torsdag den 30. januar 2014

Macro Digest: Russia a catalyst for EM and global troubles

Russia a catalyst for EM and global troubles

 EM crisis unlikely to go away
 Devaluation worries gather momentum
 Hike in interest rates a disease

By Steen Jakobsen

Taking an express train to St Petersburg, I have just left behind Moscow and its minus 20-degree Celsius temperature. Russia is very much a part of emerging markets (EM) and, more importantly, one of the countries that is fast losing its economic momentum due to a lack of reform. As long as this is the case, the EM crisis is not going to go away. If anything, it will probably get worse before markets and currencies across EM find a new and probably much lower equilibrium?

Policy makers, sovereign governments and their not-so-independent central banks in EM are all seeking a rebalancing, which for the current account deficit countries (Fragile Five + Russia) means lower currencies to take a short-cut to more competitiveness. The problem with this approach is that there are no such short cuts, as these countries all failed to use their high-growth period to invest in long-term capital formation. Instead, they invited "franchise" capital during the boom years with open arms. Think burger joints, quick solutions and fast profits. But nowhere did this franchise model include increasing domestic competition and opening up. This now means that corruption and the misallocation of capital have accumulated for some countries over a full decade since the Berlin Wall came down 25 years ago. Time is simply running out.

Furthermore, this game of buying a "tail-wind" or short-term support for your economy by seeking lower currency rates removes all incentives to own EM at all. I recently discussed this subject and a related paper, written by my friend Jeppe Ladekarl and his colleague Edgar E. Peters in my last Steen's Chronicle. My argument (theirs, indirectly) goes like this:

EM central banks and governments are now pursuing lower growth and weaker currencies to slow imports and increase exports, but by doing this they "penalise" EM investors, who will want to run for cover. EM investors , if invested in EM equities, makes 70 percent of the return through FX revaluation, and if in EM bonds, almost 100 percent of the returns are attributed to exchange rate changes. So when policy makers signal they will allow weaker currencies forward, then by definition the last place you want to invest is in EM. Voilà, the perfect vicious circle has been created.

Now, over the last few days, a degree of panic has ensued. The momentum of the devaluation is picking up and rates such as USD/RUB are almost as high as they were during the peak of the global financial crisis. The same applies to Turkey, Indonesia and South Africa. Their response?  Higher short-term interest rates, which of course hurt their bonds, their equity markets and, ultimately, also their currencies. The market has largely shrugged of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey's recent interest rate hike, and the same goes for the South African Reserve Bank's attempt to use rate hikes to restore some semblance of order. These macro solutions will increase the tensions as the hike in rates is a disease we have seen before: the 1992 ERM crisis and the 1997/98 Asian and Russian crisis. If you can't recall those days, please realise that during the ERM crisis in 1992, the Swedish kroner overnight rates went to 10.00 percent. Did that stop them from devaluing? Not at all! If anything, panic short-term money market hikes are a sign of weakness, not strength, and play into the hands of investors who are shorting EM.

Does this mean doom and gloom are coming ? Not necessarily. What we should realise is that this is the third wave of this crisis: the first wave was the US housing and bank crisis. This was followed by the crisis in European debt, and then we arrived, full circle to Asia and EM overall. As we move through these stages some assets get " burned", some merely survive while others thrive. Commodities, one of the traditional growth indicators, peaked in 2010/11, fixed-income finally tired in late 2012 and crashed and burned in 2013. Now, 2014 looks like a case of "sick" equities, which may begin to struggle from here and hit a secular low Q4-2014 or Q1-2015. Bonds, meanwhile, could have one last hurrah, with new lows in yields in the second half of 2014.

The conclusion here is that we have just started the final move in this crisis. However, the good news is the word "final" — the crisis for EM, Europe, the US and certainly Russia will create the necessary mandate for change. It seems we can only make the real changes when the previous paradigm has totally failed and we are in a moment of crisis. And globally, we have failed and are finally discovering that fact through this final crisis phase, not only in Russia or EM, but everywhere as we have failed with our macro policy mistakes to promote the real engine of the economy: the micro economy of small and medium enterprises.


