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Deflation, A Stock Market Crash And Then Christmas
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying things will happen in this order and timeframe. Just that they're going to if central banks and treasury departments don't up the ante. But they will. The question becomes more important now whether it'll be enough to continue keeping their - presumed - demons at bay. They can't go on forever. You can inflate asset price bubbles only so much. And then people will lose faith. So the order and timeframe is definitely an option. Deflation is already here. Everyone's talking about lower inflation numbers than expected everywhere, but prices have been pushed up artificially in so many ways and in so many places that, even given the fact that they all ignore what inflation really is, it's getting profoundly absurd. Ironically, a few interesting lines this week came from an unexpected corner, the Telegraph editorial staff: The last thing highly-indebted Britain wants is price deflation
I'm indebted to the Telegraph for giving a name to something I have denounced several times in the past: governments raising "inflation" levels through taxes. My argument of course is that taxes should never be counted towards inflation, because doing so would mean inflation and deflation are easy as pie to control by governments (which they are very obviously not, or this "control" would be applied all the time and there would never be any inflation or deflation). Anyway, we can now call this phenomenon "administered prices"... The paper neglects to note that this is one of the main ways in which Japan purports to fight its deflation: through higher taxes. That will not end well. Look, one more time: inflation means an increasing money supply and/or a higher velocity of money. No more, no less, and certainly not higher prices by themselves. If the money supply increases and/or the velocity of money does, prices will rise, but only as a consequence, and across the board. Nothing to do with taxes. And if for instance the Big Six UK energy companies raise their prices through fraudulent bookkeeping, that doesn't - and shouldn't - count towards inflation, but towards fraud. As for the velocity of money, you can see in this graph from Lacy Hunt and Van Hoisington (more on them later) that in the US, it's come down in just 15 years from the highest point in more than 100 years to the lowest in the past 60 years. That is huge. That must have a tremendous influence on the economy, no matter what unemployment numbers are released, or what records stock markets set. As economic data go, the latter ones can only be entirely secondary to this:
When the velocity of money is that low, and we know there's no huge increase in the money supply (though there may be in the monetary base), how can inflation numbers still be positive? Good question. You tell me. That deflation (money supply and/or velocity of money shrinks and, only after that, prices and wages fall) is a growing worry, becomes clear through the following Bloomberg piece as well. It's just that until now it remained hidden behind a veil of - mostly - central bank stimulus measures, which are behind various asset bubbles. Most of it is credit, backed by taxpayers, doled out to financial institutions and invested in stocks. Or, you know, the UK cabinet supplies cheap housing credit, people fall into the trap and buy their dream home, and, voila, "inflation" numbers go up. All nonsense designed to keep you from finding out what's really going on, and to keep using your money to keep banks from going bankrupt. Bloomberg: Central Banks Risk Asset Bubbles in Battle With Deflation Danger
It might be more accurate to say we increasingly have multiple claims to the same pieces of the pie.
So why don't you explain to us what Bernanke has done to unclog those pipes, Mo?
People are not spending, i.e. the velocity of money has fallen. A lot. And no, tempting them into more cheap credit is no solution for that. Because that means more debt. And it's debt that is dragging economies down in the first place.
Yeah, but Japan does this through "administered prices", prices which are being "deliberately pushed up by government diktat". Again, if that could work, everybody would be doing it, and all the time.
See, what these people are saying is in essence that Fed policies have not had the desired effect, or not enough of it, and now things are getting even worse, because they were so wrong, and deflation looms (even if many prefer for now to call it disinflation). I have a problem with that. Which is that I, and others with me, have said for years that this would happen, that QE wouldn't "help" the real economy. Just look up what debt deflation is, and it all becomes clear. It's embarrasingly simple. I mean, what exactly is the idea? That Ben Bernanke honestly tried to fight unemployment by stuffing the accounts Wall Street banks have with his own Fed, full of excess reserves? Because that's all QE has resulted in in practical terms, isn't it? I know that it has probably affected the "mood" in the markets somewhat as well, but is that really something Bernanke should fake? Is that part of his mandate as well, to fool people into believing things? I don't see how. Really, how wrong can a man in his position be before he's pushed to look for alternative employment? And don't look for any relief from Janet Yellen either, she's been part of that same Fed all these years that continues to hand out $85 billion a month and has nothing to show for it other than some perceived moodswing and those bloated excess reserve accounts. Here's what Yellen will say today in her nomination hearing before the Senate Banking Committee.
