BACK TO JOSEPHINTERNATIONAL.ORG

Tag Archive | "economic forecast"

Anatomy of a Bubble | Bob Fraser


I thought this chart summed up well the human psychology of a financial bubble:

 Anatomy of a Bubble

 

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

The Failure of High Tax Rates | Bob Fraser


I have repeatedly pointed out that higher tax rates decrease tax revenues and slow the economy. Here are some more charts:

US corporate tax rates are among the highest in the world:

 US Corporate Tax Rates

And US corporate profits are also strong (red line); we would therefore expect corporations to be contributing strongly to US tax revenues. But not so (blue line):

 US Corporate Tax Share vs profit share

In fact, US corporations contribute to tax revenues far less than in other nations:

Corporate Tax Revenue as % of GDP

 When tax rates are so high, corporations have a number of options to avoid them. Currently, corporations that have foreign subsidiaries are leaving the cash in those subsidiaries, not bringing it back the US. It means lower tax revenues, and less investment in US-based operations, which also depresses US employment.

Look at this astonishing chart from the Wall Street Journal (article, article). While US top tax rates have varied from 28% to as high as 91% (blue line), tax revenues have stayed steady at about 20% of GDP:

Hauser's Law Hauser's Law

People change their behavior according to tax rates. When rates are high, people work fewer hours, businesses put the brakes on growth strategies, and people look for ways to avoid taxes.

 

*This Article originally posted April 2013

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

Japan Goes Full Godzilla | Bob Fraser


Newly elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ran his election campaign on a platform that emphasized ending Japan’s 20-year economic malaise by having the Central Bank of Japan, (BOJ) print money.

Last month he replaced the BOJ chief with his own man Haruhiko Kuroda, and together they just announced their economic plan. It was a doozy. Analysts called it “bold” and “shock and awe.”

They have decided they will “print” money at a rate of about 75% of the US, on an economy one third the size of the US. On a relative basis, it is 2.3 times larger than the US program:

 Japan vs US QE, Japan Quantitative Easing

It will double Japan’s monetary base by 2014.

They will use the new money to buy Japanese government bonds, corporate bonds, stocks, and real estate.

Japan has a declining population, zero savings rate, a negative GDP growth rate of 3.5-4%, debts equal to 20 times government revenue, and a plummeting balance of trade.

Japan believes they can fix all this through central-bank induced inflation. Hedge fund guru Kyle Bass calls it a “giant experiment.” Billionaire George Soros called it “quite dangerous.” (Article)

“What Japan is doing is actually quite dangerous because they are doing it after 25 years of just simply accumulating deficits and not getting the economy going,” billionaire investor George Soros told CNBC in an interview Friday, on the sidelines of a conference in Hong Kong.

“So if what they are doing gets something started, they may not be able to stop it. If the yen starts to fall, which it has done, and people in Japan realize that it is liable to continue, and want to put their money abroad, then the fall may become like an avalanche,” Soros added.

Since 2008, the once-taboo practice of central bank monetary expansion, or “money printing,” has gone mainstream. It was just a matter of time before a nation decided to “up the ante.” After all, what is good in small doses must be better in massive doses, right? Japan is that nation. We are about to see the endgame, how the “great experiment” begun by Bernanke in 2008, but mega-sized by Japan in 2013, will end.

I expect asset prices to rise, the Yen to fall, and interest rates to fall as the BOJ buys government bonds. But at some point, they will lose control of interest rates and will be forced to print ever more Yen to control interest rates, and the Yen will plunge in value. We shall see.

 

*This Article originally posted in April 2013 Newsletter

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

Time to Buy Stocks? | Bob Fraser


US Corporate earnings growth has been quite weak:

 S&P Earnings Growth YoY, US Corporate Earnings Growth

 

2013 and 2014 earnings estimates, the amount of money analysts expect US companies to make, continues to drop:

 Consensus 2013 and 2014 EPS Estimates,

In the past, this tends to show market turning points:

 S&P 500 Annual Earnings Per Share Estimates

The stock market has shrugged off mediocre US corporate earnings and weak US economic numbers, terrible European economic numbers, financial earthquakes in Cyprus, and Japan’s “great experiment” to march relentlessly to new highs. Many are asking me, “How can the market continue to go up?”

The answer is simple: Quantitative Easing (QE) which is essentially money-printing. When money is printed, the value of money is worth proportionally less, driving up all asset prices. Zero interest rates also are forcing all cash from the sidelines into stocks and investments in a desperate search for yield. Furthermore, the seizure of Cyprus’ deposits will further cause money to flee bank accounts and enter the investment markets.