The Berlin Wall came down 25 years ago this year. Alexia Bannister / iStock

This is happening in the 25th anniversary year of the Berlin Wall coming down. In the late summer of 1989 we were celebrating that market-based economies had won the battle with the planned economies. Isn't it ironic that if we 
fast-forward to today, we see the current dire need to break another wall down — the wall of bad central macro planning by central banks and sympathetic governments. We need to "go micro", from big business to small business, from the state to individuals, and from state and central bank intervention to market-based pricing.

Russia is our catalyst. I remain a bull on Russia but only if we get a crisis. It looks as though that crisis is now almost guaranteed by the inaction and the lack of accountability of the world policy makers.

It may be a sign that the sun has just broken through the clouds as we pulled into St. Petersburg, it's still minus-20 celsius outside, but this is easier to bear when the sun is shining.

Safe travels.

Steen

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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mandag den 27. januar 2014

EM return - all FX ... Research paper

Following up from today Steen's Chronicle: http://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/fear-perfection-ll-never-reach-153674370 with commentary on among other things: Emerging markets return profile.

 

My friend Jeppe Ladekarl and his colleague Edgar Peters have done an excellent paper on the data – the conclusion still stands – depending on the asset class the return is mostly FX revaluations: In ELMI it's close to 100% and in MSCI its near 70% -

 

Conclusion world is full of smart managers on equity and fixed income, but their return is mainly in a class they don't cover, hedge, or even have a view on: Foreign exchange. Getting to understand why Fragile Five, BRIC and Latam currencies will have an impact?

 

http://www.firstquadrant.com/downloads/2013_Fall_JOI_FirstQuadrant.pdf

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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Steen's Chronicle: Have no fear of perfection - You will never reach it (Salvador Dali)

 

Investment research is ill equipped to deal with the present macro themes as most research is Fed, ECB, BOE and BOJ centric. We live in a world where 60% of all growth comes from Asia, but very people research or even travel to Asia or Latin America, but that never stops anyone from having a view J - A view which is in my opinion often superficial and ignores the big fundamental changes going on with the business models all over Asia. There is now in Asia a need for "a mini crisis" to create a mandate for changing things around. In China it's about the shadow economy, the bubble in the housing market and pollution. In rest of Asia it's about financing current account deficits, the needs for new reform to reach next level in the economic evolution, and finally its election year in many populous countries (India, Indonesia, South Africa, Brazil=???)

 

I noticed on my last trip November 2013 to Singapore, Hong Kong and Indonesia that something significantly had changed: There was a sense of urgency, a realization and finally an embracement of the fact that the Asian business model of being production hub to the world was under pressure. Salary increase, lower export volume, rising import costs, and falling producer prices have tested margins at companies and as seen in the recent flurry of "bad deals" in China managed products the credit cycle have turned into the nasty mode where failures, intervention and crisis management are a every exercise.

 

This crisis runs considerably deeper and have bigger impact than most people realize. Asia slowing down means 60% of world growth is under pressure. (China: 36%, Asia excl. Japan & China: 24% in 2012 data). Asia continues to export deflation, and the export companies in Europe and the US will soon find that not only is their margins coming down, but so is their volume. Asia overinvestment had high degree of OECD countries products in them, now…….less is coming through as Asia and China readjust their model towards what will be the next leg, where the next 5-10 years sees Asia growing 3-5% from 7-10% and China moves to 5% sustainable growth from 10% few years ago.

