Category Archives: Global Economy

Global Economy

France Elections, A Risk to the Euro?

France is such a socialist country that, in the polls, the four candidates appear each with 20% vote intention. The voter has a “wide” variety of choice: the Socialist, the Social-Democrat, the Communist and the National Socialist.

However, what should amaze anyone is the fact that nearly 40% of the voters are choosing an anti-Euro option.

The rise of anti-Euro populism is not due to “austerity”. And populism is not defeated with more interventionism. France is the proof.

In France there has been no austerity, as the Natixis shows in “A big misunderstanding: The French think that there has been austerity”. Not only has public spending and the state intervention increased to 57% of GDP, with the government controlling major companies and nearly 70% of the economy, France has carried out for years a wrongly-called “expansive” Keynesian policy, despite two decades of stagnation. France is the example of a failure of central planning statism that some blame on the fact that there was not enough of it.

In the face of a misdiagnosis (“populism is due to the -ineexistent- budget cuts”), politicians propose the erroneous solution (“populism must be fought with more interventionism”), and what this does is legitimate the wrong message of magical solutions that lead the voter to prefer the most radical ideas.

Among those magical solutions, there are few things more ridiculous than the populist promise that everything will be great if France gets out of the euro and defaults.

In a delirious interview with Melenchon, the populist ultra-left candidate, he said that he counted on the “atomic bomb”. Stop paying the debt. A genius. “If we stop paying the debt, the economy does not suffer, only bankers suffer,” he said. On the other side of economic schizophrenia, at the far right, LePen’s party claimed that “70% of the French debt is issued before the monetary union, so it can be redenominated in French francs.” And they didn’t blink.

They forgot that their country runs a structural deficit and that it cannot finance that huge amount of expenses if it defaults.

They forgot that more than 40% of the French debt is in the pension plans, social security and savings of its citizens, which would sink their beloved welfare state.

They forgot that, in order to finance public expenditures of more than 1.2 trillion euros (57% of GDP), France needs a secondary market that supports the monetary policy of the Central Bank and a currency that is accepted globally as a reserve.

They forgot that, if France defaults on public debt, the risk premium of SMEs and families in their country soars and credit dries.

They forgot that their local financial system is three times the GDP of France and that, if a default sends it to bankruptcy, they can say farewell to citizens’ deposits.

Every populist always comes up with the brilliant idea of ​​doing what has never worked and thinking that this time will be different. Melenchon and LePen, like the rest, look at Venezuela or Zimbabwe and think that it has not worked because they were not in charge.

They forget that such a destruction is not solved by printing French francs, because it ignores the history and the disaster that inflationary policies were for Europe, always with the same result. Sink the economy, blame the external enemy, inflationism, war and back again.

The fallacy that a country will solve structural problems devaluing the currency is more than dismantled by reality. As if the ECB had not carried a massively expansive monetary policy, within the euro, they believe that the problem is that it is not devalued enough. France has spent ten years with an expansive fiscal and monetary policy, as shown by Natixis, and they think the problem is that it was not enough. That it did not work because the populists were notin power.

Default and devaluation destroy the average citizen, businesses and families, wiping out savings and deposits, cost of imports soar and the ability to finance their beloved State, collapses.

Lessons from the economic history of France:

Between 1790 and 1793, 3,500 million notes were issued in France, the so-called Assignats, which soon lost 95% of the value artificially decided by politicians. Of course, food prices soared with the loss of value of the currency. Finance Minister Claviere blamed the shopkeepers and the “merchants” and promised to force the machines and print more money.

Prices continued to rise inexorably. Money was worth less and less, and therefore, goods and services cost more and more.

And what did the French government do to make up for the mistake? Print more money, raise taxes and confiscate properties, destroying real investment and trade in the face of lack of legal certainty. The Jacobins introduced the “Law of Maximums” prohibiting price increases. Like Kirchner, Maduro … At the same time, they punished with jail and the guillotine anyone who rejected payment with paper money. This just got the shops closed, because owners just did not want those colored papers that were no longer worth anything.