The bottom line is that Bernanke and the other world’s central bankers have their feet firmly pressed on the accelerator, and until they back off, the market is biased strongly upward. Here you can see the effects of QE:

S&P 500 Performance during Fed Open Market Committee Action

But there are many signs of a very exuberant stock market.

 

*This article originally posted in April 2013 Newsletter

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

 

 

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (1)

US Economy Muddles Along | Bob Fraser


Meanwhile the US economy continues to muddle along, weak but positive. This is the Chicago PMI, which is predictive of GDP. It printed at 52.2, just above the 50 level (50 indicates zero growth):

 Chicago PMI, GDP Predictor

GDP growth continues to be anemic but positive:

 GDP Following Recoveries

Positive “surprises” in the economic data have stalled:

 US Economic Surprise Index

Initial jobless claims spiked up:

 Initial Claims, Initial Jobless Claims

Copper demand, which is also viewed by many as a predictor of the economy, because copper is the “ultimate” industrial metal, just crossed below a key support range:

 LME Spot Copper, Copper Demand

In the recent past, when copper diverges from the stock market, the market has fallen to match copper:

 S&P 500 and Copper, Stock Market and Copper

Factory orders show a similar pattern, and have also been highly predictive:

 S&P 500 and YoY Factory Orders, Stock Market and Factory Orders

The latest data continue to show an anemic recovery, but one that is not fully reflected in the stock market, which has its eye firmly on the Fed and Bernanke’s QE program.

 

*Article Originally Posted in April 2013 Newsletter

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

European Economic Struggles Continue | Bob Fraser


Here are some European economic charts that basically show more of the same – deep contraction in the south, moderate strength in the North:

 Eurozone GDP seasonally adjusted, Germany GDP, France GDP, Spain GDP, Italy GDP, Euro Area GDP, Europe GDP Seasonally Adjusted, Eurozone GDP,

GDP is contracting, unemployment is rising, and manufacturing is slowing. Germany is the somewhat stronger.

 Eurozone GDP, Unemployment, and Manufacturing

 

 Eurozone Real Retail Sales, Europe Real Retail Sales

 Eurozone Real Industrial Production, Europe Real Industrial Production

 Eurozone Deposits by Residents, Europe Deposits by Residents

 Eurozone Loans to Residents, Europe Loans to Residents

 

*ARTICLE ORIGINALLY POSTED IN APRIL 2013 NEWSLETTER

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

 

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

Why Cyprus is a Global Game-Changer | Bob Fraser


Why Cyprus is a Global Game-Changer

Last month, the European “troika” agreed to bail out the overextended banks in the tiny Meditteranean Sea CyprusMediterranean island-nation of Cyprus. The banks had made loans equal to nearly 8 times the size of the nation’s economy. As the local real estate market dropped, and the banks’ investment in Greek government bonds plunged in value, the banks became insolvent.

Cyprus bank, Cyprus bank robberyBecause the banks were so big, there was no way the nation of Cypress could bail them out. So they called on the EU for help. After all, the EU had pledged hundreds of billions for Ireland, Portugal, Greece, and Spain.

But the troika’s tone had changed. They estimated a bailout would require €15.8B. They agreed to provide €10B, but the remaining €5.8 would have to be paid by those who “created the problem.”

A Very, Very Bad Idea…

But “those who created the problem” could not include the Cypriot government, which had no money; or the banks’ owners, who were broke; or those who lent money to the banks, who were too few in number to matter. That left one remaining group: bank depositors.

The troika decided that depositors with accounts below €100,000 would lose 6.75% of their funds, and accounts over €100,000 would lose 9.9%.

However, the Cypriot parliament refused to go along. As negotiations dragged on, the banks remained closed and the problem worsened.

…Unjustly Leaked

Prior to “confiscation day” millions were secretly transferred out of Cyprus by those “in the know,” including €21M by relatives of the President (article). Some 132 parties transferred all their money out of the banks within two weeks before, according to Sigma (article).

…Then Bungled

Then, while the banks were supposedly closed during this negotiation, the banks’ foreign branches, including those in London and subsidiaries in Russia, actually remained open, and millions were transferred out. From Reuters:

While ordinary Cypriots queued at ATM machines to withdraw a few hundred euros as credit card transactions stopped, other depositors used an array of techniques to access their money.

No one knows exactly how much money has left Cyprus’ banks, or where it has gone. The two banks at the centre of the crisis – Cyprus Popular Bank, also known as Laiki, and Bank of Cyprus – have units in London which remained open throughout the week and placed no limits on withdrawals. Bank of Cyprus also owns 80 percent of Russia’s Uniastrum Bank, which put no restrictions on withdrawals in Russia. Russians were among Cypriot banks’ largest depositors.

…And the Sheep Get Sheared

Those unfortunate souls who didn’t know one of the political elites, or who didn’t know anyone in London or Russia, would end up paying the bill.

