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Turning and turning in the
widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity. - William Butler
Yeats Last week we focused on the first half of a
paper by the Bank of International Settlements, discussing what they
characterized as the need for "Drastic measures ... to check the rapid growth of
current and future liabilities of governments and reduce their adverse
consequences for long-term growth and monetary stability." As I noted, you
don't often see the term drastic measures in a staid economic paper from
the BIS. This week we will look at the conclusion of that paper, and then turn
our discussion to the fallout from the problems they discuss, initially in
Europe but coming soon to a country near you. But first, what a week in the
markets! I'm sure more than a few investors felt like they had a severe case of
whiplash. We will discuss the volatility a little more below. First, a very quick three-paragraph commercial. In
the current market environment, there are managers who have not done well and
then there are money managers who have done very well. My partners around the
world would be happy to show you some of the managers they have on their
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you'll get a call from Absolute Return Partners in London if you are in Europe
(they also work with non-accredited investors). If you are in South Africa,
then someone from Plexus Asset Management will ring. And in Canada it is Nicola
Wealth Management. And Fynn Capital Management in South America. (In this
regard, I am president and a registered representative of Millennium Wave
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CMG in Philadelphia. We have created a platform of money managers who
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the platform, and then sign up to get more information. If you are an investment advisor or broker, all of
my partners can work with you in providing your clients exposure to
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high-net-worth individuals, then you will want to work with Altegris, ARP, or
one of my other international partners; and if your clients need lower
minimums, then you should work with CMG. And if you have any feedback or
comments, feel free to write me. Now, on to the letter. The Risks from Fiscal Imbalances Today we are going to return to 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." Let me briefly sum up last week's
letter. They wrote: "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?" I reproduced graphs that projected interest-rate
payments as a percentage of GDP rising rather dramatically over the next 30
years, to levels that, quite frankly, cannot be tolerated by the markets. Long
before we get to the place where we in the US are paying 20% of our GDP in
interest (which would be about 80% of our tax collections, even with much
higher tax rates) the bond market, not to mention taxpayers, will revolt. The paper's authors clearly show that the
current course is not sustainable. And to get back to a level of debt-to-GDP
that countries "enjoyed" as recently as 2007 requires such massive structural
surpluses as to boggle the mind. And that is with rather optimistic growth
assumptions that, as I will show in a few pages, are not very likely. You can read last week's letter at http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo043010.
The discussion of the BIX paper is in the last half of the letter. Now, we come to the section where
they talk about the risks associated with the fiscal deficits. And by the way,
we should note that 25 of 27 European countries are running deficits in excess
of 3% of GDP. Ireland has a deficit of 14.3%. Portugal is at almost 10%. Greece
is almost 14%. Here is a table from my friends at
Variant Perception in London, from data from The Economist. Notice that
France is over 8%. Germany is almost 6%. Wow. We'll look at the implications of
this later. 
The first risk is of course, higher
interest rates brought about by what they term increased risk premia. In
essence, investors want to get paid more for their increased risk. Interest on Greek
debt for 5-year bonds is now 15%. There is no way for them to grow their way
out of the problem if interest rates are at 15%, up almost fourfold in less
than a year. Rates are rising for other European peripheral countries as well. The second risk "... associated with high levels of
public debt comes from potentially lower long-term growth. A higher level of
public debt implies that a larger share of society's resources is permanently
being spent servicing the debt. This means that a government intent on
maintaining a given level of public services and transfers must raise taxes as
debt increases. Taxes distort resource allocation, and can lead to lower levels
of growth. Given the level of taxes in some countries, one has to wonder if
further increases will actually raise revenue. "The distortionary impact of taxes
is normally further compounded by the crowding-out of productive private
capital. In a closed economy, a higher level of public debt will eventually
absorb a larger share of national wealth, pushing up real interest rates and
causing an offsetting fall in the stock of private capital. "This
not only lowers the level of output but, since new capital is invariably more
productive than old capital, a reduced rate of capital accumulation can also
lead to a persistent slowdown in the rate of economic growth. In an open
economy, international financial markets can moderate these effects so long as
investors remain confident in a country's ability to repay. But, even when
private capital is not crowded out, larger borrowing from abroad means that
domestic income is reduced by interest paid to foreigners, increasing the gap
between GDP and GNP." This squares solidly with the work done by Rogoff
and Reinhart, showing that when the debt of a country reaches about 100% of
GDP, there is a reduction in potential GDP growth of about 1%. As I have
written elsewhere, government debt and spending do not increase productivity.
