Stock Markets Bailout Bubble, What's On the Horizon?
Stock-Markets / Global Stock Markets Aug 21, 2009 - 05:21 AM GMT
	
	
  
OVERVIEW -  
    STOCK prices around the world recently hit their highest levels for this year,  buoyed by a wave of optimism about prospects for a global economic recovery -  only to fall back to a three-month low this week on fresh doubts about the  sustainability of that recovery. So, is it 'for real' or is it destined to run  out of steam? The Business Times empanelled a team of key experts to answer  this critical question, and to tell us whether the world faces a threat of inflation,  deflation or stagflation in the coming months. There were mixed views on the  prospects for equity markets, but interestingly, everyone on the panel was  bullish about gold.  
  
 
PanelistsMark Mobius, executive chairman, Templeton Asset Management
Eisuke Sakakibara, former vice finance minister for international affairs, Japan, and now Professor at Waseda University, Tokyo
Jesper Koll, president and CEO, Tantallon Research, Japan
The Hon Robert Lloyd-George, chairman of Lloyd George Management, Hong Kong
Ernest Kepper, former senior official of the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Wall Street investment banker who now heads an Asian financial consultancy
William Thomson, chairman, Private Capital Ltd, Hong Kong and senior adviser to Axiom Funds, London and formerly a Vice President of the Asian Development Bank
Christopher Wood, managing director and equity  strategist, CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets, Hong Kong
  
  Moderator: Anthony Rowley, Tokyo correspondent,  The  Business Times
  
  Anthony Rowley: Let me start by  asking: is the apparent recovery in the global economy for real, or a 'phony'  one? And, are stock markets justified in behaving the way they have been doing  lately?
  
  Eisuke Sakakibara: I don't  understand why equity prices are so high - in Japan  the US  and elsewhere. In China's  case, there is obviously a very major bubble in the equity market. Also, I  don't see any reason why the US Dow Average should be more than 9,000 (as it is  now)or why the Japanese Nikkei average is more than 10,000. I just cannot  understand it.
  
  Ernest Kepper: This is a phony  recovery. A turn-up in the economy is not the same as the economy recovering  all lost ground. To keep rising in the future, markets need a sign of real  economic recovery, and that requires a surge in consumer spending, business  investment and home buying, combined with a reduction in government spending.
  
  I fully expect to see the markets rise for a while longer, even as high as Dow  10,000 or S&P 1,100. After that, I think that we are going to see another  leg down when the current rally ends, just as the powerful rally following the  initial crash in 1929, ended up dealing out severe losses to those who held  onto their shares.
  
  William Thomson: In the wake of  Lehman's failure the global financial system was staring into the abyss of a  systemic meltdown. Governments then junked their economic philosophies and  threw fiscal and monetary assistance at the problems on an unimaginable scale,  just to keep things afloat. It has worked to the extent the system limps on and  there has been a rally in the markets. But there has been no recovery in the  real economy yet in the West. The pace of decline has slowed and the second  half of 2009 could be modestly positive. But modest is the operative word since  unemployment is likely to continue to grow well into 2010, reaching double  digits even on the official count.
  
  With housing foreclosures likely to keep climbing in the wake of extended  unemployment, the consumer is likely to keep his wallet shut and try and repair  his balance sheet. Modest economic recovery should continue as long as neither  fiscal or monetary conditions become restrictive too quickly. But markets need  a period of consolidation whilst they assess future prospects, so a broad  trading range may be possible for the rest of the year. Dips can bought and  rallies sold.
  
    Anthony: Are any of you gentlemen more optimistic about the global outlook?
  
  Robert Lloyd-George: This is not a  'phony' recovery. It may be slower and weaker than usual because of the debt super-cycle.  But it is a real recovery - in trade, auto sales, consumer spending, corporate  capital spending and so on.
  
  We are 'climbing a wall of worry' because many economists (and hedge fund  managers) do not believe in the recovery and still have 50 per cent cash,  awaiting a correction, which may never come. Earnings, and GDP, figures will  slowly improve and equity markets will strengthen well into spring of 2010.
  
  Mark Mobius: The financial crisis  was real in the banking system but not in the industrial economy. It impacted  the economy because the banking system froze. However, markets are leading  indicators and they are telling us the recovery is on the way now.
  
  Jesper: I agree. There is nothing  'phony' about the recovery; globally, the policy response was swift and massive  and very correct. Since the start of 2009, slowly but surely, global money and  credit have started to flow again.
  
  Markets have, of course, been pulled by the massive liquidity creation; the  tell-tale sign was the US  banks raising massive amounts of private capital this spring without much  problem; and beyond financial companies, corporations in general have been very  fast in cutting costs and slashing inventories. Many CEOs used the crisis as an  opportunity to do all the harsh and hard things they had been wanting to do for  years, but could not ; corporations are now mean and lean. Corporate profits  for many companies are poised to explode in the coming two years; global stock  markets are - right now - transitioning from a 'liquidity market' to an  'earnings market' ; in this phase, stock selection will become increasingly  important.
  