By the time the banks reopened, the capital needed far exceeded the original estimate of €15.8B, and the losses imposed on depositors needed to be far greater than 10%.

They finally agreed that deposits under €100,000 would be fully preserved, while those larger would bear the full brunt of the losses. Larger deposits would get only a fraction of their cash, the bulk of it converted into shares in the worthless bank. The latest estimates put the losses at between 60% for depositors at the Bank of Cyprus, and 80% for those at Laiki Bank (WSJ).

“I went to sleep Friday as a rich man. I woke up a poor man.”

Can you imagine waking up one day and your bank account is wiped out? From the Sydney Morning Herald: Cyprus Merkel, Cyprus protest, Cypriot protests

“Very bad, very, very bad,” says 65-year-old John Demetriou, rubbing tears from his lined face with thick fingers. “I lost all my money.”

John now lives in the picturesque fishing village of Liopetri on Cyprus’ south coast. But for 35 years he lived at Bondi Junction and worked days, nights and weekends in Sydney markets selling jewelry and imitation jewelry.

He had left Cyprus in the early 1970s at the height of its war with Turkey, taking his wife and young children to safety in Australia. He built a life from nothing and, gradually, a substantial nest egg. He retired to Cyprus in 2007 with about $1 million, his life savings.

He planned to spend it on his grandchildren – some of whom live in Cyprus – putting them through university and setting them up. There would be medical bills; he has a heart condition. The interest was paying for a comfortable retirement, and trips back to Australia. He also toyed with the idea of buying a boat.

He wanted to leave any big purchases a few years, to be sure this was where he would spend his retirement. There was no hurry. But now it is all gone.

“If I made the decision to stay, I was going to build a house,” John says. “Unfortunately I didn’t make the decision yet.”

Businesses Destroyed

I expect most of those large accounts are operating accounts of local businesses. Can you imagine: having a large account balance because you are getting ready to pay a vendor, or payroll, and suddenly it’s all gone?

Most Cypriot businesses will struggle to survive. One firm related that its €400,000 account at Laiki Bank was frozen, leaving them unable to pay for a consignment of shoes.

Here is a blog post from a Cypriot business:Cyprus business, Cypriot account blocked, Cyprus blocked funds

 

‘My bank account’s got robbed by European Commission. Over 700k is lost.

The most of circulating assets on our business Current Account are blocked.

Over 700k of expropriated money will be used to repay country’s debt. Probably we will get back about 20% of this amount in 6-7 years.

I’m not Russian oligarch, but just European medium size IT business. Thousands of other companies around Cyprus have the same situation.

The business is definitely ruined, all Cypriot workers to be fired.’

Businesses are the engine of wealth for a nation. They produce products people want to buy, and create jobs. Without a healthy business sector, the wealth of a nation will be destroyed.

Capital Controls

During the crisis, banks were closed and ATM withdrawals were limited to €300 per day. People lined up for access to their cash:

Cypriots waiting in line, Cyprus bank line, Cyprus bank withdrawal

But the banks couldn’t just reopen – people would rush to get their cash out, and the banks would again be at risk. So the plan had to include “capital controls” – limitations on people accessing their cash. The capital controls included (article):

  • Checks cannot be cashed
  • No more than €3000 can be carried across the border
  • No more than €5000 per month can be spent on credit card/debit card purchases outside of Cyprus
  • Commercial transactions over €500 must be proven to be in the “ordinary course of business”

These controls were supposed to last 7 days, but have already been extended, and they will be extended again, far longer than anyone will admit. Capital controls are always hard to lift. As soon as they are lifted, capital will flee Cyprus.

A Global Game-Changer

The global markets have mostly shrugged off Cyprus as insignificant. Indeed, the nation has only 1.1M inhabitants, equivalent to a mid-size city. And its GDP is just €28B, 500 times smaller than the US.

But in spite of its small size, Cyprus is a game-changer in several ways:

#1 Disregard for the Rule of Law

One of the greatest reasons for the prosperity of the west is high regard for the “rule of law.” This means that “the law is in charge” – rights and property are legally protected by well-established and proven laws and judicial systems; and thus risks can be measured and clearly defined. This is necessary for investment. For example, would you have second thoughts about investing in a business in Somalia, where there is no operating government or legal system?

Banks have capital structures that have been clearly defined by law and precedent for hundreds of years. The capital structure specifies that in a bankruptcy scenario, the first to take losses are the shareholders (owners); the next would be the creditors, those who lent the bank funds and received a return commensurate with the risk taken; only then would the depositors be affected. Depositors are further protected an explicit guarantee (the FDIC), in the US since the great Depression, and in Europe, an implicit protection since the financial crisis.

