mandag den 29. april 2013

Macro Digest: The US is heading to recession and the next non-big thing in economics

This chart I redid with inspiration from King's report this morning – interesting in nominal terms the US need minimum 4% growth to avoid recession each time we have been "here" we have entered recession as seen by my shading.

 

 

 

 

Furthermore each time we have seen a drop similar to that in Q1 GDP data from Friday's disposable income the US market have topped – the saving rate is now lowest since Q4-2007.

 

 

Conclusion:

 

I have said all along Q1 that the "real economy" is much weaker than the underlying economic data suggest and certainly considerably weaker than the survey data projects.

 

I have visited all of the world regions in Q1 including Latin America last week and we are in a significant slow-down even among hitherto strong economies: Poland, South Africa, Chile, Russia, Czech – All of them stand in front of massive challenges to keep their growth projection on course –and many of them also have to fight relative high inflation. Interesting times, where stock market valuation is totally separated from reality as they offer the "easy and cheap" way out of asset allocation.

 

Personally I remain over-weight in fixed income as we are entering a disinflation / deflation as the debt trap in Europe and US is combined with the Middle Income trap in Emerging markets. Where it leads stocks I don't know, but I know it will lead to higher deficit, more debt issuance and more daring economic experiments where politicians will have one dangerous final go at extending-and-pretending.

 

I think there is ample reason to keep the head cold and reduce equity risk into this April/May seasonal top – market betting on both FED and ECB to extend their monetary experiment and the concept of Modern Monetary Theory is gaining more and more tracktion despite it being nothing new but a restatement of elementary well-understood Keynesian macroeconomics oversimplifying the challenges of attaining non-inflationary full employment by ignoring dilemmas posed by the Phillips curve analysis; the dilemmas associated with maintaining real and financial sector stability; and the the dilemmas confronting open economies. (Source: Money, fiscal policy and interest rates: A critique of Modern Monetary Theory by Thomas I. Palley, January 2013) 

 

I sincerely recommend you to read the above piece as this concept is the new black for many people in the "more nonsense is needed" camp of the Keynesian's. Let me stress I am neither Keynesian or Monetarist – I am pragmatic – I do believe in ANY MACRO will help us out of this crisis, only rejecting macro, stopping intervention will bring market, employment and prices back to equilibrium – not pretend-and-extend squared – not believing we did too little in the first place – Reality is an ugly word for the market and the always non-accountable central bankers, policy makers and often non-elected EU officials. This is a crisis of the mind – a lack of diversity – and a lack of common sense. It's should be about the micro-economy – the ability of mankind to deal with crisis (which is big)) and to react positively, but as long as we keep the patient of life-support and a believe in easy money nothing will change.

 

I find it telling that when I meet CEO's and business leaders around the world – they are all holding back in investment in their own company (buying back their own stocks instead of investing), but meanwhile privately they are willing to buy a third persons stock. We need things to be the other way around, but it just shows you how misconstrued the financial markets have become.

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen

 

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

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torsdag den 18. april 2013

FED in 1940s

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April week 14-19: Gold collapse, DAX fell and TIPS fell.

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EU working on not only "Cyprus template" but also bank stability fund

 

 

Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported this weekend on an internal European Commission strategy paper indicating that the EU's internal market commissioner, Michel Barnier, is preparing a law that would tap bank investors and account holders in the future before any aid would be provide by the permanent euro bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). The proposal establishes a hierarchy for who would be hit first when liquidating a bank: shareholders and creditors first and then depositors with more than €100,000 in their accounts. A bank stability fund that each EU country is now being called on to establish would also be tapped. ESM would then only participate in a bailout as a last resort. The EU legislation is expected in June.

 

Source: http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/cyprus-mulls-giving-russian-investors-citizenship-a-894409.html

 

The original story from Süddeutsche.de: Reiche Sparer sollen bei Banken-Pleiten haften

 

Comment:

 

The naïve hope that Cyprus was not a template is being exposed. EU is working on making "template" which fits the Cyprus modus operandi pretty well, but also note this line in the text: "A bank stability fund that each EU country is now being called on to establish would also be tapped"

 

This smells of what I written extensively about: A Swedish bank model – financed by tax on AUM  (AUM taxes already in place in Italy & Spain although small in size).