That takes private investment. And if government debt crowds out private
investment, then there is lower growth. And that is what the Rogoff and Reinhart
study clearly shows. And finally, the BIS authors note
the risk that a government cannot run deficits in times of crisis to offset the
affects of the crisis, if they already are running large deficits and have a
large debt. In effect, fiscal policy is hamstrung. The Challenge for Central Banks Interestingly, the authors worry that one of the
real problems central banks may face is that inflation expectations may become
unanchored in the absence of a willingness on the part of the government to
show fiscal constraint. Without some evidence of that willingness, monetary
policy could lose any ability of be effective. In other words, no matter how much the people at
the Fed might like to help in a crisis, they may not be able to do anything
effective if the US government does not deal with its deficits. "A second mechanism by which public
debt can lead to inflation focuses on the political and economic pressures that
a monetary policymaker may face to inflate away the real value of debt. The
payoff to doing this rises the bigger the debt, the longer its average
maturity, the larger the fraction denominated in domestic currency, and the
bigger the fraction held by foreigners. Moreover, the incentives to tolerate
temporarily high inflation rise if the tax and transfer system is mainly based
on nominal cash flows and if policymakers see a social benefit to helping
households and firms to reduce their leverage in real terms. It is, however,
worth emphasising that the costs of creating an unexpected inflation would
almost surely be very high in the form of permanently high future real interest
rates (and any other distortions caused by persistently higher inflation)." The head of the European Central
Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, made it very clear this week that the ECB is not
going to be buying Greek bonds. In my recent discussion with Richard Fisher,
president of the Dallas Fed, it was also made clear that the current leadership
of the Fed knows it cannot print money. So who is the BIS looking at when they
talk about the temptation to inflate? The Bank of England comes to mind. Also
Japan. And a number of smaller European central banks. Countries that would not
mind their currencies falling, especially if the euro continues to slide. As the
BIS notes, the temptation is going to be large. But there is no free lunch.
Such things can spiral out of control and either end in tears or in a Paul
Volker wrenching the economy into serious recession. I think the final sentence
of the paragraph quoted above serves as a warning that such a policy dooms a
country to even worse nightmares. Now we come to the conclusion of
the paper. Normally, I do not like to quote at length, but these next six
paragraphs deserve it (again, all emphasis mine): "Our examination of the future of
public debt leads us to several important conclusions. First, fiscal problems
confronting industrial economies are bigger than suggested by official debt
figures that show the implications of the financial crisis and recession for
fiscal balances. As frightening as it is to consider public debt increasing
to more than 100% of GDP, an even greater danger arises from a rapidly ageing
population. The related unfunded liabilities are large and growing, and should
be a central part of today's long-term fiscal planning. "It is essential that governments
not be lulled into complacency by the ease with which they have financed their
deficits thus far. In the aftermath of the financial crisis, the path of future
output is likely to be permanently below where we thought it would be just
several years ago. As a result, government revenues will be lower and
expenditures higher, making consolidation even more difficult. But, unless
action is taken to place fiscal policy on a sustainable footing, these costs
could easily rise sharply and suddenly. "Second, large public debts have
significant financial and real consequences. The recent sharp rise in risk
premia on long-term bonds issued by several industrial countries suggests that markets
no longer consider sovereign debt low-risk. The limited evidence we have
suggests default risk premia move up with debt levels and down with the revenue
share of GDP as well as the availability of private saving. Countries with a
relatively weak fiscal system and a high degree of dependence on foreign
investors to finance their deficits generally face larger spreads on their
debts. This market differentiation is a positive feature of the financial
system, but it could force governments with weak fiscal systems to return to
fiscal rectitude sooner than they might like or hope. "Third, we note the risk that
persistently high levels of public debt will drive down capital accumulation,
productivity growth and long-term potential growth. Although we do not provide
direct evidence of this, a recent study suggests that there may be non-linear
effects of public debt on growth, with adverse output effects tending to rise
as the debt/GDP ratio approaches the 100% limit (Reinhart and Rogoff (2009b)). "Finally, looming long-term fiscal