Of course, now it is different. At that time, the state was not in debt more than 100% of its GDP, with more than 40% of that debt in the hands of families, with a structural deficit and a public expenditure of almost 60% of GDP.

But it is what populists want to repeat, with the argument that “this time is different”.

All populist inflationists always talk about the United States and the dollar to justify their monetary mirage and forget to be a global reserve currency, have a functioning secondary market and an attractive and dynamic market-based economy. The US dollar is not the global reserve currency because it is decided by a committee. It is so because the world trusts its economy.

I remember an episode of Game of Thrones in which a character said “he would not mind burning down the kingdom as long as he is appointed the king of the ashes”. That’s the populist strategy. To destroy the economy and proclaim themselves as the only savior, as the solution to their own sabotage. Poor France.

 

Daniel Lacalle is a PhD in Economics, fund manager and author of Escape from the Central Bank Trap (BEP), Life In The Financial Markets, and The Energy World Is Flat (Wiley).

Image courtesy Google Images, CNN

Video: Escape from the Central Bank Trap. Risks to Reflation, China and the US

In this short video we discuss the risks I outline in “Escape from the Central Bank Trap” (out now)

. Chinese growth. Careful what you wish for.

. Copper, telling us something about industrial demand and inflation expectations.

. Slow reform pace in the US

 

Daniel Lacalle is a PhD in Economics, fund manager and author of Escape from the Central Bank Trap (BEP), Life In The Financial Markets, and The Energy World Is Flat (Wiley).

Image courtesy Tressis

China’s Higher Growth Is No Relief, Shows No Change of Model

China posted a first quarter GDP growth of 6.9 percent, better than consensus and government estimates. This might sound good, until you get to the reasons behind it. Yet another debt-fuelled stimulus in overcapacity-ridden sectors and a dangerous property bubble.

. China’s total “social financing”, the broad measure of credit and liquidity in the economy, reached a record 6.93 trillion yuan (US$1 trillion) in the first quarter. Total social finance stood at 162.82 trillion yuan at the end of March, up 12.5 percent year-on-year, according to the PBOC data.

At the end of last month, total outstanding yuan-denominated loans stood at 110.83 trillion yuan, up 12.4 percent compared with the previous year.

A 12.5% increase in debt for a 6.9% increase in GDP shows how dangerous and unsustainable this growth is.

At the same time, spending by the central and local governments rose 21 percent from a year earlier. Considering the high level of overcapacity in the economy, further debt-fuelled stimulus only adds to an already problematic situation.

. The real estate bubble has not slowed down. In fact, it is the primary driver of growth in the first quarter. Real estate investment expanded by 9.1 percent year-on-year, with new construction accelerating, despite calls from the government to slow down speculation.

Outstanding real estate loans rose 26.1 percent year-on-year.

All these figures bring total debt in the Chinese economy to 257% of GDP, on its way to 300% in two-three years.

. On the positive side, disposable income growth picked up to 7.0 percent in the first quarter, the fastest since the end of 2015, and March retail sales rebounded 10.9 percent year-on-year driven by the property boom, mostly home appliances, furniture and decorations for new homes.

All in all, the 6.9% growth shows that the drivers of the Chinese economy remain in low productivity, high debt sectors.

More worrying, these figures show that the government seems to have given up on reforms to tackle overcapacity, debt and soaring property prices.

Daniel Lacalle is a PhD in Economics, fund manager and author of Escape from the Central Bank Trap (BEP), Life In The Financial Markets, and The Energy World Is Flat (Wiley).

Image courtesy Google Images, CNN

The Fed vs the ECB. A Risky Bet Against the Curve

Last week, the Federal Reserve announced three rate hikes in 2017, and another three in 2018, with a $600 billion reduction in its balance sheet ($420 billion in treasuries and $ 180 billion in mortgage-backed assets).

