Sunday, 7 June 2009

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard is no more optimostic than Liam Halligan 
though he comes at it from a totally different angle.  What is not in 
the terms of reference of either of these distinguished men, however, 
is the impact on the final consumer.  It will be dreadful and the 
longer Brown stays in No:10 the worse it will be.

xxxxxxxxxxx cs
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SUNDAY TELEGRAPH 7.6.09
Merkel's inflationary fretting may wake the bears from hibernation
It is lonely in the diminishing camp of bears, says Ambrose Evans- 
Pritchard.


Those of us who still question whether the world has purged its 
toxins are reduced to the same tiny band of moaning Druids from early 
2007, when we shook our heads in disbelief as the carry trade swept 
Iceland to fresh madness and bankers laughed off sub-prime rot at 
Bear Stearns.

We learned then to thicken our skins with walnut juice, lie down in 
dark rooms, and dissent from Goldman Sachs. Such seclusion is called 
for once again as Goldman replays its BRIC anthem and raises its oil 
forecast to $85 a barrel this year, betting that the world will roar 
back on a tidal wave of liquidity.

It is perhaps unkind to mention that Goldman issued a $200 call at 
the top of the speculative frenzy last year, just before oil crashed, 
but they have broad shoulders.

Note that Total's Jean-Jacques Mosconi said markets are awash with so 
much crude that almost 100m barrels (a near record) are stored on 
tankers at sea. Note too that May electricity use fell 10pc in 
China's industrial hub of Guangdong from a year earlier. This is 
revealing, given that China's fiscal boost has reached peak and will 
fade later this year.

For guidance on where we are in this long-drawn saga, I look to 
Berkeley's Barry Eichengreen, author of the Great Depression classic 
Golden Fetters - which avoids the error of viewing the 1930s through 
a US prism.

He has crunched the latest data with Trinity College Dublin's Kevin 
O'Rourke for VoxEU, concluding that the global rupture over the last 
nine months has been more violent than in the early slump. This is 
logical. Global debt leverage is much greater this time.

The fall in industrial output has been roughly equal to the 1929-1930 
stage for Germany and the Anglo-Saxons, but worse for Japan, France, 
Italy, and Eastern Europe. The collapse in world trade has been 
swifter: the global equity crash has been twice as bad. "It's a 
depression alright. The good news is that the policy response is very 
different. The question now is whether that response will work," they 
said.

The elastic was bound to snap back, just as it did in the bear rally 
of early 1931. Whether the underlying economy has begun to heal is 
another matter. World Bank chief economist Justin Yifu Lin said 
capacity utilization is running at an historic low of 50pc-60pc. 
Companies will have to fire a lot of workers. This is where the 
danger lies, and why he fears that deflation is creeping up on us.

Trade data from Asia are flashing warning signals again. Korea's 
exports were down 28.3pc in May, reversing the April rebound. 
Malaysia has slipped to -26pc, and India has touched a new low of -33pc.

US freight data is getting worse, not better. The Association of 
American Railroads said traffic was down 22pc in the third week of 
May from a year earlier. Canadian freight was down 34pc.

The American Trucking Association (ATA) said it saw fresh drops of 
4.5pc in March and a further 2.2pc in April. Tonnage is down 13pc 
over 12 months. Bob Costello, the ATA's chief economist, said 
companies have not cut inventories fast enough to keep pace with 
declining sales. The contraction in truck volume has "accelerated".

Yes, the Baltic Dry Index for bulk shipping of resources has 
quadrupled since January, but this reflects China's bid to stockpile 
metals while prices are low.

Stephen Roach, Morgan Stanley's Far East chief, fears an "Asian 
Relapse", saying the region is prisoner to its fatal dependency on 
exports to the West. The export share of GDP has risen from 36pc to 
47pc across developing Asia over the last decade.

"China's incipient rebound relies on a time-worn stimulus formula: 
upping the ante on infrastructure spending in anticipation of an 
eventual rebound of global demand," he said. The strategy cannot work 
this time because Americans have exhausted their credit, and their 
desire to borrow. Consumption will fall from its peak of 72pc of GDP 
to the "pre-bubble norm" of 67pc, if not more. [does he mean FALL 
more ? -cs]

David Rosenberg from Gluskins Sheff expects Americans to retrench 
ferociously as 78m baby boomers face the looming threat of penury in 
old age. "The big story is that the personal savings rate hit a 15-
year high of 5.7pc in April. I believe it could test the post-War 
peak of 15pc. Too many pundits are still living in the old paradigm 
of Americans shopping till they drop," he said.

If he is right, this will shatter the surplus economies of China, 
Japan, and Germany, unless they adjust fast to the new world order. 
Germany does not even seem to understand the problem it faces. 
Chancellor Angela Merkel lashed out last week at quantitative easing 
by the Fed, the Bank of England, and the European Central Bank, 
repeating the silly mantra that this will set off an inflationary 
storm.  [The saving grace on inflation is that all that quantitative 
easing has been a waste and as it has not gone into circulation it 
does not affect the issue! -cs]

How can it do so when the velocity of circulation has collapsed, and 
unemployment is rising everywhere? The Fed's "monetary multiplier" 
ended last week at 0.867, half its average of 1.7 over the last 
decade. The credit mechanism is still broken. This is what happened 
in Japan in its Lost Decade.

The ECB says the eurozone economy will contract until mid-2010, at 
best. Germany's trade association (Wirtschaftsverbände) warned Mrs 
Merkel last week that the credit drought threatens to become "life-
threatening by the summer at the latest".

The list of countries in deflation is growing every month: Ireland 
(-3.5), Thailand (-3.3), China (-1.5), Switzerland (-1), Spain 
(-0.8), the US (-0.7), Singapore (-0.7), Taiwan (-0.5), Belgium 
(-0.4), Japan (-0.1), Sweden (-0.1), Germany (0).

Yet markets seem to think otherwise, and this has its own awful 
consequences. Inflation fears have driven 10-year US Treasury yields 
to 3.86pc, a full point above levels in March when the Fed intervened 
to force rates down. US mortgage rates have jumped to 5.29pc. Gilts 
have reached 3.92pc, and French 10-year bonds are at 4.05pc.  [These 
rising rates are precursors of the rising costs of servicing the vast 
debts that Brown-Darling have - and still are - running up here. -cs]

This bond revolt is enough to bring any global recovery to a 
shuddering halt. The irony is that those fretting loudest about 
inflation may themselves tip us into outright deflation, with all the 
perils of a debt compound trap. It is Angela Merkel who plays with fire.