imbalances pose significant risk to the prospects for future monetary
stability. We describe two channels through which unstable debt dynamics could
lead to higher inflation: direct debt monetisation, and the temptation to
reduce the real value of government debt through higher inflation. Given the
current institutional setting of monetary policy, both risks are clearly
limited, at least for now. "How to tackle these fiscal dangers
without seriously jeopardising the incipient recovery is the key challenge
facing policymakers today. Although we do not offer advice on how to go
about this, we believe that any fiscal consolidation plan should include
credible measures to reduce future unfunded liabilities. Announcements of
changes in these programmes would allow authorities to wait until the recovery
from the crisis is assured before reducing discretionary spending and improving
the short-term fiscal position. An important aspect of measures to tackle
future liabilities is that any potential adverse impact on today's saving
behaviour be minimised. From this point of view, a decision to raise the
retirement age appears a better measure than a future cut in benefits or an
increase in taxes. Indeed, it may even lead to an increase in consumption (see
eg Barrell et al [2009] for an analysis applied to the United Kingdom)." Bang, Indeed! I had a discussion today with
Jonathan Tepper of Variant Perception in London. We agree that the risk that no
one talks about is the level of foreign investment in some of these countries
and the consequent rollover risk. By this we mean that when a bond comes due,
you have to roll over that bond into another bond. If the party that bought the
original bond wants cash to invest in something else, or just does not want
your bond risk anymore, you have to find someone to buy the new bond. Greece
has a large number of bonds coming due this year. It is not just the new debt;
they have to find someone to buy the old debt. And that is why they need so
much money. But it is not just a Greek problem.
About 45% of Spain's debt is owned by non-Spanish, and they need to roll over
old debt and new debt of 225 billion euros this year alone. That is bigger than
the entire GDP of Portugal. Spain cannot finance this internally. But will
foreigners buy 100 billion euros and, if so, at what price if they are not
convinced that Spain will enact serious austerity measures? Listen to ECB Governing Council
President Jean-Claude Trichet (hat tip to Greg Weldon): "As regards fiscal policies, we
call for decisive actions by governments to achieve a lasting and credible
consolidation of public finances. The latest information shows that the
correction of the large fiscal imbalances will, in general, require a
stepping-up of current efforts. Fiscal consolidation will need to exceed
substantially the annual structural adjustment of 0.5% of GDP set as a minimum
requirement by the Stability and Growth Pact.... "The longer the fiscal correction is postponed, the
greater the adjustment needs become and the higher the risk of reputational and
confidence losses. Instead, the swift implementation of frontloaded and
comprehensive consolidation plans, focusing on the expenditure side and
combined with structural reforms, will strengthen public confidence in the
capacity of governments to regain sustainability of public finances, reduce risk
premium in interest rates and thus support sustainable growth." This is a man who wants some
serious austerity. No garden-variety cuts here and there. And that brings us to
the heart of the problem. That chart a few pages above showed the large fiscal
deficits involved. If those are tackled seriously, it will put many countries
into outright recessions and reduce the growth in others. Some, like Greece,
will be in what can only be called a depression. The entire eurozone is in for a
double-dip recession, if it is not there already. And one country after another
is going to have to convince foreigners to buy its debt. But if they make the
cuts, their GDP will fall, ironically increasing their debt-to-GDP ratio and
making investors demand even higher rates, which becomes a very vicious spiral. And the banks that do own that debt
will suffer liquidity problems unless the ECB steps forward with a new program
in a massive way - which Trichet is currently
resisting. As Reinhart and Rogoff wrote:
"Highly indebted governments, banks, or corporations can seem to be merrily
rolling along for an extended period, when bang!
- confidence collapses, lenders disappear, and a crisis hits." Bang is the right word. It
is the nature of human beings to assume that the current trend will work out,
that things can't really be that bad. The trend is your friend until it ends.
Look at the bond markets just a few months before World War I. There was no
sign of an impending war. Everyone "knew" that cooler heads would prevail. We can look back now and see where
we made mistakes in the current crisis. We actually believed that this time was
different, that we had better financial instruments, smarter regulators, and
were so, well, modern. Times were different. We knew how to deal with leverage.