 

This crisis started with the Fragile Five, got more momentum from Argentina and Latam, and now it also includes Eastern Europe. Rubble is almost as weak as during the financial crisis:

 

 

Source: Bloomberg LLP

 

Russia which have gotten use to do "things their own way" is increasingly getting to a point where the dependence on the rest of world, and certainly global growth is more and more important. Energy is 50% of Russian revenue and 25-30% of GDP. Growth in Russia is almost perfectly correlated with the development of the oil prices:

 

Meanwhile rumors persist about a potential devaluation of the Rubble, which is denied by Putin and the central bank: Putin denies devaluation and Russian PMI have entered contraction:

 

 

The point is that this "Argentinian story" is really most of the growth engines in the world, less than one week ago you couldn't open a newspaper or tv without getting told that market was great, recovery, higher growth, IMF and World Bank even increased their growth forecasts, all ignoring probably the most central catalyst there is in any markets: The FX rate.

 

Currencies are always leading not lagging in reaction, this due to higher liquidity and 24 hours trading, and more to the point in EMG. Let's face it EMG returns are almost exclusively driven by FX rates adjustments. Several studies point out that EMG FX translates to more than 100% of performance, meaning investing in stocks and bonds have NET negative accumulated return. Or put more directly: EMG as a theme is not about the local economies, or even investors believe in the countries, no, it's about FX rates reflecting interest rate and inflation differentials, and now these same indicators are telling you: No excess return here – go somewhere else. We have gone full circle. Chasing the yields, will change to capital preservation if this continues. That however is good news. Imagine we start trading on fundamentals and not expected printing of money?

 

For investors interested in correlations, volatility and EMG Robco Fund Management in April 2013 did great white paper called: The volatility effect in emerging markets The conclusion reads: Specifically, a monthly rebalanced top-minus-bottom quintile hedge portfolio based on the past three years volatility exhibits a negative raw return spread of -4.4 percent per annum over our 1989-2010 sample period. Adjusted for differences in market beta, this amounts to a statistically significant negative alpha spread of -8.8 percent. The alpha spread remains large and significant after also controlling for size, value and momentum effects. In line with other studies on the volatility effect, we observe that the negative alpha of the most volatile stocks is greater than the positive alpha of the least volatile stocks. 

 

We started the year with markets being priced to perfection. Perfection does not happen very often unfortunately, what 2014 will be however, is a year where volatility will increase across the board, the world economy, its capital flow and investors are looking for a new equilibrium – as George Soros says in his book on reflextivity: The market is never in a static equilibrium, it always going to a new clearing price. The illusion we had over the last three to four years was that we indeed had found a static not dynamic equilibrium – meaning finding the next better eqiulibrium will take a lot of trial and error's but like in Asia crisis in late part 1980s, the ERM crisis in 1992 and financial crisis 2008, it will be worth it as we need to find new model for world growth otherwise we doomed to fail in creating enough growth to keep everyone happy, at the end of the day the closest thing we get to perfection when we deal with crisis'.

 

MARKET POSITIONS:

 

Fixed Income

 

My models still very skeptical of higher fixed income prices (lower yield). The move is extended and I'm still looking to sell. My good friend Mr. E points out we have some seasonal weakness in US fixed income over the next month, but I am flat from long in fixed income, but looking for the sell.

 

Commodities

 

Natural gas:  bought some deep of the money puts. Weather continues to indicate "deep freeze" but this move is now overdone even under present forecasts: Another Artic blast on the way & next 10 days for Washington(-6/+7 Celsium from Friday…)

 

Brent: Went long this morning @ 107.50  (stop: 105.00). WTI and Brent trades in very clear mean-reversion channel right now:

 

 

Gold: Still long some of the money Gold Puts (based on the higher yield my models indicate)

 

Stock market:

 

IBEX50 still short…

S&P: Short one unit on model

 

FX:

 

GBPUSD: Sold option this week. Neutral

EURUSD: Still long….

AUDUSD: Took big profit on multi-week play.

USDMXN: Took profit – neutral

USDTRY: Sold option back.

