Tag Archives: Macro

Abenomics Failure In Six Charts

” Those who believe in Abenomics are suffering from amnesia. This is nothing new ” Yasunari Ueno (Mitzuho)

A few months ago in this blog I commented that the policy implemented by Japan to fight deflation is nothing new, and as such would not meet the expectations that consensus gave to the supposed magical solutions. And so it has been.

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Five Lies About Quantitative Easing

Compiled/created by Statistics Professor Juan Manuel Lopez-Zafra (@juanma_lz)
1) “QE has created 8 million jobs
QE has created 8 million job
2) “Despite QE, there is no inflation”
Despite QE, there is no inflation
3) “There is no evidence that QE creates financial asset inflation”
There is no evidence that QE creates financial asset inflation
…Or encourage excessive risk-taking
Or encourage excessive risk-taking
4) “QE helps average Americans, not Wall Street” 
QE helps average Americans, not Wall Street
5) “There is no evidence that QE is re-creating the housing bubble”
There is no evidence that QE is re-creating the housing bubble

Baltic Dry Index Shows The Global Economy Is Not Moving

Baltic Dry Index Shows The Global Economy Is Not Moving
 
 
The big moves seen in the Baltic Dry Index falling aggressively (down 52% YTD and back to September levels) have come from a combination of:
–          . Capesize rates have fallen 48% in a week to $17k per day. This has been driven by spot chartering falling to 72 vessels relative to the highs of 161 vessels chartered seen at the peaks in December.
–        .  Iron Ore imports are on hold after stockpiles in major Chinese ports have gone to 82mt versus 71mt average in 2013. Chinese crude steel output has fallen driven by pollution control measures as well.
Panamax rates have fallen 7% in a week due to the suspension of Colombian coal shipments until March by Drummond, the world’s 4th largest coal exporter.
–         . Crude tanker rates (VLCCs) have fallen 28% in a week to $30k per day, as vessels to the US are reducing given lower imports.
 
These moves justify the decline back to September levels, as the previous increases arrived from short term big rate improvements driven by re-stocking in India and China and an increase in refinery utilization –and oil imports- from the US.
In essence, rates are returning to a normalized level of small improvement from the lows but a shipping environment that is still oversupplied and global commerce is not improving drastically, and definitely not even close to 2007 levels. 
 
The moves up in rates in October-December were driven by one-off events that drove to a short-term tightness in very particular segments (Capesize and Panamax).