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SPAIN: Cuenta atrás

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From  Ambrose Evans Pritchard:

“The spreads on 10-year Spanish bonds jumped to a post-EMU high of 224 basis points above German Bunds as traders brace for a crucial auction by Madrid on Thursday. The relentless rise in bond yields replicates the pattern seen in Greece at the onset of crisis. Spain must raise €25bn of debt in a cluster of auctions in July.”

“We’re in a dangerous and stressful situation,” said Gary Jenkins, a credit expert at Evolution Securities. “Spain is a big enough borrower to wipe out the EU’s rescue fund.”

“The spreads on 10-year Spanish bonds jumped to a post-EMU high of 224 basis points above German Bunds as traders brace for a crucial auction by Madrid on Thursday. The relentless rise in bond yields replicates the pattern seen in Greece at the onset of crisis. Spain must raise €25bn of debt in a cluster of auctions in July.”

“We’re in a dangerous and stressful situation,” said Gary Jenkins, a credit expert at Evolution Securities. “Spain is a big enough borrower to wipe out the EU’s rescue fund.”

Spain and its government have entered a very difficult path. Market´s confidence is lost and 25 B € should be paid in July !!!

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SYMBIOSIS

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SYMBIOSIS : Interaction between two different organisms living in close physical association, typically to the advantage of both.

We are not really sure that we will get this “typically to the  advantage of both ” this time…

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CHINA: Inflation ahead ?

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The cost of doing business in China is going up.

FT: ” Chinese labour protests that have forced shutdowns at foreign factories have spread beyond south China’s industrial heartland, posing a dangerous new challenge for Beijing.”

Coastal factories are increasing hourly payments to workers. Local governments are raising minimum wage standards. And if China allows its currency ( Renmimbi) to appreciate against the United States dollar later this year, as many economists are predicting, the relative cost of manufacturing in China will almost certainly rise.

The salaries of factory workers in China are still low compared to those in the United States and Europe: the hourly wage in southern China is only about 75 cents an hour. But economists say wage increases here will eventually ripple through the global economy, driving up the prices of goods as diverse as T-shirts, sneakers, computer servers and smartphones.

The shift was illustrated last Sunday, when Foxconn Technology, one of the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturers and the maker of products that include iPhones, said that it was planning to double the salaries of many of its 800,000 workers in China, beginning in October. The new monthly average would be 2,000 renminbi — about $300, at current exchange rates.

Honda is following the same path after a strike. So in between strikes and protests maybe China is becoming the new engine for Inflation…

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HUNGARY: The new PIIG

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The PIIGS family is growing  to include Hungary as a spokesman for the PM of Hungary said their economy is “in a grave economic situation” and the possibility of default is “not an exaggeration.”!!!

Markets rolled over after the comments and the euro fell to a new 4 year low vs the US$. Hungary 5 yr CDS is higher by 15 bps to 323 bps, the highest since July ‘09. Hungarian stocks are lower by almost 4% and European banks are all lower including rumours that SG ( Societée Generale ) has a huge exposure to Eastern Europe through derivatives exposure.

The possibility of Europe heading towards a double deep recession whenever Greece, Portugal, Spain, Ireland, Italy, and now Hungary apply restrictive medicine is becoming a REAL possibility. If that happens, US will follow as it happened in 1931…

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IMPOSSIBLE THINGS

Today we post John Mauldin´s letter ( www.johnmauldin.com ). We think  a MUST read :

Six Impossible Things

“I have written several letters over the years about the basic economic equation

GDP = C + I + G + (Net Exports)

Which is to say, that Gross Domestic Product in a country is equal to total Consumption (personal and business) plus Investments plus Government Spending plus next exports. This equation is known as an identity equation. It is true for all countries and times.

Now, gentle reader, I am going to spare you a few pages of algebra and cut to the chase. Let’s divide a country’s economy into three sections, private, government and exports. If you play with the variables a little bit you find that you get the following equation.

Domestic Private Sector Financial Balance + Governmental Fiscal Balance – the Current Account Balance (or Trade Deficit/Surplus) = 0

This equation was introduced to you a few months ago in an Outside the Box written by Rob Parenteau. We are going to review this briefly, as it is VERY important. Paragraphs in quotes will be from that letter. As Rob noted, “…keep in mind this is an accounting identity, not a theory. If it is wrong, then five centuries of double entry book keeping must also be wrong.”