 

Citigroup's estimate for funds needed to "save Europe" is 3.000 billion EURO – but as this is politicians they would want to mix out-of-balance-sheet guarantees with the usual promises to do more. I expect a 3-5% upfront "tax" where we are all given shares in the "TFFBOIPM fund" (The Fund For Bailing Out Idiotic Policy Makers)

 

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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onsdag den 17. april 2013

Fixed income and ECB's say: All fine - The rest of our indicators screams: Be careful out there!

This week's  Stress Indicators include a few new charts, but also some which have become redundant:

 

The 10 Year spread between France and Germany have totally lost value. The ECB and French government is forcing domestic players in France to buy government bonds due to regulation and pro-government incentive structures.

 

France and Netherland are two economically challenged countries in the core of Europe which continues to perform Dirigisme instead of attending to reforms.

 

 

I have changed Denmark 5 YR CDS for Slovenia in order to monitor its rise to the "next big thing" in Euro debt crisis. Today the CDS spread fell due to good bond auction.

 

 

Meanwhile Europe's depositors – mainly in the weak Club Med(Greece+ Portugal) continues to take money out of the country – even increasing the speed with which they do it – sure Mr. Draghi – ECB has been a great success……(The shown data is only including January as IMF data is as slow as their willingness to accept changes…Imagine when March and April data is in?)

 

 

In Saxo Bank we believe the banking sector leads- hence it is with some concern we note JPMorgan continues to trade weak vs. its long-term averages. The hero of Wall Street Dimon seems to have lost some love?

 

Finally, I have added Copper (1st future) – which is said to have a Phd in Economics as its normally "leads" the direction of the growth – again – Not good news:

 

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

Dr. Copper with a Phd in Economics... making new lows

Copper is often seen as “key” indicator of global growth – unfortunately it just took out recent lows.

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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DAX turning down again...

 

Too many rumors this morning – now its trailing back lower – the technical picture pretty ugly:

 

Note long-term broken early April – followed now by test of sideways to lower channel a break would be bad for risk. The price of the high EURO and the lack of global growth seems the be hitting where it should: Europe’s biggest export economy, so in short this is like Gold a move towards reality and as I like to say: Reality is a place the market fear more than anything, but which Main Street is hungering for – Keep very close eye on the 7550 level on close tonight.

 

 

 

 

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tirsdag den 16. april 2013

Steen's Chronicle: Did gold give us a sneak peek at market reality?

Did gold give us a sneak peek at market reality?

We should feel sorrow, but not sink under its oppression – Confucius

Online version:  http://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/gold-give-us-sneak-peek-market-reality-1291245365

I feel bad having to write about something as unimportant as the macro outlook a day after several families lost a loved one and more than 100 people were seriously injured by the explosions in Boston. My thoughts go out to everyone in the US and I hope the people behind this outrageous crime are caught very soon.

In the dreamland of macro, things came to an abrupt stop yesterday when gold suffered one of its largest sell-offs in history - the absolute largest two-day sell-off, in fact, in nominal terms and the fifth-largest percentage-wise:

It's easy to ooh and aah and put up a table like the one above - but interpreting the move's implications is perhaps not so straightforward. Is it the beginning of the end of extend-and-pretend, a mere warning signal, or is it actually a great opportunity to put on more risk? Clearly the early lead is taking by BTFD (I leave you to Google the admittedly impolite, but also very apt origin of that term if you don't know it already...)

It's always dangerous to draw conclusions too soon and on too little data, but this move clearly didn't come out of nowhere.