 

Performance Index: 105.00

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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fredag den 24. januar 2014

Steen's Chronicle: Latam blowing up? - UPDATE on trading and week -

Steen's Chronicle - UPDATE -

Normally I would only update on Sunday for coming week, but with Argentina under severe pressure and fixed income going exactly opposite of my expectations when I wrote the last piece here is quick update:

ü  IMF and World Bank increasing growth forecast looks to be the best INVERSE indicator.

ü  Argentina has been in free fall

ü  China PMI came in below 50 (confirming my main story of Asia slow-down ==> global growth down)

ü  UK policy makers are now busy ( BOE's Carney and government) "phasing out" forward guidance even before it really got started.

This leaves my medium- and long-term model in place: Asia is secular slowing down and more than consensus.

The "sugar high" of policy makers is not creating any higher interest rates. It's as always like going to Church on Sundays praying the weather will improve on Monday.Furthermore our USDJPY down-side and EURUSD upside is now starting to work. USDJPY needs to break 102.80 (where it trades right now) to retest 100.80/101.00 the 100 MA. Market is increasingly reminding me of 1997/98 in JPY. I am yet to meet a single investor who does not think USDJPY goes higher. The only question is how high?

SaxoTV did interview with me on USDJPY positioning the other day:  The overpositioning of USDJPY

Some headline and charts on Argentina and LATAM:

http://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/macro-alert-latam-risk-only-concern-driving-ars-1612253273

IBEX hurting from sell off in Argentina and LATAM

 

Insurance - CDS 5 yr - for Argentina cost 24% p.a!!!!

Conclusion:

FX:                  Model are SOFT the US dollar - model is going short USDJPY, long GBPUSD and EURUSD. Long USD EMG

FI:                    Failed to signal correctly, but... still too expensive. Take profit - and await - new impulse.. Still see fixed income lower in correction mode before data disappoint and reality about growth comes back.

EQ:                  The short IBEX working nicely - now also forced to sell S&P on model break down.

Commodity:    Short COPPER - major trend break-down. Still short GOLD (but remember weekly and monthly trend this year will be up.  Short Natural Gas - weather should warm up over the weekend in the US.

Performance Index: 110

Safe travel and weekend

Steen

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
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MACRO ALERT: LATAM risk sharply off - Spain also casualty...

MACRO ALERT:

LATAM risk is not only concern driving ARS - Argentina pesos down hard, now IBEX50 is also a casualty due to the bank exposure....... the BRICS & Fragile Five currencies all under pressure and there is downside growth from this.......and that in the week IMF and World Bank increased their growth forecast for world in 2014! Talk about inverse indicator!

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-24/argentina-seen-extending-world-s-biggest-currency-decline.html

 



I am small long USDMXN and USDZAR on this...

 

ARGENTINA CDS – trading @ 2400 handle… or 24% p.a to insure per year against default.

 

 

USD/ARS up 20% this year to date and ACCELERATING….

 

 

 

Spain – one of the best performing markets in 2013 is hurt from bank exposure to Argentina and Latam overall…..

 

 

AND remarkable "real life" impact.. Samsung Galaxy price same day… from 8000 to 11500 ARS!

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
material in this email is strictly prohibited.

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torsdag den 23. januar 2014

Macro Digest: No stress to be seen in Saxo's Stress Indicators, but higher yields coming?

By Steen Jakobsen

It is no secret that my biggest trade for 2014 is significantly lower growth going into the second half of the year, by which time Asia will have adjusted growth down by 100-200 bps to help rebalance local economies. This will hurt the export machines in Europe and in the S&P 500, but, after a nice run in late 2013 and early 2014 being long fixed income (Bunds, Denmark and IEF) my model is now calling for a correction higher in interest rates.