In other words: Yellen's not going to change a thing, despite that fact that everything the Fed has done so far has been a huge and costly failure as far as the real economy is concerned, which is what the Fed claims to be execute QE for. I am not kidding you: this is a real problem for me. Because either those who keep claiming that Bernanke and the rest of the Fed board have made nothing but honest mistakes for years are right, and I am profoundly stupid - which I don't think I am -, or I am right and the Fed is loaded with really stupid people. And I don't believe that either. There is a third option, however and of course: that the Fed has not at all been doing what they say they have, and it wasn't a long line of mistakes, but something else altogether. Found a fitting description of that too. In a highly interesting must read piece by Yanis Varoufakis. Fitting, also, because what the Fed does is the same thing the ECB does. Ponzi Austerity – A Definition and an Example
Great article. Great novel view of things. And a great quote. Let's get back to the Fed. We can say for the Fed what Varoufakis says about the ECB (and the troika): Fed policies. A failure. Yes and no. A failure in terms of stated objectives but not in terms of the underlying ones Is the Fed trying to revive the US economy? If they are, they have been making lots of mistakes. Lots. Too many. All they've done is make mistakes. Other than creating a moodswing. But those are notoriously temporary. And this one depends on financial markets expecting more and more "free money“, not on an improving economy. What do they care, if the money keeps coming anyway? This QE game has raised the Fed balance sheet by well over $3 trillion. And ballooned the too-big-to-fail-but-dead-broke banks' accounts with the Fed by about the same amount. But still, you have these respected analysts who keep on hammering the same single tune: it's all mistakes, none of it happens on purpose. Like Lacy Hunt at Hoisington: Federal Reserve Policy Failures Are Mounting
No, Lacy, that is not undeniable. I just did. And I have to wonder: why would you say that? Why would anyone? Do you really believe all you said there? That this entire group of more than average intelligent people make all these mistakes, and misinterpret all of these signals, despite having more and better access to data than anyone else, and you still don't wonder if perhaps they're not trying to do what they say they are? How can you claim to be an analyst if you don't even question your most basic assumptions? How is that analysis and not apologism? John Hussman writes some good market opinion, but he sort of falls into the same apology trap: It’s fascinating to hear central bankers talk about the economy, because in the span of a few seconds they can say so many things that simply aren’t supported by the evidence. [..] quantitative easing essentially proposes that rapid increases in the monetary base can achieve reductions in the unemployment rate. But when we examine the data, we find very little to support this view, regardless of whether the relationship is posed in terms of growth rates, levels, changes, coincident changes, or subsequent changes in unemployment. [..] In my view, most of the response to quantitative easing reflects psychological factors rather than mechanistic ones. Certainly the scale of QE has been enormous, and suppressed short-term interest rates have undoubtedly motivated a reach-for-yield in more speculative assets. But it remains true that the amount of credit market debt in the U.S. is roughly 19 times the current size of the monetary base (with an average maturity of about 5-6 years), while the value of U.S. equities is easily over 6 times the monetary base. So quantitative easing effectively relies on the extent to which investors shun zero-interest cash amounting to less than 3.9% of that available portfolio. In any environment where low-interest but liquid and non-volatile securities become desirable as even a small part of investor portfolios, quantitative easing is likely to lose its presumed ability to "support" financial markets. [..] The truth is that Fed policy has the capacity to do enormous damage by adding fuel to asset price bubbles when investors are already inclined to take risk, yet has very little power to "support" asset prices when investors are inclined to avoid risk. The confidence that the Fed can, in all circumstances, drive asset prices higher is largely psychological – mostly due to misattributing the 2009 recovery to monetary policy instead of the move to end "mark to market" accounting. Yet even to the extent that stocks have been driven higher, there is very little evidence that the "wealth effect" on jobs and economic activity has been large. This is something that the Fed should have understood years ago. [..] I continue to believe that it is plausible to expect the S&P 500 to lose 40-55% of its value over the completion of the present cycle, and suspect that whatever further gains the market enjoys from this point will be surrendered in the first few complacent weeks following the market’s peak. See? they're doing everything wrong. Ergo: boy, must they be stupid. Only, that second part is left out. What I do find interesting is Hussman's last claim: that it's plausible to expect the S&P 500 to lose 40-55%. And he's got a nice graph to show where things stand:
What can hold off a crash? Probably only more asset purchases by the Fed, and temporarily at that. Enter Janet Yellen stage left. Or does anyone doubt that the S&P would look completely different if QE had never happened? But even then. The people at the Fed are aware of the velocity of money data, they're not nearly as thick as the analysts make them out to be. They know they've long lost the deflation battle. Maybe they can move people to take some of their money out of stocks and into something else, something that moves money around a bit more. Or maybe they can push some money or credit into the real economy through real estate prices. The problem there is that increasing credit doesn't do much, if anything at all, that can be seen as positive. Not in an already hugely overindebted economy. At some point you need to ask: stock market crash? What stock market? How is it still really a stock market if it hinges to such a large extent on the Fed pumping money into Wall Street banks? At the very least, you might question if the S&P still reflects an actual market at all, if that market is supposed to reflect what goes on in the economy, and obviously doesn't. You might want to ask what purpose such a largely illusionary stock market has, what its use is within the larger economy. And while you're at it, you might also want to answer what use the financial system as a whole is to the real economy, if all it does is squeeze money out of it. We know the Fed can prop up the S&P for a while, and though we don't know for how long, we do know that they're running out of time. That's what Hussman's graph says. And wouldn't we perhaps be better served by a market, and by data, that better reflect what's going on in the real economy? So we know where we actually stand, and not what some moodswing or another says about that? The entire market, the entire financial system, has turned into a zombie that feeds on the American people's life blood. Let's redefine all this talk, and call a spade a spade: The Federal Reserve defines and executes policies aimed at aiding the banking system, not the overall US economy. And although the Fed may claim that these are one and the same, it could have known - and it does - that they are not. The idea that supporting the banks equals supporting the US people, is just that: an idea. The Fed, more than anyone else, has access to the data that prove this. It knows how badly off the banks are. So quit propping them up, throw open their books and let's start restructuring. If you choose not to - here's looking at you, Janet - stop pretending you're acting on your dual mandate, that you have the people's best interest at heart. There's no evidence of that anywhere to be found in anything but words. We may make it to Christmas without a market crash, with lots of happy expectations for record sales and a last bout of happy moodswing. That's not that interesting. What is, is what'll happen after that. We already have deflation, once you look past the words. And we have a stock market so grossly overvalued it can only be labeled a zombie. Record holiday sales are not going to materialize with the velocity of money at a 60-year record low. And then what, Janet? Increase QE? Double or nothing for the most costly "failure" in US history? All it takes is for people to keep believing, right? |
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