Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

July 12, 2011

Lehman On My Mind

The US government still has not reached an agreement on raising the debt ceiling, the markets turn their backs on Spain and Italy, stocks worldwide erase all their recent month's earnings in two days, gold is near its historic high again... Everybody seems to be expecting another big hit to the economy sooner rather than later. We have already been there, we should know what to do. Quoting the great Ray Charles "No peace I find, just this old sweet song keeps Georgia on my mind". In this case the name may not be Georgia but Lehman Brothers, and the 'song' may not be sweet at all, but we should have it on our minds...

Because while preparing for this kind of impact, what people are not figuring out is that they are inadvertently paving the way for said impact to be much stronger. Nobody seems to trust anybody else these days, and this is bad, very bad for market stability. No matter how long you have traded or invested with a counter-party, no matter how strong and risk-averse you have been for years; in the eyes of others nobody seems safe against what is coming. 

Lehman Brothers' situation was really bad, but it was the mistrust from its clients, partners and rivals that put it into a corner and accelerated its demise. This mistrust seems to be the general rule in financial markets these days. Today everybody is hedging against everybody else, buying insurance and taking CDSs (Credit Default Swaps) through the roof. This mistrust has enough power to stall the global financial markets; and as we recently became aware of, a financial crisis can transform in a fully fledged economic crisis in the blink of an eye. If that was to happen we would find ourselves in the much feared double-dip recession. I do not want to even think about what another economic crisis would mean globally when we are still struggling to make our ways out of the first one. However there is something I can be totally sure of: if such a double-dip recession happened, a lot of players would be out of the game very soon. A lot of companies, and most importantly some countries, would be unable to dodge a second punch when they are still dizzy from the first one.

July 6, 2011

A skyrocketing euro for a deep diving Europe

Although it is not the first time I write about why I think the actual exchange rate of the euro against other currencies is wrong (see here and here), the latest developments on the Eurozone's life well deserve a revision of the subject. A quick look at the Eurozone lets one see some not very encouraging facts. The Greek tragedy has been quieted down in the last days but is far from over. In fact almost everybody with eyes in the matter is expecting a default sooner rather than later. The only uncertainty seems to rest in knowing if it would be an orderly default, basically a giant debt restructuring effort (hopefully...), or a messy one.

On the opposite side of Europe we have Portugal, but it seems to be in the opposite side only geographically speaking, because its bonds have also been kicked out of investment grade and are now officially  'junk' grade like Greece's. This will make Portugal financing efforts (even) more difficult, which in turn could end with Portugal asking Europe for more money soon. And to complete the domino effect, this troubles are putting extra pressure into Italy's and Spain's not-exactly-buoyant finances.

Credit: Yahoo! Finance

But the euro simply does not care. As seen in the graph above, the euro is rising against the US Dollar, the British Pound and the Chinese Renminbi, and it is doing so with a specially notable rally in the actual week despite all the bad news surrounding the Eurozone. The european currency is spiking also against special cases like the Japanese Yen and the Swiss Franc, although this is a totally different matter. The Yen has its own set of playing rules because of the Fukushima incident, and the Swiss Franc had been overtly growing uncomfortable with its strength against the euro affecting their exports competitiveness. The case with China's Renminbi is a difficult one to analyze, but what happens with the Dollar and the Sterling Pound?

April 25, 2011

The government, that drag on the economy.

In the previous post, on why economic recovery was being compromised by excessive and useless government spending I quickly illustrated my point with a table showcasing government expenditure in percentage of GDP and also average tax burden on percentage of GDP. I did not analyze the data from the table though, it deserved its own post. So let us have a look at how much money the governments need in some countries:
2011 data from The Heritage Foundation , The Wall Street Journal via Wikipedia

The highest percentages on government spending are found scattered across developed countries, specially in Europe. On Baltic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden) we can see the percentage even goes over 50% of GDP . No surprises here, blame it on their splendid welfare systems everybody loves... The real problem is not welfare systems themselves, but the progression of the government spending in the latest years. People would agree with me than welfare systems and social measures have not increased during the last 5 years, in any case they have been reduced, but government expenditure on the other side has kept growing, as plotted in the following chart for the biggest economies in Europe.

