Succinct Summation of Week’s Events 1/23/15
by Barry
Ritholtz - January 23rd, 2015, 4:30pm
Succinct Summations week
ending January 23rd
Positives:
1. ECB to start a QE
of their own; 60 billion a month until September 2016 and markets around the
world explode higher
2. Housing starts rose 4.4% in December to an annualized pace of 1.09mm coming in much stronger than the 1.2% and 1.02mm expected.
3. The German Dax hit all-time highs.
4. The Dow and S&P 500 have their first positive week of 2015
2. Housing starts rose 4.4% in December to an annualized pace of 1.09mm coming in much stronger than the 1.2% and 1.02mm expected.
3. The German Dax hit all-time highs.
4. The Dow and S&P 500 have their first positive week of 2015
Negatives:
1. Real yields in
parts of the world go negative.
2. Existing home sales in 2014 fell 3.1%
3. NAHB Homebuilder sentiment fell to 57, vs expectations of 58.
4. China GDP rose 7.4% in 2014, from 7.7% in 2013.
5. Building permits declined 1.9% to a pace of 1.03mm, both weaker than expected.
6. Existing home sales rose in December by 2.4% vs expectations for a 3% rise.
7. Initial jobless claims came in at 307k vs 300k expected.
2. Existing home sales in 2014 fell 3.1%
3. NAHB Homebuilder sentiment fell to 57, vs expectations of 58.
4. China GDP rose 7.4% in 2014, from 7.7% in 2013.
5. Building permits declined 1.9% to a pace of 1.03mm, both weaker than expected.
6. Existing home sales rose in December by 2.4% vs expectations for a 3% rise.
7. Initial jobless claims came in at 307k vs 300k expected.
BONUS:
by David Kotok - January
25th, 2015, 5:00am
ECB, Euro, USD, Interest Rates
David R. Kotok
Cumberland, January 24, 2015
David R. Kotok
Cumberland, January 24, 2015
After a
two-and-a-half-year wait for “whatever it takes,” the quantitative easing (QE)
announced this week by the European Central Bank (ECB) is different from the QE
undertaken by the Federal Reserve (Fed) during and after the financial crisis
and now completed. The European action
comes in the aftermath of the Fed’s programs and is a European attempt to
confront complex economics.
In the 2008–2014 Fed version, QE injected
liquidity into markets that were frozen. More QE was then piled on as the Fed
expanded its holdings of federally backed securities. A single sovereign
guaranteed that debt, and that was the United States government.
The QE process quickly drove the short-term interest rate to zero
but not below zero. Over time the longer-term interest rates followed a similar
path to lower and lower levels. The reduction in interest
rates translated to reduced mortgage and corporate-financing costs. The process
has continued for seven years. A refinancing apparatus could then develop in
the US economy as one agent after another took advantage of persistently lower
interest rates. Lenders adjusted to the new notion of lower interest rates for
longer periods. Investors were hit by financial repression as their savings
instruments matured and rolled over into lower interest rates. That process is ongoing in 2015.
In the
US, behaviors changed over the course of seven years. Positions that were
initially viewed as being temporary started to seem permanent.
Forecasters
warned, “The Fed is printing all this money; we’ll have a big inflation;
interest rates will skyrocket; and the economy and markets will go in the
tank.” The warnings were repeated ad infinitum in the media. They were debated
by some.
Cumberland
Advisors numbered among the debaters. We argued “no.” We were in the minority.
Over and over again we heard predictions of hyperinflation and higher interest
rates. We said “no.” We heard
all of the outcomes that would be terrible as a result of QE. We said “no.” Seven years on, the debate
continues, with the detractors
predicting doom. Meanwhile, in the United States, interest rates are very
low. There is minimal inflation. The economic recovery is strengthening. The
American stock markets reached all-time highs within the last month.
The
detractors are still predicting the end of the world. Someday they may be
correct. But not in January, 2015. At Cumberland we still say “no.” Not
yet!