Borrowing against your home was a good thing. Housing values would always go
up. Etc. The Center Cannot Hold Sovereign debt was a good idea only a little
while ago. Take cheap money, lever up, and make a nice spread. And now, not so
much a good idea. Credit spreads are widening all over Europe. Interest rates
are rising for the European periphery. We once again find ourselves on a Minsky
Journey to a rather fraught Minsky Moment. Hyman Minsky famously taught us that
stability breeds instability. The more things stay the same, the more
complacent we get, until Bang!
We always seem to think this time is different, and it never is. The Minsky Journey is where
investment goes from what Minsky called a hedge unit, where the investment is
its own source of repayment; to a speculative unit, where the investment only
pays the interest; to a Ponzi unit, where the only way to repay the debt is for
the value of the investment to rise. Greece is now at its Ponzi moment of
financing. As John Hussman pointed out this week, if interest rates are at 15%
when you roll over debt, and your country is not growing, you have no way to
actually service the debt. And thus, the Minsky Moment when the markets walk
away. Bang! From Hussman's
letter: "The basic problem is that Greece
has insufficient economic growth, enormous deficits (nearly 14% of GDP), a
heavy existing debt burden as a proportion of GDP (over 120%), accruing at high
interest rates (about 8%), payable in a currency that it is unable to devalue.
This creates a violation of what economists call the "transversality"
or "no-Ponzi" condition. In order to credibly pay debt off, the debt
has to have a well-defined present value (technically, the present value of the
future debt should vanish if you look far enough into the future). "Without the transversality
condition, the price of a security can be anything investors like. However
arbitrary that price is, investors may be able to keep the asset on an upward
path for some period of time, but the price will gradually bear less and less
relation to the actual cash flows that will be delivered. At some point, the
only reason to hold the asset will be the expectation of selling it to somebody
else, even though it won't be delivering enough payments to justify the price. "Unless Greece implements enormous
fiscal austerity, its debt will grow faster than the rate that investors use to
discount it back to present value. Moreover, to bail out Greece for anything
more than a short period of time, the rules of the game would have to be
changed to allow for much larger budget deficits than those originally agreed
upon in the Maastricht Treaty." And if Greece has further problems,
the market will look at Spain (and Portugal and Ireland). In order for Spain to
continue to get financing, the market must believe they are going to make a
credible effort at austerity measures. And because they need so much foreign
financing, that moment may be sooner than we now think, as their rollover risk
is massive. If Spain gets slapped, then who will be next? There are examples of countries
that have worked their way out of even worse problems and have done so without
default. But those examples always came with currency devaluation and higher
inflation. The eurozone countries cannot devalue their currencies. The risk in
Europe is that the austerity measures bring about deflation, which makes the
debt an even greater burden. Look, I want the eurozone to
succeed. I love Europe and look forward to my family vacation in Italy this
June. But I think we have to be realistic and acknowledge that the European
leadership has a very tough set of problems. As does Japan, as does Great
Britain, as does the US, etc. To argue that the US can decouple
from Europe's problems doesn't hold water with me. We are clearly in recovery,
but we are going to need all the help we can get. And a Europe falling into
what could be a serious recession is not a Europe that buys our goods. And with
the euro on the way to parity (along with the pound) we will have to compete
with their exporters. The latter half of this year, I think the US slows down.
Then the 2011 tax hikes kick in. I still think there is at least a
50-50 chance of renewed recession, and with it a serious bear market and rising
unemployment. I hope I am wrong but, as I have been writing for some time, you
should see this as a trader's market and, with a few exceptions, be wary of
being long only. Montreal and New York and Italy 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 of
his new (and should-be bestseller) book, The Great Reflation. I also get
to go out and party when I land there with David Rosenberg. That should be fun! The following 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, grand-babys) 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. We have been planning (or Tiffani has) for the
Italy trip. I really can't wait, as it's going to be a ton of fun. It has been
over 25 years since I was in Italy, and that was just a few days in Rome and
Venice. This time it's two full weeks, with a week in Rome and Venice and then a
week in Tuscany, then to Paris, and then back to Tuscany and Milan. Your ready for a vacation analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
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