But the troika’s initial demands clearly gave no regard to any of this. Lenders to the bank, professional investors who weighed the risks and were paid handsome returns for assuming that risk, would face no losses; while depositors, who were more senior in the capital structure, and who had an implicit guarantee, would be plundered.

When I read this, I simply couldn’t believe it. A small group of officials were willing and able to circumvent well established legal precedent and deprive 370,000 people of their property, without any regard to law or due process. It is extremely disconcerting to investors to face such arbitrary decisions, where the only factor is political expediency.

For millennia the world endured the “divine right of kings,” to do whatever they pleased. The latin phrase that encapsulated this was “Rex Lex,” or “The King is Law.” Kings could do whatever they wanted – they were the law. In 1215 the Magna Carta was signed, which partially limited the right of the king for the first time in history.

In 1644, Samuel Rutherford reversed the phrase, writing a book called, “Lex Rex,” or “The Law is King.” He set forth the idea of the “rule of law,” where clear, fair laws are impartially applied to all situations, and no one is above the law.

In 1776, the US was founded on this idea, the first modern nation to do so. The central tenets of this ideal are captured in the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights, the 14th Amendment of which states, “nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Gradually rule-of-law became the dominant mode of governance. It is also one of the primary reasons for the unprecedented global prosperity achieved in the last 200 years.

But today, rule-of-law is at risk in Europe. If the troika can seize deposits, what can they not do? The new “kings” are policymakers. Their guiding principle is political expediency. They will readily take from anyone who cannot hurt them at the polls, either because they are not their constituents (just as Cypriot voters cannot hurt German Chancelor Angela Merkel at the polls) or they represent a small voting bloc (like the “rich”).

Clearly, today there is far greater risk of doing business in Europe than in other places. The mood is decidedly confiscatory, and the decision making is arbitrary and political.

The net effect is that investors will begin looking for the exits. Investment will slow in Europe, and capital will flee.

#2 Future Bank Runs

Depositor trust has been violated. After Cyprus, would you be concerned if you had a large deposit in a weak bank in Spain or Italy? You would right now be figuring out where and how to move it.

I am a student of the 1930’s financial crisis. Bank runs were common. From 1930-33 9096 banks failed; 4000 in the first two months of 1933 alone (FDIC). When a bank was rumored to be in trouble, the news would flash person-to-person and crowds would suddenly converge on the bank to withdraw their funds:Mass Bank withdrawal, Bank crowd, Bank mob

Bank runs in the US have all but ceased since the formation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in 1933, which guaranteed bank deposits up to $100,000.

Bank runs are always a risk in a “fractional reserve” banking system, which allows banks to lend substantially all of their deposits. The more people withdraw their deposits, the likelihood of default rises, triggering more withdrawals. A bank run thus wipes out the bank.

When the Cypriot banks reopened, officials were pleased that there were no crowds and people were orderly. But in today’s connected world, a bank run will not be accompanied by mobs crushing to get to a bank teller. Their money is a mouse click or phone call away. Billions can be transferred in seconds.

Today Deutschebank, one of the largest banks in Europe, is leveraged 60-to-1 – it has made $60 in loans for every dollar in equity capital. If they lost just 1.5% of their loans, they would be insolvent. Why on earth would a sane person keep their money at Deutschebank? One reason: the government guarantee.

Today, few people think much about which bank they should use – because of the guarantee. But all that has changed now – in Europe at least. The public has suddenly been made aware that a bank deposit is not the temporary storage of money, but an investment in a highly leveraged institution. Which in fact, it is.

The EU has destroyed trust in banks as a safe place to put money. This will have two impacts on the banks:

First, bank deposits will continue to accelerate their flight from the periphery states (Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Italy) to the core European banks. This will further endanger the already weak banks there.

Second, future bank runs on weak European banks are now quite likely. When it is clear a bank is in trouble, depositors will flee en-masse.

UK politician Nigel Farage summed it up like this (article):

Never did I think they would resort to stealing money from people’s savings accounts…

Now that they have done this in one country, they are quite capable of doing it in Italy, Spain and anywhere.

The message that sends to people is ‘get your money out while you can.’

He warns Europeans, “Do Not Invest In The Euro-Zone; you have to be mad to do so – as it is now run by people who do not respect democracy, the rule of law, or the basic principles upon which Western civilization is based.”

#3 Investments Will Rise

You may be surprised at this result – but as capital flees the European banking system, it will look for safe havens outside of banks, and many asset classes will benefit and rise in value: especially bonds, real estate, stocks and gold.

Money will also continue to flow out of Europe to safer places, like the US, Australia, Canada, and Switzerland to name a few.

#4: A Template for the Rest of Europe?

