Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
I was interviewed by Jorge Nascimento Rodrigues for Janela na web, a Portuguese management site. After what I said, he might never interview me again :-]
1-
Sovereign bond yields of some Eurozone peripherals are at historical
lows, in certain cases even below yields for US Treasuries and UK Gilts.
So the three-year austerity adjustments worked?
Central
banks have performed a miracle: separating financial assets from
reality. The crassest example is the Bank of Japan. Not far behind are
the Fed and the ECB. Japan’s fiscal situation is far worse than
Greece’s. Gross national debt is over 220% of GDP. About half of every
yen the government spends is borrowed. There is no solution in sight to
bring down the deficit. Hence, the debt will continue to balloon.
Standard & Poor’s rates Japan’s debt AA-, four notches from the top.
Inflation in April was 3.4% for all items from a year earlier, with
goods prices up 5.2%. And yet, 10-year JGBs yield below 0.6%. Whoever
holds this dodgy paper is getting creamed. But by purchasing every JGB
that isn’t nailed down, the BOJ has effectively imposed a peg on yields.
“Financial repression” is the result.
Draghi’s
promise to do “whatever it takes” has had a similar effect, but less
pronounced. To investors, it no longer matters what the classic risks of
holding debt are. The only risk that matters is what the ECB will do.
With its whatever-it-takes promise, the ECB has effectively given
investors the idea that sovereign bonds are a one-way bet.
So the
austerity adjustments have had little impact on yields. But they’ve had a
huge impact on the real economy in the affected countries – and rarely
for the better. Bailing out bank bondholders, stockholders, and
counterparties and then making workers give up wages and benefits – the
lucky ones who got to keep their jobs – and imposing numerous other cuts
to fund these bailouts isn’t exactly a prescription for economic
success. But it benefited investors!
2-
Are these historical lows sustainable? For Portugal the historical
“average” for 10-year sovereigns is 6.8%, based on data from Global
Financial Data. Since 1997, yields were below 4% for only 28 months. Now
they’ve dropped to 3.3% and might go a little lower. Does this mean
that Portuguese “fundamentals” have changed?
My
example – and every central banker’s role model – is the Bank of Japan.
Portugal’s fiscal situation is far better than Japan’s, and Japan’s
10-year yield is currently below 0.6%. So by that standard, Portugal’s
is still high. Portugal’s economic and fiscal fundamentals are a
different story. But if the ECB decided tomorrow to very vocally abandon
its “whatever-it-takes” pledge, and to pronounce that it would never
ever again engage in any form of bond purchases, guarantees, or special
loans, not even through the back door, and that all countries in the
Eurozone would have to deal with their debt and the financial markets on
their own, Portuguese yields would soar to crisis levels. Portugal
could borrow even under these conditions, but at much higher rates –
rates that it could not afford. Hence a debt crisis.
3-
Jeremy Stein, Harvard professor and former US Fed Board member,
proposed we focus the attention on risk premiums in the sovereign bond
market. Risk premiums for certain Eurozone peripherals are declining
with respect to German Bunds or Nordics’ bonds. Are investors in the
Eurozone bond market taking on excessive risk?
The
only risk investors are currently paying attention to is what the ECB
will do in the future. As the ECB has backed all Eurozone sovereign
bonds, it has taken credit risk essentially off the table, as far as
investors are concerned. They cannot imagine that the ECB would let
Portugal default. The risk of inflation remains, though inflation is low
at this point. But look at Japan: inflation jumped and yields haven’t
budged. Investors see that. Bondholders used to fear inflation. Now they
take it lying down. When a central bank with its unlimited power to
manipulate sovereign debt markets gets involved, the overbearing risk is
the central bank itself – and what it will or will not do in the
future.
With
their policies, central banks have pushed all investors who want to earn
any kind of yield way out to the thin end of the classic risk limb. At
the next major storm, these investors will fall off and get hurt.
4-
You recently wrote that the Financial Stress Index dropped to the
lowest level on record, going back to December 1998. But instead of
three cheers, you are worried about it. Why?
The
Financial Stress Index, issued by the St. Louis Fed, is based on 18
components, such as interest rates (Fed Funds, Treasuries, corporate
bonds, and asset backed securities), yield spreads, and “Other
Indicators” that include the VIX volatility index, expected inflation
rate, and the S&P 500 Financials index.
