About Edward Hugh

Edward 'the bonobo is a Catalan economist of British extraction. After being born, brought-up and educated in the United Kingdom, Edward subsequently settled in Barcelona where he has now lived for over 15 years. As a consequence Edward considers himself to be "Catalan by adoption". He has also to some extent been "adopted by Catalonia", since throughout the current economic crisis he has been a constant voice on TV, radio and in the press arguing in favor of the need for some kind of internal devaluation if Spain wants to stay inside the Euro. By inclination he is a macro economist, but his obsession with trying to understand the economic impact of demographic changes has often taken him far from home, off and away from the more tranquil and placid pastures of the dismal science, into the bracken and thicket of demography, anthropology, biology, sociology and systems theory. All of which has lead him to ask himself whether Thomas Wolfe was not in fact right when he asserted that the fact of the matter is "you can never go home again".

Happy Birthday Italy

You are two today, since you just completed 24 consecutive months of retail sales decline.

Business confidence isn’t looking any too rosy either:

And I hope you are “readying up” that rescue plan for Sunday Angela, since the difference between German and Italian benchmark bond yields widened to the most in nearly 12 years today as Italy sold 10 billion euros ($12.8 billion) of government securities.

The spread between the 10-year note yields increased as much as four basis points to 161 basis points today, the widest since May 1997, based on generic Bloomberg prices. It was at 155 basis points as of 12:05 p.m. in London. The average in the past 10 years is 31 basis points.

Germany or the International Monetary Fund may be forced to rescue members of the euro bloc that struggle to refinance debt, former Bundesbank President Karl Otto Poehl said today.

“The first will certainly be a small country, so that can be managed by the bigger countries or the IMF,” he said in an interview with Sky News. “There are countries in Europe which are considering the possibility to leave the eurozone. But this is practically not possible. It would be very expensive.”

Angela Merkel Says “Maybe” To Common EU Initiative In Support Of Member States

Sunday is obviously going to be “D Day” or something like it for the European Union. Leaders of all 27-member EU states will meet in Brussels to discuss concerns about growing protectionism and to examine ways to finance an all Europea economic recovery plan. On the table are two big issues:

a) What to do about eurozone member states who find themselves in difficulty.
b) What to do about the problems posed for the whole EU by the mounting problems in Eastern Europe.

On the first topic “our Angela” is clearly shifting from the time when the German Finance Ministry was simply denying “Der Spiegel Reports”, and is now saying that euro zone nations need to show solidarity towards each other in the current crisis, offering her strongest signal yet that Germany is prepared to help weaker members of the bloc. According to Reuters:

“We have shown solidarity and things will stay like that, but this must be on the basis of the commitments that form the foundation of our common currency,” Merkel said, when asked about possible German aid to fellow euro zone members.

Speaking at a news conference with the foreign press in Berlin, she referred directly to Ireland, which faces ballooning deficits, saying: “A country like Ireland .. is in a very different situation from a country that has fewer banks, such as Slovakia.” Germany has made clear it opposes the idea of a joint euro zone bond issue to alleviate financial pressure on fragile states in the bloc. But a consensus seems to be forming around some other form of aid, with strict conditions attached that would compel recipient countries to consolidate their budgets in line with the goals set out in the EU’s Stability and Growth pact.

On the second issue Merkel put out a call, which I wholeheartedly endorse, for East European states to be absolutely honest, and get all their economic bad news up and on the table, once and for all.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she expects an “honest report” on the economic status of eastern European Union members at a summit on March 1. “We need to remain attentive over the problems of the member states in eastern Europe,” Merkel told reporters in Berlin today. “Yet for that we need them to speak openly about their problems.” “We expect them to speak clearly at the summit this weekend,” Merkel said. “Although there are marked differences in the situation of those members we know that foreign banks are withdrawing capital.”

Decisions need to be taken on Sunday, important decisions. The time for procrastination is over.

Postscript

I have put forward extensive arguments on both these issues in my recent posts:

Let The East Into The Eurozone Now!

The EU Bonds Story Rumbles On

US Fiscal Deficit Projected At 12.3% of GDP In 2009

According to the 2009 budget Barack Obama is sending to congress today, the United States will have a $1.75 trillion deficit this year. The figure represents 12.3 percent of estimated gross domestic product, double the previous post-war record of 6 percent in 1983, and the highest level since the deficit totaled 21.5 percent of GDP in 1945, at the end of World War II. It seems the numbers are about to start getting let out of the bag, and it will be interesting to see how the markets react. You can find many more details here.

Now if you look at the chart below (prepared by Lazard for a presentation on consumer deleveraging) you will see that this is not the first time something like this has happened. The earlier peak in US indeptedness occured (of course) between 1930 and 1933, when total debt peaked at 299% of GDP. In fact total debt expanded quite rapidly between 1930 (211% GDP) and 1933, largely as a result of GDP contraction and price deflation (which is why it would be preferable not to see extensive price deflation this time round). As a result, while private sector debt contracted between 1930 and 1933, public sector debt held steady, and rose from 34% of GDP to 72% of GDP (for better viewing click on image, and try zooming in a bit. Sorry, that’s the best I can do/suggest).

