision maker in a long and arduous process), as
there are some very interesting aspects to this case that I would like to see
resolved, as an individual in the industry. On someone else's legal bill. I wonder why Goldman's witnesses
seemed ill-prepared. Did their lawyers tell them to keep it simple and not get
into a spirited defense? My instinct says that a lot more will come out about this
case. If it was just this one deal, then Goldman should pay the fine and walk
away. Done all the time. I suspect there is more here. Or maybe it was just
that they didn't want to explain why they were doing a synthetic CDO. We'll see
when someone writes the book. How Should Our Institutions
Invest? However, the larger and far more
critical question is, why were institutions buying synthetic CDOs in the first
place? This is an investment that had no productive capital at work and no
remotely socially redeeming value. It did not go to fund mortgages or buy
capital equipment or build malls or office buildings. It seems to me there is a
certain social responsibility when you have institutional capital and manage
pensions. It's one thing to buy a gambling stock; it's quite another to be the
gambler, especially if it is not your capital at risk, and by being a yield hog
you increase your bonuses. The hedge funds were risking their capital. The
institutions were risking other people's money. And let's be clear, the counterparties
in the Goldman deal, at least, were very knowledgeable players. They knew exactly
what they were buying. OK, enough. Let's move onto the BIS paper. The Future of Public Debt For the rest of this letter, and probably next
week as well, we are going to look at a paper from the Bank of International
Settlements, often thought of as the central bankers' central bank. This paper
was written by Stephen G. Cecchetti, M. S. Mohanty, and Fabrizio Zampolli. (http://www.bis.org/publ/work300.pdf?noframes=1)
The paper looks at fiscal policy in a number of
countries and, when combined with the implications of age-related spending
(public pensions and health care), determines where levels of debt in terms of
GDP are going. The authors don't mince words. They write at the beginning: "Our projections of public debt ratios lead us
to conclude that the path pursued by fiscal authorities in a number of
industrial countries is unsustainable. Drastic measures are necessary to check
the rapid growth of current and future liabilities of governments and reduce
their adverse consequences for long-term growth and monetary stability." Drastic measures is not language you typically
see in an economic paper from the BIS. But the picture they paint for the 12
countries they cover is one for which drastic measures is well-warranted.
I am going to quote extensively from the paper, as I want their words to speak
for themselves, and I'll add some color and explanation as needed. Also, all
emphasis is mine. "The politics of public debt vary
by country. In some, seared by unpleasant experience, there is a culture of
frugality. In others, however, profligate official spending is commonplace. In
recent years, consolidation has been successful on a number of occasions. But
fiscal restraint tends to deliver stable debt; rarely does it produce
substantial reductions. And, most critically, swings from deficits to surpluses
have tended to come along with either falling nominal interest rates, rising
real growth, or both. Today, interest rates are exceptionally low and the
growth outlook for advanced economies is modest at best. This leads us to
conclude that the question is when markets will start putting pressure on
governments, not if. "When, in the absence of fiscal
actions, will investors start demanding a much higher compensation for the risk
of holding the increasingly large amounts of public debt that authorities are
going to issue to finance their extravagant ways? In some countries,
unstable debt dynamics, in which higher debt levels lead to higher interest
rates, which then lead to even higher debt levels, are already clearly on the
horizon. "It follows that the fiscal
problems currently faced by industrial countries need to be tackled relatively
soon and resolutely. Failure to do so will raise the chance of an unexpected
and abrupt rise in government bond yields at medium and long maturities, which
would put the nascent economic recovery at risk. It will also complicate the
task of central banks in controlling inflation in the immediate future and
might ultimately threaten the credibility of present monetary policy
arrangements. "While fiscal problems need to be
tackled soon, how to do that without seriously jeopardising the incipient
economic recovery is the current key challenge for fiscal authorities." They start by dealing with the growth in fiscal
(government) deficits and the growth in debt. The US has exploded from a fiscal
deficit of 2.8% to 10.4% today, with only a small 1.3% reduction for 2011
projected. Debt will explode (the correct word!) from 62% of GDP to an
estimated 100% of GDP by the end of 2011. Remember that Rogoff and Reinhart
show that when the ratio of debt to GDP rises above 90%, there seems to be a
reduction of about 1% in GDP. The authors of this paper, and others, suggest
that this might come from the cost of the public debt crowding out productive
private investment. Think about that for a moment. We are on an
almost certain path to a debt level of 100% of GDP in less than two years. If
trend growth has been a yearly rise of 3.5% in GDP, then we are reducing that
growth to 2.5% at best. And 2.5% trend GDP growth will NOT get us back to full
employment. We are locking in high unemployment for a very long time, and just
when some one million people will soon be falling off the extended unemployment
compensation rolls. Government transfer payments of
some type now make up more than 20% of all household income. That is set up to
fall rather significantly over the year ahead unless unemployment payments are
extended beyond the current 99 weeks. There seems to be little desire in
Congress for such a measure. That will be a significant headwind to consumer
spending. Government debt-to-GDP for Britain
will double from 47% in 2007 to 94% in 2011 and rise 10% a year unless serious
fiscal measures are taken. Greece's level will swell from 104% to 130%, so the
US and Britain are working hard to catch up to Greece, a dubious race indeed.