    Anthony: What is driving recovery in the markets - emerging markets  especially?
  
  Mark: In a word, money is what is  driving the recovery. The money supply in most countries is rising at a very  rapid pace. This money is finding its way into the economic system and is  driving prices and economic activity. Added to this are the US$600 trillion in  financial derivatives which amplifies money supply.
  
  Jesper: In a word - growth. There is  no question that the structural growth potential of 'Chindonesia' - China,  India and Indonesia - is easily about two times, if not three times higher than  that of the US, Europe or Japan. Even so, it will be interesting to see how long  emerging markets sustain their growth premium. Valuations are now very  stretched and if the US and Japanese recovery continues to gain visibility,  these two markets could well start to outperform the emerging world for a  couple of quarters.
  
    Robert: Emerging Markets - Brazil, India and China anyhow - have clearly  risen faster and stronger from the crisis, for good fundamental reasons - young  consumers in hundreds of millions, and governments following ambitious  infrastructure plans (in turn), driving demand for commodities.
  
  Christopher Wood: Recovery is partly  driven by the hope of a US restocking cycle and partly by the fact that Asia  and emerging markets in general are becoming more domestic-demand driven.
  
  William: We are in the midst of a  historic shifting of economic power globally from a worn-out, complacent,  over-leveraged, demographically challenged and decrepit West to a youthful,  striving, high savings and increasingly well educated and confident Asia eager to take its place at the top table internationally.
  
  Emerging markets cannot decouple completely in a globally integrated world but  they do have greater flexibility to develop their own internal markets - as we  have seen with the Chinese stimulus programme. This growth of emerging markets  at the expense of the West is the story of the next 50 years.
  
  Anthony: Let's focus on China  especially for a moment since that is where most of the action continues to be.  How do you see prospects in the China  market?
  
    Mark: Excellent. Chinese stocks have already gone up a lot and they will  correct downwards but that will be temporary.
  
  Robert: I remain bullish on China.  Their macro-economic planning and management during the crisis continues to  defy the Western pundits. They have plenty of cash (US$2 trillion reserves) and  plenty of confidence. The younger generation will consume and borrow more.  Economic relations with Taiwan  improve. Overseas trade will recover. The renminbi is internationalising.
  
  Jesper: China is one of the countries most  exposed to rising cost pressures. Profit margins are already very thin,  competition keeps intensifying across most sectors, and skilled labour is  scarce. The key to success in the Chinese equity market will be an intense  focus on stock selection - the gap between winners and losers is poised to  widen sharply.
  
  We will see the rise of true multinationals from China, true global players who do  not just manufacture, but actually control the distribution channels and  branding across the globe. These will be the real winners emerging from China  over the next couple of years.
  
    Ernest: China  took aggressive measures to increase bank lending which in turn supported a  strengthening of the stock market and is producing what looks like the start of  a bubble, which the authorities are now trying to contain.
  
  The Chinese government's stepping up bank lending was necessary but it's time  for the excessive lending to be scaled back now. China's stimulus adds its own risk,  including those of asset bubbles, overcapacity and non-performing loans.
  
    Christopher: It is possible that the Chinese economy will grow by around 9  per cent in the second half of this year, after 7.1 per cent (year on year)  growth in the first half of the year, due to surging public-sector and  private-sector fixed-asset investment and resilient consumption. This assumes  no real recovery in the West and a negative contribution to growth in terms of  net exports. I am still overweight on China equities.
  
  Eisuke: China  will continue to grow at a fairly high rate of 7 or 8 per cent for some years  to come and next year I think that China will be number two in terms  of GDP.
  
  That is only natural (because) China  is a big country with a big population. China will need to emerge as a  major economic power in the world.
  
    William: The Chinese stimulus programme has been successful but the  question is whether it is sustainable. It has involved a rapid expansion of  bank balance sheets that could result in substantial losses a few years from  now. As long as China's  export markets stabilise then China's  growth rate can be maintained at levels well above the West's rates. China  recognises the old reliance on exports must change and it will. The real  question is how fast that transformation can occur. Chinese equities have had a  great run and are overdue for a breather but they have a core position in any  long-term growth portfolio.
  
  Anthony: Let's turn to wider issues.  Is the world facing a risk of inflation as a consequence of all the liquidity  that has been injected into economies, or deflation because of the global  recession?
  
  Eisuke: The global inflation threat  is almost zero but there are some asset bubbles. If you think in terms of  prices of goods, inflation fear is groundless but in terms of the prices of  assets, there is a danger of bubbles in China,  and even in Japan and the US. I don't  think there will be hyper-inflation.
  
    Robert: I expect inflation to rise within 12 months. Deflation is  politically unacceptable in Western democracies and monetising debt is the only  way out. This is very bearish for government bonds but mildly bullish for  equities, property, and commodities, provided that inflation remains below 10  per cent.
  