The narrative is fairly easy to establish:

  • Overconfident central banks and policymakers on growth for 2014 (the IMF and World Bank both increased growth forecasts last week).
  • A technical pattern clearly showing the need for a 200-300 bps correction in the US and Europe.
  • Global central policies are now at a junction, where the Bank of England (BoE) plus maybe the US will hike rates in 2014, while the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and the European Central Bank (ECB) looks almost certain to do more on downside in yields. Hedge fund Tudor Investment explored this subject yesterday morning in a research piece.

The market is priced for perfection. A slow, gradual telegraphed exit in the US, a slower-than-usual policy response from the BoE as governor Mark Carney is seen as a dove and in Europe, if needed, the ECB will do not less. The odd one out is the BOJ, where results are starting to reverse on Abenomics even before the April VAT hike, which will kill whatever growth there is created from the world's biggest monetary experiment.


Japan's economy is already running out of steam ahead of a VAT-rate hike in April. Photo: antb \ Shutterstock.com


The Stress Indicators are almost entirely trading HIGH on risk and LOW on credit spreads. It's hard to remember a more perfect pricing expectation scenario, except maybe for the "strange" resignation of co-chief investment officer Mohamed El-Erian today from the world's biggest fund manager Pimco El-Erian.

Is this one of those signs you should take not off? Is this a bullish or bearish sign for bonds? Most probably it is positive for fixed-income prices (lower yields) overall.

US YIELD CURVE starting to price in earlier Fed exit?

 

Comment: There will be a price to pay for the significantly higher US real rates. Our model operates with a 12 to 18-month lag, meaning the period from May to August should see dramatic growth and activity slowdown. Real rates are up 150 bps since April, measured as 10-year US generic rates minus deflator (the only real inflation gauge).

Comment: There is a small paradox — the higher US rates should in normal conditions have sent EURUSD into the lows, instead it trades on the high — why? Think "deflation risk". Europe has a more than 50:50 chance of deflation, while the US is 25:75 against. A currency with weak inflation SHALL increase in value.

Comment: Being a simple man, I use AUD versus JPY as my ultimate risk indicator. AUD is due to growth, commodities and China. JPY is due to cheap funding, manipulation and carry. It's been going absolutely nowhere or, perhaps more correctly sideways since August 2013, indicating that stock and risk are going up on chasing returns.

Comment: The target for my correction is probably a test of the high channel in 30-year US rates based on hope, feel good and naivety on 2014... It's January; everything can happen! 

 

 Comment: The stock market remains bullish and since October 2012, has traded almost without any corrections.

Comment: Finally, Mads Koefoed, Saxo Bank's Head of Macro Strategy, and Peter Garnry, Saxo's Head of Equity Strategy, use simple, yet useful models on "fair value" that indicate we are "at fair value" and that the expected return in the next six months is 0-10 percent.

Conclusion: There is a high chance that the next three to five weeks will see policymakers and central banks increase their hawkish rhetoric. I still see a very weak second half for 2014, but I am playing higher rates in this environment after a nice profit being long fixed income.

The risk is that both confidence and valuation are stretched in equities, setting off the much-needed 10 to 20 percent correction.

Safe travels,

Steen

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
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tirsdag den 21. januar 2014

Steens Chronicle: New beginnings....

I can't say I am big fan of New Year and starting over but It's part of life and more importantly the investment cycle, by January 1st everyone is rested, they have all done a lot of reading and the forecasters are working overdrive (including me), but the best advice on January ever given was given by my old boss on Chase Propriataty desk: "Steen, never ever do any trades in the first two weeks of January and ignore all the forecasts...". Now two week have pasted so where are we in Steen-Land?

We have two major trends and two major potential upsets:

  • Asia slow-down and how it makes deflation and lower yields my central strategy
  • Deflation - the misunderstood economic realit
  • Positive surprise: ECB put on stock market and economy
  • Negative surprise: The EU election in May - things are about to get nasty

The two by two will be my first Chronicle this year, but as something new they will have a fifth point: Trading allocation. When I travel I am often told: "Love your newsletters, but... we don't really feel there is enough "trades" and accountability in them" - never one to shy away from challanges I have decided to add my internal trades to my research. All of these trades are done live, with a small amount of capital provided by Saxo Bank - so real time accountability and input.......

