Wolf
Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
A new
report from Natixis, the asset management and investment
banking division of Groupe BPCE, the second largest bank in France
and one of the largest megabanks in the world with over $1.4 trillion
in assets, predicts what daredevil voices at the maligned margin of
financial analysis have worried about for a while: the likelihood
another financial panic.
It
will be caused ironically by the very mechanisms that are still used
to “fix” the last financial crisis: money-printing and
asset-purchases by major central banks around the world that
unleashed a global flood of liquidity, month after month, for over
five years.
Most of this practically unimaginable mountain
of moolah that has landed in the laps of banks, institutional
investors, hedge funds, private equity firms, and other speculators
has not been used to boost lending to the private sector in OECD
countries, the report confirmed, and thus has not contributed to the
recovery of the real economy in those countries. Instead, it has been
poured into financial assets and has artificially goosed their
valuations.
This money sloshing through the system and the
persistence of zero-interest-rate policies have driven desperate
investors ever further out into “all risky asset classes,”
including emerging assets, junk-rated corporate credit, Eurozone
peripheral debt, and equities. That buying pressure has inflated
their valuations even further. And in the emerging markets, it led to
an appreciation of exchange rates.
After
the May 2013 revelation that the Fed was thinking about tapering its
asset purchases, previously considered QE Infinity, there
was a whiff of panic. Capital began to flee emerging economies, and
their asset prices and exchange rates swooned. But now, the hot money
is pouring back into emerging assets, once again inflating valuations
and exchange rates.
Investors are holding their noses and closing
their eyes, and they’re buying even the crappiest debt of
peripheral Eurozone countries, motivated by the ECB’s 2012 pledge
to do “whatever it takes” to keep the Eurozone together. So an
international feeding frenzy broke out over the bonds that the Greek
government sold last week, only a couple of years after prior
bondholders had been treated to a terrible haircut. Valuations were
so excessive that the paper, larded with risks and supported by an
economy in shambles, yielded less than an FDIC insured one-year CD
did before the crisis.
At the same time, starting in 2012, “we saw
large buying flows of corporate bonds.” Credit spreads tightened
and risk premiums evaporated. With unlimited new and nearly free
money available to junk-rated companies that would otherwise have
trouble servicing their debt, default rates have been low. But
default rates explode when the tide turns, as it did during the
financial crisis, and this is going to happen again:
And investors have been plowing money into
equities and whipping many indices around the world from one high to
the next, “despite the geopolitical risks and the uncertainties
lingering over growth.”
This is exactly what the Fed and other central
banks have explicitly wanted to achieve with their staggered and
well-coordinated waves of QE. They’ve separated markets from
reality. They’ve eliminated gravity. They’ve created that
infamous wealth effect. As a result, “investors are ignoring the
risks weighing on the different asset classes”:
- External deficits and “virtual stagnation” of industrial production in the large emerging countries
- Credit spreads that no longer cover the average risk of corporate default over the maturity of a bond
- Still rising public debt ratios in the peripheral Eurozone countries
- Soaring non-performing loans at banks in peripheral Eurozone countries; a horror picture belying any official protestations of a banking recovery:
And then the report added gingerly, not wanting
to be held responsible for having created a stock-market panic on its
own: “If share prices continue to rise, the valuation of equities
will become abnormally high in relation to past levels….”
“We can see where this is heading,” the
report said. Namely toward a situation where the prevailing
“abundance of liquidity” and near-zero returns on risk-free
assets are driving investors into emerging assets, corporate credit,
Eurozone peripherals, and equities. And then “all risky asset
classes will become overvalued.”
And what are investors going to do, once they
open their eyes and figure this out?
The report by the second largest megabank in
France, one of the largest in the world, the epitome of mainstream
finance, comes to the same conclusion that those intrepid but
maligned voices on the margin of financial analysis have offered for
a while: “There are grounds to fear an episode of widespread panic
among investors,” who would try to dump all risky assets at the
same time, with buyers running for the exits too, “as we saw in
2008 and 2009.”
Fasten your seatbelts, they’re saying.
“Biotech
Stocks’ Rout Perplexes Analysts” the WSJ headlined the
phenomenon, as analysts continue to hype this stuff to small
investors. But hedge funds are dumping stocks, and private equity
firms are dumping their LBOs. That’s the Smart Money. They’re
getting out. Read…. “It’s
not a bubble,” Retail Investors Are Told As The Smart Money
Bails Out
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