  William: We have been printing money  like never before: the Fed's monetary base more than doubled in three months in  late 2008. However, this has been going to fill up the black holes in balance  sheets created by the credit implosion and velocity has dropped sharply. As a  consequence it has yet to create inflation.
  
  As things stand, we still need more quantitative easing and ultimately we need  some inflation to reduce the real burden of our excessive debts. Renewed  inflation would most likely come from currency depreciation especially the  dollar which looks very weak at present and headed further south, possibly disastrously.  I believe US  government bonds are unattractive under such circumstances, selected equities  are relatively more attractive, especially emerging markets on pull backs, as  well as some commodities, including gold, silver and oil. Income producing property  should also be attractive after the falls of the last two years.
  
  Christopher: The risk in America  and the West remains deflation. There remains almost zero evidence of  re-leveraging in America.
  
  Mark: Inflation is good for equities  but not for bonds because bond rates must go up. Depending on how fast the  money supply brakes are applied then the impact on equities could be positive  or negative.
  
    Anthony: While we're talking about inflation, the gold price continues its  upward climb. Where is it headed and why?
  
  Mark: Gold has probably already  discounted a lot of inflation expectations but when hyperinflation hits then  gold could move much higher.
  
  Robert: Gold is going to a minimum  of US$2,000 an ounce by 2011, in my view, for all the reasons above. World  money supply has doubled in the last two years. No new gold supply, plus  dwindling faith in 'fiat' currencies all around the world. Neither the dollar,  nor the yen, nor the Euro will fill the bill.
  
  Christopher: I maintain a long-term  bullish view on gold bullion, with my long-term target price set at US$3,360 an  ounce.
  
    William: Gold has been tracing out a huge consolidation pattern since it  first crossed the US$1,000 mark in March 2008. The demand for physical gold has  been huge during this period of financial crisis as gold performs its familiar  role of asset of last resort as governments around the world have engaged in  unprecedented levels of quantitative easing. I am looking for a significant  breakout to higher prices in the coming months: US$1,200 by the end of the year  is not impossible with higher prices next year.
  
  Jesper: Gold is the best hedge we  have to the principal risk, which is inflation; so I like gold and also  inflation linked bonds as a hedge.
  
  Ernest: Psychology is the driving  force behind the price of gold. Unless you have a clear idea who is going to  come and rescue your portfolio of paper investments, owning gold and silver is  important. Gold is still the only asset class which has risen in price every  year since 2001. In fact, it is a bargain for gold to be selling for less than  US$1,000 per ounce!
  
    Anthony: In conclusion, what could go wrong to derail the present recovery?
  
  Mark: Money supply has had fed the  markets. Excess money supply begets inflation and that is what could go wrong  but that is something we don't have to worry about for probably another year.
  
  Robert: The only real problem I see  is the high level of European government debt, which should not affect Asian  markets.
  
  Christopher: What can go wrong, and  will go wrong, is that Western growth will remain anaemic in 2010 as a result  of continuing de-leveraging.
  
  Jesper: The biggest threat is  inflation; if we get a new round of cost-push inflation we would be forced to  call for a negative earnings cycle coming as soon as 2011. Another big threat  is protectionism. Personally, I am hopeful this threat is low; I am very  encouraged by the well coordinated response we have had to the global financial  crisis, which suggests that global policy makers actually act rationally.
  
  William: Many problems have been  swept under the carpet and so a sustainable recovery to former growth rates  does not seem to be on the cards for the US,  the EU and Japan.  The de-leveraging process still has a way to go and consumers, especially, have  to continue to rebuild their balance sheets. Governments will have to restrain  their expenditures and increase taxes, which will be neither easy nor popular.
  
  Central banks also have to walk a fine line between taking away the punchbowl  of quantitative easing and creating the fuel for future large scale inflation.
  
    Ernest: There are two major things that could go wrong - the commercial  property mortgage market and stimulus spending which could cause a bubble.  Years of loose monetary policy has fuelled a dangerous credit bubble, leaving  the global economy more vulnerable to another 1930s-style slump than generally  understood.
  
  Throwing billions of stimulus dollars at the banks is unlikely to produce a  healthy economy because households are broke. At best, it may only lead to a  temporary pickup in growth. Stimulus packages around the world are ultimately  going to cause more damage than they prevent. These packages have simply  delayed the coming downturn, and by adding significant numbers to the massive  debt bubbles of the world's nations, will ultimately make the downturn worse  than had governments not injected massive amounts of money into the economy.
  
  When the (current) debt bubble bursts, the world will enter a serious downturn.  The bailout is much bigger than the dot-com and real estate bubbles which hit  speculators, investors and financiers the hardest. When the 'Bailout Bubble'  explodes, the system goes with it because neither the US President  nor the Federal Reserve will have the fiscal fixes or monetary policies  available to inflate another bubble.
By William R. Thomson 
wrthomson@btconnect.com 
William Thomson is Chairman of Private Capital Ltd. in Hong Kong and an adviser to Axiom Funds and Finavestment Ltd. in London .
Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
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