Source: Mr. E

The reasons on offer for this crushing sell-off range from forced selling by Cyprus to the anticipation of the Fed tapering its quantitative easing in the US. But if we look back, the gold rally began stalling at least 18 months ago! This is hardly a new paradigm. Actually, what could and should concern the Masters of Money Printing, aka the central bank policymakers, is that despite a historic amount of printing money, inflation is falling again and its momentum is pointing towards disinflation and even deflation rather than reflation. No easy way out for central banks, it seems. They wanted inflation, but are risking the opposite as they failed to understand economics and, more importantly, the microeconomy.

A central banker's worst nightmare will always be deflation because it makes debt more expensive and means investors will spend less. Don't forget that 95 percent of all economists are trained to think only in terms of AGGREGATE DEMAND - expecting that aggregate supply will simply follow the lead from demand. If you tell them it does not work, they not only get upset but also anxious as it means all the theories and models they busy themselves with at their day job simply don't have two legs to stand on. Do not mention the microeconomy or The Individual to policymakers. They have never met a person from Main Street in their life - no, for them it's in and out of a meetings and cocktail parties with fellow policymakers and politicians; it's a bubble world that is hermetically sealed from the real consequences of their wrong decisions. 

My advice? We need to revisit Say's Law: "Supply creates its own demand." If for nothing else because during the Great Depression, the Keynesian school refuted Say's conclusion. A classic battle between what works and what does not!

Say's formulation

In Say's language, "products are paid for with products" (1803: p153) or "a glut can take place only when there are too many means of production applied to one kind of product and not enough to another" (1803: p178-9). Or "the supply creates its own demand". Explaining his point at length, he wrote:

"It is worthwhile to remark that a product is no sooner created than it, from that instant, affords a market for other products to the full extent of its own value. When the producer has put the finishing hand to his product, he is most anxious to sell it immediately, lest its value should diminish in his hands. Nor is he less anxious to dispose of the money he may get for it; for the value of money is also perishable. But the only way of getting rid of money is in the purchase of some product or other. Thus the mere circumstance of creation of one product immediately opens a vent for other products. (J.B. Say, 1803: p138–9)[4]

Look at the definition of business cycles and what drives people. Think about Microsoft - did they sit around and look at aggregate demand? No, they created a product without a demand and hence created more demand for other products. Voila! New products meant new jobs!  Heaven forbid! 

In the current market, everything is about printing money. Japan is fighting hard with the US and, from July onwards, the UK (upon Carney's arrival) to become the world leader in printing money.

Currency manipulation, currency manipulation, currency manipulation

I'm no diplomat, but printing money to offset relative external prices is currency manipulation in my book. Japan has less of a chance of reaching 2 percent inflation than I have of being selected to play for Denmark at the next FIFA World Cup. If - and I will not be - am wrong, then inflation will kill what's left of Japan. Imagine financing a debt to GDP of 240 percent at a 3 percent interest rate, when it can barely manage the interest payments on 0.5 percent.  

USDJPY could go higher - but the main point is that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has his eyes on the Japanese House of Councillors elections in July, so the peak "politically" will be around July. After July, Abe will tone down the rhetoric, using what is probably a handsome majority to do so. 

The open manipulators of FX in my book are:

Switzerland, Japan and China (and their cohorts), while the rest are desperate to tag along and do the same. The irony should not be lost: When everyone is printing money and manipulating, we all end up back at square one having wasted time and resources on creating absolutely nothing.

World growth will be lower than in 2012 and significantly so.

The Emerging Market (EM) business model is one generation old and needs a change (like any other 34 year old!)

China's big economic experiment started in 1979 - yes the same year that Margaret Thatcher was voted into office (funeral tomorrow; she was the last of the EU politicians with a vision) - but it now needs changing. All of EM Asia needs two main things:

1.    Less corruption: Which is only achieved through increased competition. It will happen, but not without a fight first;

2.    Less savings: Lack of a social safety net and financial repression makes Chinese and Asians save too much - behaviour won't change until this is changed. 