Spain is set to rise from 42% to 74% and "only" 5% a year thereafter; but their
economy is in recession, so GDP is shrinking and unemployment is 20%. Portugal?
71% to 97% in the next two years, and there is almost no way Portugal can grow
its way out of its problems. Japan will end 2011 with a debt ratio of 204%
and growing by 9% a year. They are taking almost all the savings of the country
into government bonds, crowding out productive private capital. Reinhart and
Rogoff, with whom you should by now be familiar, note that three years after a
typical banking crisis the absolute level of public debt is 86% higher, but in
many cases of severe crisis the debt could grow by as much as 300%. Ireland has
more than tripled its debt in just five years. The BIS continues: "We doubt that the current crisis will be
typical in its impact on deficits and debt. The reason is that, in many
countries, employment and growth are unlikely to return to their pre-crisis
levels in the foreseeable future. As a result, unemployment and other
benefits will need to be paid for several years, and high levels of public
investment might also have to be maintained. "The permanent loss of potential output caused
by the crisis also means that government revenues may have to be permanently
lower in many countries. Between 2007 and 2009, the ratio of government revenue
to GDP fell by 2-4 percentage points in Ireland, Spain, the United States and
the United Kingdom. It is difficult to know how much of this will be reversed
as the recovery progresses. Experience tells us that the longer households
and firms are unemployed and underemployed, as well as the longer they are cut
off from credit markets, the bigger the shadow economy becomes." We are going to skip a few sections and
jump to the heart of their debt projections. Again, I am going to quote
extensively, and my comments will be in brackets [].Note that these graphs are
in color and are easier to read in color (but not too difficult if you are
printing it out). Also, I usually summarize, but this is important. I want you
to get the full impact. Then I will make some closing observations. The Future Public Debt Trajectory "We now
turn to a set of 30-year projections for the path of the debt/GDP ratio in a
dozen major industrial economies (Austria, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, the United Kingdom and the
United States). We choose a 30-year horizon with a view to capturing the large
unfunded liabilities stemming from future age-related expenditure without
making overly strong assumptions about the future path of fiscal policy (which
is unlikely to be constant). In our baseline case, we assume that government
total revenue and non-age-related primary spending remain a constant percentage
of GDP at the 2011 level as projected by the OECD. Using the CBO and European
Commission projections for age-related spending, we then proceed to generate a
path for total primary government spending and the primary balance over the
next 30 years. Throughout the projection period, the real interest rate that
determines the cost of funding is assumed to remain constant at its 1998-2007
average, and potential real GDP growth is set to the OECD-estimated post-crisis
rate. [That
makes these estimates quite conservative, as growth-rate estimates by the OECD
are well on the optimistic side.] Debt Projections "From
this exercise, we are able to come to a number of conclusions. First, in our
baseline scenario, conventionally computed deficits will rise precipitously. Unless
the stance of fiscal policy changes, or age-related spending is cut, by 2020
the primary deficit/GDP ratio will rise to 13% in Ireland; 8-10% in Japan,
Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States; [Wow!] and 3-7% in
Austria, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands and Portugal. Only in Italy do these
policy settings keep the primary deficits relatively well contained - a
consequence of the fact that the country entered the crisis with a nearly
balanced budget and did not implement any real stimulus over the past several
years. "But the
main point of this exercise is the impact that this will have on debt. The
results plotted as the red line in Graph 4 [below] show that, in the baseline
scenario, debt/GDP ratios rise rapidly in the next decade, exceeding 300% of GDP in Japan; 200% in the United Kingdom;
and 150% in Belgium, France, Ireland, Greece, Italy and the United States. And, as is clear from the slope of the line, without a
change in policy, the path is unstable. This is confirmed by the projected
interest rate paths, again in our baseline scenario. Graph 5 [below] shows the
fraction absorbed by interest payments in each of these countries. From around 5% today, these numbers rise to over 10% in all
cases, and as high as 27% in the United Kingdom. "Seeing
that the status quo is untenable, countries are embarking on fiscal
consolidation plans. In the United States, the aim is to bring the total
federal budget deficit down from 11% to 4% of GDP by 2015. In the United
Kingdom, the consolidation plan envisages reducing budget deficits by 1.3
percentage points of GDP each year from 2010 to 2013 (see eg OECD (2009a)). "To
examine the long-run implications of a gradual fiscal adjustment similar to the
ones being proposed, we project the debt ratio assuming that the primary
balance improves by 1 percentage point of GDP in each year for five years
starting in 2012. The results are presented as the green line in Graph 4.