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, Dutch Financial Minister and president of the Eurogroup, stunned the financial world when he said that seizing depositor’s money could be a template for future bailouts. He immediately retracted the statement, denying that he said it, even though it is clearly documented that he did indeed say it.

French ECB Director Benoît Coeuré and many others quickly responded by stating explicitly that Cyprus was a unique situation and was not a model for future bank rescues.

But then ECB Governing Council member Klaas Knot said last night that there was “little wrong” with Dijsselbloem’s comment and that “the content of his remarks comes down to an approach which has been on the table for a longer time in Europe. This approach will be part of the European liquidation policy.” (Reuters) Europe is clearly endorsing depositor seizures!

Then Federico Ghizzoni. the CEO of Unicredit, Italy’s largest bank, then endorsed the idea of confiscating deposits: “uninsured deposits could be used in future bank failures provided global rule-makers agree on a common approach.” (Bloomberg) Holy smokes! What would you do if you had a large deposit in his very sick bank?

The reason they are saying Cyprus is unique is because its banks had little equity capital and few bondholders who could be stuck with the losses. The banks have financed themselves mostly through deposits, so they were the only ones who could absorb the losses.

European banking sector liabilities, banking liabilities, banking liabilities by nation

But the ugly truth is that Cyprus is not as unique as they claim. Banks in Greece, Austria, Belgium, Slovenia, Spain, Portugal and the UK are at least 2/3 depositor-funded (see “Total Deposits” item on the chart from Credit Suisse above).

The banks in Europe remain badly overleveraged – meaning that they have made far too many loans relative to their capital base. From the above chart from Credit Suisse, we can calculate the bank leverage ratios. This chart shows the amount of loans they have made for each dollar of equity and reserve capital. You can see that most of the countries’ banks are far more leveraged than Cyprus:

 

Country Leverage
Belgium 20x
Germany 20x
Netherlands 20x
France 17x
Slovenia 13x
Portugal 11x
Spain 9x
Cyprus 8x
Greece 8x
Ireland 5x

As scary as these numbers are, they are quite optimistic because they are using the banks’ own rosy estimates. Obviously today Cyprus does not have 12% equity capital as the chart indicates. I have documented for years the accounting gimmicks banks use to boost their numbers.

Banks have loans go bad all the time. But the only times banks fail is when they are too leveraged – when they have made too many loans relative to their capital base. This is the real culprit. At 20x leverage, if a bank has just 5% of its loans fail it becomes insolvent. Such leverage makes bankers rich when times are good, but creates a massively unstable financial system.

Not only are the banks massively overleveraged, they are huge – “too-big-to-fail.” Even in “conservative” Germany, banks are 3 times larger than the entire economy of Germany. Switzerland’s banks are 8 times larger; Luxembourg is 13 times larger. It is insanity.

Euro Bank assets to GDP,  Euro bank assets, Bank assets GDP country, Bank assets GDP nation

 

#5: Bank Stress to Increase

As already mentioned, Europe’s banks are leveraged to the hilt.

They already have to deal with the weak economy which causes their loans to go bad and recovery ratios worsen.

But the EU’s short-sighted response will accelerate capital outflows. This will put increasing pressure on the banks.

Furthermore the new Basel III rules are on the horizon. These rules require banks to hold much more capital relative to the number of loans they make.

For most banks this means raising capital from investors. But the EU’s decision will clearly make attracting the needed capital very difficult for the banks.

#6: Someone Has to Pay

So far, much of the damage from the financial crisis has been absorbed by governments and central bank “money printing.” But events in Cyprus make it clear there is no “free lunch.” These banks have lost billions in other’s money, and someone must pay.

When governments do bailouts, taxpayers will pay: through increased taxes, budget deficits, and decreasing government services, as we are now experiencing. People forget that the government cannot give anything to anyone except that it first takes it from someone else.

When central banks print money for bailouts, savers pay through increased inflation and decreased yields, as I wrote about in last month’s article, “Your Wealth is Now Being Transferred.” People forget that central banks cannot print goods or services, and that printing money simply dilutes the value of money relative to goods and services.

When central banks and governments do not do bailouts, then investors will pay; and when there are not enough investors, as in the case of Cyprus, then innocent bystanders will pay.

The bottom line is that those who have money will pay all the bills, one way or another.

#7 Depression Coming to Cyprus

The financial services industry in Cyprus is now dead. Big money is unlikely to return to Cyprus for decades. This matters, because financial services are 45% of the economy of Cyprus. Forty-five percent of Cyprus’ economy has just been vaporized.

Businesses in Cyprus are also cooked. Any cash they had has been confiscated, and many will not survive. Credit will be nearly impossible to obtain.