By Domestic Private Sector Financial Balance we mean the net balance of business and consumers. Are they borrowing money or paying down debt? Government Fiscal Balance is the same: is the government borrowing or paying down debt?  And the Current Account Balance is the trade deficit or surplus.

The implications are simple. The three items have to add up to zero. That means you cannot have  both surpluses in the private and government sectors and run a trade deficit. You have to have a trade surplus.

Let’s make this simple. Let’s say that the private sector runs a $100 surplus (they pay down debt) as does the government. Now, we subtract the trade balance. To make the equation come to zero it means that there must be a $200 trade surplus.

$100 (private debt reduction) + $100 (government debt reduction) – $200 (trade surplus) = 0.

But what if the country wanted to run a $100 trade deficit? Then that means that either private or public debt would have to increase by $100. The numbers have to add up to zero. One way for that to happen would be:

$50 (private debt reduction) + (-$150) (government deficit) – (-$100) (trade deficit) = 0. Remember that we are adding a negative number and subtracting a negative number.

Bottom line. You can run a trade deficit, reduce government debt and reduce private debt but not all three at the same time. Choose two. Choose carefully. And before we get into the implications, let’s look at yet another equation, although this is somewhat simpler.

Delta Force

There are two and only two, ways that you can grow your economy. You can either increase your population or increase your productivity. That’s it.

The Greek letter “Delta” is the symbol for change. So if you want to change your GDP you write that as:

Δ GDP = Δ Population + Δ Productivity

If you are a country facing a population decline (like Japan) that means to keep your GDP growing you have to increase your productivity even more. That is why I have written so much about demographics over the years. Population growth (or the lack thereof) is very important. Russia is facing a very serious problem over the next 20 years that will require either a significant increase in productivity or large immigration to stave off a collapsing economy. Russia’s population has declined by almost 7 million in the last 19 years to 142 million. UN estimates are that it may shrink by about a third in the next 40 years. But that’s another story for another letter.

One last economic insight. You cannot grow your debt faster than nominal GDP forever. At some point, the market begins to think you will not be able to pay your debts back. This is no different than the fact that a family cannot grow its debt faster than its income ability to pay the debt back. At some point, you run out of the ability to borrow more money as lenders “just say no.”

As a family’s or country’s debts grow, the carrying cost or interest expenses rise. At some point, the interest expense consumes an   ever larger portion of the budget. Increasing the debt increases the interest expense eventually to the breaking point. There are limits.

Reduce your Deficits!

Now, let’s look at the implication of all this. Let’s start with Great Britain. They are running very large deficits on the order of 11% of GDP. Clearly, that is unsustainable and the new government knows it. They are looking to cut £6 billion in their first effort, which sounds like a lot, but is less than 4% of the £156 billion deficit. There is a lot more cutting that needs to be done.

But spending cuts and tax hikes have consequences. The UK retail industry is warning that a feared hike in value-added tax to 20% from the Conservative-Liberal Democrat government would cost 163,000 jobs and cut consumer spending by £3.6bn over four years. And that tax hike is just for openers.

The classic hope for any country in such a dire strait is to be able to grow your way out of the problem. Martin Wolfe wrote in the Financial Times a few weeks ago that Britain needed to let the pound drift lower so that British exports would be more competitive. A cheap pound will drive up tourism. Their trade deficit can become a trade surplus.

Here is their dilemma. In order to reduce the government’s fiscal deficit, either private business must increase their deficits or the trade balance has to shift, or some combination. Lucky for them, they can in fact allow the pound to drift lower by monetizing some of their debt. Lucky, in they can at least find a path out or their morass. Of course, that means that pound denominated assets drop by another third against the dollar. It means that the buying power of British citizens for foreign goods is crushed. British citizens on pensions in foreign countries could see their locally denominated incomes drop by half from their peak (well, not against the euro which is also in free fall).

What’s the alternative? Keep running those massive deficits until ever increasing borrowing costs blow a hole in your economy reducing your currency valuation anyway. And remember, if you reduce government spending, in the short run that is a drag on the economy, so you are guaranteeing slower growth in the short run. As I have been pointing out for a long time, countries around the world are down to no good choices.