This is the phenomenon we are seeing now. If the stimulus programme is successful then we might see US debt to GDP stabilising around 2013, since the deficit is expected to remain around $1 trillion for the next two years before starting to decline to $533 billion in 2013, according to budget projections.

So what is likely to happen to prices? Well, if we look at the chart below, we can see that US consumer price inflation was pretty lacklustre right the way through from 1920 to 1940 (that’s why I called the whole interwar epoch a deflationary one in my last post), so I guess, if we’re lucky, we might get to see some serious inflation around 2020. If history is any guide that is, which ain’t necessarily the case, but still.

In Memory Of Victor Zarnowitz

Victor Zarnowitz, well known US economist and expert on business cycles died last Saturday in Manhattan. He was 89. Although I didn’t know him in any way personally, I learnt a lot from reading Victor’s papers and his monumental book on the US business cycle – “Business Cycles: Theory, History, Indicators and Forecasting” (University of Chicago Press, 1992). Among other ideas of note, Zarnowitz divided the history of modern industrial society into deflationary and inflationary epochs, with the system switching around from one mode to the other for reasons we still barely understand. In his view, 1875 to 1918 would be, basically, an inflationary epoch, 1918 – 1945 a deflationary one, 1945 – 1995 an inflationary one, and 1995 to……… a disinflationary/deflationary one.

Thank you Victor, your presence among us will be missed now more than ever. Dennis Hevesi has an obituary in the New York Times.

Dr. Zarnowitz, who was emeritus professor of economics at the University of Chicago, was also a research associate for the National Bureau of Economic Research, and in that capacity was one of the seven economists who officially determine when the United States is in a recession. Speaking of the growing dependence of forecasters on computerized econometric models, he said the following in a New York Time Op-Ed in 1980:

“Their expectations ran high that in such models lay the answer to the challenges of economic forecasting and policy making…..They were to be disappointed……..Forecasts of econometric model builders have been no more accurate than the forecasts of those who analyze business conditions using less formal methods,”

Times, it seems have not changed that much. You can find a list of his NBER papers and other publications here, and his Conference Board biography here.

In Need Of Stimulation, Or How To Do Things When You Are Busted Flat.

It isn’t only the bank bailout programme which is suffering in Italy due to lack of sovereign borrowing capacity. I couldn’t help noticing this piece in Bloomberg earlier in the week.

Italian Labor Minister Maurizio Sacconi said the government can’t provide unlimited unemployment benefits, La Stampa reported. The government is concerned about unemployment and has freed up about 8 billion euros ($10.3 billion) in regional aid that local entities can tap into, Sacconi told La Stampa in an interview. Still, “we cannot leave the taps running,” Sacconi was also cited as saying.

So as the recession deepens, and layoffs spread, the Italian government is obviously going to have problems keeping people afloat. Which lead me to think, maybe there are two ways to do this, the regular, and the irregular one. And maybe Italy is the ideal place for the application of rather more “unconventional tools” in fighting the crisis, especially since money for the conventional ones is beginning to run scarce. Continue reading

Is French Sovereign Debt Now The Benchmark?

Well, I had been warning this would happen. Credit default swaps measuring risk on five-year sovereign German debt touched 90bp yesterday and look set to rise above French debt for the first time in the near future. The current spike follows a warning by Deutsche Bank that Germany’s economy will contract by 5% this year as industrial exports collapse at the fastest pace since the Great Depression. I have been warning about this looming problem in my EU Bonds posts for some time now. Germany’s export driven economy is heaviliy dependent on fluctuations in world trade, and German industry is very dependent on Eastern Europe (which is more or less the focal point of the current global crisis at this stage). In addition, German savings went to fund investments in many of the riskiest assets, hence the need for a very large bank bailout. So moving forward things do not look that marvellous for German public debt, and another wave of health and pension reforms will now need to be put in the works as the population ages rather more rapidly than is desireable for stability.

Strangely, and again as I have been pointing out, despite an evident lack of substantial reform in recent years, France’s economy is preforming noticeably better than Germany’s, and the reasons for this will surely form part of the post crisis post-mortem.

Some indication of the headaches which are now looming, and of the fact that the market for German debt may not be as liquid as many had imagined, can be found in the statement from the Head of the German Federal Finance Agency this morning that Germany may increase sales of short-dated securities at the expense of longer-term or index-linked bonds if government borrowing rises more than forecast this year. Carl Heinz indicated that Germany was fortunate in this sense since the appetite for debt maturing in 12 months or less is “huge” as money managers are currently rather reluctant to deposit cash with banks. Germany will need to sell more debt this year than at any time since the end of World War II as Chancellor Angela Merkel increases spending to cushion the economy against recession, and the government plans to sell a record 323 billion euros ($414 billion) this year, almost 50 percent more than the 220 billion euros sold last year. The issuance will comprise 149 billion euros in bonds with maturity over one year and 174 billion euros of shorter-dated money-market securities.

