Have Central Banks Run Out of Weapons? by Jon Markman, [Money and Markets] Thursday, October 16, 2014
Volatility has shot higher in the past two weeks as the
major U.S. indexes sink below uptrend support that has persisted since 2012.
The declines confirm the internal, hidden weakness that we have been discussing
since mid-summer, when many measures, such as market breadth, small-cap stocks,
and other measures topped out.
The theme that has supported this bull market and
economic recovery — the idea that
nothing bad would happen as long as central banks were providing cheap money stimulus — is beginning
to crumble.
Two things have happened .
One is that outside of the U.S., economic growth has hit a wall.
No surprise then that Vanguard MSCI World ex-USA Index (VEU), a great
proxy for major stocks outside the U.S., has returned to levels last seen in
September 2013.
The focus was on Germany last week, where industrial production,
factory orders, and export activity all posted the worst results since early
2009 amid chatter that the country is on the verge of falling back into a
technical recession.
Separately, France is having budget trouble. And the
euro-zone debt crisis threatens a comeback as credit rating agencies issue new
downgrades and the market starts to realize that the European Central
Bank can no longer bluff its way out of trouble, but must step up with a
big sovereign bond purchase stimulus program
(which could be illegal according to its charter and is an unpopular
idea with the Germans) after playing at
one for more than two years.
Japan is also at risk of falling back into recession (GDP growth
already contracted last quarter) as a recent sales tax hike and the negative
impact of a very weak yen (higher food, fuel, and import costs) pinch
consumers.
Japan has been held together by the idea that the Bank
of Japan would issue more cheap money stimulus and further slam the yen if
the economy faltered. But economists are realizing that a weak yen is hurting
more than it's helping at this point. Given Japan's massive 227 percent
national debt-to-GDP ratio (vs. around 100 percent for the U.S.), time is
running out.
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And in China, the People's Bank of China is
watching as Chinese electricity production contracts outright for the first
time since early 2009 in an anecdotal sign that the economy has hit a wall. But
the temptation to indulge in more credit
easing — as it did earlier this year in
response to the "Credit Equals Gold #1" bad bond scare — would
merely exacerbate the underlying problem of overreliance on debt-fueled growth
and overcapacity in key industries like
steel.
The second thing: The Federal Reserve is watching as its efforts to merely return monetary policy to a
more neutral footing — by bringing to an
end the QE3 bond purchase program and looking ahead to the first interest rate hike since 2006 — has resulted
in volatility in the corporate bond
market and a massive, dangerous rally in the U.S. dollar.
This has crushed commodity prices, tightened credit to foreign
economies (many of which have grown dependent on borrowing at low rates in cheap dollars), and threatens to slow U.S.
GDP growth by pinching exports. And now,
with the Q3 earnings season getting underway, Wall Street is worried that
companies are going to downgrade forward guidance because of the negative profit
impact from a strong dollar, since it reduces the value of overseas earnings.
This is coming at a time when the Bureau of Economic Analysis' preferred measure of corporate
profits — which puts depreciation on an
economic basis and removes accounting gimmickry like inventory profits —
is dropping at a pace normally seen in
recessions. As shown in the chart above, this measure of profits is already
falling at a rate on pace with the one seen during the dual recessions of the
early 1980s.
The more dovish officials at the Federal Reserve,
including new vice-chairman Stanley
Fischer, have already responded by saying a loss of momentum in the U.S. economy could cause the
Fed to slow its pace of policy
normalization. With the unemployment rate at 5.9 percent (hitting the
Fed's year-end target months ahead of schedule) and the job market tightening
(job openings at 2001 levels), it will be hard to justify this in the near
term.
But if it happened in the medium term, would slowing the pace
of normalization be enough? Considering that the monetary base has already
swollen from $800 billion before the last recession to more than $4 trillion
now, and that bond yields have been near historic lows for years, would a full turn-about
to do more bond-buying stimulus make a difference?
While you ponder that, note that it wouldn’t do much to help
Germany, Japan, or China deal with their specific set of problems. Nor is it clear
that it would reverse the slide in corporate profits or the rise in corporate
bond spreads — both of which are combining to slam the brakes on the share
buyback programs that have been a big boost to the stock market over the last
two years.
These are big questions with no easy answers. Just the nagging feeling that maybe central banks have
already done all they can and that it's
time for new strategies, or for nature to take its course.
You have to imagine that someday governments and companies will
have to address deeper, structural problems that remain unresolved. Here at
home, that includes a broken tax code, dilapidated infrastructure, unreformed
entitlement programs, a national deficit that's set to never close, a screwed
up healthcare system, subpar education system, regulatory morass, and a worrisome decline in entrepreneurship.
No one can say what happens next. But what's a touch more clear
is that something appears to be ending. I'm not just talking about the 40-week
moving average on the S&P 500. It's bigger than that.
It's the general feeling that the smooth sailing the world has
enjoyed since 2012 — when the ECB threatened a sovereign bond buying program
and ended the euro-zone debt crisis, when the Fed launched QE3 and ended a deflation scare, when the People's
Bank of China stopped worrying about
inflation and opened the credit taps, and when the Bank of Japan
launched the first phase of
"Abenomics" by destroying the yen with cheap money stimulus — are over.
And with investor sentiment coming off of record highs,
we've yet to see the cathartic panic of the kind we saw back in 2011 after the
U.S. credit rating downgrade much less a wholesale sentiment collapse of the
2000 or 2008 variety.
Market breadth continues to deteriorate as fewer and fewer survivors
— i.e. big staples producers like Coca-Cola (KO) and Procter
& Gamble (PG) — resist the downside pressure.
As a result, I expect the fireworks to continue at the
very least through November as more
wildcards — the mid-term elections, the
potential return of knockdown budget battles between Congress and the
White House, the Ebola contagion threat
and the collapse of oil demand — are thrown
into the mix.
Near term, my expectation is that bulls will make a valiant effort
to take advantage of last week's price and sentiment smack-downs to rally
stocks this week. Wall Street is likely to at least gin up some excuse for a rebound,
such as dovish comments from Fed leaders, some surprise M&A, a much
stronger than expected earnings report or just outright bargain-hunting.
The quality and extent of that rebound, should it materialize,
will provide clues about the rest of the month and quarter. I don't take the
Macro-Switch sharp decline lightly, however, so no matter how sharp a snapback
manages to emerge I will recommend lightening up.
The next line in the sand on the S&P 500 is 1845, which was
the close on the first day of the year. That's 3.2 percent lower than the Friday
close. Should that level give way, a much larger drop would be in store; the
next key level to watch is 1741, the February low, and then 1700, which is the
long-term trend-line.
Source: Money and Markets by Jon Markman, Money and Markets
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Comments
Turning
off the “bubble machine” is hard to do. Globalists and their beneficiaries will
fight ending QE. The last thing governments want is austerity. They must be
told to grow productivity, but that would require a skill set they don’t appear
to have. Eventually, Liberals will run
out of other peoples’ money.
What
we’re left with is our own economy, whatever it is. In Greece, they need to learn how to produce
everything they need for themselves, plus some to exports. Government dominated
“welfare countries” are not ready for this sovereign debt bubble-burst. The U.S. will fare better if we reverse our
“welfare march” and close our borders to all immigrants and refugees.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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