The announcement has sparked the concern of inflationists and bubble defenders. A downsizing of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet! Anathema. As if it had not risen from $900 billion to the terrifying figure of $4.5 trillion, and mainstream analysts are worried about a small decrease. None of them seem to worry about the huge bubble in bonds nor the excess of risk taken looking for a little yield.

Mainstream is so concerned that they have invented a direct correlation of the size of the Fed’s balance sheet to warn of a massive crash in the markets… Except it does not happen. Rates are rising, the dollar is strengthening, the Fed’s balance sheet is shrinking… and stocks are soaring.

Stocks soar because earnings are better, leading indicators improve and financial conditions strengthen, not only because of money supply. Quantitative easing generated inflation on financial assets, while dividends and buybacks created multiple expansion, and now earnings are back to the rescue.

What consensus is worried about is that, between 2017 and 2018, the composition of members of the Federal Reserve will change to a majority that defends sound money, that is, to end the assault on savers and the middle class that QE meant. In the past eight years, fiscal policy in the US has meant an increase in taxes of $ 1.5 trillion and destroyed a similar figure in the value and purchasing power of the main source of wealth of the United States citizen: deposits. The largest transfer of middle-class wealth to the government seen in over fifty years.

 

The Federal Reserve is already almost 300 basis points behind the curve. It should to have raised rates much faster.

Meanwhile, in Europe, the ECB is not just behind the curve. It is so far away it does not see the curve.

If the ECB continues with its monetary policy while normalization accelerates in the US, the vacuum effect will multiply.

What is the “vacuum effect”? The world’s US dollar supply shrinks as demand for the currency soars, generating capital outflows in countries that are not a global reserve currency and into the US. This vacuum effect, added to the repatriation of dollars from US companies, is a major risk for the European Union. With more than 1.3 trillion euros of excess liquidity in the ECB, the EU would face the opposite scenario. Supply of euros massively exceeds demand.

Some will say it is an opportunity to export more. It just does not happen. European exports outside of the Euro Zone have stalled since the ECB started its quantitative easing program. But what does happen is that international confidence in risky assets denominated in euros diminishes. If it also coincides with a deterioration of solvency indicators – deficit, net issues, interest payments over GDP – this deterioration in confidence can generate a significant risk that, today, few are analysing.

We must remember that the vast majority of global trade transactions are made in US dollar (87.6%, according to the BIS).

Contrary to what many people think, the percentage of global transactions in US dollars is not only high, but has recently risen. In the same period, since 2008, transactions in euros have fallen eight points. It is no coincidence that this collapse in the use of the euro in global transactions, accelerated with the so-called “monetary expansion”.

As we mentioned, the euro risks losing relevance in global trade, and the alleged “export-effect” is inexistent. If the United States finally puts the policy of defending sound money and the savings of its citizens as the center of its policy, it can create enormous uncertainties for a euro that is now used in fewer transactions globally.

You will say that the US cannot survive a strong dollar, but we already dismantled that argument here (“Is the US dollar the new gold?”).

Almost all governments and parliaments in European countries are seized by the single thought the Japan-style futile policy of negative real rates and excess liquidity must continue, despite evidence of the risks it generates, but Japan has huge savings in foreign currency and an enviable financial inflow. The European Union, does not.

If the ECB resists raising rates, when it is an emergency, and reducing asset repurchases, when it has 1.3 billion euros of excessive liquidity, there could be significant risks in a global economy where the euro is an anecdote. If this is a risk with a strong currency, backed by economic powerhouses, imagine what would happen with unsupported currencies, as the European populists want. A disaster.

If we forget the need to strengthen economies before monetary excess ends, the negative consequences will be serious. Of course, when a new crisis arises, some will blame lack of regulation, not reckless policy.

Daniel Lacalle is a PhD in Economics, fund manager and author of Life In The Financial Markets, The Energy World Is Flat (Wiley) and Escape from the Central Bank Trap (BEP).

Image courtesy Google Images