So I think we should forget about stereotypes here, since this whole situation is now extremely fluid, and, of course, in need of rapid attention from EU leaders . Maybe instead of asking ourselves whether Germany can bail-out Ireland the question we should be asking ourselves is whether Portugalcan bail-out Germany?

And in case some of you simply think this is a joke, be careful what you ask for, since David Beers, head of sovereign ratings at Standard & Poor’s told Reuters this morning that the weakness of the global economy could be expected to have an impact on some countries’ credit ratings, and that he expected more sovereign ratings downgrades than upgrades this year, especially in the light of financial market concerns about the health of public finances.

Russia’s Economy Declines At An 8% Annual Rate In January

Russia’s economy contracted at an annual rate of 8.8 per cent in January, according to the latest statement by the Russian economy minister. This data point, which provides us with the latest confirmation that a very sharp contraction is now taking place in Russia, follows last week’s announcement by economic development minister Elvira Nabiullina, economic development minister, that the economy shrank by 2.4 per cent between December and January. Industrial production also fell 16 per cent year-on-year in January, while there was a 17 per cent decline in construction.

It also gives us some indication of the viability of VTB’s Russian GDP Indicator (as posted here) which indicated a year on year rate of contraction of 4 percent in January, down from December’s 1.1 percent decline, and November’s 2.1 percent expansion. This is somewhat under the actual reading, but it is an estimate in real time (we got this at the start of February) and it was by far the nearest estimate I have seen. The Russian government is currently forecasting a contraction of only 2.2% for this year, which has to be way, way too optimistic as things presently stand.

Continue reading

Ukraine Debt Ratings Cut to CCC+ by S&P

Well in some countries it never rains but it pours, as they say. Following the news that Ukraine GDP contracted at an annual rate of 20% in January, today we learn that S&P have cut Ukraine’s long-term foreign currency rating to CCC+, seven levels below investment grade. Ukraine’s rating is now the lowest in Europe and at the same level as Pakistan. S&P left the outlook negative, suggesting there may be more to come.

To give us all some idea of what this means contracts to protect Ukraine’s government bonds against default now cost 59.5 percent upfront and 5 percent a year, according to CMA Datavision prices for credit-default swaps today. That means it costs $5.95 million in advance and $500,000 a year to protect $10 million of bonds for five years. The cost is higher than for any other government debt worldwide. Continue reading

Japan’s Exports Collapse In January

Japan’s exports plunged by 45.7 percent year on year in January, producing a record trade deficit, as recessions in the U.S. and Europe, and a sharp downturn in China crushed demand for the country’s machinery, cars and electronics. A drop of this size is truly staggering.

“People are coming to realize that Japan is in deep trouble,” said Hiroshi Shiraishi, an economist at BNP Paribas Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo. “Considering what’s happening on the export side, and the implications that has for the domestic economy, the yen is clearly not a buy.”

Continue reading

How Not To Practise The Ancient Art Of Verbal Intervention

Let’s flash back quickly to yesterday (Monday). The big news of the day (at least as far as Central and Eastern Europe went) was that a number of East European central banks had reached an agreement to try to bolster their currencies via their first coordinated action since the start of the global financial crisis.

Czech, Polish, Hungarian and Romanian central bankers all agreed to speak publicly about the damaging effects of exchange-rate swings, according to the statement read by Romania’s central bank Governor Mugur Isarescu at a news conference in Bucharest. His counterparts in Prague, Budapest and Warsaw issued similar statements during the afternoon. The four currencies all gained significantly on the day. The Hungarian central bank even kept interest rates on hold to boost the currency, even though this will lead to an even sharper economic contraction and even higher unemployment. But how long did it all last?

Well, now fast forward to today, and a press conference in Brussels, attended by EU Commission President José Manuel Barroso and Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany. The message was meant to be that the Hungarian government was on the right path, and was going to receive full backing from the European Union. And how did our good prime minister “talk up” the currency?

“We’re in serious trouble indeed,” the Hungarian prime minister said.

And how did the forint react?

The sell-off on the forint market was almost immediate, and the Hungarian currency abruptly and sharply fell to over 303 to the euro from its earlier and hard won level of 297.

True all the talk about Latvian downgrades (see previous post) and East European weakness didn’t help, and the kind of verbal strategy decided on yesterday was always a sign of weakness rather than a sign of strength. As Danske Bank said in a report yesterday:

The markets might try to test whether this is just verbal intervention or whether the CEE central banks would be willing, for example, to hike rates to defend their currencies. The markets will be watching over the next days for more direct intervention in the CEE FX in the form of coordinated intervention and/or rate hikes. However, if they see that the talk is not being backed up by action, the depreciation of the region’s currencies could resume.

Still, you might have thought the policy would have lasted a little longer than 24 hours, and that the Hungarian people would have been a bit better served by their leaders.