Seven
years later in the US we can now add a major oil shock to the economic
positives. With QE-induced refinancing in place and with growing intensity in
our economic recovery, the outlook is simply marvelous. In 2015, our growth
will be above 3%, employment will improve, and inflation will remain low. The
positive trends continue and are becoming more robust. In addition, we have the
world’s strongest major reserve currency, with a long run still ahead of it.
And we have a better fiscal balance in the US than most nations enjoy.
In the
US, QE was controversial and still is. Meanwhile, look at results. It worked.
Examine
the same issues in the Eurozone and the ECB, and we see a different picture
than in the US.
The ECB
will be acquiring over €1
trillion in sovereign debt. Their allocation method is quite different from the
Fed’s. They have to deal with the sovereign debts of different countries that
have different levels of creditworthiness, ranging from junk-bond status in
Greece to the highest-grade status in Germany and Finland. There is no
inflation and no expectation of inflation in the Eurozone. Interest rates for
the debt of the very highest-grade sovereigns are already next to zero in the
Eurozone. The same is true for nearby sovereigns like Sweden and for Switzerland.
In all of
Europe, interest rates on longer-term sovereign debt are remarkably low and
mostly lower than in the US. Italy’s 10-year benchmark sovereign debt touched
1.4% on Friday. Spain reached 1.25%. In Germany, the sovereign benchmark for
the Eurozone, the 30-year bond yield is 1%, and the 10-year note is 0.2%. All
German maturities under 5 years are trading at negative yields.
QE by the
ECB will not lower interest rates — they are already at or near zero. In fact,
the ECB has announced it will acquire sovereign debt even if the yield is
negative. Think about that. The central bank will be creating money in order to
pay the various sovereign governments for the privilege of buying their debt.
That is how a negative interest rate works.
Meanwhile,
the fiscal situation in Europe is still under repair, a process that will take
many years. In countries like France, a great portion of the economy, more than
half, is driven by the government. Italy is another case study of a huge burden
of social promises and a deficient funding mechanism to pay for them. Greece is
a mess without easy answers. Others in Europe no longer care whether Greece
exits the Eurozone. Many hope that they do, because it is nearly impossible to
throw any country out. Grexit (the term for a Greece exit from the Eurozone) would be welcomed
by other peripheral countries, although the celebration in those countries
would be a quiet one due to the observance of political correctness.
To be
blunt, the divisions in Europe cannot be healed by QE. The promises that are
expensed as social benefit payments act to reduce productivity and restrain
growth. This fiscal reality cannot be cured by QE. In fact, there is no
liquidity shortage in Europe for QE to fix. QE is not a reform mechanism for
euro-sclerosis. QE cannot cure sick governance. It cannot lower interest rates
when they are at zero. It cannot stimulate credit expansion when there is no
credit demand. If zero interest rates won’t work, a continuation of zero
interest rates also won’t work.
So what
does QE do?
In
Europe, QE transfers the fiscal failure of the sovereign states involved to the
monetary authority, the European Central Bank. The ECB creates money. The money
is used to buy the sovereign debt of Eurozone members at an interest rate of zero
or near-zero. The sovereign debt the ECB buys is likely to be held for years.
It must be viewed as a permanent structure, just as it has become in Japan. The
ECB will not be “tapering” in this decade. Maybe it will do so in the next
decade. The proceeds of the issuance of sovereign debt will fund the social
promises that governments cannot otherwise keep. Contrast that situation with
that in the US, where the annualized government deficit is nearly $1 trillion
smaller than it was at its worst in 2009.
In
Europe, QE is a circular mechanism. It has no multiplier in the credit arena.
It inspires no productivity gain from investment by the private sector. It is
merely circular.
So, if it
is circular, why have QE?
There is
one element that works with QE, whether in the US or Europe. We have seen it
work in the US, and we will see it work in Europe. QE withdraws duration from
the market and transfers it onto the government’s books. The market then seeks
to replace the duration in its asset mix. That is why asset prices rise when QE
occurs: asset prices rise when duration is in demand, and they fall when
duration is in supply. When central banks extract duration from the market, it
has to be replaced with something else. Stocks are long-duration assets. Real estate
is a long-duration asset. Collectibles and precious metals are long-duration
assets. Patents and other forms of intellectual property rights are
long-duration assets. Cash is not long-duration. The duration of cash is one
day.