Britain’s is a much slower economy (maybe another recession), much lower buying power for the pound, lower real incomes for its workers, yet they have a path that they can get back on track in a few years. Because they have control of their currency and their debt which is mostly in their own currency, they can devalue their way to a solution.

Pity the Greeks

Some of my fondest memories were made in Greece. I like the country and the people. But they have made some bad choices and now must deal with the consequences.

We all know that Greek government deficits are somewhere around 14%. But their trade deficit is running north of 10%. (By comparison, the US trade deficit is now about 4%.)

Going back to the equation, if Greece wants to reduce its fiscal deficit by 11% over the next three years, then either private debt must increase or the trade deficit must drop sharply. That’s the accounting rules.

But here’s the problem. Greece cannot devalue its currency. It is (for now) stuck with the euro. So, how can they make their products more competitive? How do they grow their way out of their problems? How do they become more productive relative to the rest of Europe and the world?

Barring some new productivity boost in olive oil and produce production, there is no easy way. Since the beginning of the euro, Germany has become some 30% more productive than Greece. Very roughly, that means it cost 30% more to produce the same amount of goods. That is why Greece imports $64 billion and exports $21 billion.

What needs to happen for Greece to become more competitive? Labor costs must fall by a lot. And not by just 10 or 15%. But if labor costs drop (deflation) then that means that taxes also drop. The government takes in less and GDP drops. The perverse situation is that the debt to GDP ratio gets worse even as they enact their austerity measures.

In short, Greek life styles are on the line. They are going to fall. They have no choice. They are going to willingly have to put themselves into a severe recession or more realistically a depression.

Just as British incomes relative to their competitors will fall, Greek labor costs must fall as well. But the problem for Greeks is that the costs they bear are still in euros.

It becomes a most vicious spiral. The more cuts they make, the less income there is to tax, which means less government revenue which means more cuts which mean, etc.

And the solution is to borrow more money they cannot at the end of the day hope to pay. All that is happening is that the day of reckoning is delayed in the hope for some miracle.

What are their choices? They can simply default on the debt. Stop making any payments. That means they cannot borrow any money, but it would go along way toward balancing the government budget. Government employees would need to take large pay cuts and there would be other large cuts in services. It would be a depression, but you work your way out of it. You are still in the euro and need to figure out how to become more competitive.

Or, you could take the austerity, downsize your labor costs and borrow more money which means even larger debt service in a few years. Private citizens can go into more debt. (Remember, we have to have our balance!) This is also a depression.

Finally, you could leave the euro and devalue like Britain is going to do. Very ugly scenario, as contracts are in euros. The legal bills would go forever.

There are no good choices for the Greeks. No easy way. And then you wonder why people worry about contagion to Portugal and Spain?

I see that hand asking a question. Since the euro is falling won’t that make Greece more competitive? The answer is yes and no. Yes, relative to the dollar and a lot of emerging market currencies. No to the rest of Europe, which are their main trade partners. A falling euro just makes economic export power Germany and the other northern countries even more competitive.

Europe as a whole has a small trade surplus. But the bulk of it comes from a few countries. For Greece to reduce their trade deficit is a very large life style change.

Germany is basically saying you should be like us. And everyone wants to be. Just not everyone can.

Every country cannot run a trade surplus. Someone has to buy. But the prescription that politicians want is for fiscal austerity and trade surpluses, at least for European countries. But if the PIIGS reduce their trade deficits, that will not be good for Germany.

Yet politicians want to believe that somehow we all can run surpluses, at least in their country. We can balance the budgets. We can reduce our debts. We all want to believe in that mythical Lake Woebegone, where all the kids are above average. Sadly, it just isn’t possible for everyone to have a happy ending.

And this brings us to a last quick point, which some day will be its own letter. Every country wants it currency to be valued “fairly” which means lower than its competitors. With both Europe and Britain on their way to parity with the US dollar, what will be the reaction of Asia and especially China?

As Ollie said to Stan (Laurel and Hardy), “Here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into!”  A nice mess indeed.

Should the US Bail Out European Banks?