Add to this mix the Troika’s austerity program now in place (article):

  • Increase in VAT taxes
  • Increase in income taxes
  • Freezing of pensions
  • Increasing the retirement age
  • Increasing fees for public services
  • Increasing road taxes, registrations fees, and excise duties
  • Reduction of pension entitlements
  • Public sector layoffs

Together, this is a highly toxic brew for Cyprus. They will enter a very severe recession, probably the worst in Europe.

#8 Debt Slavery

Cyprus will go into this depression for the sake of a €10B bailout. Remember, this bailout is a loan, not a gift. It will push Cyprus’ debt-to-GDP ratio to 120% – unsustainable territory. Cyprus will likely enter a debt-trap – a situation where debt spirals out of control and cannot ever be repaid.

#9: Cross Border Contagion

The banking problem in Cyprus stemmed from two sources: 1) the economic crisis and housing crisis caused a number of loans to go bad; 2) much of the banks’ equity capital was held in Greek government bonds.

If you recall, in the Greek bailout, the troika forced investors in Greek government bonds to take a 50% loss. Once the dust settled, Greek bonds lost about 80% of their value. This decimated the banks in Cyprus. It was the bailout in Greece thaHouse of Cardst substantially caused the problem in Cyprus.

Here is the point: when bailouts force losses on investors, it will hurt banks and pension funds, which will then need to be bailed out too. All the debt is interlinked. The problem in Europe is that there is simply too much debt, all interlinked, and all fragile. It is a sky-high debt pyramid, and a “house of cards.”

Europe has no “Plan B”

I admit to being amazed and somewhat mystified at Europe’s level of commitment to the Euro. It was enlightening to read ECB President Mario Draghi’s recent response when asked what would happen if Cyprus left the Euro. This was his answer:

‘Well you really are asking questions that are so hypothetical that I don’t have an answer to them. Well, I may have a partial answer. These questions are formulated by people who vastly underestimate what the Euro means for the Europeans, for the Euro area. They vastly underestimate the amount of political capital that has been invested in the Euro. And so they keep on asking questions like: “If the Euro breaks down, and if a country leaves the Euro, it’s not like a sliding door. It’s a very important thing. It’s a project in the European Union. That’s why you have a very hard time asking people like me “what would happen if.”’

Europe has proven their deep commitment to their single currency. But will-power cannot overcome the mathematical reality. The Euro has created massive economic imbalances between north and south. Their only choices are:

  1. Split into two Euros, north and south. The south Euro would drop by 30-40%, and the cheaper wages and costs would restart the economy.
  2. Reduce wages in the south by 30-40%. Not politically possible, though the current austerity-induced depression will probable achieve this if it continues for another 10-15 years.
  3. Eliminate the national sovereign budgets and go to a single budget and in essence, a single government. European nations would have to give up their sovereignty, just as the US states gave up their sovereignty to the US federal government. Only then could the Euro work.
  4. They could take the US, UK, and BOJ approach, and print money and bail out the banks and nations. However, the imbalances would remain and this would have to be repeated every 10 years or so.

The Iceland Solution

As long as Cyprus remains in the Euro, it will remain one of the most expensive places to do business. According to the IMF, the labor cost index, which measures the “fully loaded” cost of doing business, has risen even faster than in Greece, Spain or Italy since the late 1990s. Cyprus cannot hope to claw its way back to viability with a tourist boom because EMU membership has made it shockingly expensive. Turkey, Croatia and Egypt are all much cheaper. Manufacturing is just 7% of GDP.

Furthermore, Cyprus ranks very low on its international competiveness rank, Cyprus ranks below all European countries except Greece, Russia and Turkey (Cyprus Development Bank). The rank objectively measures countries in areas like “Burden of Government Regulation,” “Rigidity of Employment,” “Pay and Productivity,” “Ease of Starting a Business,” and “Extent of Investor Protection.”

If Cyprus remains in the Euro, it cannot recover until wages drop 40%. Cyprus must leave the Eurozone. Cyprus House of Representatives President Yiannakis Omirou has already called for the nation to leave the Euro (article):

There is no other alternative but to free Cyprus from the bonds of the troika and the memorandum, House of Representatives President Yiannakis Omirou has said.

Omirou talked about the troika demands, which according to him will multiply and will turn Cyprus to a colony of the worst possible type and warned “I would like to send a message to the Cyprus people that there is no other way, there is no alternative apart from freeing (the country) from the troika’s and the memorandum’s bonds”.

He noted that certainly, “this road will demand sacrifices”, adding that “by leaving the troika and the EMS behind us, we will ensure our national independence, our national sovereignty, our moral integrity and our economic independence”.

“If we remain bound by the Troika and the memorandum Cyprus’ destiny is already foretold and there will be no future”, he pointed out.

He is calling for an Iceland-like solution, which I have written about many times.