The response from these economies has been to pump more credit into the economy or ease, but this is now failing. China and Asia need 2.5 to 3 units of credit for every unit of output. (The US uses 5 USD of credit for 1 USD of output) - and in the EMs, or "easy money land", inflation has become an issue. Below is my BRICs inflation (simple average of Brazil, Russia, India and China inflation levels). Clearly the BRICs, EM's in general and most of "new economies" are caught between the need for easing and potential runaway inflation. Bad luck. The only remedy is like in Europe and the US in the form of real reform. Create competition and social security and we will see the next growth path for EM, BRICs and Asia but for now they are all "buying time" - the new and already outdated panacea.

BRICs Inflation

 

EM has been seriously underperforming (The MSCI EM Index is the white line below):

 

So don't look for help on the global growth front from BRICs or EMs more generally. QE and the printing press is proving impotent. Growth is falling. Employment isn't improving and is even rising in many places. Politically, we have stalemates everywhere. Central banks are providing just enough painkillers to delay the will for reform, or perhaps better said, the crisis that creates a mandate for change. We will see more hair-cuts and templates in Europe. These are the facts, as is the current "climbing the wall of worry" - I love that argument as it's totally circular. It's an ex-ante argument. It explains nothing except what has happened, but let's stay with the premise. The market is stronger than the economy. 

How so? Only through paying higher multiples in stocks, for instance, paying more for each profit dollar. I happen to think the "real way" we make money in the market is to extract the liquidity premium of assets. The more illiquid, the more upside. Endowment and risk-parity portfolios teach us that. In today's market, there is hardly any difference in liquidity premium across all asset classes. All have the same the low-spread values or high valuations. The carpet bombing of liquidity has created a totally surreal and artificial price discovery in which everything is possible - yes, even me joining Denmark in the next World Cup.

The answer to my first question will have to be: Dependence. If gold's move was the start of a move back towards reality and fundamentals, then yes, it's the beginning of the end. But if this was merely another "blip" - and it seems that way with FED Governor Dudley on the wire this pm announcing: Don't worry. Ben, Janet and I will print more money because it has worked so well (for my 401K!).

No, the market is not ready for a move to reality - the one thing it fears more than anything else.

Finally, it's comforting to see how people in the US react with grace and help to the victims and families in Boston - herein lies our hope: We are strongest in times of adversity

Steen Jakobsen

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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mandag den 15. april 2013


Using Long Term Bonds To Improve Returns Of Bridgewater's All Weather Risk Parity Portfolio

Apr 7 2013, 07:27  |  includes: AGG, BND, DBC, DVY, EMB, FVD, GLD, GSG, HYG, IAU, JNK, LTPZ, PCY, SLV, SPY, TIP, TLT,VGLT, VIG, VTI, VYM

Disclosure: I am long TLT, SPY, GLD. (More...)

In our previous article, we constructed an all weather risk parity portfolio using intermediate term bonds (AGG, BND) and inflation protected bonds (TIP). The idea is based on the all weather portfolio concept proposed by Ray Dalio's Bridgewater, one of the most successful hedge funds.

To recap the previous work:

The allocations of the previous Bridgewater All Weather Portfolio are as follows:

 

Growth +

Growth -

Inflation +

Inflation -

Total

Fund

Equities

6.25%

 

 

12.50%

18.75%

VTSMX

EM Debt Spreads

6.25%

 

8.33%

 

14.58%

PEBIX

Commodities

6.25%

 

8.33%

 

14.58%

GLD

Corporate Spreads

6.25%

 

 

 

6.25%

VWEHX

Nominal Bonds

 

12.50%

 

12.50%

25.00%

VBMFX

TIPS

 

12.50%

8.33%

 

20.83%

VIPSX

 

 

 

 

 

100.00%

 

The percentages were derived based on equal spreads on the four corners of economic cycles. However, in Bridgewater's original presentation, the all weather portfolio should allocation 25% risk to each corner, instead of just simply the actual portfolio allocation.

In this article, we use long bonds instead of intermediate term bonds to increase durations while still maintaining the risk parity. The purpose is to see whether this can improve returns while still managing the risk in an acceptable level.