Although such an adjustment path would slow the rate of debt accumulation
compared with our baseline scenario, it would leave several major industrial
economies with substantial debt ratios in the next decade. "This
suggests that consolidations along the lines currently being discussed will not
be sufficient to ensure that debt levels remain within reasonable bounds over
the next several decades. "An
alternative to traditional spending cuts and revenue increases is to change the
promises that are as yet unmet. Here, that means embarking on the politically
treacherous task of cutting future age-related liabilities. With this
possibility in mind, we construct a third scenario that combines gradual fiscal
improvement with a freezing of age-related spending-to-GDP at the projected
level for 2011. The blue line in Graph 4 shows the consequences of this
draconian policy. Given its severity, the result is no surprise: what was a
rising debt/GDP ratio reverses course and starts heading down in Austria,
Germany and the Netherlands. In several others, the policy yields a significant
slowdown in debt accumulation. Interestingly, in France, Ireland, the
United Kingdom and the United States, even this policy is not sufficient to
bring rising debt under control. 
[And yet, many countries, including
the US, will have to contemplate something along these lines. We simply cannot
fund entitlement growth at expected levels. Note that in the US, even by
"draconian" estimates, debt-to-GDP still grows to 200% in 30 years. That shows
you just how out of whack our entitlement programs are. Sidebar: This also means that if we
- the US - decide as a matter of national policy that we do indeed want these
entitlements, it will most likely mean a substantial VAT tax, as we will need
vast sums to cover the costs, but with that will come slower growth.] 
[Long before interest rates rise
even to 10% of GDP in the early 2020s, the bond market will have rebeled. This is
a chart of things that cannot be. Therefore we should be asking ourselves what
is the End Game if the fiscal deficits are not brought under control.] "All of
this leads us to ask: what level of primary balance would be required to bring
the debt/GDP ratio in each country back to its pre-crisis, 2007 level? Granted
that countries which started with low levels of debt may never need to come
back to this point, the question is an interesting one nevertheless. Table 3
presents the average primary surplus target required to bring debt
ratios down to their 2007 levels over horizons of 5, 10 and 20 years. An
aggressive adjustment path to achieve this objective within five years would
mean generating an average annual primary surplus of 8-12% of GDP in the United
States, Japan, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and 5-7% in a number of other
countries. A preference for smoothing the adjustment over a longer horizon
(say, 20 years) reduces the annual surplus target at the cost of leaving
governments exposed to high debt ratios in the short to medium term. 
[Can you imagine the US being able
to run a budget surplus of even 2.4% of GDP? $350 billion-plus a year? That
would be a swing in the budget of almost 10% of GDP.] That is enough for today. We will
delve further next week. Montreal, New York, Connecticut, and Italy Join Me in Paris I have to tell you, the conference last week was
awesome. The energy in the room was great. The speeches and conversations were
amazing. We are working on getting them transcribed so we can share a few of
them. You really want to make plans to be there next year. There is not any
investment conference in the country that matches it for quality. My thanks to
the hard-working staff of Altegris for doing such an outstanding job of making
it all go so smoothly. And my apologies to all those who waited to the last
minute to sign up and couldn't get in. When I say this conference will sell
out, I really do mean it. So, next year, don't procrastinate. I am home for most of May. I have a 24-hour trip
to Montreal to be with Tony Boeckh for his private Club X conference. Tony will
be the author of next Monday's Outside the Box, where he will discuss the
themes in his new (and should be bestseller) book, The Great Reflation.
I also get to go out and party when I land with David Rosenberg. That should be
fun! The next week I am back in New York for a day,
then two nights in Stamford, Connecticut, speaking to Pitney Bowes execs, and
then home, where I will stay until June 3, when the whole family (seven kids and
spouses, grandbabys) takes a vacation to Italy for two weeks. I am going to stay over and speak
at the Global Interdependence Center Conference in Paris June 17th
and 18th, with my good friend David Kotok and other luminaries.
There will be a lot of central banker types, and if you want to get a feel for
what's happening in Europe you should come. Information is at www.interdependence.org. It is time to hit the send button.
It's late and this letter is overlong. Thanks for hanging with me! Have a great
week. Your worried about the debt analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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