In the
US, QE has resulted in record stock market prices. They are still rising. QE
has resulted in higher real estate prices. They are still rising. QE adds to
the upward direction of asset prices and the accumulation of wealth by the
wealthy. We see it in the statistics that track wealth and in the statistics
that are derived from the income streams owned by the wealthy.
Wealth
effects operate with a time lag. There is a slight transfer each year from
accumulated wealth into consumption spending and hence into economic growth. It
is a small percentage. From a higher and rising stock market, we estimate that
transfer to be 1%-2% in any given year. If stock market wealth rises and there
is a positive and permanent wealth effect of $100 over the course of the year,
an additional $1 to $2 in annual spending transfers slowly to economic growth.
We see that at work in the US. We will see it at work in Europe as well.
There is
a higher transfer when real estate prices rise and are viewed as permanently
heading higher. The financing mechanism for housing has a multiplier that is
greater than the financing mechanism applied to financial assets. That makes
sense since the credit multiplier for housing is higher than for stocks. For
example, stocks can sit in your 401(k) unleveraged, while houses are mortgaged
and do not sit in 401(k)s. Therefore the transmission mechanism from higher housing
wealth is more robust than the transmission mechanism from higher stock prices.
Yale Professor Bob Shiller notes that housing wealth effects can reach 3% to 5%
a year. We already see some of those effects in the US, thanks to QE. As
housing becomes more robust, we will see more of the positive housing wealth
effects in the US. We will see a little of this happening in the Eurozone.
The
conclusion is that the extended and predictable period of QE in Europe will
give some positive stimulus to economic growth via the wealth-effect
transmission method. It will not be a panacea for Europe’s problems. Monetary
policy cannot fix fiscal policy errors or the suppression of production by
governments, but monetary policy can raise asset prices. In Europe it will do
so. In the US it already has done so, and the rise is not over.
At
Cumberland Advisors, we remain fully invested in the US stock market in our
exchange-traded fund (ETF) strategies. We are focused on domestic businesses.
Our largest overweight is the utility sector. It is 95% domestic, so its
corporate entities do not have to worry about foreign currency translations
impacting their earnings. The sector benefits from a slowly and steadily
growing US economy. It pays dividend yields that exceed the riskless interest
rate from Treasury notes. It is defensive and less volatile than other sectors
in a period when volatility is rising.
Our
international ETF strategies have a majority of components that are currency
hedged. Our outlook for the dollar is a prolonged period of strengthening. We
expect a lot of adjustment vis-à-vis the other currencies that are involved in
the present historic restructuring of monetary policy. Those currencies will
weaken relative to the dollar. It is conceivable that the yen could reach 135
or 150 to the dollar over a period of several years. It is conceivable that the
euro-dollar exchange rate could be 1.00, 0.90, or 0.85 over the next two or
three years. The range of possibilities is unknown, and the confidence
intervals on such estimates are very wide.
Imagine a
world where the US central bank policy rate is 1% and the Eurozone central bank
policy rate is minus 0.2%. The math suggests that the dollar would then
strengthen by 1.2% a year against the euro. Compare the current 10-year German
Bund at 0.2% to the 10-year US note. The difference is 1.7%. That math suggests
the dollar will strengthen 17% against the euro over the next 10 years. Please
note that this is a very simplified model. The actual way this comparison is
done is much more complex, but the concept is the same. Interest-rate
differentials explain longer-term movements in currency exchange rates.
We cannot
fully estimate what euro-dollar exchange rates will be. The truth is, nobody
knows.
We
anticipate the volatilities associated with this massive transition in policy
to reach new levels. That means lots of activity in managed portfolios and a
need for the portfolio manager to be nimble and move quickly when required.
Volatility
is bidirectional. It is scary when it causes prices to accelerate if they fall.
It is frightening at inflection points. And it is exhilarating when it
enables prices to head upward. Expect all of the above in 2015.
~~~
David R.
Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer, Cumberland
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