Iceland suffered severely in the 2008 financial crisis. Unlike other nations, Iceland refused to bail out their banks. Unemployment spiked up to 10%. The Icelandic stock market crashed 95%:

Iceland stock market, Icelandic stock market crash, Iceland stock market crash

Iceland has its own currency, the Krona, which also crashed by about 50%:

 Krona exchange rate, Iceland exchange rate, Krona crash, Iceland crash

This sounds bad, but it is actually long-term positive. The crashed currency caused imports to double in cost, but it also made exports 50% cheaper. Icelandic export industries like aluminum and fishing began booming. Because its currency is so low, today entrepreneurs are profitably growing tomatoes in greenhouses, in a country just miles from the Arctic Circle! As a result, the economy of Iceland is recovering – due in large part to the weaker currency.

Iceland GDP

Unemployment continues to drop. Compare the unemployment in Iceland to Greece:

 Greece unemployment rate, Iceland unemployment rate, Icelandic unemployment

Economies will always self-adjust in time – and exchange rates are the cornerstone of this self-adjustment. But this mechanism cannot function in Southern Europe because they are bound to the Euro.

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market Insight, News & UpdatesComments (1)

Weather | Bob Fraser


 

The Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research released a recent report studying climate extremes. They constructed a weather extremes index which includes data on temperatures, daily precipitation, and the Palmer Drought Index. They discovered that 2012 broke the last record set in 1934, the peak of the “dust bowl:”

 Contiguous US Without Tropical Cyclone Indicator

We may be looking at another such year of drought and heat in 2013. NASA’s long range forecast, which accurately forecasted last year’s heat and drought, is forecasting similar for 2013, though more focused on the central Midwest region, from Canada down to Texas:

 NASA Forecast, NASA Long range forecast, NASA Midwest Forecast

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

China | Bob Fraser


China and the US are the world’s economic growth engines today. The US economy is still growing, but at a slower pace, while Europe is still contracting:

 US & Eurozone Industrial Production Annual % of Change, US Industrial Production, Eurozone Industrial  Production, U.S. Industrial Production

Last month I wrote that China finally appeared to be emerging from its contraction, but that it could be overstated due to seasonal adjustments. The latest numbers show this was the case. Current PMI readings show China a near zero-growth level of 50.4 (50 means zero growth).

China Manufacturing PMI, China HSBC Manufacturing PMI

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

 

 

 


Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)

Successful “Print-Era” Investing | Bob Fraser


As part of The Fed’s QE program, in 2013 the US Federal reserve will create money and buy fully 75% of all 30-year bonds issued by the US Treasury (Article).

We are entering into the final stage of the debt Supercycle – a stage that will be characterized by rising interest rates and inflation – and if interest rates are manipulated, plummeting currencies.

Ultimately, the last resort will be money-printing. It is the only politically viable solution to the financial crisis.

But money-printing comes with a steep price tag: selective inflation. By “selective,” I mean that asset prices and commodity prices will rise. Here you can see the effect of the Bernanke-Fed era on commodities:

 Commodity Prices Bernanke, Bernanke Era, Bernanke Era Prices

But that doesn’t mean we have to be the victim. There are a number of investments that will work well in this environment. Simple math tells us that when money in being printed, it will be worth proportionally less. But it also means that anything that cannot be printed will be worth proportionally more!

Some things that cannot be “printed” are: good businesses, housing, precious metals, and many other things as well.

Housing

I continue to steer people toward US residential real estate. In recent news, new home sales were up 15% in January (article). Foreclosures are dropping:

 US Foreclosure Starts,

And prices have fallen into a reasonable range. The US housing market has fallen 35% on average and is now in its historical price range when adjusted for inflation:

 US Home Values 1890-2010, US Home Values Inflation Adjusted Over Time,

It is time to buy bargain-priced housing, especially if can qualify for today’s 3% 30-year fixed rate mortgages. That is basically free money.

Mortgages

I have stumbled across an even “richer vein” than traditional real estate investing – defaulted mortgages. I have even started a small investment firm to capitalize on this opportunity.

Banks have been inundated with bad loans. When banks accumulate too many bad loans, they are penalized by bank regulators, and are commonly forced to liquidate these loans. Because there are few buyers, these loans can be bought for pennies on the dollar.

For example, we were able to purchase one loan worth $109,000 for only $20,000 – and there was enough equity in the home to fully cover the mortgage. We purchased another $91,000 note for $6,500. This note had $21,000 in equity when we bought it, but since then the home has risen $22,000 in value, giving us $43,000 in equity. In fact, this investment is structured in such a way that we are capturing 100% of the increase in the value of this $300,000 home with only a $6,500 investment. And our only maximum potential loss on this investment is our $6,500 investment. It is the kind of risk-reward profile that comes along once or twice in a lifetime.