The following table shows the actual allocations once we replace intermediate term bond fund (VBMFX or AGG or BND) with a long term Treasury bond fund (VUSTX or TLT), and intermediate term inflation protected bond fund (VIPSX or TIP) with PIMCO long term inflation protected bond ETF (LTPZ). It again uses 10 year standard deviation of a fund as its risk and solve a linear equation based on each fund's target risk allocation:

 

Tgt Risk Allocation

Fund

Std Dev (Risk)

Actual Allocation %

Equities

18.75%

VTI(SPY)

0.16

12.53%

EM Debt Spreads

14.58%

EMB (PCY)

0.06

24.68%

Commodities

14.58%

GLD (IAU,SLV,DBC)

0.19

8.23%

Corporate Spreads

6.25%

JNK(HYG)

0.06

10.41%

Nominal Bonds

25.00%

VUSTX (TLT,VGLT)

0.13

20.65%

TIPS

20.83%

LTPZ (TIP,LTPZ)

0.09

23.5%

 

 

Total Risk

9.53

100.00%

Comparing with the portfolio Bridgewater All Weather Portfolio With Risk Parity with this current one Bridgewater All Weather ETF Portfolio Long Bonds Risk Parity, we noticed that

·         No bond assets (Equities, Commodities) is increased from 11.07% to 20.76%.

·         Nominal bonds and TIPs are reduced from 65.07% to 44.16%.

·         Emerging market debts is increased from 14.8% to 24.68%, a big increase due to the reduction of bonds and TIPs.

The performance comparison:

Portfolio Performance Comparison (as of 4/4/2013)

 

 

Ticker/Portfolio Name

1 Week
Return*

YTD
Return**

1Yr AR

1Yr Sharpe

3Yr AR

3Yr Sharpe

5Yr AR

5Yr Sharpe

10Yr AR

10Yr Sharpe

Bridgewater All Weather ETF Portfolio Long Bonds Risk Parity

0.8%

0.2%

10.0%

2.31

12.8%

2.12

 

 

 

 

Bridgewater All Weather Portfolio

-0.3%

0.4%

3.8%

1.15

8.5%

1.81

7.0%

1.09

8.8%

136.1%

Bridgewater All Weather Portfolio Risk Parity

0.2%

0.1%

5.8%

2.58

7.9%

2.5

6.8%

1.54

7.2%

152.1%

VBINX

-0.1%

5.7%

9.3%

1.31

9.6%

0.93

5.9%

0.41

7.8%

54.4%

AR: Annualized Return

*: NOT annualized

**YTD: Year to Date

The relative short back testing history of the portfolio is due to the short history of LTPZ.

More detailed year by year comparison >>

(click to enlarge)

The 1 and 3 year annualized returns are improved dramatically while the Sharpe ratio is slightly lower than that of the previous Bridgewater All Weather Portfolio Risk Parity. The portfolio also out performed the standard 60% stock/40% bond Vanguard balanced index fund (VBINX). Furthermore, its Sharpe ratio is almost double over that of VBINX.

Note that since our previous two articles published on SeekingAlpha.com, we have received several comments. We would like to answer them here:

·         Why Gold (GLD or IAU)? Answer: there is no specific purpose to use Gold or a broad base commodity index fund such as DBC or GSG. In our 1st. article, the reason using GLD is really because GLD has relatively long price history so that we can get a longer back testing period.

·         Why so much emerging market debt? Answer: emerging market bonds are now tightly coupled with global inflation, growth and US dollar (weakness). However, we see no reason that an investor can eliminate or reduce this portion of exposure (while increasing other parts to maintain the same risk exposure in the Rising Growth and Rising Inflation corners).

·         How about using dividend paying equities (DVY, VIG, VYM, SDV, FVD) instead? Answer: we believe this is a good idea. Again, equity allocation will be increased if one were to use dividend paying ETFs instead as they generally have less risk thus its allocation will need to increase to maintain the overall equity allocation.

To summarize, it is possible to improve a risk parity portfolio's return by extending bonds' durations.

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Economist

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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