The obvious answer to the above question, at least on this side of the Atlantic, is no. But that is the plan being foisted on US tax-payers by the International Monetary Fund. The IMF wants to create a $250 billion dollar bailout fund for Greece, Portugal, et al that the US will contribute roughly 20% to. This fund will loan money and that IMG debt will be subordinate (junior!) to regular Greek debt, so when Greece does default, and they will, the IMF is the last in line to get paid.

Where will the money go? It will buy mostly Greek rollover debt from European banks getting out of their Greek debt. It is a back door bailout for German and French banks. The US Senate voted 94-0 that the US should not fund any such debt if the Treasury cannot certify the probability of getting repayment. If the Obama administration allows this funding to go through, the hue and cry will be large. It is bad enough that we have to pay for Freddie and Fannie (already $400 billion and counting!). Not meaning to be churlish, but the French and Germans can bail out their own banks”.

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SPAIN: Contagion ?

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Today´s markets are moved by FEAR. Fear  that the European debt crisis is spreading to Spain and tensions between Koreas.

Three developments in the past couple of days have put Spain in the market’s cross-hairs:

First, the Spanish central bank had to take over a savings bank over the weekend. ( Caja Sur )

Second, this was followed yesterday by 4 other savings banks merging.

Third, the IMF yesterday urged Spain to do more to overhaul its banking system warning that its  response has been too slow. It also commented on some of its structural rigidities, as in the labor market.

In addition to its much larger size, Spain also differs from Greece in that the bulk of Spain’s debt issue is not (yet) a sovereign issue as it is in Greece.  As in Portugal, the debt is still largely a private sector issue.  However, all share that common trait of requiring external financing.

Let´s remember that Spain needs to refinance € 54 Billions of Debt  by July !!!

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EU: Can´t live with Markets or without

Today we want to post an article courtesy of WSJ :

“The debt crisis in the euro zone is intensifying a confrontation between governments and the financial markets. It’s a fight that both sides could lose.

For many European politicians, attacks by “speculators” against the government debt of Greece and other weaker members of the common currency, are viewed as a challenge to the right of democratically elected leaders to govern.

“It’s well reciprocated,” says Andrew Hilton of the Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation in London. “Continental European governments hate the markets and the markets hate Continental European governments.”

This month, leaders have repeatedly promised “consequences” for speculators. “The euro is an essential element of Europe. We cannot leave it to speculators,” said President Nicolas Sarkozy of France. Said Jean-Pierre Jouyet, the president of the French markets regulator AMF: “As soon as I have information about speculation, when I see abnormal market behavior, there will be an investigation and sanctions.”

José Manuel Barroso said the European Union would do “whatever necessary to ensure that financial markets are not a playground for speculation.” George Papandreou, the Greek prime minister, promised an investigation of the role of U.S. banks in the Greece debt crisis.

But such comments illustrate some serious contradictions.

Even as they rail against the financial markets, most politicians now seem to accept that the markets are sending an important signal: that giant deficits in many economies need to be corrected before they trigger an unsustainable expansion of government debt.

There are more costly contradictions. As the sharp drop in the euro following this week’s German announcement of a ban on short selling of some euro securities suggested, such moves may satisfy a domestic political audience but they backfire in the financial markets. Investors seem to conclude that blaming the markets is a way of obfuscating the underlying problems.

Furthermore, while governments attack the financial markets, they also depend on them for finance—including for funding of €440 billion ($546 billion) of bonds that euro-zone governments have pledged to put together to save the weaker economies of the euro zone.

Marco Annunziata, chief economist of UniCredit Group, said the German action on short-selling bespeaks the “schizophrenic attitude of some euro-zone governments which insist on painting as enemies the very same markets from which they expect substantial financing.”

The rhetoric of euro-zone politicians goes beyond the speculators and the financial markets: It also suggests that the hands of unfriendly governments are behind the market moves. Though rarely named explicitly, the chief suspects are the U.K.—for which the euro crisis is seen as helpfully deflecting attention from its own giant budget deficit—and the U.S.—which is viewed as seeking to secure the place of the dollar as the world’s only reserve currency.

Spain’s Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero noted in February that the speculation against the euro came mostly from outside the currency area. El Pais reported that month that Spain’s CNI intelligence service was investigating whether there was some ulterior motive behind the financial speculation against the Spanish economy and the aggressiveness of the Anglo-Saxon media. (A Spanish government spokesman didn’t respond to a request to comment.)