Credit: Eurostat


The corrections on the growing trend seen in the 2010 data, as you may expect, are related to the austerity packages endorsed by the European Union to fight the financial and debt crisis. But these corrections have been too soft to correct the situation. Economists and traders everywhere (The Economist devoted an issue to this matter) see the situation as unbearable, which explains the rising concerns on sovereign solvency that has plagued the markets and has already blasted through Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
But if this has been this way for a long time, what can possibly have changed to make the situation so worrying for developed countries?

April 18, 2011

Get used to China's trade deficit

When the balance of trade for February 2011 was published a lot of people were genuinely shocked to see that China had a 7.3$ billion trade deficit, the first since March 2010. When those same people think of China, they think on an enormous factory and lots of container full of goods ready to be transported to the West. While this image is right to some extent, they seem to disregard China's soaring internal demand for non-Chinese goods (mostly luxury items) and the uncomfortable neighbor that rising commodity prices are.


China's main clients are Europe and the USA, and with both of them growing slowly in the first quarter of 2011, exports have obviously slowed down too. China knew this, and expected to offset this slowdown with increasing internal demand. However this internal demand had another idea, it has focused mostly on non-Chinese goods... China is starting to have an incipient middle-upper class, but more importantly it is creating lots of new millionaires every month. And this newly created wealth is mostly being used to buy western goods, specially luxury cars, high-end clothes and fine jewelery. Take as an example BMW and Mercedes, whose sales in China grew 76% last year. This can be the biggest example, but it is only one of many; luxury clothing brands keep opening flagship stores (mainly in Shanghai) to fill the never-ending Chinese appetite for foreign luxury.
How many containers full of light bulbs, ipod accesories or handkerchiefs do you need to compensate for a Chinese entrepreneur buying a fully-equipped BMW 7-series? There you have your trade deficit...

January 18, 2011

Debt death spiral

Issuing debt when you have problems is not the answer. It is not the answer for today's problems and obviously it will not be the answer for your forthcoming problems... In fact it creates more problems for the future. Take the case of a struggling household, what is the wise thing to do if your income was to decrease for some reason: Keeping your spending as usual by borrowing money? or trying to optimize it and reduce expendables? Everyone on its right mind will tell you the later is the only responsible and logic way to go. Well, everyone but European governments or so it seems.

January 5, 2011

Europe. Opposed realities, same currency

When the euro was born in the late 90's everybody (except for the UK and Sweden) thought that adopting it was the best way to boost the European Union (EU), to establish it as a competing power to the supremacy of the United States and its reference currency, the US Dollar. It was expected to facilitate intra-EU commerce and tourism, ease the access to credit and financial instruments and making them more stable at the same time. Purchasing power and exports-imports from EU companies would benefit from having a better reference instrument to compare their money against the rest of the world currencies, lowering the risk introduced by exchange rates fluctuation worldwide. It really had all of those benefits, at least at the beginning... 

December 28, 2010

Peak-oil? More like Peak-gas

Everybody talks every once in a while about the much feared Peak-oil, but what we are suffering right now is a different phenomenon. We are seeing gas prices go through the roof worldwide, matching or even exceeding the record prices posted on the summer of 2008 when the Brent crude hit the 145$/barrel mark. 
Since then we have grown accustomed to high gas prices, fueled (pun not intended) by consecutive cuts in production from the OPEC and political conflicts around the world. However, even if we take these factors into account, the demand has fallen so abruptly due to the economic crisis than the barrel price is steady at 85-91$/barrel. The problem is that actual gas prices are not following the price of the oil they come from. But a picture is worth a thousand words:

$/barrel VS $/gallon from 01.01.2008 to 12.27.2010 (All data from US Energy Information Administration)