The
prior record low of “financial stress” was achieved in February 2007
when the financial system in the US was already cracking under mountains
of toxic securities and iffy overleveraged mega-bets cobbled together
and sold at peak valuations to funds held by unsuspecting investors in
their retirement nest eggs. And banks stuffed this paper into their
basements and into off-balance-sheet vehicles, while their financial
statements showed values and profits that didn’t exist. No one cared.
Greed and obfuscation ruled the day. That’s what “low financial stress”
means.
In
bubble times, when exuberance takes over, when nothing can go wrong,
when risk has been banished from the system, and when interest rates are
low, perceived financial stress simply disappears. At that point,
decision makers – from homebuyers to bank CEOs – make reckless decisions
that can only be funded when there is nearly free money for everything,
and when this crap can be unloaded no questions asked. It happened in
2007, and it’s happening now again. These decisions always come to haunt
the markets. It’s just a question of when.
5-
Another index under the spot is the Euro High Yield Index from BofA
Merrill Lynch. It is also at historical lows, going back to 1997. What
does that mean?
Junk
bonds have benefitted particularly from the ECB’s interest rate
repression. As desperate investors are searching for yield, any kind of
yield at any risk anywhere, they come upon junk bonds, and they hold
their noses and close their eyes and pick up this stuff, and it drives
up demand and represses yields further. With plenty of liquidity
sloshing through the system, the risk of default is perceived as minimal
since everyone knows that even junk-rated companies that are losing
money can usually refinance their debt and sell new debt to
yield-desperate investors. Everyone knows that the day of reckoning is
being delayed, and hopefully for long enough. But this debt is
explosive, and it sits on the shelf everywhere, waiting to go off. It
has to be refinanced – which may be difficult or impossible in an era of
higher rates and tighter liquidity. Hence, once again, all eyes are on
the ECB, instead of on the junk-rated, overleveraged, money-losing
companies and the crappy paper they’re selling.
6- Is ECB monetary strategy under Draghi fueling the Eurozone sovereign bond market? Are we living in bubble dynamics?
The ECB
in conjunction with the Fed, the Bank of Japan, and others have created
the greatest credit bubble in history. Financial markets are distorted
beyond recognition. Real risks are covered up and cease to figure into
the calculus. Related asset bubbles are blooming everywhere,
particularly in equities, and in some places in housing, farmland, and
other sectors. Bubbles are good: some people get immensely rich,
governments collect more taxes, banks are saved as they can write up
certain assets on their books…. There are just two problemitas with
bubbles: they don’t do much for the real economy; and they invariably
implode. Then sit back and watch the magnificent and very destructive
fireworks!
7-
Fiscal policy in the Eurozone has been driven by austerity marked by
disinflation and quasi-economic stagnation. Is ECB easing – and a
collateral bubble in sovereigns and stock exchanges – the only way?
Disinflation
– that is inflation at a lower rate – is good for most people as the
prices of goods and services rise only slowly, rather than quickly. In
many countries, wages have lagged behind inflation; hence, real wages
have dropped. It is widely claimed that lower real wages make a country
more “competitive.” But with what? The competitor down the street? Not
that many industries have to compete with Bangladesh. But it does
increase corporate profits. It’s a devastating experience for workers,
and it reduces domestic consumption. Inflation is a tax on wages (except
where wages are indexed to inflation). On the other hand, low or no
inflation or even slight deflation is good for workers, savers, and many
investors.
But low
inflation or deflation is toxic for over-indebted governments,
companies, and other debt sinners because they can no longer rely on
inflation to mitigate their debt. In a land of low or no inflation,
corporations have trouble showing paper growth in revenues and profits.
And it’s terrible for politicians who rely on inflation to take care of
their promises.
We now
know that these days, central bank easing is creating asset bubbles,
which, when they implode, are devastating for the real economy. Easing
may or may not create consumer price inflation. It doesn’t seem to
stimulate the real economy, as we have seen in the US where economic
growth has been tepid despite enormous amounts of easing for over the past five years.
Solution?
Let the markets sort this out on their own, let decrepit overleveraged
companies and banks fail and restructure, let even big investors lose
their shirts, and let the real economy take priority. People are smart.
They can figure out how to make this work once central bank manipulators
get out of the way. Wolf Richter interviewed by Jorge Nascimento Rodrigues for Janela na web.
Speaking of Japan, a terrible corporate hangover from the consumption-tax hike has set in. Read…. Japan Inc.’s Worst Quarterly Outlook Since The 2011 Earthquake
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