At the weekend, Steffen Kampeter, German parliamentary state secretary in the ministry of finance and a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling coalition, spoke of the euro’s “false friends.”

In a month when U.S. President Barack Obama telephoned a series of European leaders and urged them to act decisively to deal with the region’s debt crisis, Mr. Kampeter suggested governments from outside the euro zone were giving bad advice.

“Do not believe false friends when you form a currency union, because they may have other economic interests than the members of the union. They might be the alternative anchor currency or something like that,” he told a conference organized by the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Bahrain. He had been asked how he would advise those Middle Eastern countries that are talking of currency union.

In a defense Thursday of Berlin’s unilateral action over short selling that was criticized for not being coordinated with other capitals, German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, said: “If you want an objective decision, you don’t ask the frogs to decide on draining the swamp.” Other governments, he seemed to be saying, were too close to the financial markets to make objective decisions.

Mr. Hilton of CSFI says the current crisis points up a fundamental timing problem: financial markets move much more quickly than politicians can act and economies can react. “I think there is a real mismatch between the speed at which politicians and economies move and the speed at which traders move,” he says.

The current crisis has made, he says, the splitting of the euro zone thinkable. If that happens, he says “the political backlash will be horrendous: This will be seen as the unacceptable face of contemporary finance,” he said.

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€ : Heading to parity

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The fiscal crisis in Europe has already driven the dollar to a 3-year high against the euro. Relative to purchasing power parity, however, the US currency is still a little undervalued. What’s more, it has been a lot more expensive in the past.

We think there are three reasons :

  • First, we are becoming increasingly convinced that doubts about the long-term survival of the euro are not going to go away. The support package cobbled together by EU governments and the IMF may have averted a near-term sovereign debt crisis, but it is conditional on massive fiscal consolidation (and structural reform) that may ultimately prove too much for the electorates of some Member States in the euro-zone to bear.
  • Second, there has been a shift in the relative outlook for economic growth. In light of the scale of the coming fiscal squeeze in the euro-zone, we see a lower  GDP for the EU region ( 2010 & 2011).
  • Third, relative interest rate differentials may soon start to favour the US currency.

All that should be good news for the Global EU businesses after all…

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EUROPE: The new Printer

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The EU to help ease concerns of the debt crisis, unleashed a 750 billion € credit facility, an amount much greater than earlier reported. Finance ministers announced that the EU will pledge 440 billion € in addition to the 60 billion € in an existing program with the remaining 250 billion € from the International Monetary Fund.

In an attempt to paralyze contagion, the European Central Bank did an about face from last Thursday and will intervene in the markets through debt purchases. Furthermore, in order to ensure liquidity in the markets, the ECB will offer unlimited fixed-rate offerings of 3-month loans to banks as well as offer dollar swaps with the Federal Reserve. Both of these tools were present during the onset of the financial crisis.

However, there are good reasons not to get too excited about these measures. The ECB’s bond purchases will be sterilised. This means that the Bank will sell other assets or issue its own debt to finance the purchases instead of pursuing outright “quantitative easing” by expanding the monetary base (or “printing money”) as the Bank of England and Federal Reserve have.

Much more importantly, though, the measures do nothing to address the underlying issues that got the euro-zone into this mess in the first place. The fact remains that government debt has soared to unprecedented and unsustainable levels throughout the region. This has already prompted the
European Commission to call for extremely aggressive fiscal tightening ranging from a cumulative 2% of GDP in Germany to an eye-watering 10% of GDP for Greece over the next few years !!!

So the euro-zone’s peripheral economies are clearly in for a very painful adjustment regardless of today’s measures…

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1931 = 2010 : All over again…

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There is s all sorts of speculation over what caused the crash today.  The answer is very  simple : PURE FEAR.

Everyone is looking for someone to blame, but we have ve seen this happen in markets for hundreds of years.  It happened before there were computers and it now happens that there are computers.  Today was a classic fear filled day.

We saw huge downside in many debt and forex instruments before the crash and the equity markets were the last to capitulate.  The bids fell off the board and the sellers just continued to hit the bids.  There might have been some “fat finger” trades or some electronic trading that contributed, but this was primarily fear.  Good old fashioned fear.

This has always happened in markets and will always happen in markets.

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