It is a shining example of what I have said for years: every crisis is an opportunity. You just have to have eyes to see it.

Precious Metals

Gold and silver cannot be printed, and will continue to be great investments, until the “print-era” comes to an end. But gold and silver are heart-breakers, due to their extreme volatility, as recent price action has proven! Hopefully you have followed my advice in timing investment in gold and silver. My timing recommendations have been spot-on the last few years, and I certainly hope my blessed streak continues!  I told investors to take profits at the beginning of December, and hopefully you did.

But the recent price action in gold and silver do not mean they are finished. I laugh when I read the headlines. It happens every time gold goes into a long correction!

  •  “Gold’s Decade-Long Bull Run Is Dead” (Gartman)
  •  “Why Gold Has Further To Fall” (Forbes)
  •  “Is $1200 Gold Possible?” (Seeking Alpha)
  •  “Gold loses glitter; prices likely to come down further”
  •  “Gold Death Cross Signals Price Slump as Soros Sells”
  •  “Goldman Sachs Targets $1200 GOLD Price”

I can promise you this: government currency malfeasance has driven gold’s rise, and that malfeasance is not yet complete. Gold is not finished until its underlying fundamentals change, which they have not. Gold will rise again and probably quite soon. See my full forecast in the “Investment Themes” section below.

Natural Gas

The more I study the natural gas boom in the US the more I am astonished at the change of fortunes for the US. A recent highly-regarded study of the Barnett shale formation in Texas made it clear just how significant this new energy boom is. Here is an excerpt from a story in the Wall Street Journal:

U.S. natural-gas production will accelerate over the next three decades, new research indicates, providing the strongest evidence yet that the energy boom remaking America will last for a generation.

The most exhaustive study to date of a key natural-gas field in Texas, combined with related research under way elsewhere, shows that U.S. shale-rock formations will provide a growing source of moderately priced natural gas through 2040, and decline only slowly after that. A report on the Texas field, to be released Thursday, was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The research provides substantial evidence that there are large quantities of gas available that can be drilled profitably at a market price of $4 per million British thermal units, a relatively small increase from the current price of about $3.43.

The study, funded by the nonpartisan Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and performed by the University of Texas, examined 15,000 wells drilled in the Barnett Shale formation in northern Texas, mostly over the past decade. It is among the first to study the geology and economics of shale drilling, a relatively recent development made possible by hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in which a mixture of water, sand and chemicals is pumped at high pressure into rocks to release gas.

Looking at data from actual wells rather than relying on estimates and extrapolations, the study broadly confirms conclusions by the energy industry and the U.S. government, which in December forecast rising gas production.

We are looking at multi, multi decades of growth,” said Scott Tinker, director of the Bureau of Economic Geology at the university and a leader of the study.

Barnett Shale Study, Natural Gas from Shale, Natural Gas Shale

This energy boom will remake the US as an energy powerhouse.

Natural gas is extremely inexpensive when compared to other fuels. When compared to the energy-equivalent amount of gasoline, natural gas is 10 times cheaper:

 Natural Gas Energy Equivalent, Gasoline Energy Equivalent, Natural Gas vs Gasoline BTU, Natural Gas BTU, Gasoline BTU,

Because of its relative cost, companies that need cheap energy are moving to the US. Chemical companies and plastics manufacturers that also use natural gas are building new facilities in the US.

Prices of natural gas are far higher in other countries. In the chart below, the blue line on the bottom shows US natural gas prices, driven low by dramatic increases in production; the red line shows prices in the UK; and the black line shows prices in Japan, which is energy starved since turning off their nuclear power plants in the wake of the Fukushima disaster:

 U.S. Natural Gas vs Japan and UK, US Natural Gas, Japan Natural Gas, UK Natural Gas, Natural Gas Comparison, Natural Gas Availability

The US is set to be an exporter of natural gas in the next few years. There will be thousands of investment opportunities caused by this new energy boom. Keep your “eyes peeled” for them!

 

Robert Fraser, Author of Marketplace ChristianityBob Fraser | Director & Founder of Joseph International

Robert Fraser founded an e-commerce provider for business customers, including Xerox, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Samsung. He raised $44 million in investment capital and guided the company to an average of 20 percent month-to-month revenue growth over 6 years, becoming the Kansas City metro area’s fastest growing company between 1997 and 1999. In 2000, Fraser received the Midwest Region Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. Today Fraser is Director of Joseph International, a ministry dedicated to restoring a vision for the marketplace.

For more information or to receive Fraser’s FREE economic newsletter, visit www.josephinternational.org and click “Joseph Insight”.

Posted in Fraser's Daily Find, Market InsightComments (0)