Asia slow-down

China is actively pursuing a strategy of lower growth as reducing the shadow economy now takes centre stage, on top of this most of Asia, certainly the current account deficit nations are all looking for weaker currencies, lower import and yes, lower growth.

US and European growth from 2009-2013 was artificially kept higher than business cycle would dictate by overinvestment by Asia. China did almost 600 bln. US of fiscal expansion in autumn of 2008 (ahead of S&P low in March 2009 @ 666.00) - and those investment came back to US and Europe through rising export orders. Now the risk is that to normalise investment to GDP ratio's in Asia a by product will be lower inflation and lower export volume for the high flying export companies of the world:

HSBC Global Research, 6 December 2013 piece: 'Lacking demand' have two great charts to illustrate this point - through looking at the GDP growth and the Investment-to-GDP ratio. Good growth is linear correlation indicating investment return is positve and creating growth. Bad growth is rising Investment to GDP ratio while growth trails.... 

The gap opening up means growth now is falling due to falling investment return. The "easy" part of Asia growth is now done. Don't forget Japan grew approximately 10% pro annum in 1960/70s, 4-5% in 1970s/1980s, and close to nothing in 1990s/2000s. I am in no way saying that Asia will evolve like Japan, but growth will come down as like for like growth gets tougher due to high investment levels and still imperfect allocations models (read: plan economies).

It's also important to note that this change is not something new. The trend has been in place for a few years, and this is in my opinion behind not only the slower growth in the world but also now the deflation risk. HSBC here shows how growth and investment to GDP have change pre-crisis vs. post-crisis. Stunning results!

China have worst of all: Falling growth and rising investment - not difficult to see why they want to slow-down! Similarly with India. China and India will provide much less input to world growth from here and a country like Indonesia is now having real tough outlook with falling growth and investments! No wonder IDR has been one of weakest currencies last six months.

In 2012 world growth was 4.0% - 36% of this came from China direct, and another 24% came from rest of Asia, so a significantly slower Asia will start to hurt Europe and the US exporters as we go into H2 of 2014!

Deflation

Barclays have estimated the chances of European deflation as 50/50 chance using inflation linked products, but being more subjective I will say that next three to six month almost certainly will push more and more European nations close to zero inflation. Greece and Ireland already in deflation, Spain, Sweden, Denmark very close, and for the investors fearing inflation in Germany on the back of the so called labor market reforms, the surprising drop from 1.4% to 1.2% must have been a positive surprise!

The good news is that you don't need to use me or others to gauge the risk of deflation - there is an ETF which tracks the inflation/deflation risk called:  Powershares DB US Deflation.  An exchange trade note issues in the US by Deutsche Bank AG. The note offers investors exposure to the monthly performance of the short inflation index plus the monthly T-bill index return, reduced by the investor. Where is it trading? All time high!

 

AND.... Producer Prices continues to trend lower both in China and Germany - two or the world most impressive exporters:

 

Finally, deflation is bad for debt holders and good for the rich: or in other words: Inequality will increase in times of deflation. European Club Med vs. Club North will be painful and likewise in the US FOMC and Yellen needs to negate two major impulses for inequality increases: QE and now potentially deflation.

Positive Surprise - ECB goes to full QE

One conclusion from my trip around major financial capitals in Europe last week is: Be long European equities. If Steen Jakobsen is right then ECB will issue put through full QE. If Steen Jakobsen, again, is wrong then market will return you 10-20% based on recovery. 

There is no doubt that the ECB and to some extend the German government have stepped up and helped the market each time it has been needed but is it safe to assume it will happen again? Asmussen, who by many was perceived to be the "mediator" between German government and to some extend Bundesbank and the Club Med is now a junio labor market minister in the new German government. 

