Showing posts with label Euro-area. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Euro-area. Show all posts

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Austerity Contracts Italy and in turn Germany

ISTAT, Italy's National Statistics Institute has had a busy December 2011-end.  ISTAT released October's monthly stats. The results are not good. In fact, the results were not good for any of the critical markings: the releases confirmed decreases in the Orders, Production in Construction, and Trade Balance. Then, ISTAT published Italy's quarterly GDP. 

Notwithstanding the bleak setting above-mentioned, Italy's national accounts are particularly alarming.

The decease in GDP suggests that the Austerity measures being promoted by the Euro-Area and traditionally recommended by the IMF for struggling economies are counterproductive: detrimental to the health and growth of the Italian economy. That's not new. The results are, however, significant because they offer the economist-Prime Minister Mario Monti an acid test that the austere remedy preferred by the markets, in the longer run, will weaken the economic infrastructure of the country, induce social tensions and may trigger social unrest thereby further stiffening Italy's already fragile capacity to access reasonably priced funds from future markets. After all, once reimbursement of capital is made, there is no obligation on the part of the investor to revisit and refinance a palliative patient.

For the obstinate, the position that austerity is not necessarily linked to contracting economies is a reasonable stance. In fact, for the majority of austerists, if one can coin the label, there is no necessary relationship between austerity measures and contracting economies, where contraction is usually defined as an economy in which gross domestic product weakens for two consecutive quarters.

Orders were down in October 2011 by 4.8% over the same month in the previous year 2010. In October 2011 the seasonally adjusted industrial new orders index decreased by 1.6% with respect to September 2011 (-1.0% in domestic market and -2.4% in non-domestic market). The percentage change of the average of the last three months compared to the previous three months was -2.3 (-0.7 in domestic market and -4.7 in non-domestic one). Although adjusted industrial turnover index, which measures current dollar sales was up by 1.1% for the same periods, the medium and longer term effect of orders is critical to the growth and stability of the country, whereas industrial turnover results are an historical metric that is already integrated into the fourth quarter's projections. Traditionally, orders underscore the basic fabric of small and medium business which constitute the majority of regional economies in central and southern Italy. The significant indicator to watch is the Order Book, especially for export orders since Eurozone orders will certainly decrease all around given the need to cut back on spending: consumer spending will drop and business will limit its investments in order to buffer cash for a 'transition' towards a better investment climate.

Germany, on the other hand appeared to be steering through the storm. Unfortunately, recent indicators, especially the Order Book for Exports is designing a pessimistic future. Counterbalance to a drop in export orders is a suggested increase in consumer spending. I think pundits are overly optimistic about Germany's population continuing to bear the load of a European economic stall. Not only is unemployment inching up in 2012, savings will also inch up and business investment will decrease quickly and for a prolonged period.

The lesson of Austerity is that its negative effects profuse through the system much more quickly than market reinvestment. Once markets realize that an economy is slowing down, they will forestall decisions to reinvest capital, which in turn will stall growth. Austerity leads to a vicious circle and insidious downturn,especially during a global slowdown. We said it in an earlier post:
Evidently, once investors realize that the longer term confidence required to justify purchasing Eurobond securities is not justified by output figures from the region's business sector, then even if your brand name is Germany, and even if the rating agencies mark you tops,  it won't help keep yields down. Germany is as susceptible to being dumped as is Italy and its next candidate France which witnessed its yields increase, and its yield gaps widen against the German counterparts. There is no Immune Boutique in this Shopping Mall. There isn't any vote of confidence for Germany; rather it signals that investor concern is becoming pandemic within the Euro-Area and no sovereign, especially a non-sovereign issuer, is immune.


and we will repeat again: Mrs. Merkel, like all others including Mr. Monti, is neither immune to the consequences of Austerity nor to the whims of the markets. It's time to change tune before the audience boos the performance or rather lack thereof.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Equity Markets: Thank Heaven for Central Bankers

November 30, 2011 will be a day to remember for many Bourse firms.

It's never a pleasant to be wrong. But it's always a pleasure to be wrong when you called the only viable option that would have made you wrong.

Finally the Central Banks convened to lower USD swap costs and consequently ease tensions within the Euro-Area. Acknowledging that the ECB (and IMF-chuckle for those that conceived that piece of gossip) could do little on their own without frustrating donors, Mr. Draghi understood the problematic and the challenge. Europe needed help from its friends: The Fed and its allies, and the Bank of China. One signaled monetary comfort; the other signaled monetary stimulus. In both cases,  the better bankers realized that a demand for the USD could get out of hand and leave an even more fragile Euro begging for crumbs at untenable rates. That setting without improvement on the Chinese economic front, global economies were in trouble.

The best part of the staging is that China is becoming a beach-head participant in the world's financial system. Mr. Xiao's next challenge is to convince his stakeholders that assisting in the European bailout is a necessary condition to not losing out on everything else, and exercise the appropriate actions. Slowly but surely, Chinese pragmatism is waving a wand that signals a change in political directions towards western rhetoric.The only other adjustment China has to make is a concession on the yuan.

The swap arrangements agreed to (who knows when) are effective December 5, 2011 and will extend for 15 months into 2013. Is there anyone that still thinks that Europe has no problem when its own banks show appetite only for USD. Is Europe out of the woods? Not necessarily. This morning, Mr. Cameron et al, are you listening, European unemployment is on a record rise with the exception of Germany, and that will reverse. Mrs Merkel will see a reversal within three months as less and less demand go her way, and more and more constraints are put on businesses.

Well, US President Obama, Fed Chair Bernanke and Secretary of the Treasury Geithner were there again and maybe someday, some inspired filmaker will find a decent moment to direct  real drama. Europe has been saved for a second time by the United States and its credible allies. Bank of China dropped its reserve requirements by 50 basis points in order to help trigger some activity on a slowing economy. This monetary easing was the first sign that November 30, 2011 was going to be a V-Day.

At this moment, there is little left that the Central Banks and Chair Bernanke can do on the monetary front. US Republicans should analyze their own pundits' results on job creation by President's Obama spending initiatives, and improve on the solutions by fine-tuning timing and sectoral interventions rather than dismiss the spending option. Most of all, they should stop battering the US Public Service. The constituents of that sector represent the most faithful spending segment of the consumer population.

Don't knock down the walls that hold back the oceans.

To the many, stay the course.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Mellow Yellow Monday; Black the Week

Today we'll experience a cover-the-shorts rally and from all indications, we might get a 200pt lift. That's the best this week will bring. By week's end, regardless of mixed signals from the US economy, the week's cumulative should be down by 250points. The USD will gain another notch, and European malaise will continue to batter the credibility of the Euro-Area. Best to short the Euro.

What can the IMF do? What are its sources of income? Should one chuckle. Not really; it's pathetic that most of the market forget that both the ECB and the IMF are recipients from donor sovereigns.

Not a week to enjoy!

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Is the Euro-Area Collapsing?

Over the last week, there are three significant Euro-Area activity figures that merit the market's consideration.

September's Eurozone's industrial production dropped from a previous August +1.3% to -1.9%
September's construction production dropped from a previous months -0.4% to -1.3%;
New Industrial Orders for the four largest populated economies-Germany, France, Italy and Spain all dropped significantly to -4.4%, -6.2%.-9.2% and -5.3% respectively. For the reverent, the United Kingdom NIO's dropped to -1.9%.

Well, shuttered factories are not privy only to the UK; they seem to be the prospect of industrial Europe, especially if one considers that levels of capacity utilization in manufacturing is slipping everywhere with the exception of an anomalous month in United Kingdom.

Evidently, once investors realize that the longer term confidence required to justify purchasing Eurobond securities is not justified by output figures from the region's business sector, then even if your brand name is Germany, and even if the rating agencies mark you tops,  it won't help keep yields down. Germany is as susceptible to being dumped as is Italy and its next candidate France which witnessed its yields increase, and its yield gaps widen against the German counterparts. There is no Immune Boutique in this Shopping Mall. There isn't any vote of confidence for Germany; rather it signals that investor concern is becoming pandemic within the Euro-Area and no sovereign, especially a non-sovereign issuer, is immune. But the contagion on the financial front is not as great a deterrent in our opinion as the rapid weakening and dampening of economic activity within the area. Germany can certainly pull out, or welcome the unstable members' exit, but it can't deter the oncoming economic slowdown that will devastate its own regional economies.

The ECB is a lame-duck if Mr. Draghi continues to endorse without challenge its constitutional mandate. Signor Draghi deve sospendere 'Price Stability',  which is a moot predicament at the moment, and with the help from two oversea friends, act to stabilize the yield curves. The New Normal advocated by financial and portfolio managers should not be higher unemployment and softer growth, it should be lower Returns on Investment. The structural adjustment required by the global economy in order to survive the extending contagion of below-quality investments is to realign investor expectations in view of  de-stabilized and riskier investment scenarios.

Obviously, this goes contrary to the grain of conventional investment lore: the riskier the target, the higher the yield! Unfortunately, when available resources are numbered, and quality contaminated, there's not much choice. You buy into the mess,praying for a cure, or seek quarantined shelters. Are there any? You run to gold? Does anyone care? To SF, Yen or some other resource-constrained sovereign? Price those economies out of the market and over time, the original predicament only changed hands.

What is becoming clearer is that there are only a few viable Backstops in this Global economy, and the Classic is the United States Treasury, with a little help from a friend.

To the United States Treasuries-of course, and at most probably quasi-zeros, or cash the portfolio. If the latter is the soundest judgement  of the wise and enlightened investors, then why wait for the storm; shelter yourselves now.

How will the markets end? Not with a tumble but a crumble. The EU will fall apart unless Draghi and some confreres show their stuff...change the discourse from financial narratives about controlling deficits and imposing guarantees to a discourse with fiscal narratives about job creation, stabilizing growth engines and stimulating aggregate demand. Mr. Draghi will need support from Mr. Bernanke and gang. He knows it and the United States know it.