Furthermore I still see German export volumes coming down dramatically this year, which gives Merkel et al less room to help out with, but there is no doubt in my mind that the hedge fund and mutual funds is betting their bottom Euro that whatever happens the ECB will save the day.

Negative Surprise - European Parliamentaty election in May

I could of course also have added VAT hike increase in Japan (April), but as its already signaled I think this one is bigger. The European Election normally makes investors and voters eyes glaze over, but this could be different. Not only is the Far Right and Far Left gaining in most opinion polls in general Anti-EU mood, but now they have a common theme: Welfare Tourism.

Government and pro EU parliamentarians are hiding as the expansion of Europe now includes free labor market movement for Bulgarians and Romanians. There is claims that this have created welfare tourism where these relatively poor countries goes to northern Europe and to the relatively higher social welfare in simple arbitrage seeking job, failing and then claiming benefits. This upsets the labor unions, the far left and the far right. 

It is of course a natural price of free labor market but the problem is that Europe now is not only split in North and South divided, but also in West vs. East (or Old Europe vs. New Europe) Europe is at risk should the anti EU vote prevail, but for now... ECB will help - right?

Fixed Income:

Bunds: Been long as you know from Tradingfloor - took profit yesterday on 141.00 CALL - now slightly short based on my model which indicates risk of short-term higher rates. It should be noted that weekly model still indicates plain sailing for lower rates (my main 2014 call)

10 Yr. US - same as Bunds. Big risk of high in place soon. FOMC is on 28/29 and in circular argument we cant expect FOMC to continue tapering as they will argue that continuing tapering is signal in their own belief in their higher growth projection despite latest Non-famr pay-roll being weak. No position yet.

Gilts: Looking to sell soon - Model is turning down and the "success" of UK economy will lead to higher short term rates.

OAT/Bonos: Both have some room, so spread could continue in vs. Germany but risk reward is poor.

Commodities:

Gold: Bought 1200 Put today (See Tradingfloor) - trigger is technical, but FOMC meeting, the overconfidence in consensus, higher World Bank and IMF projections for growth will drive next week into FOMC.

Silver: No position but model is short.

Nat. Gas: Long - building higher trend in both daily- and weekly.

Crude: Long

Stock Market:

S&P: No position

DAX: No position - but getting close to sell ...

IBEX50: Shorted today at 10.432. Was in Madrid last week. Mood is brilliant, apparently they are about to good into growth.... Not......

Nikkei: Really interesting. VAT hike in April. Premier Abe still looking for the 3rd arrow for this bow. USDJPY failing to take out 105.00 for real must be disappoint. Watch USDJPY for sign, but Nikkei will be sold tonight.

FX:

USDZAR: Short......10.8450.

AUDUSD: Short... trade on tradingfloor from before XMAS.

EURNOK: Neutral. Had good run, but it could go higher this week..

EURSEK: Long.... Riksbanken not offering relieve on downside in yields to an economy which is performing below standard.

EURUSD: Slightly long, through options

USDJPY: Slight short, through options.

PERFORMANCE INDEX 101 (+1%)

=========================================================================================================

Safe travels,

Steen Jakobsen

Chief Investment Officer, Saxo Bank A/S

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: John J. Hardy (JJH)
Sent: 21 January 2014 16:16
To: Steen Jakobsen (SJN)
Cc: Felicity Glover (FGL)
Subject: RE: Steen's Chronicle: New beginnings...

 

I can't look stuff over that is already in tfloor – can you copy and past text from there?

 

From: Steen Jakobsen (SJN)
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2014 4:10 PM
To: Felicity Glover (FGL); John J. Hardy (JJH)
Subject: Steen's Chronicle: New beginnings...

 

Can you edit publish..please.. if John have time.. can you look it over first?

 

http://www.tradingfloor.com/posts/beginnings-1017883111/edit

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

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

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

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